The.conjuring.2 Official
“You have no power here,” he said. “This is a home. Not a hunting ground.”
“I will break you first. Then I will take the girl.”
They arrived at Green Street on a Tuesday. Ed carried a tape recorder and a wooden crucifix. Lorraine carried the weight of the other side. The moment she stepped through the door, she stopped breathing. The hallway smelled of rot and old cigarettes. And there, in the corner of the living room, she saw something that made her turn away. The.conjuring.2
“It’s starting again,” she whispered.
The local newspaper dubbed it “the Enfield Poltergeist.” Reporters camped outside, their cameras flashing against the rain-streaked windows. But cameras cannot capture what Janet saw in the dark: an old man in a threadbare vest, sitting in the armchair at the foot of her bed. His face was gray, like spoiled milk. His eyes were hollow. He called himself Bill Wilkins. He had died in that very chair of a brain hemorrhage, and he wanted his house back. “You have no power here,” he said
Then the crucifix on the wall flipped upside down.
That night, the children slept in the living room while the Warrens investigated upstairs. Janet lay rigid on the couch, her eyes open but unseeing. Then her spine arched. Her feet lifted two feet off the mattress. Her body hung in the air, limp as a doll on a nail, and the deep voice came again—but this time it was laughing. Then I will take the girl
It started with a whisper. Not words, exactly—more like the dry rustle of dead leaves scraping against the inside of the walls. Then the furniture began to move. A chest of drawers slid across the bedroom floor of her daughters, Margaret and Janet, as if pushed by an invisible hand. Peggy grabbed a kitchen knife and screamed for them to get out.