His Dead Wife Waits in Our Bed / Chapter 6: The Ritual Begins
His Dead Wife Waits in Our Bed

His Dead Wife Waits in Our Bed

Author: Bryan Jacobs III


Chapter 6: The Ritual Begins

← Prev

“What you saw is both real and not real.”

I chose my words carefully, speaking slow and low. This was delicate work—the kind you can’t rush or gloss over.

“Lillian’s spirit is indeed in this house—that’s real. But what you saw was an illusion created by her anger—that part isn’t real.”

I let that settle in the silence. Sometimes the dead show us what we most fear, not what’s actually there. Anger twists everything, even memories.

As I spoke, I took out a copper penny and handed it to Derek.

It was an old wheat penny, worn smooth from years in Grandpa’s pocket. I’d drilled a hole through the center and strung it on a leather cord. It wasn’t magic, exactly, but sometimes, faith is enough.

“This is something I made myself. Look through the hole in the coin, and you’ll be able to see her.”

I pressed the penny into his palm. His hand shook as he closed his fingers around it, staring at the tiny hole like it was a peephole into another world.

Derek was half-convinced, half-doubtful. After a moment’s hesitation, he still didn’t dare to put it to his eye.

He swallowed, the Adam’s apple in his throat bobbing. Sometimes, not seeing is safer than knowing.

He said, “Forget it, sir. I really have a shadow in my heart. Can you just... help her move on?”

He sounded tired, beaten down by fear and grief. There’s a limit to what most folks can bear.

I shook my head. “Lillian isn’t unable to move on—she’s unwilling. If her wish isn’t fulfilled, she won’t leave.”

I explained that spirits only linger for a reason—unfinished business, a promise unkept. The living can’t always fix it, but we can try.

“People and spirits walk different paths. Normally, spirits don’t disturb the living. If they do, it means they want something.”

It’s a lesson as old as the hills—when the dead knock, you have to listen. Ignoring them only makes things worse.

When I finished, Derek immediately asked, “Then what does Lillian want? Does she want the driver’s life?”

His eyes flickered, searching for an easy answer. I took a slow breath. It’s never as simple as revenge—sometimes it’s justice, sometimes it’s love, sometimes it’s just wanting to be remembered.

I didn’t answer. Normally, what he said would make sense—Lillian’s anger should come from this.

But there was a nagging sense that something didn’t add up. I needed more than Derek’s story—I needed to hear from Lillian herself.

But all of this depends on whether what Derek told me is true.

I knew that in matters of spirits, the truth is slippery. Only by speaking directly to the source could I know for sure.

My purpose in coming here was simple: to call her spirit and ask Lillian directly.

Sometimes the only answers worth having are the ones you get straight from the dead. I steeled myself for whatever would come next.

After all, spirits don’t lie.

Grandpa used to say, “The dead don’t have time for games. Listen close, and you’ll hear what they really want.”

Under Derek’s gaze, I pulled over a table to serve as the altar, then took out my backpack and began to set up the ritual.

I unfolded a paisley tablecloth, smoothed it over the desk, and laid out my kit—eight homemade flags, a stubby candle, the chipped redwood wand Grandpa gave me. The room filled with the familiar smell of sage and burnt matches.

Eight small flags, a candle holder, a chipped redwood wand—these were all things Grandpa left me.

Each flag was painted by hand—north, south, east, west, and the spaces in between. The redwood wand was carved with old family symbols, its surface polished by decades of use.

First, I placed the candle holder on the altar, lit a candle, and paid my respects.

I let the flame burn for a moment, closing my eyes and breathing deep. It’s a way of setting the boundary—of saying, "I’m here for peace, not trouble."

Then I arranged the flags at the points of the compass, sprinkled a circle of salt—flags for protection, and the redwood wand as a powerful tool.

Salt is old magic, plain and simple. I circled the table with it, making sure the line was unbroken. The air grew still, as if the house was holding its breath.

I set out a Mason jar half-full of salt—Grandpa always said nothing keeps out bad spirits like a good old Ball jar.

But unless I was facing something truly evil, it was rarely used.

I set the wand beside the candle, hoping I wouldn’t have to lift it. Most spirits just want to be heard, not fought.

To call a spirit, there was still one crucial thing missing: a medium.

You can’t open a door without a key. I’d learned to carry simple, honest offerings—things that tied the living to the dead.

I pulled out a folded paper man—like the ones we’d cut in grade school, only this one was marked with Lillian’s initials in red ink—and had Derek prick his finger and let a drop of blood fall onto it. This medium would allow Lillian to appear for a few minutes.

He hesitated at first, but I explained it was harmless—a way to bridge the gap. His hands trembled as he pricked his finger and let the blood drop onto the doll’s chest. The paper seemed to soak it in, curling at the edges.

I placed the paper man on the altar and checked the time—we still needed to wait a bit.

The clock ticked loud in the silence. Sometimes the waiting is the hardest part—the air heavy with anticipation.

Derek, not knowing what I was doing, couldn’t help but ask as I finally stopped.

He fidgeted, eyes flicking from the altar to the dark corners of the room, every nerve stretched thin.

I looked at him. “Didn’t you want to know what Lillian wants?”

I fixed him with a steady gaze, letting him know this was his last chance to back out. When he nodded, I took a deep breath and said, “I’ll bring her out and ask directly.”

The candle flickered, casting Lillian’s name in warped shadows across the wall. Somewhere in the house, a floorboard creaked. I looked at Derek. “Once we start, there’s no stopping. Are you ready to hear what the dead want?”

This chapter is VIP-only. Activate membership to continue.
← Prev

You may also like

My Wife’s Corpse Won’t Let Go
My Wife’s Corpse Won’t Let Go
4.9
You can outrun the law—but not the dead. Carter Hensley thought he’d covered every trace of his wife’s tragic accident, but one midnight checkpoint changes everything. Hiding her body in his trunk, Carter’s mind unravels as guilt and panic spark hallucinations—or is it something more? When a vengeful, twisted vision of his wife claws her way from the darkness, Carter must fight for his sanity, his life, and his last chance at redemption. As the horrors close in, help is a single phone call away—if it isn’t already too late. When guilt turns flesh and bone, can you ever truly escape what you’ve done?
My Wife’s Corpse Won’t Let Me Go
My Wife’s Corpse Won’t Let Me Go
5.0
You can’t outrun guilt—or the dead. When Carter Hensley, bestselling horror novelist, is stopped at a midnight DUI checkpoint, his heart pounds for more reasons than one: his wife’s corpse is hidden in the trunk. As the trooper’s questions close in, Carter’s mind frays—until a chance encounter with a fan in uniform lets him slip away. But terror is waiting on the open road. His wife returns, twisted and relentless, forcing Carter to flee into the skeleton of an abandoned building, haunted by memories and hunted by something that may not be real. As guilt, grief, and horror converge, Carter must decide: can he trust anyone to save him, or is he doomed to be destroyed by his own secrets? When the line between hallucination and reality shatters, will Carter’s final confession be heard—or will the truth stay buried with his wife?
I Died, But I Stayed for Him
I Died, But I Stayed for Him
5.0
Death didn’t end my story—it set the stakes. I woke as a ghost, memories erased, bound to the man I once loved: Dr. Harrison, the forensic pathologist tasked with unraveling my brutal murder. As he examines my ruined body, I drift helplessly beside him, piecing together the truth of my death—and the life we almost shared. But the clock is ticking: seven days to reclaim my memories or disappear forever. Each revelation brings heartbreak, rage, and the aching hope that love might survive even death. When Harrison is abducted by my killer, I must make an unthinkable sacrifice—trading my own afterlife for a chance to save him. Will justice or love win, or will I vanish before I can say goodbye?
The Wife Who Came Back From the Dead
The Wife Who Came Back From the Dead
4.8
Declared dead, Sarah returns to find her husband remarried to a woman who looks just like her—and her children calling the stranger 'Mom.' When her own son rejects her and her ex accuses her of being a mistress, Sarah must fight for her place in a family that’s moved on. But she’s got secrets of her own—and this time, she won’t back down, even if it means burning every bridge to reclaim her daughter.
My Dead Wife Lives in Our House
My Dead Wife Lives in Our House
4.9
After her father vanishes, Lillian Harper inherits his strange small-town antique shop—and his secret supernatural business. When a desperate, wealthy client begs her to solve the chilling mystery of his haunted mansion, Lillian is drawn into a family riddle where one room—and one soul—shouldn’t exist. The truth will force her to risk everything, even her own sanity, for a shot at finding her missing dad.
Buried for Him, Bound by Death
Buried for Him, Bound by Death
4.9
Death was only the beginning—now I’m stuck in the afterlife’s endless line, desperate for a second chance. Forced into a ghost marriage and buried alive, my spirit lingers, tethered to the world by the wish for justice. When a wild bouquet leads rookie detective Quinn Harper to my lost grave, he becomes bound to my fate by a single broken bone. As Quinn investigates the tangled secrets of Maple Heights and my family’s hidden betrayals, every revelation draws him deeper into a web of lies, love, and vengeance. Can the truth set my soul free—or will the living and the dead both pay the price for what happened thirty years ago?
His Wife Was Meant for Another
His Wife Was Meant for Another
4.7
I married Chicago’s most coveted bachelor in my sister’s place, only to become a ghost in my own marriage—unwanted, untouched, and tormented by suspicion. Every night, Jake shuts me out, his body close but his heart locked away, leaving me desperate and humiliated. But when I discover his secret online confessions—and the twisted truth behind his distance—I realize our cold war is just the beginning of a forbidden, addictive game neither of us knows how to win.
Married to the Parasite Bride
Married to the Parasite Bride
4.7
When his gentle wife suddenly turns violent, he thinks it's just a rough patch—until a mysterious stranger warns him that the red line on her neck means death is coming for him. Trapped in his own home, stalked by his wife's inhuman habits and a growing horror in the dark, he realizes he's not just fighting for his marriage—he's fighting to survive the night. But the real nightmare? His wife's deadly secret is only the beginning.
My Wife Waited While I Betrayed Her
My Wife Waited While I Betrayed Her
4.8
I was the husband everyone envied—until my secret affair with the girl I once worshipped shattered everything. While my wife braved the snow for my health and waited up with a birthday feast, I was tangled in another woman's arms, convincing myself guilt was love. Now, in the freezing silence, my wife stares through the glass, and I know the truth is about to destroy the only warmth I have left.
I Died, But He Wouldn’t Let Go
I Died, But He Wouldn’t Let Go
4.9
In the afterlife, you expect peace—not paperwork. But when I, Lila, finally pass the Underworld’s civil service exam, I earn the right to visit the living and maybe find answers about my own mysterious death. My first stop? Carter—the love I left behind, who’s haunted by secrets, guilt, and a new girl with a familiar face. As I chase down lost memories, rumors swirl, betrayals surface, and the truth behind my suicide threatens to unravel everything I thought I knew. With the lines between love and vengeance blurring, Carter spirals toward his own breaking point, determined to make those who destroyed me pay. But can we find forgiveness, or will the past drag us both under—forever? When love and grief meet at the edge of the afterlife, is there any way back, or are some wounds too deep to heal?
I Deliver to the Dead—But She Ordered Herself
I Deliver to the Dead—But She Ordered Herself
4.9
Death isn’t the end—it’s just another delivery on Autumn Harper’s route. Haunted by debt, she sells afterlife luxuries on livestream, promising to deliver memorial offerings to the dearly departed. But when a desperate young mother places a lavish order—for herself—Autumn stumbles into a viral mystery: the woman’s file says she’s destined to live to a hundred, yet she’s preparing to die. As the line between living and dead blurs, Autumn’s chat explodes with questions, betrayals, and impossible reunions. Ghostly secrets, a looping tragedy, and a chilling confession threaten to unravel the truth behind Marissa’s fate. Can Autumn deliver justice—and forgiveness—before another soul is lost? Or will the afterlife’s ledger demand a price none of them can pay?
Buried Beneath Her Bed
Buried Beneath Her Bed
4.9
Derek Foster built a secret bed to hide beneath the woman he’s obsessed with, craving the intimacy she’ll never willingly give. But when her fiancé enters the picture, Derek’s obsession spirals into violence—and a gruesome, claustrophobic nightmare. Now, trapped with a rotting corpse and his sanity slipping, Derek realizes too late that love and madness are only a heartbeat apart.