In Long Beach, California, a hair-raising retired ship sits at the docks as a frightening hotel tourist attraction. The Queen Mary. Many spirits amble among the chilling hallways where many lost their lives in vain.
Many deaths loom aboard the Queen Mary. It was a ship used to transport Allied troops in WW2, and one day unintentionally barrelled right into its escort ship. Forbidden to stop, it left hundreds to drown in the harsh waters. After the war, the ship returned to transporting the wealthy across the Atlantic. More murders followed. Two women drown to death in the pool when it collided with a large wave, knocking them in. A little girl, Jackie, also haunts the pool, breaking her neck there when she fell off of the waterslide. All three of these spirits have been heard or seen at the pool. The engine room is also of infamousy. Two young crewmen were crushed to death by the heavy metal door of room #13. Then, in 1966, another young man was crushed by the same door in a drill. This man’s particular spirit has been said to walk about the engine room and neighboring hallways, drastically dropping temperatures and omitting ghastly sounds.
The Queen Mary has been a chilling attraction for years, attractive everyone from a curious tourist to top-notch movie producers. The presences are so strong that they have been caught on video and tape, making it the perfect destination for a ghost hunt. Glowing orbs of losts souls, sorrowful moans of young lives gone, and weeping, screeching children searching for their loved ones are only some of the known experiences. The hotel has seduced many, barely anyone ever leaving without feeling something, a breath, a cry, of hundreds of lost souls searching for salvation.
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