I. The House on Verot School Road

By daylight, T’Frere’s House looked harmless enough.
It sat a little back from Verot School Road, where the traffic sighed past in a long, damp whisper and the moss hung from the live oaks like old gray lace. Its porch wrapped around the front with the patient hospitality of another century. Its windows caught the sun in soft squares. Its shutters had weathered hurricanes, heat, and years of Louisiana rain, and still the house seemed to lift its face each morning as if expecting company.
Travelers came for the charm. They came for the beds with carved headboards, the polished floors, the smell of coffee in the morning, and the particular music of Acadiana at night: frogs calling from the ditches, insects buzzing in the dark, the far-off mutter of trucks rolling toward Lafayette. They came because the place promised rest.
But houses have two faces.
There is the one they show the road.
And there is the one they show after midnight.
I first came to T’Frere’s in late October, when the air had cooled just enough to make a person believe summer might finally loosen its grip. I had been driving since dusk, and by the time I turned beneath the trees, a fog had risen low over the grass. The old house floated in it, pale and quiet, every window dark except for the warm yellow light over the porch.
A woman named Elise met me at the door. She was small, silver-haired, and courteous in the way of people who have learned that courtesy is a wall as well as a welcome.
“You’ll be in the Magnolia Room,” she said, handing me a brass key tied to a wooden tag. “Breakfast is at eight. If you need anything, there’s a bell at the desk.”
She paused then. Not long. Only long enough for me to notice.
“The house settles at night,” she added. “Old wood. Old pipes. Don’t let it trouble you.”
That is what people say when they know something will trouble you.
Inside, the air smelled of lemon oil, old plaster, and something faintly floral beneath it, like perfume trapped in fabric. The hallway ran long and narrow from the front parlor toward the rear of the house. Framed photographs lined the walls—weddings, families, stern men in dark coats, women with guarded eyes. Their faces seemed to hold their breath as I passed.
The Magnolia Room was on the second floor. Its ceiling sloped slightly, and a large mirror stood between the wardrobe and the window. The bed was high and white-quilted. On the nightstand sat a small vase containing a single camellia, its petals browned at the edges.
Outside the window, the branches moved without wind.
I set down my bag, washed my face, and tried to shake off the unease that clung to me like the fog. It was nothing, I told myself. Just an old house. Old houses make sounds. They expand, contract, complain. They remember the weather.
But as I unpacked, I felt watched.
Not dramatically. No icy breath on the neck. No whisper in the ear. Just a pressure from the hallway side of the door, as if someone stood there with one hand raised, deciding whether to knock.
I opened the door.
The hallway was empty.
At the far end, near the stairs, a shape of shadow lay across the floorboards. For a moment it seemed taller than it should have been, gathered upright like a person in a dark dress. Then a car passed on the road outside, its headlights sliding through the lower windows, and the shadow flattened into nothing.
I closed the door and locked it.
That was the first foolish thing I did.
Locks are meant for the living.
Near midnight, the house began to move.
A floorboard creaked below me. Then another. Slow. Deliberate. Footsteps crossed the parlor directly beneath my room, paused, and started up the stairs.
I sat in bed with the quilt clenched in both hands.
The steps reached the landing.
One.
Two.
Three.
They came down the hall and stopped outside my door.
The knob turned.
Not quickly. Not as if someone wished to enter.
It turned with the careful, domestic patience of someone who had opened that door ten thousand times before and expected it to yield.
The lock held.
For a long moment there was silence.
Then, from the other side, a woman sighed.
It was not a theatrical sound. Not a moan from a cemetery or a cry from some painted stage. It was small, tired, and intimate—the kind of sigh a person makes when she has misplaced something precious and knows she may never find it again.
“Hello?” I called, though my throat had gone dry.
No answer.
Only the slow retreat of footsteps down the hallway, stopping once before the mirror at the far end.
I did not sleep after that.
At dawn, when the house blushed with pale light and birds began their shrill gossip in the trees, I opened my door.
On the floor just outside lay a wet footprint.
Bare.
Small.
A woman’s foot, dark with mud, pointing toward my room.
There was no other print beside it.
Only that single mark on the polished wood, as if someone had stepped out of the earth, stood listening at my door, and then vanished before taking another step.
II. The Name in the Walls

At breakfast, no one mentioned the footprint.
There were three other guests: an elderly couple from Baton Rouge who spoke mostly to each other, and a salesman from Houston who ate grits with the intensity of a man signing a contract. Sunlight poured through lace curtains. Plates clinked. Elise moved in and out of the dining room, refilling coffee, offering biscuits, smiling that careful smile.
I waited until the others had gone.
“Who is Amelie?” I asked.
Elise’s hand tightened around the coffee pot.
It was slight, but I saw it.
“Where did you hear that name?”
“I didn’t,” I said. “Not exactly.”
This was true. No voice had said it in the night. No apparition had leaned over me and whispered her sad little name. But when I woke from a shallow doze just before sunrise, it had been there in my mind, as clear as if written across the ceiling:
Amelie.
Elise set the pot down.
“People tell stories,” she said.
“About this house?”
“About every old place.”
“But this one has a name.”
She looked toward the hallway. The gesture was quick, almost unconscious, like glancing toward a sickroom.
“There was a girl,” she said at last. “Long time ago. Depends on who tells it. Some say she worked here. Some say she was kin to the family. Some say she was promised to a man who went away and never came back. Others say he did come back, and that was the trouble.”
“And the well?”
Her face changed then.
Outside, a crow called from the oak. Harsh. Accusing.
Elise lowered her voice. “Behind the house, beyond the old kitchen garden. It’s been capped for years.”
“What happened?”
“What always happens in stories like that?” she said. “A girl dies. The living decide what she meant. Then the dead are expected to be quiet.”
She picked up the coffee pot and left me sitting there.
I should have checked out that morning. I have often thought so. But fear has a strange gravity. It draws us closer to the thing that frightens us. It makes investigators of cowards and pilgrims of fools.
Instead of leaving, I went outside.
The grounds behind T’Frere’s were greener than the front, shaded and damp. The grass gave slightly beneath my shoes. Beyond the back porch stood a scatter of old shrubs, then a brick path, mostly swallowed by weeds, leading toward a ring of stones beneath a leaning pecan tree.
The well had been sealed with a round slab of concrete. Moss covered the edges. Someone had placed flowers there recently—white camellias, browning now, like the one in my room.
The air around it felt cooler.
I stood over the capped well and listened.
At first there was nothing. Then came the faintest sound from below.
Water.
Not dripping. Not flowing.
Stirring.
As if something far down in the dark had shifted and disturbed the black surface.
I stepped back.
“Don’t stand too close.”
The voice came from behind me.
The elderly woman from Baton Rouge stood at the edge of the path, wrapped in a blue cardigan despite the warmth. Her husband was nowhere in sight.
“You know about her too?” I asked.
She smiled without pleasure. “Honey, anyone who has stayed here twice knows about her. The trick is whether you stay the second night.”
“And did you?”
“Once.”
She came nearer, careful with her steps.
“My husband doesn’t believe in such things. He says houses make noises, and people make up the rest. But twelve years ago, we stayed in the room at the end of the hall. I woke up and saw a woman sitting at the dressing table. Long dark hair. White nightdress. She was brushing and brushing that hair, only she had no reflection in the mirror.”
The old woman looked back at the house.
“I thought I was dreaming until she turned. She didn’t look at me. She looked at my husband. Then she said, ‘He promised.’ Just those two words. He promised.”
“What happened then?”
“She put the brush down, stood up, and walked through the door without opening it.”
A thin breeze moved through the pecan leaves. Somewhere beneath us, the well seemed to breathe.
“What does she want?” I asked.
The woman’s eyes were pale and watery, but not weak.
“Want?” she said. “Want belongs to the living. The dead have need. That’s worse.”
Before I could answer, a sound came from the house.
A door slammed.
Once.
Then again.
Then again.
Each strike echoed across the grounds like a gunshot.
Elise appeared on the back porch, face white, one hand pressed to her throat. Behind her, inside the house, doors continued to open and shut in a furious rhythm. Not random. Not the settling of old hinges. A search.
The elderly woman crossed herself.
I looked up at the second-floor windows.
In my room, behind the glass, someone stood watching.
A young woman.
Pale face. Dark hair loose about her shoulders. One hand pressed to the pane.
Then the shutters blew inward with a crack, and she was gone.
That afternoon, the salesman from Houston checked out early. The elderly couple followed just before sunset, the husband grumbling about humidity and bad plumbing, the wife refusing to look back.
I stayed.
Elise did not try to stop me. She only placed a candle at the front desk beside my key.
“If the lights go,” she said, “don’t use the mirror.”
I laughed, because sometimes the body chooses idiocy over terror.
“What does that mean?”
But Elise had already turned away.
III. The Mirror at Midnight

Rain came after dark.
It began as a soft tapping on the roof, then grew heavier until the whole house seemed wrapped in water. The gutters gurgled. The trees thrashed. Thunder rolled somewhere beyond Lafayette, low and long, like furniture being dragged across heaven’s attic.
I sat in the Magnolia Room with every lamp on.
The mirror stood where it had the night before, tall and gilt-framed, reflecting the bed, the wardrobe, the lamplight, and me: a pale fool in a chair, pretending a book lay open in his lap for any reason other than camouflage.
At ten, the hallway creaked.
At eleven, the door at the far end opened.
I heard its hinges sigh.
Then came the footsteps.
Bare feet on wood.
Soft.
Wet.
They passed my room without stopping.
I held my breath until they reached the staircase. They descended slowly, and for some time I heard nothing but rain.
Then a woman began to sing.
The song came from below, faint and sweet. It was not in English, or not entirely. French, perhaps, or the softened Cajun speech of old kitchens and porches, of lullabies murmured where mosquitoes battered the screens. The melody rose and fell, tender enough to break the heart. But beneath it lay something wrong—a snag in the music, a thread pulled too tight.
I took the candle Elise had left me and went downstairs.
The house was dark below. The power had not gone out upstairs, yet the parlor lamps were dead, the dining room black. Rain streaked the windows. Lightning flashed, and for an instant I saw the hallway stretching ahead, longer than it had any right to be.
The singing came from the rear of the house.
I followed.
Past the dining room.
Past the kitchen, where pots hung from hooks and swung gently though no wind moved there.
Past a narrow door I had not noticed before.
It stood open.
Stone steps led down.
Every sensible part of me refused. Every ancestral warning, every childhood fear, every instinct hammered at the locked door of my reason.
Do not go down.
So, of course, I went.
The steps descended into a cellar that smelled of wet earth and cold brick. My candle flame shrank. Shelves lined the walls, crowded with jars, old tools, folded linens yellowed by time. At the far end stood a small dressing mirror on a wooden table.
In it, the candle behind me burned with a blue flame.
The singing stopped.
“Amelie?” I said.
My voice sounded small in that underground room.
The mirror darkened.
Not like glass losing light. Like water filling a hole.
A shape formed there: the suggestion of a face beneath a surface. Eyes closed. Hair drifting as if underwater.
Then the eyes opened.
I stumbled back, striking a shelf. Something fell and shattered at my feet. The candle went out.
In the sudden black, a hand touched mine.
It was cold. Not winter cold. Deep cold. Well cold.
The kind of cold that has never known sunlight.
“Please,” a woman whispered.
I could not move. Her fingers tightened.
Images opened in my mind—not seen with my eyes, but poured into me like water into a drowning mouth.
The house as it had been long ago, brighter, noisier. A young woman moving from room to room with linens in her arms. Amelie, though no one in the vision spoke her name. She was lovely in an unadorned way, with dark hair pinned at the nape of her neck and a face made solemn by hope.
A man in the doorway.
His hat in his hands.
A promise whispered where the hallway met the stairs.
A ring hidden in a matchbox.
Then time bending cruelly forward.
Arguments behind closed doors.
A letter torn in half.
Rain.
The well.
Amelie running through the back garden in a white nightdress, mud splashing her calves, one hand pressed against her belly as if she carried a secret there.
The man following.
Not faceless. Worse—ordinary. Angry in the way ordinary men become when the world refuses to arrange itself around their lies.
His hand on her arm.
Her cry.
A struggle near the stones.
The ring falling into the mud.
Then the open mouth of the well.
Her body tipped backward.
Her hair floating.
Her hand clawing the stone.
Water closing over her scream.
And the man standing above, breathing hard, rain washing his face clean of everything but fear.
The vision broke.
I was on my knees in the cellar, sobbing without memory of beginning. The candle lay beside me, relit somehow, its flame now thin and steady.
The mirror on the table reflected the room.
Only the room.
From upstairs came the sound of a door opening.
Then another.
Then another.
A voice spoke from the dark at the foot of the stairs.
“He promised.”
Amelie stood there.
Not as she had appeared in the window. Not pale and distant. She was wet, her nightdress clinging to her, her hair streaming over her shoulders. Mud streaked her feet. Her eyes were fixed on me with terrible expectation.
“I can’t help you,” I said, though I did not know if it was true.
She lifted one hand and pointed past me.
Behind the shelves, half-hidden by a drape of old sacking, was a door.
It took effort to open it. The wood had swollen in its frame, and the iron latch left rust on my palm. Beyond lay a cramped storage space, little more than a pocket in the foundation.
The smell that came out was not decay. Too many years had passed for that.
It smelled of dust.
Old cloth.
Secrets.
In the corner sat a small cedar box.
Inside were letters tied with ribbon, a brittle photograph of Amelie standing on the porch, and a matchbox.
My fingers shook as I opened it.
A ring lay within, tarnished nearly black.
The instant I touched it, the house above us groaned.
Not settled.
Groaned.
A long, wooden agony ran through the beams. The cellar walls trembled. Dust fell from the ceiling. Somewhere, glass broke. And from the sealed well outside came a sound that no human throat should make—a rising cry of grief and rage, held too long beneath stone.
Amelie stood in the doorway, staring at the ring in my hand.
For the first time, her expression changed.
Not peace.
Recognition.
Then she vanished.
The candle blew out.
And upstairs, in my locked room, the mirror shattered.
IV. What the Well Remembered
Elise found me at dawn on the back steps, covered in cellar dust, holding the matchbox in both hands.
The rain had stopped. The sky over Lafayette was the color of pewter. Water dripped from every leaf, every eave, every sagging thread of moss. Behind the house, the capped well waited beneath the pecan tree.
I told Elise what I had found.
She did not seem surprised.
Only older.
“My grandmother said there was something hidden,” she murmured. “But nobody knew where. Or nobody admitted they knew.”
“Who was the man?”
Elise looked toward the road.
“The family name is gone now,” she said. “Married away, moved away, buried. Maybe that’s justice. Maybe it isn’t.”
We carried the cedar box to the well.
The concrete cap was slick with rain. Elise had called a local caretaker, a broad-shouldered man named Paul who arrived with tools and a cigarette tucked unlit behind one ear. He asked no questions. Perhaps in Louisiana, when an old woman asks you to open an old well at daybreak, you learn not to ask too much.
It took an hour to shift the cap.
When the seal broke, a smell rose from below—mineral water, cold mud, and the stale breath of the earth. I expected some terrible exhalation, a black swarm of flies, a visible darkness. But the well only waited.
Paul lowered a lantern on a rope.
The light descended, spinning slowly.
Brick walls.
Wet roots.
Black water.
And there, on a narrow ledge just above the waterline, something pale.
Not a body. Not after all that time.
A bone.
Then another.
The sheriff came later. There were questions, of course. There are always questions when the past is dug up, because the living prefer their horrors properly documented. Men stood around the well with gloves and cameras. Elise made coffee no one drank. By noon, they had removed what remained of Amelie.
No one said her name officially.
Not then.
But Elise whispered it when the sheet was drawn over the small collection of bones.
“Amelie.”
The wind moved through the trees.
For a moment, the moss lifted as if in a breath.
That should have been the end.
Stories teach us to expect endings: the bones found, the ring restored, the restless spirit released into whatever mercy waits beyond the dark. We want the dead to be grateful. We want grief to obey ceremony.
That evening, Elise arranged the letters, photograph, and ring on a small table in the parlor. She lit two candles. The sheriff had taken the remains, but he had no use for love letters too old to prosecute and a ring no court could cross-examine.
The house was very quiet.
Too quiet, perhaps.
At midnight, the front door opened.
Elise and I were in the parlor. Neither of us had spoken for nearly an hour. The candle flames bent toward the hallway, though no wind entered.
Footsteps crossed the threshold.
Bare.
Soft.
Dry.
Amelie appeared beneath the arch.
She no longer dripped with well water. Her nightdress was clean. Her hair lay dark over one shoulder. In the candlelight, she looked almost alive, though the wall showed faintly through her where the shadows were deepest.
Her gaze moved to the table.
To the letters.
To the ring.
Then to us.
Elise began to cry silently.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I’m so sorry.”
Amelie’s face held no accusation. That, somehow, was worse. Hatred would have belonged to the world. Her expression was beyond it.
She stepped into the room.
The floor did not creak beneath her.
She reached for the ring, but her fingers passed through it. The candle flames shuddered. On the table, the matchbox slid forward by itself, inch by inch, until it reached the edge.
I picked up the ring.
It was cold, but no longer well cold. Only metal.
“What do you want?” I whispered.
Amelie looked toward the hallway mirror.
Its surface was whole again.
I knew it had broken. I had heard it shatter. In the morning, I had seen shards on the floor of my room. Yet there it stood at the end of the hall, tall and bright, reflecting candlelight from a room it could not see.
In that reflection, someone waited behind her.
A man.
Hat in hand.
Head bowed.
His face was indistinct, blurred as if the glass refused to remember him clearly. But Amelie saw him. Her shoulders stiffened. The air thickened with a pressure that made the candles gutter low.
“He promised,” she said.
The words were quiet.
The man in the mirror raised his head.
For one heartbeat, his face sharpened.
Not monstrous. Not skeletal. Not blazing with hellfire.
Ordinary.
That was the horror of him.
He looked afraid.
Amelie turned away from us and walked toward the mirror. With each step, the hallway seemed to lengthen. The house groaned softly, not in pain this time, but in recognition. Doors opened one by one as she passed: the dining room, the kitchen, the stair closet, the front parlor. Every threshold in the house yielded to her.
At the mirror, she stopped.
The man inside lifted one hand to the glass.
She lifted hers.
Their palms met on opposite sides.
A crack ran through the mirror from top to bottom.
Then another.
The reflection darkened behind them, deepening into the black circle of the well. Water rippled where the hallway should have been. The man shook his head, pleading now, mouth moving without sound.
Amelie stepped through the glass.
Not into light.
Into dark water.
The man recoiled, but something below seized him. His silent scream opened wide as hands—not Amelie’s, many hands, pale and wavering—rose from beneath the surface and pulled him down.
The mirror shattered inward.
The candles went out.
When Elise relit them, the hallway was empty.
At the base of the mirror frame lay a small heap of wet mud and one white camellia, fresh as morning.
I left T’Frere’s House the next day.
Elise walked me to the porch. The sky was clear, the oaks dripping gold light. Traffic passed on Verot School Road. Somewhere nearby, a lawn mower started up, absurd and cheerful.
“Will she come back?” I asked.
Elise looked into the house.
For a long while she did not answer.
“No,” she said finally. Then, softer: “Not the same way.”
I understood.
A house does not forget because one ghost has finished grieving. Walls keep what they have heard. Floors remember the weight of every footstep. Mirrors, especially, are never truly empty. They are patient things, always waiting for someone to stand before them and look too long.
Years have passed since I stayed there, but sometimes, in hotel rooms or darkened hallways, I catch the faint scent of camellias. Sometimes I wake at night certain that someone has just sighed outside my door.
And once, only once, I saw her again.
Not at T’Frere’s.
In my own bathroom mirror, just after midnight, when the lights flickered during a storm.
She stood behind me in the reflection, pale and solemn, no longer wet, no longer searching. Her eyes met mine. She raised one finger to her lips, asking silence.
Then she looked past me, toward the dark hall of my house.
As if listening.
As if some other sorrow had called her name.
And from far away—far below, perhaps, or far back—I heard water stir.