Guest author: Shehanne Moore – ‘Nobody’s There…’

“I know what you think you heard and felt but I swear to you, nobody’s there.” Shehanne Moore.

Sitting there that autumn evening, I couldn’t have been more truthful. Nobody was there. If I’d said to my twelve year old daughter nothing’s there, now I’d have been lying.  Something was. And that something was pacing back and forward across her attic bedroom floor, inches from my own toes as I sat on her bed. That something was the house ghost. The presence we’d at that point shared our house with for over that twelve years.

Are you sitting comfortably? Or is your hair beginning to prickle all along the back of your neck?

Firstly I want to thank the lovely Sue Vincent who I admire hugely for so many reasons, for inviting me here today to her wonderful blog.

Secondly, if you’re sitting really comfortably let’s begin at the very beginning. I do like quoting certain songs.

I was so excited to move into our new house. A big Victorian, with lots of space, with views to die for—oops sorry–overlooking the River Tay in a quietly suburban area?

Who wouldn’t be? It was roughly day 3 and I was busy putting the sitting room into some kind of order when my older girl tapped me on the arm.  I remember it very distinctly because I tapped her hand back.  I clasped it anyhow. ‘Mama’s just coming,’ I said. But the thing was, she wasn’t there. The room was empty. Then I heard her on the landing upstairs.  ‘If that’s  her up there, then who’s  that down here whose hand I just happen to NOT be clasping……’ I can remember thinking

Over the next few days, every time I stood in the bathroom –which was two rooms knocked together– I could feel someone screaming at me to get out.  This wasn’t my house.

We had bought the house from my sister, and my niece had often told what I had always thought were fanciful tales of a ghost locking her in her room, of something pacing the attic floor above her head  at nights.  Come on. But was it possible these weren’t fanciful?

There was the time someone drew our bedroom curtains. I heard them and thought it was my husband but it couldn’t have been because he was outside at the time. The time someone knocked on the bathroom door when I was in the bath–there was nobody there when I opened it.  The times Christmas decorations fell ‘up’ as if they were being yanked, not down, things were switched on that were off, things went missing and were later found where you just knew you hadn’t left them, the time a toy portable typewriter lying flat on the floor stood up on its side, the times the linen chest in the bathroom creaked as if someone was sitting on it.

Some of the decorations that fell up not down…

My daughters both asked if I thought the house was haunted. Despite having lived in  the house at one stage, my sister refused point blank to water plants for us when we were on holiday, after being told to ’get out’ one day , my niece, would never go upstairs when she visited, then there was the incident of the flying plant and kitchen cupboard contents.   We had been getting the bathroom redone and the builder wanted to let his wife see.   She fled after a plant flew at her off of the top of the boiler. ‘ To let you understand,’ she said, as if I needed to, ‘that plant never fell, it was thrown.’

So who was doing the haunting and why did we stay?

Well, I guess I just don’t frighten easily.  I really loved my house so I always said, ‘I can live with you, if you can live with me,’ although eventually that didn’t prove to be quite the case, when I am most amenable.

A lot of the incidents happened when we had the attic properly converted. We wanted to give our younger daughter a big bedroom.  A few weeks after it was finished my sister asked me how my daughter was liking it. I had to say she was sleeping on a couch in her sister’s room, insisting the attic was haunted.  I thought she would laugh. My sister is a very sensible lady.

Instead she  said, ‘Yes it is’ and they had experienced  everything we had. Also, she’d seen this spirit at the foot of the attic stairs one night and it was a soldier. At that time she’d spoken to the old lady next door– this was the 1970s and the lady had lived there almost all her life–she identified the spirit as Robert who had gone to the First World War and never come home.

So, the following week  I was teaching a woman who was a newspaper psychic and she came down from the bathroom to say she had seen a soldier. Despite everything, I am actually a hefty sceptic. I said, ‘ Yeah, as you do.’

‘His name is Robert Wann,’ she said,  ‘and he’s furious that you have taken his chest of drawers.’

I kid you not. I also kid you not that a few years after this, I had a roofer in to look at a leak in the bathroom roof and he was out of there in ten seconds. His wife was a medium, he had a slight gift himself. ‘You are not alone up there, are you?’ he asked.

The thing is I had never taken anyone’s chest of drawers but his wife did come out to the house and she had the same story.  The little room that had been taken away when the two rooms were knocked into the bathroom by my sister’s husband– not by myself– had been his. He also had no idea what any of us were doing in his house and wanted us all to get out.

The time had come, not for us to go but for him, really, and this lady agreed to help. Let me kid you not about this either, a black pall descended on the room. I have never experienced the likes and I hope never to again.  If ever any doubt lingered, or lingers to this day that there is another world there, that moment dispelled it.

Before anyone asks, we don’t live there now. We live in a ghost free Edwardian house!

I did look for Robert’s name on the local war memorial. It wasn’t there.  Nor was it further along the road at the other war memorial either.

Obviously the psychic got it wrong.

A few years ago I was editing a local history magazine. A local author asked if we would review his new book. It was about the local war dead. The name was there all right. Not on the memorials but on a plaque inside the local church.

When it comes to writing, none of my published books  feature  ghosts. That’s about to change with  the one I’m working on now. As to whether she’s good, bad, or indifferent, you’ll have to wait and see. I will too.


About the author

When not cuddling inn signs in her beloved Scottish mountains alongside Mr Shey, Shehanne Moore writes dark and smexy historical romance, featuring bad boys who need a bad girl to sort them out. She firmly believes everyone deserves a little love, forgiveness and a second chance in life.

Shehanne caused general apoplexy when she penned her first story, The Hore House Mystery—aged seven. From there she progressed to writing plays for her classmates,  stories for her classmates, plays for real, comic book libraries for girls, various newspaper articles,  ghost writing, nonfiction writing, and magazine editing.  Stories for real were what she really wanted to write though and, having met with every rejection going, she sat down one day to write a romance, her way.


Find and Follow Shehanne Moore

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Facebook     Facebook Author Page     Kilting-the-Book on Facebook


Books by Shehanne Moore

Click the titles or images to go to Amazon


Splendor – London Jewel Thieves

The only thing he hates more than losing at chess is marriage…

For Splendor, former servant to the London’s premiere jewel thieves, pretending to be someone else is all in a day’s work. So when she learns of a chess tournament—a men’s chess tournament—with a ten thousand pound prize, pretending to be a man is the obvious move. The money will be enough to set her fiancé up in his own business so they can finally marry, and more importantly, it’ll pay off her bills and keep her out of debtor’s prison. But she doesn’t plan on her opponent, the rakish Kendall Winterborne, Earl Stillmore, being a sore loser—and a drunken one, at that. But before she can collect her prize, she finds herself facing the most merciless man in London across a pair of dueling pistols at dawn. Chess may be Splendor’s game, but she’s never fired a pistol. And dressed as a man with ill-fitting shoes on the slippery grass and borrowed glasses that make it hard to see, she’s certain she’s finally tipped her own king.

Bitter divorcee Kendall Winterborne, Earl Stillmore, is the ton’s most ruthless heartbreaker. And he’s got three pet peeves: kitchen maids, marriage…and losing. So when he realizes the “man” opposite him has entered the chess tournament under false pretenses, he’s in the perfect position to extort the little chit. But that’s before the exasperating woman begins to slip beneath his skin, and soon all he can think about is slipping beneath her skirts. But the confounded woman is engaged to someone else, and worse—she’s nothing but a former kitchen maid, just like the one that lured his father into the marriage that ruined the family name. And his ex-wife taught him more than he cared to know about why marriage was the worst kind of checkmate of all…

Read Carolee Croft’s review of Splendor here.


Loving Lady LazuliLondon Jewel Thieves.

Only one man in England can identify her. Unfortunately he’s living next door.

Ten years ago sixteen year old Sapphire, the greatest jewel thief England has ever known, ruined Lord Devorlane Hawley’s life. Now she’s dead and buried, all the respectable widow, Cassidy Armstrong, wants is the chance to prove who she really is.

 But not only does her new neighbor believe he knows that exactly, he’s hell-bent on revenge.  All he needs is the actual proof.  So when he asks her to choose between being his mistress, or dangling on the end of a rope, only Sapphire can decide…

What’s left for a woman with nowhere left to go, but to stay exactly where she is?

 And hope, that when it comes to neighbors, Devorlane Hawley won’t prove to be the one from hell.

Read Pam Lasos’s review of Loving Lady Lazuli here.


 The Writer and The Rake – Time Mutants

He saw her coming. If he’d known her effect he’d have walked away.

When it comes to doing it all, hard coated ‘wild child’ writer, Brittany Carter ticks every box. Having it all is a different thing though, what with her need to thwart an ex fiancé, and herself transported from the present to Georgian times. But then, so long as she can find her way back to her world of fame, and promised fortune, what’s there to worry about?

Georgian bad boy Mitchell Killgower is at the center of an inheritance dispute and he needs Brittany as his obedient, country mouse wife. Or rather he needs her like a hole in the head. In and out of his bed he’s never known a woman like her. A woman who can disappear and reappear like her either.

And when his coolly contained anarchist, who is anything but, learns how to return to her world and stay there, will And when his coolly contained anarchist, who is anything but, learns how to return to her world and remain, will having it all be enough, or does she underestimate him, and herself?

Read Sarah Potter’s review of The Writer and The Rake here.


 

The Viking and The Courtesan – Time Mutants  

(Sceal Award Finalist Books and Benches.)

In 898 AD she wasn’t just from another land.

Wrecking a marriage is generally no problem for the divorce obtaining, Lady Malice Mallender. But she faces a dilemma when she’s asked to ruin her own. Just how businesslike should she remain when the marriage was never consummated and kissing her husband leads to Sin–a handsome Viking who wants her for a bed slave in name only?

She came from another time.

Viking raider Sin Gudrunsson wants one thing. To marry his childhood sweetheart. Only she’s left him before, so he needs to keep her on her toes, and a bed slave, in name only, seems just the thing. Until he meets Malice.

One kiss is all it takes to flash between two worlds

But when one kiss is no longer enough, which will it be?  Regency London? Or Viking Norway? Will Malice learn what governs the flashes? Can Sin?

Where worlds collide can love melt the iciest heart.

Read Carolee Croft’s Review of The Viking and The Courtesan here.


The Unraveling of Lady Fury

Rule One: There will be no kissing. Rule two: You will be fully clothed at all times…

Widowed Lady Fury Shelton hasn’t lost everything—yet. As long as she produces the heir to the Beaumont dukedom, she just might be able to keep her position. And her secrets. But when the callously irresistible Captain James “Flint” Blackmoore sails back into her life, Lady Fury panics. She must find a way to protect herself—and her future—from the man she’d rather see rotting in hell than sleeping in her bed. If she must bed him to keep her secrets, so be it. But she doesn’t have to like it. A set of firm rules for the bedroom will ensure that nothing goes awry. Because above all else, she must stop herself from wanting the one thing that Flint can never give her. His heart.

Ex-privateer Flint Blackmoore has never been good at following the rules. Now, once again embroiled in a situation with the aptly named Lady Fury, he has no idea why he doesn’t simply do the wise thing and walk away. He knows he’s playing with fire, and that getting involved with her again is more dangerous than anything on the high seas. But he can’t understand why she’s so determined to hate him. He isn’t sure if the secret she keeps will make things harder—or easier—for him, but as the battle in the bedroom heats up, he knows at least one thing. Those silly rules of hers will have to go…

Read Witless Dating for Over Fifty’s review of The Unraveling of Lady Fury here.


His Judas BrideHis Judas Bride by [Moore, Shehanne]

To love, honor, and betray…

To get back her son, she will stop at nothing…

For five years Kara McGurkie has preferred to forget she’s a woman. So it’s no problem for her to swear to love and honor, to help destroy a clan, when it means getting back the son she lost. But when dire circumstances force her to seduce her fiancé’s brother on the eve of the wedding, will the dark secrets she holds and her greatest desire be enough to save her from his powerful allure?

To save his people, neither will he…

Callm McDunnagh, the Black Wolf of Lochalpin, ruthlessly guards heart and glen from dangerous intruders. But from the moment he first sees Kara he knows he must possess her, even though surrendering to his passion may prove the most dangerous risk of all.

She has nothing left to fear except love itself…

Now only Kara can decide what passion can save or destroy, and who will finally learn the truth of the words… Till death do us part.

Read Paul Ruddoch’s Review of His Judas Bride here.


If you have had a strange experience or encounter that you would like to share, please get in touch with me at findme@scvincent.com (or my usual email if you already have it) and we can discuss a guest post. If you would like to share your story but remain anonymous, we can discuss that too. If you would like to share your beliefs and opinions on the nature of these strange experiences, I would be happy to talk about a guest post too. Through sharing with respect we may learn to understand our world and each other a little better.

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About Sue Vincent

Sue Vincent was a Yorkshire born writer, esoteric teacher and a Director of The Silent Eye. She was immersed in the Mysteries all her life. Sue maintained a popular blog and is co-author of The Mystical Hexagram with Dr G.M.Vasey. Sue lived in Buckinghamshire, having been stranded there due to an accident with a blindfold, a pin and a map. She had a lasting love-affair with the landscape of Albion, the hidden country of the heart. Sue  passed into spirit at the end of March 2021.
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80 Responses to Guest author: Shehanne Moore – ‘Nobody’s There…’

  1. Mary Smith says:

    What a dramatic start to Sue’s new series. I’m glad you found Robert’s name on the plaque. Did he ever return or was that the end of the visitations?

    Liked by 1 person

  2. Mr. Militant Negro says:

    Reblogged this on The Militant Negro™.

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Pingback: Guest author: Shehanne Moore – ‘Nobody’s There…’ – The Militant Negro™

  4. I really enjoyed this creepy post, Shey and Sue, although I am glad this is Shey’s house and not mine. My house is supposed to be haunted too. It is the oldest house in our area, the original farm house, and it was occupied for a period by a local gang in 1929. One of the gang was killed in the house and he purportedly haunts it. I have never seen a thing though…

    Liked by 1 person

  5. Resa says:

    I adore this story Shehanne!
    I live in a building that’s about 130 years old.
    I’ve always thought there was a spirit in here, but it doesn’t bother me. It presents in smells, smells that come from the kitchen…. cooking smells, of foods that I don’t cook, mostly like bacon frying or a roast dinner or other meats. I’ve been a veggie almost my entire life.
    My BF never smells these things, and I always ask when they occur.
    I’ve opened windows to see if they are from somewhere out there, but no…. not.
    Other than the smells, there was only 1 incident. One day there was a great crashing noise. Turned out every picture in the house had fallen off the walls, all at the same time.
    Sue! Great idea, thank you!!!!

    Liked by 3 people

  6. Sue, jut got in. THANK YOU so very much for your kind invite to come here AND our quickness at putting the post up. I am such a fan of al you wonderful ladies that it’s great to be here xxxxxxx

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Carolee Croft says:

    What a wonderfully creepy post, Shey! I believe you, there are definitely other worlds… and I’m so excited that you’ll be writing about a ghost in your new book.
    Thanks for hosting, and linking to my blog, Sue 🙂

    Liked by 2 people

  8. Sue big hugs for uploading Paul Andruss’s GIF. He sent it after I had sent the post and it was a big surprise x

    Like

  9. jjspina says:

    Loved reading this post! Fascinating and a little creepy and hair-raising! Nicely done, Shehanne. Happy to hear you are not living there anymore. Great series, Sue! 😘

    Liked by 1 person

  10. catcavendish says:

    Great post, Shehanne. So spooky. Bet, when you sold that house, you didn’t tell the new people about the ‘sitting tenant’!

    Liked by 1 person

  11. Don, xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

    Liked by 1 person

  12. Jennie says:

    Oooo, I love this. I am more of a history buff than a romantic. Yet, I have been there with more spirits than most people would believe or want to believe. Hey, I didn’t go looking. Terrific post!

    Liked by 1 person

  13. macjam47 says:

    I rather like the spirit of Robert Wann, Shehanne. The old house I grew up in was “haunted” and the spirit followed me after I was married.

    Liked by 1 person

  14. dgkaye says:

    Ok, this post was fantastic, frightening, and interesting all rolled into one! You are a better weapon than I my friend! One sense of a strange ghost and I’d have given the house away LOL. Now you’ve gone and reminded me about a similar experience my sister who never believed in spirits until she realized she had no choice but acknowledge ‘the Lady’ who lived in her basement! Loving this series Sue! And Shey, I imagine you didn’t bring the dudes because you might scare the heck out of them. LOL xoxo

    Liked by 1 person

  15. Adele Marie says:

    wow, Shehanne, you showed some guts sticking it out. I’m glad you now live in a haunted free house. Thanks for sharing and thanks to Sue, for hosting. xxx

    Liked by 2 people

    • Ocht you got used to it my darling xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx

      Liked by 2 people

      • Adele Marie says:

        We had a poltergeist in our old home, we called him Henry. He would take our fags and lighters and we couldn’t find them. He would then put them somewhere and we were all like “Oh my god, Henry.” We were teenagers at the time. lol xxx

        Liked by 2 people

        • Adele, I one lost a bracelet in this house and weeks alter found it in a place I know I never left it. I had already looked there. then there was the wedding ring time where even the Mr had bought me a new ring after my ring vanished . I think ghost like jewellery. I love how you name him Henry,. We do that don’t we. I mean for a while I had already called our ghost Tommy. Now I know it wasn’t his name but it sure was what the WW1 soldiers were called and apparently what the next door neighbour said to my sister was . ‘ Yes there was a young man. He was a Tommie..’ (as in soldier .)

          Liked by 2 people

  16. paulandruss says:

    Dear Sue and Shey, I don’t know how I missed this fantastically creepy story. It’s brilliant… really chilling… wow!

    Liked by 2 people

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