
"Mas, quickly come here right now. I'm scared."
"Why the hell, Dek? It's midnight, you know. Evano is also sleeping again" Aksa said.
"Evano used to live with mom. Tomorrow morning we'll take him there. I'm scared in this house, Mas," urged the Goddess from across the street.
Unlike usual, Dewi whined to get Aksa to come that night. Though usually he never demanded the man to always be with him, although Aksa spent more time with Rani.
However, tonight she continued to force her husband to come soon.
Electricity is already on. The figure that had disturbed them was no longer there either. But the Goddess still felt traumatized. His eyes were sleepy, but he dared not shut. He really needs Aksa right now.
"What the hell is going on, Dek? Let's talk first, "persuade Aksa. He himself also felt afraid of traveling in the middle of the night, since the appearance of the spirit of Kinanti.
"So we bullied Nyai Kunti, Mas. He showed himself clearly. Surely the figure I saw in the car this afternoon was not wrong," said Dewi who almost cried.
"God! So you were also disturbed?" exclamation Aksa.
"What does that mean, Mom? Did you know this was going to happen?"
"No. That's not what it means. I'm coming there now yeah. We'll talk later" said Aksa.
"Yes, Mas. Be careful on the road."
Aksa hung up the phone, then woke up his Mom and Dad to leave. He also left Evano to his mother.
"Where are you going? It's still midnight, you know," said Aksa's mother-in-law who felt heavy hearted to take off her daughter-in-law.
"The goddess needs me again, Mom. Pity him," said Aksa briefly. He was busy putting on his jacket and looking around for car keys.
"You were delivered by Parjo. Let there be friends too. It's the same season of robbing, you know. Danger," said the father.
Parjo is Dewi's distant cousin, who now works as an clerk in the grocery store of both Dewi's parents.
"Can, deh. Then I wake Parjo up first."
Aksa quickly agreed to the advice of her father. He thought it was better than being alone in the dark. Aksa has been traumatized by the unrelenting kuntilanak disorder.
...***...
"Well, where are you going, anyway? It's been two hours since he left. It should only take an hour and a half."
The goddess paced back and forth in her room restlessly. Her hand held the HP that was making a call to her husband. But the umpteenth time, his phone still not connected.
"I'm so sorry for forcing her here. Hopefully they are not okay," said Dewi calm himself.
While it was in a different place, somehow the trip became longer than usual. The whole trip was always in trouble. Like this time, the tire suddenly leaked.
Time has entered the early hours, while the left right is a quiet plantation area. The sound of the night beast.
Parjo shuddered in horror. Sometimes he rubbed the nape of his neck, because he felt uncomfortable. Parjo's heart was getting increasingly thin, especially when accidentally looking at the plantation that was so dark.
"What is white?"
He felt like there was a figure in white clothes blocking them right at the end of the dark street. The more he felt that something was wrong, he then inched back. Approaching Aksa who was helping him change the tyre.
"Read the prayer, Jo. Don't think weird. Later yes you increasingly feel the look that is not-no," said Aksa without focusing on holding a flashlight, to illuminate the tires of the car that is being exchanged Parjo.
"But this isn't how I feel, Sa. It's actually. The white-white is getting closer" whispered Parjo as he ducked. He hides behind Satya's body.
"White-white? Is Kinan coming?" thought Aksa wouldn't take a headache.
"That's not Kinan!" peekik Aksa unconsciously.
His entire body was bristling at the figure in white clothes with part of his stomach that was hollow. The white negligee floated freely, as if there was nothing in it. Just a head, with long tangled hair and pointy teeth full of blood.
"Ki-kinan iku sopo?" tanya Parjo doesn't understand.
"That's kin... Ah, that's important. Now we have to run away" Aksa said in a trembling voice.
"Lah, come. Why kowe neng kono?" Aksa pulled the ice-cold hand of Aksa. - Why are you even standing there?-
"I-I can't move, Jo," said Aksa with a stiff and flat face. His body felt amused, like it was touched by something very delicate.
"Astaghfirullahaladhim's chat. Go demon. Don't bother us. We just taste seeing real women. It's not just that you don't have your bones" Parjo said, closing his eyes.
"Huh?" Aksa was surprised to hear Parjo's slurping speech just now.
But it seems to be quite powerful. Aksa's courage slowly returned and they hurriedly entered the car. Aksa also turned on the tape, and played the recording of the Koran verse to repel the terrible creature.
Fortunately, they were able to leave without any more interruptions.
... ***...
The goddess woke up to hear the sound of a car roar in front of the house. Time has shown at two in the morning.
"Assalamualaik."
"Vaalaikumussalam. That's okay, right? Sorry I made Mas come in the middle of the night like this." The goddess greeted and hugged her husband tightly with a feeling of relief.
"I'm okay. Only the tire leaked in the middle of the plantation. So there is no signal for your ngabarin," Aksa replied.
"Ehem! I'm here, you know. Cold, mosquito-borne. Now it's a mosquito repellent too" parjo said, standing next to the car.
"God! I almost forgot. Come on in, Mas. I made an angel tea, yes," said Dewi inviting her cousin to come in.
"No, Wi. I'm sleepy. Want to just go to sleep," said Parjo directly to the living room, and lay on a mattress that has been provided by Dewi. He was used to this house, like his own.
"We're in too, yuk. I'm so tired" Aksa asked. Goddess nodded.
"So what's the matter, Mom? How can we be haunted like this?" ask Dewi while twitching Aksa's shoulder.
"It's all my fault, Dek. My mistake when I was in High School. L'm... Ever killed someone." Aksa confessed to the crime he had committed before.
"God! The joking? High School killed someone? Because what?" The Goddess could not believe that her husband had ever lost someone's life.
"It's complicated to tell. The point is that me and my friends have caused the smartest students in our school to lose their lives" Aksa said weakly.
"Why are we telling stories now? Are you tired of being haunted by him?" Instead of feeling angry or disgusted, Dewi embraces her husband.
"He just showed up now. I don't know what triggered it. Said the smart man I met with Genta earlier, we have to find the remains, so he stops interfering," explained Aksa.
"Then just do it. Genta is a police officer" said Dewi.
"It's not that easy, Deck. It happened twenty years ago. Nature has changed a lot. We don't know where the body is rotting and being destroyed anymore" Aksa replied. "Whether we can find him again or not" he added.
"So we're gonna be haunted anyway?" ask the goddess.
(Connected)