Hunter
“Don’t look at me like that,” I told Fred who was staring at me as if I’d spoken in Chinese.
“I guarantee you will eat your words when you see her,” Fred said.
And for the first time in my life, I saw what a pissed off Fred looked like. And somehow his mood-swings were getting to me too. They wanted to give me half-truths and also get mad when I uttered a word. They remembered everything, I didn’t. Someone needed a reality check and fast.
“Even though we’re married, I don’t know this woman. What if I don’t get my memories at all? How do you expect I spend my life with her?” I asked.
He wasn’t going to answer me, frustrated; I put the car into drive and drove to my house. The miles stretched on with no words exchanged between us. He thought I was that shallow asshole who’d suddenly change my words when I saw just how pretty she was. And that’s the thing. I didn’t care what she looked like, okay…maybe I was curious, like A LOT but that didn’t change the fact that I wouldn’t want to spend my life with a woman I didn’t know.
When we entered my house, I decided to break the silence because it was getting unbearable. “Okay, I’m sorry for what I said. I guess I’m just tired of thinking of all the possibilities that this might go to shit.”
“If you’re going to keep up with your attitude, it sure will go to shit, maybe even the sewer.” He commented, following me upstairs.
Leslie was right behind us, wagging his tail begging Fred for belly-rubs.
“Alright.” Fred put his hands on his waist, “where did you want to start?”
“I searched through most rooms; the bedrooms, the living area, and the basement. Found nothing there.”
“Have you checked the attic?” Fred asked.
“Nope.”
“Then that’s where we start.” He suggested.
“You have to understand why it’s so hard for me to believe that I married someone. It’s like she was never here. If she lived with me, how did she not leave anything behind? Clothes, makeup, you know, women stuff.”
Fred shrugged, “I don’t know, man. It’s so shady.”
We climbed the stairs to the attic together. The door was locked and I didn’t remember where I left the key. Fred picked the lock easily with a sharp-pointed object, and the door gave away. I wanted to ask him how he’d acquired the skills of a thief but thought better of it since I didn’t want to piss him off more than I already had.
“You gonna help me look through these or are you just gonna stand there looking pretty?” He taunted me as he dived into a box.
His attitude of making me feel like crap was getting on my nerves. He wasn’t going to allow me to play the “Amnesia guy” card.
“I’ll look into this one.” I found another dusty old box and sifted through the contents.
My old clothes, shoes, comic books, toys, and other useless things started to pop up. An hour passed and both Fred and I had no luck finding anything.
Then suddenly I found this one box pushed far back into one of the old dusty shelves. Something about that box was odd. When I pulled the box down on the floor, I noticed how tightly it was shut with a cello-tape. The other boxes had been vaguely closed, why was this one specifically wrapped up?
I tore open the wrapping, feeling like opening a box of Pandora. Inside the box was an instant photo camera and a stack of pictures. With shaky hands, I picked it up.
The first picture was of me taken in a restaurant. I had a huge smile on my face, the kind of smile that I didn’t think I ever had, and my arm draped around...
No one.
I wasn’t even looking at the camera; I was looking at the invisible being beside me. Feeling uncomfortable, I shifted to the next picture. This time it was a selfie. Clearly, there had to be a person posing with me and yet I was alone in this one too.
The last picture gave me chills.
It was a wedding photo. Guests surrounded the area, I was dressed as a groom and I obviously looked like I was over the moon, holding hands with the air beside me.
“Fred, look at these...” I whispered.
Fred dropped whatever he was doing and reached out towards me to take the pictures from my hands.
“What does this mean?” I asked him. “My wife. Are you sure I haven’t imagined her?”
“I clicked some of these pictures and I can swear she was with you. I don’t know how someone can just disappear from a picture like a...like a...”
“Like a ghost.” I completed for him.
“Yeah.” He said reluctantly. “This is some kind of sorcery man.”
“I never knew the exact meaning of the word “ghosting” on someone until these pictures.” I gave out a bitter laugh.
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