Everyone knows that if you're looking for somewhere haunted, there's no better place around Forks than the old Frazier house. Some kid axe murdered his parents there and then broke his neck trying to run from the cops. It's been abandoned ever since.
J: I thought your dad was going to come inside. Can you let him know I appreciate that he tried to help and I'm sorry for not trusting him?
"My dad's reading in the car and doesn't want to run down the battery. I can come by tomorrow, after school if you don't have a lot of itinerary or I can ditch if you do?"
J: I heard him say that, but I don't remember, or maybe never knew, how long car batteries lasted for this sort of thing.
"I don't know exactly. I think I have twenty minutes and not ninety and if you want more precision I can go ask."
J: You might want a battery lantern as opposed to a flashlight, for your own sake.
D: You may also want to install a working lock on the back door. I don't think many folks come around here anymore but evidently some do.
J: You mentioned a battery clock earlier; that would actually be really nice. I don't know that it needs a date display. It would be nice to have if you can find one but I don't remember them being common.
"I don't already have one but if I'm going on any shopping trips more extended than a swing through Newton's, I can probably find one. If you don't need a date it could just be a watch."
J: Yeah. If there's
He pauses and then scratches the sentence-start out.
Thanks for
A longer pause.
this.
"Three but usually it's a job and a half getting out of the parking lot, especially if it's wet. I nearly got hit by somebody's van last winter."
J: I guess it's worse for you guys. I mean, if you think you've had rain in your eyes, imagine having rain in your eyes. But at least we can't actually get wet.
"I didn't have the impression that going through walls was very - sensational - and would not have naively imagined that going through rain, or having rain go through you, was much different."
J: It's certainly less feelable than something going through your living body? And it might also be less than almost anything living people experience; I'm not sure. But it's the main thing we can feel and we definitely can feel it. Even air, a little bit. Moreso when it's moving.
MA: I'd like to clarify that Jeremy means things in general moving through us is the main thing we can feel, not just rain, and also that he's wrong, for those of us who sometimes touch other ghosts.