đŚâ⏠The Haunting of Black Hollow Ranch
November 1861
Thistle Creek, Colorado
"Mitchell, I dare you to go up there," Jed said as he watched the cattle.
Mitchell didnât answer right away. He spat a long stream of tobacco juice into the dirtâsomething Jed hated but, as always, ignored.
"There ain't no way I'm goin' up there. Not alone."
"What if me and Johnny went up there with you?" Jed countered, nodding toward the prairie where the dilapidated old ranch house stood. A few of the cattle had wandered near it, sniffing the overgrown fence line.
Mitchell scratched his head. "I don't know. Why do you wanna go up there so bad? Ain't it supposed to be haunted? By that lady? The one who got killed comin' across the plains? Said she haunted her family."
"Oh, that's just a load of hogwash," Johnny said, grinning over at Jed.
The three of them had been hired to watch the cattle on the lower range for Mr. Dugan. Right in the middle of the land sat the old ranch house. The family had long since left, but the stories stuck around like burrs on a muleâs tail.
They said a womanâMrs. Laffertyâstill haunted the place, looking for her family. Anyone who ventured too close to her home met the same fate. The story went that as her family traveled west from Missouri, she fell ill and was left behind with plans to catch up later. Her husband had gone ahead with their two young children to make a new life far from their homeland in Ireland.
Anyone who dared stay the night there mysteriously fell ill. Some died within months. It had been years since anyone nearby dared go near the place.
Jed, for one, thought it was all a ruseâsomething cooked up by bandits to keep folks away so they could use it as a hideout. Fran and Izzy Sullivan even told them theyâd once gone inside and found loot from robbed stagecoaches.
But sometimes a rumor grows teeth. And Mitchell? He believed them.
"Iâll buy you a whiskey if you stay the night," Jed said.
Mitchell scoffel
"I mean it," Jed repeated. "Three whiskeys if you stay overnight."
Mitchell raised an eyebrow. "Three? You come into money or somethin'? You runninâ with Tateâs boys?
Jed chuckled. "Ainât no bandit. Just want to see you do it."
"Why donât you stay the night then?" Mitchell asked.
"'Cause I donât believe it. I wouldnât be scared, and whereâs the fun in that?"
Mitchell looked to Johnny.)kkk is "You reckon I should?"
Johnny shrugged. "Three whskeys sounds decent. It's just an old house, Mitch."
Mitchell looked back toward the house. Jed could see him thinking hard, chewing over the offer like an old piece of jerky.
The truth was, Jed had come into a bit of moneyâgambling, over in the next town. And that money was itching in his pocket.
"You swear?" Mitchell asked. "You'll buy me three whiskeys if I stay the night?"
Johnny laughed. "Hell, you might need 'em if you see the Lady Lafferty."
Mitchell scowled. "You gonna stay with me, or you yellow?"
Johnny laughed again. "Donât go baitinâ me with insults. I ainât yellow. But Jed didnât ask me. He asked you."
Mitchell narrowed his eyes. "Why'd you ask me and not Johnny?"
Jed shrugged. "Figured youâd do it. Youâve lived here the longest. Surprised you havenât been out there already."
Mitchell shook his head. "I donât want to go messin' with no ghosts. Especially not ones that make folks sick and die."
"Oh, those are just old rumors," Johnny said, moving toward the cabin. The cows shifted behind them, hooves crunching in the dry grass.
Jed and Mitchell followed. Soon the three of them were within shouting distance of the house. Its front door barely clung to the hinges. Some of the boards on the porch were rotted clean through. The windows were covered with old, warped planks.
It gave off a forlorn, foreboding feel.
All three men shivered, though none admitted it aloud.
"Well, it sure looks haunted," Johnny said. He was new to town and had never been out this way.
Jed had passed it a few times, but never this close. He had to admitâit felt eerie.
Mr. Lafferty and the children had lasted only a year before they packed up and left in the middle of the night. No stories of bandits. No tales of Indian trouble. They just left. Took nothing with them.
For just a second, Jed wondered if the rumors were trueâif the ghost of Mrs. Lafferty really had driven them away.
He shook the thought off.
"So, you gonna do it?" he asked Mitchell. "The rules are simple. At sundown, you go in. You donât come out until sunrise."
"Thatâs it?" Mitchell asked.
"Thatâs it," Jed nodded. Johnny was grinning now, mischief in his eyes.
Jed knew he had him.
"For three whiskeys?" Mitchell asked.
"Yep."
A look passed over Mitchellâs faceâhard to name. Then it cleared.
He spit into his hand and held it out.
Jed hated that custom too, but he spit in his own and shook. A deal was a deal.
"You wanna do it tonight?" Jed asked.
"Might as well," Mitchell replied. "That whiskey ainât gonna drink itself."
He laughed and spat again, but the look on his face said he wasnât quite at ease with his decision.
***
The sun kissed the edge of the horizon, the prairie sky looking as if on fire. Shadows stretched long and thin across the dry earth as Mitchell stood at the edge of the porch.
The house loomed before him, broken. It looked like it had taken one punch too many from the wind and still refused to fall.
Jed handed him the lantern. âOilâs fresh. Should last all night.â
Mitchell took it with a grunt, his fingers curling tight around the handle.
âYou sure about this?â Johnny asked, his earlier bravado now quiet under the weight of the moment.
âNope,â Mitchell said, but he put his boot on the first step anyway.
The porch bowed slightly beneath his weight. He gave one last glance over his shoulder at the two men standing in the waning light, then opened the door.
It didnât creakâit moaned.
Inside, the air was stale and cold. The lanternâs flame sputtered to life, casting flickering shadows that danced along the bare boards and cracked ceiling. Dust hung thick and clung to the cobwebs in the corners. Mitchell shuddered. He hated spiders. But he liked whiskey more.
He stepped into what mustâve been the sitting room. A rocking chair sat near the hearth, its back facing him. A brittle book lay open on a nearby table, its pages yellowed and curled. On the mantle, a photograph in a tarnished frame showed a stern man, two children, and a woman with a hauntingly blank stare.
Her eyes didnât follow him. But it felt like they did.
He lit a second lantern from the wall, setting it near the center of the room. Then he settled onto an old settee, creaking and groaning beneath him, just like everything else in the house.
âJust a house,â he muttered.
The wind outside picked up. It hissed against the walls and sounded like a whisper.
The hours passed.
The stillness settled around him and time got lost. The fire in the lanterns flickeredâsometimes calm, sometimes uneasy, as if moved by something not quite air.
From upstairs, something shifted.
A faint scrape.
Like bare feet across floorboards.
Mitchell stood, slowly. His fingers found the knife in his pocket.
âJust an animal,â he whispered. âRaccoon or somethinâ.â
Another step overhead.
Then a sound like a soft sob.
Mitchellâs heart turned to ice. The lantern in his hand shivered and the light cast flickering shadows as he crept toward the staircase.
He didnât want to go up.
Everything in him said no.
But something elseâsomething curious, something stubbornâmoved his foot onto the first step.
The second creaked louder.
The third cracked beneath his boot.
As he reached the landing, the sobbing stopped.
All was quiet.
Then⌠a lullaby.
Soft and low. A womanâs voice, humming something too sad to be a childâs song.
It came from the room at the end of the hall.
The nursery.
Mitchellâs breath caught. He gripped the lantern tighter.
And walked forward.
***
The door to the nursery stood ajar, just wide enough for a spirit to squeeze through.
Mitchell pushed it open with the toe of his boot.
The room was coated in more dust. A cradle sat in the corner, long untouched, one rocker broken. A doll lay facedown on the floor, its porcelain cheek cracked, one eye stuck open.
The lullaby stopped.
A pale figure sat in the corner chair, turned halfway toward the window. Her back was to him, her shoulders narrow and trembling, clad in a faded muslin dress. Her hair hung long and damp down her back, as though the prairie storms had followed her in.
Mitchell froze.
He wanted to run. He meant to run.
But she turned her head.
Her face was soft, sorrowful. Not angry. Not hideous. Just... empty. Her eyes met his with such aching loss that he forgot to breathe.
âI couldnât go with them,â she whispered.
Her voice was like wind through grassâbarely there.
âI told him to take them. Said Iâd catch up. But the sickness⌠it held me.â
She looked at the cradle, and Mitchell followed her gaze.
There were no children.
No toys.
No laughter.
âThey cried for me. I heard them. I still hear them.â Her voice cracked. âBut Iâm still here. I keep waiting. I keep listening.â
Her eyes met his again.
âHave you seen them?â
Mitchell shook his headâjust once, stiffly.
âIâm sorry,â he said, his throat sticking.
A long silence.
She gave him a small, sad smile. âSo am I.â
And thenâ
She vanished, like fog in the morning sun.
Mitchell didnât remember turning around.
He barely remembered stumbling down the stairs, the lantern swinging wildly in his hand. He threw open the front door and ran across the yard, nearly tripping over a tuft of grass. He didnât stop until heâd reached the edge of the field where Jed and Johnny were leaning against a fence post, passing a flask between them.
Johnny caught sight of him first. âWell, well. Thought you were settlinâ in for the night.â
Mitchell bent over, hands on his knees, gulping air. âShe was there,â he gasped. âShe was there.â
Jed smirked. âLet me guess. Pale dress? Sad eyes?â
âShe talked to me.â
That made Johnnyâs grin falter. âShe talked?â
âSaid she was waitinâ. Said she heard them. The kids.â
The three stood quiet for a long beat, the wind rushing past like a womanâs cry.
Then Johnny handed over the flask, goose pimples breaking out on his arms.
Jed clapped him on the back. âGuess we owe you those whiskeys. Didnât make it to sunrise, but⌠close enough.â He had heard the cry too and was keen to leave.
Mitchell took the flask and drank deep.
He didnât say thank you.
He just looked back toward the house, hidden in the darkness, watching them.