...
Then for some reason I will never understand, I took elevator up. Up to the tenth floor.
The floor was silent. Not even the sound of the air conditioners broke the stillness.
The elevator's door closed. It echoed through the place.
I thought I heard whispering from off to one side. I followed it slowly.
Then I paused and held my breath. Actually hoping to hear footsteps, or something that would suggest it was a radio someplace, or maybe the old intercom malfunctioning.
Nothing.
I walked slowly back toward the elevators and then around to the far hallway where the cloak room and vending machine was. I walked into the cloak room and turned the light on, then looked around. It was still and quiet.
The whispering was back.
I walked to the counter and just stood there. Waiting. Listening.
I heard the elevator door open and looked over that way. But both sets of doors were closed.
The whispering was louder. I heard some chairs move and the rattling of glassware.
I had to go look.
The ballroom was silent and still. The sun shone in the windows lighting the stage area in an almost hurtful glare.
I walked to the waitress station. There wasn't even any glassware in the cabinet to rattle. Then I went down the far hall. The side rooms were just as empty and still as the ball room. I knew I was being watched. But I ignored it. I walked back around to the cloak room and looked in it again.
The whispering started up again.
Whispering that I could almost understand. I strained and thought I could hear an actual word once in awhile. But the harder I strained to hear it, the fainter it got.
I heard what sounded like the cover of the piano close and fought down the temptation to go see if it had moved. I turned the light off in the cloak room and stood there again. Listening to the almost discernible voices.
"Sir. Do you have your ticket?"
"WHAT!?!??!?" I screamed and jumped out into the hall and turned around.
I got a glimpse of a young woman standing at the counter, then she was gone.
My heart was pounding like a marching band in my chest, but my blood was frozen. Tears streamed down my face. My hands were shaking so hard I couldn't control them enough to wipe my face. I took several deep breaths. Then swallowed hard. I walked back toward the room slowly.
It was still empty.
"No." I said, amazed my voice would even work. "No, I think I misplaced my ticket."
There was a rustling in the room. Then it changed. Almost imperceptibly, but something was different.
"What did you check?" The voice said.
I looked around, fighting the urge to run down the stairs.
At the counter stood a young woman, a girl really, in clothes that went out of style after World War Two. She was smiling at me with clear bright eyes.
"Sir?" She said to me. But her lip movement was out of synch with the words. I heard her after she mouthed the words, like watching a movie on an old projector with a bad sound loop.
"I thought I had a rain coat, but maybe I left it in the cab." I said the first thing that came to mind.
Her mouth moved. Then "I can check for you sir."
"That's OK. Let me think about it for a minute. Maybe I'll remember what I did with it." I looked at her. Trying to remember every detail of the image.
There was no doubt in my mind that I was seeing a full apparition of somebody that had worked here ages ago.
"What's your name?" I asked her.
"Rosalie." She answered. Then her face changed, got older, and very sad. Then she was gone.
"Rosalie." I echoed. "I'll see you again sometime." I said to the room, then on a whim, I reached into my pocket and took out a couple of coins and laid them on the counter.
I walked to the elevator and pushed the button.
It took a minute for the car to arrive.
"Have a good evening sir." The voice called out to me as I stepped through the door.