I don't know what made us want to find something like that so badly, but it's all I wanted to do. I had just graduated high school, in a few months I'd be moving away from everyone. We all took trips to the Super Wal*Mart together, and we wandered through the aisles of Target in search of the perfect twin extra long sheets. We did all the things that incoming freshman should do, we just also consistently went looking for ghosts. That summer was about a trip to Dunellon, nights spent in the old slave graveyard and endless drives around the abandoned mental institution. We hit up every website to find out where the ghosts were, checked all of "Haunted Florida," we were even willing to leave Pinellas County. Looking back, I want to say that this was just what we did because there was nothing else to do. Now, Clearwater is not in the middle of nowhere. In fact- it is a hot bed for tourism, there are gorgeous beaches, and then little miniature golf courses scattered around among shops where you can get your named spelled out in sea shells. On the weekends you can do things like ride a jet ski, or go parasailing or do other things someone would do when they vacationed to the west coast of Florida. But you see, when you live there, you don't really do these things. You may go to the beach, but unlike the tourists, we don't swim in January. There are so many months left in the year with nothing to do, where you drive around and think "there is absolutely nothing to do". So, wanted to find ghosts, or demons, or anything really. Sometimes we'd steal our father's flashlights, the very strong ones that they saved for the hurricanes (because when this story takes place, Florida is still plagued by storms) and we'd pack bags and look up directions and go and try and find ghosts. It wasnt only that summer - that summer when I swore I'd never go back, it was before then and after then, too. Even now when I visit we make a three hour drive to go to Spook Hill, we ride around in the Circus Town, we stare at the window. But I want to tell you about how desperate I felt when I did it then, how good I felt. It felt like sex for the first time, when you have sex when you're too young. You are in on a big secret that no one else knows about. You feel special and you feel disgusting. We fucked when we were too young and then we looked for ghosts all summer when we turned 18. And all of the ghosts were supposed to be kept in grave yards. But I left for Ohio, after nights of abandonment and a going away party, I went to my grandmothers house and in many ways, I purged myself of the things that I had done wrong. I had this kind of insanity about me in high school that I don't think I can accurately describe because I just can't feel it anymore. I had some kind of anger, and then I went to Ohio. I spent two months in the summer there before returning to Florida to gather my belongings. I wanted to stay in Ohio because I had lived there until I was 8, and I had no choice about moving to Florida and I felt that it wasnt fair I wanted to give myself something back. And I didn't know that my grandmother would die or that I would fuck up or that I would leave and return to read some broken down eulogy . But that summer I felt like everything was mine. The ghosts were mine and the house was mine and my freedom would be mine and I'd learn to stop writing, even in letters to men I'd never end up meeting, because I wanted some things to be personal. I go through these phases, like then where I don't want to share anything. And then sometimes I am just Barbara Walters talking to Oprah Winfrey, I don't want it to be mine, I want to get rid of it. You see, now it's yours. You'll have to go there to Dunellon and see that church and ride in a car while the lights go out. You, you can go drink red wine in my grandmother's backyard and you can kiss the boy across the street. You can drive to the east coast of Florida on drugs with your best friends and decide to legally change your name to Aurora Borealis before the olympics or the floods or the concept of four or five years- now you can do that. There are one million things that I can never say anything about, so just let me tell you these things. None of the ghosts would look us in the eye, you know, you know what? I don't even know if any of those places were actually haunted. I don't even know if you believe in ghosts at all.
  A girl I went to high school with gets murdered a few nights before mother's day. I hear about it on a Facebook thread, I start reading the news articles online, watching clips of video. The whole situation infuriates me. She was twenty-three years old, a recent FSU graduate and this is a classic story of not only the system- but the whole war on drugs failing. The story goes something like this. At some point, she gets in trouble with drugs- marijuana, selling some small amount of pot, or possession some thing like that. And they work out a plea bargain with her: jail time or becoming an informant. So a scenario is set up and with the help of the Tallahassee Police Department a twenty-three year old girl, with no training in this matter is to arrange to meet two men. Not only is she sent to buy 1,500 pills of ecstacy and crack but she is also sent to buy a hand gun. Instructions are given, protocols are apparently taken and the plan is set in motion. She'll meet them in a park, she's not supposed to leave the park. And then, something goes wrong. Maybe the fact that she did not have experience buying crack and guns played a role, maybe it was a nervousness in her body that set the men off, maybe an informant system where people who get in trouble for pot are sent out to buy weapons is just a little off- but something goes wrong. The police lose contact with her. They can't find her, or her car. They say that she did something wrong- that she left when she was told to stay. In their defense, the police say that she did not follow instructions, that her mistakes led to her own death. A missing persons report is put out Wednesday night, her car shows up Thursday morning, the two man she was supposed to buy the narcotics from our arrested in Orlando, and her body is found sometime afterward. They call her parents early in the morning to tell them. And I wonder how they phrase it on the phone- "Your daughter that you raised, that you held as a child, your daughter that graduated from Countryside High School in 2003 and Florida State University in 2007, your daughter that you loved very much is gone." Or do they just say "I am sorry," while writing their defense statements? Do they say anything at all besides how she did not follow procedures. And I wonder what that would be like, meeting men in a park, and asking them for pills, for crack, a hand gun- what kind of voice should you use? What kind of face do you make? What if your cell phone rings you? What if they drag you away? What if they tell you to get into the car? What if you think about your mother's face and mother's day, and how your mother would feel- what if that goes through your head and it is obvious to the men across from you that something is wrong- what is the procedure for that? What is the Tallahassee Police Departments plan then? And you cannot tell me that this is not the system failing us, you cannot tell me that something is not very, very wrong about this situation. http://www.wctv.tv/home/headlines/18830539.html
Not only did I just wake up, but someone is tapping on my window. I walk out of my room in a haze, stumble through the living room and walk outside in my pajamas. I should be awake, it's sometime in the afternoon. But I have a high fever which I've been sleeping off, I've been dreaming so deeply for so many hours that it will take a few minutes before I realize where I am or can process the information in front of me. When I open the door a dude my age is standing there, he is tall with shaggy hair. I want to ask him if he's come here to be wed, maybe this is the arranged marriage that I long for. He will come in, put a ring on my finger. It will be in exchange of my fathers 4 best goats, or I guess since my father has no goats, I will force him to offer up his four best kung-fu students. They will protect this shaggy haired man wherever he goes, they will guard his neck if he ever attempts to use a razor and walk two behind and two in front of him when we go to find the land to build our dream home in...I don't know, East New York?
"The woman upstairs is yelling for you..."
"What?" my eyes are barely open and of course this asshole has to ruin my fantasy (in the way that tall men always do) by speaking
He points up with his fingers.
"She says she has three rules for you...."
"What???"
And when I turn my head, I see that the woman upstairs is in fact yelling for me. She is hanging her eighty-six year old body outside of the window
"DANIELA!" Where have you been I've been calling your name?" by this time my fiance has fled the front porch, I am left alone with my building.
;"I was sleeping...I'm not feeling so...is everything alright?"
"I have three rules for you."
I must look like a mess. I want a really good sandwich, I want to collapse on the pavement. I am listening to what the three rules will be.
"Number One! When are you and Kiley home? When are you girls ever home? What days are you home? What times? I've been knocking all morning."
"Oh well..we both do a lot of writing from home...we are home a lot...school is over for now and I don't really have a set schedule or anything."
A woman who is wearing a mu-mu walks by and says "Hey Angie!" to which Angie just nods her head, like a queen or maybe a police officer
"Number Two! You have to put your name on the mailbox! Did you get that package I put downstairs? It was waiting for you for two days! Two days and no one came for it!"
The funny thing is, I did get the package, and it's a good thing she did not open it because it was 4 porn dvds I was sent to review. Something about a Dominatrix and Double Penetration Paradise. I really do have to remember to put my name on the mail box. Honestly, I should get a P.O Box but I know that I wouldn't check it. I can say that I would but when it came down to it, I would never walk ten blocks for my mail, I barely walk next door for my mail as it is. Even if I was walking by the post office, I probably would not stop there. This is the kind of laziness that I have built into me, the kind that really seems to have no pattern and make no sense. I rarely transfer trains because I would prefer to walk then wait in the station, but if it comes down to me having to walk to a P.O Box I know it's just not going to happen.
"Oh yeah. I will put our names on the mail box right away."
"Number three! Why don't you ever come and visit me?"
Shit. You see, we try and go visit. We sit with the Romanian woman that is there to take care of Angie. She tells me, pulling me in closely by the arm "We have a lot of Danielas in my country," and I like this. I like a woman who uses this as an opening sentence. But this whole scenario is really turning up my Catholic guilt. I like- have always liked- hanging out with old women. From the time that I was four years old I have loved to set up camp on a front porch or in a back yard and here half a dozen decades worth of stories. I love it. But just like the mail, here is the problem. I become commited to people, whether they are men that tap on the window or relatives that I phone overseas, I become commited to them, I offer them up large parts of myself and then without warning or notice, something will happen, and I will withdrawl. And these relationships are so sensitive, so delicate, it's so easy to disappoint. I have lived here for two and a half weeks, and already, it's so easy to dissapoint.
Angie shuts the windows, I run inside to gather tape and notebook paper. I write my name and then my roommate's onto the middle mail box &then I rush back inside, climb into bed. I keep downing mugs of thera-flu and different people come over.
Our futon arrives from Target, my roommate assembles it so I can camp out in the living room and watch television. I try and write up a review of a show I went to Sunday night, to no avail. I watch Oprah so I can hear about a polygamy cult (I end up defending polygamy to the television the whole time) and then I putt on CNN. Jackson Davis accused me of watching CNN the other night as we chatted. He favors MSNBC, he explains to me that you can always tell where a person gets their news, and it's true. I watch so much CNN that I quote it without realizing it. I probably talk to you with my hands, not knowing that my own fingers are plagarizing the hand motions of John King. All I need is a large map of the United States and with the wave of a finger I will make states turn different shades of blue.
I scoot closer toward the TV because John Edwards has endorsed Barack Obama. I get particuarly giddy about this. I know everyone is sick of hearing all of this, but I'm sucked in. I'm hooked. Different visitors come over through out the day, they ask if I've been eating , if I've been drinking enough water and what I really want to say is "shut the fuck up shut the fuck up shut the fuck up," instead I offer them cups of thera-flu or try and start an argument. I am bored with a fever. I want someone to take my pants off and have a good debate! Instead everyone half heartedly insults Hillary Clinton (whom I defend) and besides, I didn't even bother putting on pants today.
Later in the evening we all watch America's Next Top Model. The ladies have come over and we are all scattered across the floor, slathering lotions on to our legs, I am recommending vitamins. We all want Whitney, the plus-sized model to win. In reality, she doesn't seem very plus-sized at all, but I guess that's modeling. Regardless, we all want her to win, and she does. In my fever haze I am happy about it. The little things, like reality television, probably don't mean as much as I feel like they do at the time, but I enjoy in this moment. It feels good to sit among friends and watch these girls cry, better then it would feel to watch commentary about how offensive Barack Obama can be as he as reffered to two women as "sweetie" during his campaign.
But he can call me "sweetie" any time. Him or the man at the door, in exchange for all of my father's farms, all the tea in China and we'll fly on some hot air balloon, watching the states change different shades of blue &always forgetting to check the mail.