“Where are you?” Maggie shouted through the blinding snow. “Show yourself! Stop torturing me!”
The fierce howling of the wind was the only reply she received.
“We’ve got to show the others,” Maggie muttered. She turned around and ran through the open the front door and pounded up the stairs, tracking snow as she ran.
She burst into the room her parents were sleeping in and flipped on the light. “Mom! Dad! Get up!” she screamed, panic evident in her strained voice.
“What is it?” her dad asked, throwing the covers onto the floor and scrambling clumsily out of bed. “Is the house on fire? Did you get hurt? Is Simon okay?”
“Just come!” she yelled. “Both of you. You’ve got to come with me.”
“All right, let me throw on my robe,” Mr. Kim said, sliding his feet into his slippers.
“There had better be a good reason for waking us up in the middle of the night, young lady,” Mrs. Kim said, rubbing her eyes and glancing at the clock. “I was sound asleep.”
Maggie ran back out into the hall, then into Simon’s room.
“Simon, get up!” she shouted.
“Whaaaa—” Simon mumbled.
“Get up!” Maggie yelled again, this time yanking the covers off her brother.
“Hey!” Simon shouted, sitting up and rubbing his face. “What’s wrong with you? Have you gone insane? What do you want? I’m trying to sleep!”
“Get dressed and come downstairs. Mom and Dad are already up.”
“Great time for a family picnic, Mags,” Simon groaned, searching the floor for his robe.
Bounding back down the stairs, Maggie was soon joined by the others. Simon had put on his snow boots, still untied. His striped bathrobe peeked out from under his winter coat, which he had buttoned incorrectly. Adding to the comic picture was a floppy-eared hat resting on his mop of unkempt hair.
Sophie had now slipped her long down coat over her pajamas, but she still wore her slippers, having been unable to find her boots.
Mr. and Mrs. Kim looked like stuffed dolls. Each wore pajamas, a bathrobe, a sweater, and a winter coat, all in various stages of zipped, incorrectly buttoned, or not buttoned at all. Mr. Kim had decided to use the terry-cloth belt from his bathrobe to secure his winter coat. They both wore big snow boots on their feet.
Maggie grabbed the knob on the front door. “Okay, here it is. Proof that I’m not crazy. I’m not selfish. I’m not just making all this up because I don’t want to live here. Ready?”
“To go out into the wind and snow at two thirty in the morning?” Mrs. Kim asked. “I don’t imagine I’ll ever be ready for that.”
Maggie flung the front door open, and the whole crew stepped outside.
They were immediately assaulted by wind-driven snow, which stung the inadequately protected areas of their exposed skin.
“There!” Maggie shouted triumphantly, pointing at the spot where she had seen the message scrawled into the snow. “Now do you believe me? Now that you see it for yourself?”
“See what?” Mr. Kim asked. “What are we supposed to be seeing?”
Glancing down at the snowy ground, Maggie realized that the message she had seen scratched into the snow had vanished—covered over or blown away by the wind and drifting snow.
“NO! It was just here. A message from him. From Old Man Wharton, telling us to leave.” Maggie swept the flashlight across the snow-covered ground, desperately searching for the message, but it was gone—completely vanished. The wind—or someone—had wiped it out, replacing it with new snow.
“Sophie saw it too!” Maggie cried.
“Is this true, Sophie?”
“Yes, Mrs. Kim,” Sophie replied as stunned as Maggie that the writing that had been there moments earlier was now gone without a trace. “We saw it being written, but there was no writer that we could see.”
“Well, then you’re both crazy,” Simon said. “Way to go, Mags. Wake everyone up because you had a bad dream. I’m going back to bed. I hope Old Man Wharton hasn’t stolen my blanket.”
He hurried back into the house, followed by the others.
“I’ve tried to be tolerant, Maggie, I really have,” Mrs. Kim said, once inside. She shook the snow off her coat, hair, and boots. “But I am so very disappointed in this blatantly selfish behavior. We all know you don’t want to move here, but to wake everyone up for nothing? This has gone too far. It’s time you think of someone else in this family besides just yourself.”
“But Sophie saw—”
Mrs. Kim hurried up the stairs without saying another word.
“This was a real bonehead stunt, Maggie,” her dad said. “I don’t even know what to say, so I’ll go upstairs too. Good night.”
Maggie flopped down into a chair, feeling defeated.
“I saw it, Mags,” Sophie said. “I believe you. And I’m starting to think I believe in Old Man Wharton’s ghost, too.”
“Thanks, Soph,” Maggie said softly. “I’ll tell you what I believe. I believe I’m going to be living here.”
“I’ll visit,” Sophie promised.
Maggie smiled, then the two girls trudged up the stairs. They slipped into the room and back into bed. Tossing and turning, Maggie tried to push everything that had happened out of her mind. Eventually she fell asleep.
She was startled awake by a voice shouting at her.
“Leave this place!”
“Leave this place!” she heard the voice repeat, shouting so loudly Maggie was certain that whoever it was had to be right there in the room. And also certain that now, finally, everyone else had heard it as well.
She leaped from her bed and looked around. There was no one else in the room, not even Sophie. Sophie’s bed looked as if it had not even been slept in.
Maggie ran from the room, stopping short at the top of the stairs. There, scrawled in dripping red paint—or was it blood?—in huge letters painted on the wall were the same three words that had been plaguing her since her arrival: LEAVE THIS PLACE!
She bounded down the stairs and stumbled into the dining room. There she saw the same three words crudely carved into the dining room table: LEAVE THIS PLACE!
Maggie staggered backward and bumped into someone. Spinning around, she found herself face-to-face with Old Man Wharton. His empty black eye sockets peered down at her. Through rotted teeth and foul-smelling breath he barked, “LEAVE THIS PLACE!”
“No! No! No!” Maggie screamed over and over.
“Maggie, wake up! Wake up!”
Maggie opened her eyes and stared up at Sophie, who had been shaking her for almost a full minute.
“You were shouting in your sleep,” Sophie said as Maggie sat up.
Maggie breathed deeply, glad that it was just a dream. But she started to wonder if everything that had happened last night was a dream. Had she dreamed that Sophie also saw the writing in the snow? Was she still the only one who believed in the ghost of Old Man Wharton?
“Uh, Soph, did you see something weird tonight?” Maggie asked tentatively.
“You mean, you screaming ‘No! No! No!’ in your sleep?” Sophie replied. “Unless, of course, you mean the writing in the snow?”
“Oh, Sophie, you have no idea how relieved I am.” Maggie sighed and hugged her friend.
“Well, don’t be so relieved yet,” Sophie said. “We still have to convince the rest of your family that this house is haunted!”