FRESH
YARN presents:
Brushes
with Evil
By Suzanne
Tilden-Mortimer
I grew up
in a house of screamers, and as an adult worked with advertising people
who ranted. I couldn't keep a job, and the men I dated were after one
thing, which they got. I was twenty-two and had become the loser my dad
predicted.
Trying to
find my identity, I studied Astrology, had my handwriting analyzed, and
visited psychics. I was told I'm a Pisces swimming downstream. My handwriting
was that of a dreamer, and lines on my palm translated overly sensitive.
My Tarot cards were all about death and I had become the epitome of bad
timing.
Once after
parking at a meter on Wilshire, I stepped out and a double bus hooked
my Pinto's door. My skirt blew over my head and the door spun down the
street after the bus. I drove for months with the crumpled mess tied onto
the car, having to climb across the passenger seat to reach the steering
wheel.
At the end
of the sixties I was renting an apartment in the Hollywood Hills and my
life was still in chaos. I drank too much, jumped into bed with the worst
choices of men and had again gotten fired from my job in advertising.
Grisly stories in the newspapers were about the Sharon Tate/LaBianca killings
and one of the murder scenes was only blocks from my apartment. I'd gone
to bed early that following weekend and sometime during the night my dog
Mickey stood growling at the edge of the bed. I almost turned on a light,
but stopped when I heard whispering. The hair twitched on the back of
my neck. I slid my hand from under the sheet, grabbed Mickey's hind leg
and the dog wiggled in beside me. My heart raced. I listened to the toilet
flush, water splashing in the kitchen sink and what sounded like more
than one person scooting around on the floor. I pulled the sheet over
my face and pressed into the mattress. I lay barely inhaling until there
was silence. Even then I didn't move and my heart continued to pound.
When sunrays
filtered through the window, Mickey jumped off the bed and I stepped cautiously
onto the floor. I entered the bathroom. The sink faucet was running. I
hurried into the living room. The front door was standing open. I reached
for the phone, but changed my mind. What could I tell police? Maybe I'd
left the faucet on and had forgotten to close the front door. Maybe I'd
dreamed the rest, or the place was haunted. Maybe my chanting had brought
in the demons.
Years later
I read Helter Skelter, the story of the Tate/LaBianca killings
told by Vincent Bugliosi, the prosecutor who put Charles Manson behind
bars. There's a chapter about the Manson family "creepy crawling"
a house. Manson told his followers to go into homes in the Hollywood Hills
and crawl around on the floor while turning on water faucets and flushing
toilets. Chilled to my very core, I put down the book and paced the room.
I knew during a scary night in the sixties, I had been "creepy crawled."
I was still
swimming downstream in the late seventies. The man I'd been living with
had gone back to his wife, and I was sleeping on a mattress in the living
room of my mother's apartment on Cedar Street in Glendale. All my stuff
was in storage and I'd recently dropped out of California State Northridge
after accumulating student loans and running up my credit cards.
The news
media was about a serial killer called the Hillside Strangler. Women disappeared
after going out for a walk, or to the grocery store. Their partially buried
bodies would be found days later on the hillsides of Glendale. They had
been tortured, raped and strangled.
At the time,
I was freelancing in advertising, picking up men in bars and nursing hangovers.
One evening I stopped at the supermarket a few blocks from the apartment.
It was dark by the time I dropped a bag of groceries on the back seat
of my mother's Honda. As I drove out of the parking lot, a black and white
followed. When the car came up on my right, I saw a dark smallish man
at the wheel. He pulled behind when I turned left and after one block,
followed close as I turned onto Cedar. When I parallel parked, the black
and white stopped, leaving an area for me to get out where I would stand
in the beams of the car's headlights.
I
got that familiar hair thing on my neck and my heart raced. It looked
like a police car, but there were no lights on top. I scooted across the
seat and got out on the passenger side. I heard the driver calling at
the same time the manager crossed the lawn from our apartment building.
The driver took off.
"Was
that a cop car?" I asked.
"An
old black and white," he answered.
Two days
later my mother rushed into the room. "It's all over the news. A
woman got away from them and says the Hillside Strangler is two people.
One is dark-haired and short. The taller one hides on the passenger side
of the car, while the short one calls to the victim. Women think it's
the police and they've done something wrong, because these guys drive
an old black and white cop car, exactly like the one that followed you."
1984 brought
my third brush with evil. I was living in the bottom of a two-story house
on Adams Hill and had landed a media-buying job with an agency on Western
Avenue. No longer drinking or hanging out in bars, I'd become lonely and
depressed. The women I worked for were treacherous. Arriving at the office
was like walking onto a minefield. Unable to rescue myself, I began rescuing
dogs off the bump list at Los Angeles Rabies Animal Control.
My front
door opened to a balcony and a deep row of steps led to the street where
I parked my beat-up Toyota purchased from a junkyard. On the east was
a home sitting farther back, and on the west, a vacant house under construction.
On my way to work, I passed areas encircled with yellow tape and police
scouring on-ramps looking for clues left by a serial killer called the
Glendale Night Stalker. His victims included older women who lived alone.
On hot nights he would break in through open windows or screen doors.
After raping and stabbing the victim, he would mutilate the dead body,
and then hide their belongings along the freeway.
Twice my
Toyota was ransacked. Certain I'd locked the car, I was surprised to find
the passenger side hanging open and everything in the glove compartment
dumped onto the floor.
It was hot
on the Sunday night I sat dozing in front of a box fan. My ninety-pound,
red, hairless xoloitzcuintli lay at my feet. In Mexico this breed is used
as a guard dog and owning Rhoda was like owning a gun. Twelve other rescues
curled on the bed.
At midnight
Rhoda started barking. I turned on a light and followed the dogs to the
living room where I'd left the front door standing open. Rhoda let out
a blood-curdling howl and lunged forward. I switched on the porch light,
unlocked the screen and holding Rhoda's collar, stepped onto the balcony.
We inched forward and I peered below. Under the streetlight a tall skinny
man wearing a twisted bandana over dark shoulder length hair stared up
at me. Rhoda's high-pitched bark cut the silence. The man spun and I could
hear his feet hitting pavement as he disappeared into the dark. Rhoda
and I hurried inside. I secured the door and checked windows. As hot as
it was, I'd become cold.
Months later,
after Richard Ramirez was caught, his photo appeared on the front page
of the morning paper. I felt lightheaded when I recognized the tall skinny
man wearing a bandana over dark shoulder length hair. The article said
he lived in houses under construction located next to his victims. He
would break into the car of the person he was stalking and rifle through
their glove compartment. His favorite to open and easiest to steal was
a Toyota.
I wonder
if during those years I'd brushed with evil because my life was in turmoil.
Was I a toxic person drawing negative vibrations like self-help books
suggested? Was it bad timing or bad luck? Or perhaps the opposite had
occurred. Maybe instead of having bad luck, mine had been incredibly good.
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