Julia

A seven-year-old girl named Julia moved
into a rental cottage like house
with her mother and older sister
in Oak View, Ca
during the summer of 1970.
It was a very small town nestled in
a canyon surrounded by
sloping hills covered with white oak trees.
The town was made up of
working class people.
It was a dusty and sleepy town
where there was only
one convenient store, a bar,
a post office and one school.
This was a much different place
for Julia to live
then the big city of Los Angeles
where she had been born
and partly raised.
She lived there for a year
with her family and step-father.
Her mother had a long history
of mental disorders
and drinking abuse.
Just after her mother was released from
Camarillo State Hospital the
step- father came and took Julia
and her sister from their grandmother
to live in Oak View with their still very sick mother.
From the first day they arrived
Julia’s mother locked
herself up in the master bedroom
for weeks without coming out until
her twin sister Lola came to visit
with her husband Richard.
Julia was over joyed with gladness
to see her aunt
but kept clear of Richard who
had abused Julia in the past
when she was four and a half years old.
At that time Richard sneaked
into Julia’s room and touch her
while her mother and aunt sat
in the other room drinking all night.
Julia’s step-father had known
Julia for about a year
before he married her mother.
He played ball in the front yard with her
at her grandmother’s house
and had brought a five gallon fish tank
with fish and
a fiddler crab in it to give to her.
She was excited about it
and enjoyed it very much.
He told her someday
I will ask you for something
and innocently Julia said okay.
A short time after Julia’s mother married
and moved to Oak View
with her two daughters and
husband the step-father came
into Julia’s bedroom
and sat at the foot of her bed.
He asked her if she liked
her uncle Richard.
Julia nervously said yes.
She was afraid someone would find out
what happened to her
and she a her sister would be
taken away
from their mother who they
loved very much.
He told her it was good that
she liked her uncle
and that she would like him even more.
He asked her to remember
about the times
they had played ball together
and reminded her of his gifts.
He said now it is time for you to
give me a gift.
Julia didn’t know what to say
and was very confused
of what kind of gift he might want.
He told her I’ll come back later tonight
and you can give me
a gift because that’s what friends
do for each other.
Later that night he came into her room
while she was sleeping.
Julia was in a dream state when
suddenly she felt herself being
squeezed until she passed out.
When she awoke in the twilight hours
she saw blood on her arms and legs.
She pulled up the top sheet of
the bed and saw a pool
of very dark blood then she
fell over and passed out again.
When she woke in the morning
the blood was gone.
She got up and saw her sister in the hall.
Her sister was very shocked to see her
and Julia asked her why.
Her sister said I thought you were dead.
Julia couldn't believe what her sister said
and insisted that she was alive.
She asked her sister why she thought that
and her sister said you were laying in your bed
for days not moving.
Julia asked her where were you
and her sister said I went to stay
at my friend’s house
because I was too afraid to be
in the same room with you.
How long have you been gone Julia asked.
Her sister said two days and three lights.
Julia still in disbelief went into
the kitchen to quench
her over whelming thirst and hunger.
Her mother had been spending all
her time in her bedroom
and didn't realize that Julia had been laying almost
bleeding to death in her bed.
She still didn't come out of her room so
Julia drank from the water facet and grabbed
a few pieces of bread from the counter.
the day Julia woke from her coma a call
came from Julia’s grandmother
with the news that Julia’s aunt
had been murdered by her husband Richard.
Julia felt disoriented, exhausted and confused
still after she drank some water
and ate the bread.
She wondered out through the back door
and into her
non-fenced back yard wearing
only her underpants.
It was a damp misty morning
and Julia walked up the wet
and cold stone steps to the
street behind the yard.
The scent of damp pepper corn
trees filled the air.
As she stepped onto the street she saw
a horde of toads covering the street.
She tried to save them from
being run over by cars
and grabbed them up to take
them to the garage.
When she got to the garage with
her arms full of toads
she found her step-father standing
in the darkness crying.
She asked him why are you crying
and he replied;
“I thought you were dead.”
Julia did not understand why
he would think such a thing
and told him that she was alright.
She was very concerned
about saving the toads
and ran back to the street.
When she got to the road she noticed
that all the toads were gone
but that a man stood at
the edge of the sidewalk
and he began speaking to her.
He told her that her aunt had died
and because of her sacrifice
you are still alive.
Julia did not understand and she asked
him where did the toads go?.
He said the toads were
sent by your aunt Lola
from the underworld to save your life.
He was a tall dark haired man
with striking blue eyes dressed in blue jeans
and a blue checkered button up shirt.
He continued to speak with Julia
and told her he
was her guardian angel.
He also said that her aunt Lola
loved her very much
and gave up her soul to spear your life.
Suddenly the man disappeared
and Julia became even more puzzled.
She thought maybe he was a neighbor
she didn't meet before
and that he must have walked quickly away.
The next summer in 1971 Julia and
her family moved to Oxnard, Ca.
into a residential neighborhood.
Shortly after moving there with her family
Julia made friends
with a girl her own age named Twyla
who lived a few houses down from her.
The two became close friends.
They began to ride bikes together up
and down their neighborhood street.
Then unexpectedly a huge ferrous barking
and crawling wolf-like dog came
charging toward her.
She stopped immediately in her tracks
terrified to move for fear of being eaten alive.
Her friend Twyla was surprised by Julia’s
reaction to what seemed to be nothing.
She asked Julia what the matter was
but Julia didn't say a word
for fear that it might aggravate
the huge dog even more.
Julia could see the dog snapping
at her with his fierce long fangs
and the look of evil in his eyes.
Then a voice called out from the house
that vicious dog came from.
A man with long blonde hair pulled back
into a pony tail
dressed in jeans and a T-shirt yelled out;
“Zapa come here! “
Zapa turned around and went to his owner.
After the dog was in his master’s care
Julia regained confidence
and her and Twyla continued to ride their
bikes down the street.
They stopped riding in front of Julia’s house.
Twyla asked her what had happened?
Julia still frightened described the devilish dog
and how it came charging out in front of her.
She told her the name of the dog is Zapa.
Twyla said how could you know that?
Zapa died over a year ago of old age.
She said I use to be afraid of Zapa too.
Twyla looked surprised at Julia and
seemly a little spooked.
She grabbed her bike
and went home without saying good-bye.
Later during the next few weeks Twyla
would invite Julia to ride bikes with her.
Every time they rode by Zapa's house
he would charge out from his yard
and chomp his jaws at Julia.
Sometimes his master was there to call him back
but sometimes he was not.
On the days he was not there Julia
stayed very still
until Zapa would disappear.
Julia told Twyla that she didn't want
to ride bikes with her anymore
and when Twyla asked why Julia
told her again about Zapa.
Twyla could not see Zapa charging at
Julia so she couldn't understand why
Julia was extremely frightened.
Twyla and Julia did not play together much after that.
They rarely saw each in the street from time to time.
A few years later when Julia was 13-years-
old she saw a family at the house where Zapa lived.
There was a woman
and three very young children in the drive way.
Julia helped the mother with her groceries
into the house.
Shortly after the mother, Jan,
and her became good friends.
Julia asked Jan if she owned a dog named Zapa.
Jan told her "yes".
She said he was my husband’s dog
that passed away many years ago.
She said that her husband had not gotten
over the loss of him.
Jan was young, maybe in her mid-twenties
and had long
strawberry blonde hair that she kept
in a ponytail under a bandanna.
She also had beautiful crystal blue eyes.
She was very slender and wore cutoff jeans
and tank tops.
Usually she was barefoot but occasionally
she would wear flip-flops.
Julia thought she was beautiful and
admired her and her children.
Julia thought to herself that she wanted to grow up
and be just like Jan.
Almost every day during that summer
she spent time at Jan’s house
and once in a while she would baby sit Jan’s children.
Mysteriously every time Jan paid
Julia money for babysitting the money
Julia put in her pocket would disappear as soon
as she left Jan’s house.
A few times Julia would search the street
to see if she could find the money but never did.
Julia continued to babysit Jan’s children
whenever Jan asked her to.
One day, while Julia was babysitting the
children who were three-year-old Branden,
one and a half-year-old Corey
and six-month-old Markkas she noticed
that for 10 hours Markkas
did not wake, eat or need a diaper change.
He laid in his crib motionless the entire time.
Julia went into the nursery often to check
on his breathing
but could not hear it so she checked his figures
and toes for good color.
She decided that he must be a heavy sleeper.
She also noticed that the older children
would disappear
from their bedrooms after putting
them to bed for the night.
When she would check on them suddenly
they would appear in the living room.
She thought they were playing hide and seek
but she could not
find an explanation how they got from their bedroom
to the living room unnoticed.
In the early morning hours Jan would return.
Julia told her about what happened
but Jan would shrug it off
and tell her it’s okay don’t worry about it.
That same summer Julia picked some Daisies
and roses from her yard.
She took them door to door in the
neighborhood to sell them
for a little extra spending money.
When she came to one neighbor’s door across
the street from Jan’s house
she was startled by
an elderly man who lived there.
He was yelling at her to go away insisting
that she was crazy,
He seemed very frightened
and demanded she leave immediately.
Julia stood for a moment
and asked him what the matter was,
and asked him why are you saying this?
He yelled out I've been watching
you talking to
yourself in that empty yard
of the house across the street.
He shouted get out of here you crazy girl
before something bad happens!
Julia became frighten and was very confused.
She ran to Jan’s house but no one was there.
Every sign of Jan and her family being there were gone.
The yard was completely over grown
and the house looked as though it had been
abandoned for years.
Julia was shocked.
She ran to Twyla’s house
and knocked on the door.
Twyla answered and asked what do you want?
Julia told her what happened.
Twyla said there is no one there!
She said there used to be a family there before
you moved into the neighborhood
but they all died a long time ago.
Julia said this can’t be true I just saw Jan
and her kids the other day.
Twyla said Jan’s husband died in a car accident
well before you moved in and
Jan and her kids died
a year later from poisoning in that house.
Julia cried in disbelief and Twyla became
fearful and shut the door.
Julia ran home and never saw Jan
and her family again.
She often wondered if because of her brush
with death earlier in life if that was the
reason she could see
and interact with Jan and her family.
She could find no explanation for why
they only appeared to her.
She knew in her heart that they were
her very close friends
during a time when things were
extremely difficult for her.
To this day she remembers them fondly
but still wonders
why they came and if they were from this life
or from another dimension.
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