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	<title>Ghost Stories</title>
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		<title>The New Home</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=48</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:14:06 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Featured Articles]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[The New Home By GhostStories.co.uk (c) not to be reproduced The day of the move, a day Colin, Dawn and had been looking forward to for months. That was however not the case for Olivia (9) the daughter of Colin and Dawn, Olivia was upset about leaving her old home, friends and school behind and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The New Home<br />
By GhostStories.co.uk (c) not to be reproduced</p>
<p>The day of the move, a day Colin, Dawn and had been looking forward to for months.  That was however not the case for Olivia (9) the daughter of Colin and Dawn, Olivia was upset about leaving her old home, friends and school behind and the thought of going to a new school was not a pleasant one for Olivia. The new home was a new build, on a brand new development, a dream home for the family, but little did they know the horrors that awaited them.  </p>
<p>A few weeks go by and the family is settling into their new lives, Dawn goes outside to put some washing on the line when she notices Olivia talking to seemingly no one, Dawn laughs and thinks to herself, we all had an imaginary friend right? </p>
<p>A few more days go by and Olivia’s parents notice more and more that there little girl is talking to no one but just put it down to the stress of the move so they ask one of her old school friends round for tea to cheer Olivia up.  Its works a treat, Olivia was really happy to see her friend, they played for hours, it’s the first time Olivia has been happy in weeks.</p>
<p>The night draws to an end, Colin takes Olivia’s friend home why Dawn runs a bath for Olivia.  ‘’Olivia, it’s time for a bath hunny’’ Dawn calls.  Olivia gets ready for the bath and Dawn is horrified to see large scratch marks on Olivia’s chest, she asks Olivia how this happened but Olivia has not idea.  Dawn is worried that Olivia may have done this to herself.</p>
<p>Colin arrives home and Dawn tells him what she has seen and her concern that Olivia may have done this to herself, then the couple her “bang bang bang” instinctively they run up stairs to see Olivia in tears in the bath, mum asks what’s wrong and Olivia tells her Emily didn’t like her playing with her old school friend, dad asks “who is Emily Olivia?” Olivia says the girl that lives in my room, Colin and Dawn look at each other shocked with what their daughter has just said, it send a very big chill down there spine.</p>
<p>Olivia sleeps with mum and dad that night.</p>
<p>Over the next week, things get worse, Olivia is waking up screaming in the night, more scratches are appearing, it was at this point Colin thoughts started to turn to the paranormal, after all if Olivia wasn’t doing it, someone or something was.</p>
<p>The next day Colin called a local paranormal investigation team up and they arranged to meet that day.  They met and Colin told them everything that had happened since moving into the house and agreed for the paranormal team to come to the house and perform an investigation.</p>
<p>The weekend is here, and the paranormal team is due, the family are excited but at the same time very worried, what will they find?  The group arrives they bring a team of 3 investigators and a medium.  The night starts slow with nothing happening then all of a sudden scratching can be heard coming from in the walls, travelling round the team the banging the room goes cold, Paul (the medium) feels the presents of a man and evil man, Paul attempts to communicate with him, who are you Paul asks, what are you doing here, what do you want?  A faint voice is then heard muttering the chilling words “GET OUT, GET OUT, MY LAND MY CEMETRY” Paul replies who are you? No answer is forthcoming; no more contact is made that night with this seemingly evil spirit. </p>
<p> The team move upstairs, into Olivia’s room where the main activity is happening, Olivia is in bed sleeping the team set up a camera in the room and audio equipment for review the next day.  Nothing further happens that night.</p>
<p>The next morning the team begins to review the video and audio and what they see shocks everyone, a little girl who looks around 12 is just standing by the bed, just looking at Olivia, almost guarding her, Paul says to Dawn and Colin, i thought “Emily” was the one that was hurting and scaring Olivia?  The couple look lost.  Paul says, we need to make contact with that little girl, the team head upstairs, Emily Pauls says, please talk to me darling, we mean you no harm, please talk to me.. Paul can be seen communicating with Emily, although her voice can’t be heard, the last thing Paul says is i will help you my dear.  The team ask what did she say, Paul replies, she was murdered here, she was in fact buried alive, this house stands on the ground of an old cemetery and Emily was buried alive here by the spirit downstairs, he is the man that has been hearting and scaring Olivia, Emily has been trying to stop him.  Paul says i know where she is, her body is in the garden but first i must free them both, Paul sends the spirits in the house to the light.</p>
<p>Colin and Dawn call the police and tell them what the medium has told them, that there is a body in the yard but the police just laugh at them and tell them to stop wasting their time.  So the family take it on themselves to search, Paul shows them where he believes the girl is and they dig, after digging no more than 4ft they find what appears to be a body, they call the police, the police arrive, investigate and take the remains.  A few months later there is an article in the local paper, girl missing for 30 years is finally laid to rest after police discovered the body of the girl on the ground of the old cemetery&#8230;</p>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>The piece of paper that was up to her life!</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=46</link>
		<comments>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=46#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:13:02 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Ghost Stories]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Submitted by &#8220;Emma Funk&#8221; there was a girl and her friends coming home from school with her friends.she said im just gonna go and get some milk for my mom, she said that she wants some because she is very poorley and would very mucch appricate it. so she did she went down to the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Submitted by &#8220;Emma Funk&#8221;</p>
<p>there was a girl and her friends coming home from school with her friends.she said im just gonna go and get some milk for my mom, she said that she wants some because she is very poorley and would very mucch appricate it. so she did she went down to the shop down the road.while she was walking she found a piece of paper so she picked it up and put it in the bin.suddenly she heard a voice&#8230;<br />
she stopped and thought&#8230;<br />
then a net fell down on her but there was no-one out and about.<br />
she was getting very scared so she tried to reach her phone out of her pocket. she couldnt reach it so she shoiuted for help unforturatly as i said no-one was out and about so no-one had heard her.she tried to reach the bin&#8230;she kept on trying and she acctualey reached.<br />
she got the piece of paper out of the bin and then was happy.<br />
suddenly the net risen.she ran and ran till she got home she explained to her mom what happened frome then on she hear a voice saying that piece of paper was up to your life and 1 day she heard a voice saying this is the end of you&#8230;and she fell and got brain damage and died&#8230;</p>
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		<title>Keeping His Promise</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=44</link>
		<comments>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=44#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:11:45 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Ghost Stories]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Keeping His Promise by Algernon Blackwood It was eleven o&#8217;clock at night, and young Marriott was locked into his room, cramming as hard as he could cram. He was a &#8220;Fourth Year Man&#8221; at Edinburgh University and he had been ploughed for this particular examination so often that his parents had positively declared they could [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Keeping His Promise<br />
by Algernon Blackwood</p>
<p>It was eleven o&#8217;clock at night, and young Marriott was locked into his room, cramming as hard as he could cram. He was a &#8220;Fourth Year Man&#8221; at Edinburgh University and he had been ploughed for this particular examination so often that his parents had positively declared they could no longer supply the funds to keep him there.<br />
His rooms were cheap and dingy, but it was the lecture fees that took the money. So Marriott pulled himself together at last and definitely made up his mind that he would pass or die in the attempt, and for some weeks now he had been reading as hard as mortal man can read. He was trying to make up for lost time and money in a way that showed conclusively he did not understand the value of either. For no ordinary man—and Marriott was in every sense an ordinary man—can afford to drive the mind as he had lately been driving his, without sooner or later paying the cost.</p>
<p>Among the students he had few friends or acquaintances, and these few had promised not to disturb him at night, knowing he was at last reading in earnest. It was, therefore, with feelings a good deal stronger than mere surprise that he heard his door-bell ring on this particular night and realised that he was to have a visitor. Some men would simply have muffled the bell and gone on quietly with their work. But Marriott was not this sort. He was nervous. It would have bothered and pecked at his mind all night long not to know who the visitor was and what he wanted. The only thing to do, therefore, was to let him in—and out again—as quickly as possible.</p>
<p>The landlady went to bed at ten o&#8217;clock punctually, after which hour nothing would induce her to pretend she heard the bell, so Marriott jumped up from his books with an exclamation that augured ill for the reception of his caller, and prepared to let him in with his own hand.</p>
<p>The streets of Edinburgh town were very still at this late hour—it was late for Edinburgh—and in the quiet neighbourhood of F—— Street, where Marriott lived on the third floor, scarcely a sound broke the silence. As he crossed the floor, the bell rang a second time, with unnecessary clamour, and he unlocked the door and passed into the little hallway with considerable wrath and annoyance in his heart at the insolence of the double interruption.</p>
<p>&#8220;The fellows all know I&#8217;m reading for this exam. Why in the world do they come to bother me at such an unearthly hour?&#8221;</p>
<p>The inhabitants of the building, with himself, were medical students, general students, poor Writers to the Signet, and some others whose vocations were perhaps not so obvious. The stone staircase, dimly lighted at each floor by a gas-jet that would not turn above a certain height, wound down to the level of the street with no pretence at carpet or railing. At some levels it was cleaner than at others. It depended on the landlady of the particular level.</p>
<p>The acoustic properties of a spiral staircase seem to be peculiar. Marriott, standing by the open door, book in hand, thought every moment the owner of the footsteps would come into view. The sound of the boots was so close and so loud that they seemed to travel disproportionately in advance of their cause. Wondering who it could be, he stood ready with all manner of sharp greetings for the man who dared thus to disturb his work. But the man did not appear. The steps sounded almost under his nose, yet no one was visible.</p>
<p>A sudden queer sensation of fear passed over him—a faintness and a shiver down the back. It went, however, almost as soon as it came, and he was just debating whether he would call aloud to his invisible visitor, or slam the door and return to his books, when the cause of the disturbance turned the corner very slowly and came into view.</p>
<p>It was a stranger. He saw a youngish man short of figure and very broad. His face was the colour of a piece of chalk and the eyes, which were very bright, had heavy lines underneath them. Though the cheeks and chin were unshaven and the general appearance unkempt, the man was evidently a gentleman, for he was well dressed and bore himself with a certain air. But, strangest of all, he wore no hat, and carried none in his hand; and although rain had been falling steadily all the evening, he appeared to have neither overcoat nor umbrella.</p>
<p>A hundred questions sprang up in Marriott&#8217;s mind and rushed to his lips, chief among which was something like &#8220;Who in the world are you?&#8221; and &#8220;What in the name of heaven do you come to me for?&#8221; But none of these questions found time to express themselves in words, for almost at once the caller turned his head a little so that the gas light in the hall fell upon his features from a new angle. Then in a flash Marriott recognised him.</p>
<p>&#8220;Field! Man alive! Is it you?&#8221; he gasped.</p>
<p>The Fourth Year Man was not lacking in intuition, and he perceived at once that here was a case for delicate treatment. He divined, without any actual process of thought, that the catastrophe often predicted had come at last, and that this man&#8217;s father had turned him out of the house. They had been at a private school together years before, and though they had hardly met once since, the news had not failed to reach him from time to time with considerable detail, for the family lived near his own and between certain of the sisters there was great intimacy. Young Field had gone wild later, he remembered hearing about it all—drink, a woman, opium, or something of the sort—he could not exactly call to mind.</p>
<p>&#8220;Come in,&#8221; he said at once, his anger vanishing. &#8220;There&#8217;s been something wrong, I can see. Come in, and tell me all about it and perhaps I can help—&#8221; He hardly knew what to say, and stammered a lot more besides. The dark side of life, and the horror of it, belonged to a world that lay remote from his own select little atmosphere of books and dreamings. But he had a man&#8217;s heart for all that.</p>
<p>He led the way across the hall, shutting the front door carefully behind him, and noticed as he did so that the other, though certainly sober, was unsteady on his legs, and evidently much exhausted. Marriott might not be able to pass his examinations, but he at least knew the symptoms of starvation—acute starvation, unless he was much mistaken—when they stared him in the face.</p>
<p>&#8220;Come along,&#8221; he said cheerfully, and with genuine sympathy in his voice. &#8220;I&#8217;m glad to see you. I was going to have a bite of something to eat, and you&#8217;re just in time to join me.&#8221;</p>
<p>The other made no audible reply, and shuffled so feebly with his feet that Marriott took his arm by way of support. He noticed for the first time that the clothes hung on him with pitiful looseness. The broad frame was literally hardly more than a frame. He was as thin as a skeleton. But, as he touched him, the sensation of faintness and dread returned. It only lasted a moment, and then passed off, and he ascribed it not unnaturally to the distress and shock of seeing a former friend in such a pitiful plight.</p>
<p>&#8220;Better let me guide you. It&#8217;s shamefully dark—this hall. I&#8217;m always complaining,&#8221; he said lightly, recognising by the weight upon his arm that the guidance was sorely needed, &#8220;but the old cat never does anything except promise.&#8221; He led him to the sofa, wondering all the time where he had come from and how he had found out the address. It must be at least seven years since those days at the private school when they used to be such close friends.</p>
<p>&#8220;Now, if you&#8217;ll forgive me for a minute,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;ll get supper ready—such as it is. And don&#8217;t bother to talk. Just take it easy on the sofa. I see you&#8217;re dead tired. You can tell me about it afterwards, and we&#8217;ll make plans.&#8221;</p>
<p>The other sat down on the edge of the sofa and stared in silence, while Marriott got out the brown loaf, scones, and huge pot of marmalade that Edinburgh students always keep in their cupboards. His eyes shone with a brightness that suggested drugs, Marriott thought, stealing a glance at him from behind the cupboard door. He did not like yet to take a full square look. The fellow was in a bad way, and it would have been so like an examination to stare and wait for explanations. Besides, he was evidently almost too exhausted to speak. So, for reasons of delicacy—and for another reason as well which he could not exactly formulate to himself—he let his visitor rest apparently unnoticed, while he busied himself with the supper. He lit the spirit lamp to make cocoa, and when the water was boiling he drew up the table with the good things to the sofa, so that Field need not have even the trouble of moving to a chair.</p>
<p>&#8220;Now, let&#8217;s tuck in,&#8221; he said, &#8220;and afterwards we&#8217;ll have a pipe and a chat. I&#8217;m reading for an exam, you know, and I always have something about this time. It&#8217;s jolly to have a companion.&#8221;</p>
<p>He looked up and caught his guest&#8217;s eyes directed straight upon his own. An involuntary shudder ran through him from head to foot. The face opposite him was deadly white and wore a dreadful expression of pain and mental suffering.</p>
<p>&#8220;By Gad!&#8221; he said, jumping up, &#8220;I quite forgot. I&#8217;ve got some whisky somewhere. What an ass I am. I never touch it myself when I&#8217;m working like this.&#8221;</p>
<p>He went to the cupboard and poured out a stiff glass which the other swallowed at a single gulp and without any water. Marriott watched him while he drank it, and at the same time noticed something else as well—Field&#8217;s coat was all over dust, and on one shoulder was a bit of cobweb. It was perfectly dry; Field arrived on a soaking wet night without hat, umbrella, or overcoat, and yet perfectly dry, even dusty. Therefore he had been under cover. What did it all mean? Had he been hiding in the building? . . .</p>
<p>It was very strange. Yet he volunteered nothing; and Marriott had pretty well made up his mind by this time that he would not ask any questions until he had eaten and slept. Food and sleep were obviously what the poor devil needed most and first—he was pleased with his powers of ready diagnosis—and it would not be fair to press him till he had recovered a bit.</p>
<p>They ate their supper together while the host carried on a running one-sided conversation, chiefly about himself and his exams and his &#8220;old cat&#8221; of a landlady, so that the guest need not utter a single word unless he really wished to—which he evidently did not! But, while he toyed with his food, feeling no desire to eat, the other ate voraciously. To see a hungry man devour cold scones, stale oatcake, and brown bread laden with marmalade was a revelation to this inexperienced student who had never known what it was to be without at least three meals a day. He watched in spite of himself, wondering why the fellow did not choke in the process.</p>
<p>But Field seemed to be as sleepy as he was hungry. More than once his head dropped and he ceased to masticate the food in his mouth. Marriott had positively to shake him before he would go on with his meal. A stronger emotion will overcome a weaker, but this struggle between the sting of real hunger and the magical opiate of overpowering sleep was a curious sight to the student, who watched it with mingled astonishment and alarm. He had heard of the pleasure it was to feed hungry men, and watch them eat, but he had never actually witnessed it, and he had no idea it was like this. Field ate like an animal—gobbled, stuffed, gorged. Marriott forgot his reading, and began to feel something very much like a lump in his throat.</p>
<p>&#8220;Afraid there&#8217;s been awfully little to offer you, old man,&#8221; he managed to blurt out when at length the last scone had disappeared, and the rapid, one-sided meal was at an end. Field still made no reply, for he was almost asleep in his seat. He merely looked up wearily and gratefully.</p>
<p>&#8220;Now you must have some sleep, you know,&#8221; he continued, &#8220;or you&#8217;ll go to pieces. I shall be up all night reading for this blessed exam. You&#8217;re more than welcome to my bed. To-morrow we&#8217;ll have a late breakfast and—and see what can be done—and make plans—I&#8217;m awfully good at making plans, you know,&#8221; he added with an attempt at lightness.</p>
<p>Field maintained his &#8220;dead sleepy&#8221; silence, but appeared to acquiesce, and the other led the way into the bedroom, apologising as he did so to this half-starved son of a baronet—whose own home was almost a palace—for the size of the room. The weary guest, however, made no pretence of thanks or politeness. He merely steadied himself on his friend&#8217;s arm as he staggered across the room, and then, with all his clothes on, dropped his exhausted body on the bed. In less than a minute he was to all appearances sound asleep.</p>
<p>For several minutes Marriott stood in the open door and watched him; praying devoutly that he might never find himself in a like predicament, and then fell to wondering what he would do with his unbidden guest on the morrow. But he did not stop long to think, for the call of his books was imperative, and happen what might, he must see to it that he passed that examination.</p>
<p>Having again locked the door into the hall, he sat down to his books and resumed his notes on materia medica where he had left off when the bell rang. But it was difficult for some time to concentrate his mind on the subject. His thoughts kept wandering to the picture of that white-faced, strange-eyed fellow, starved and dirty, lying in his clothes and boots on the bed. He recalled their schooldays together before they had drifted apart, and how they had vowed eternal friendship—and all the rest of it. And now! What horrible straits to be in. How could any man let the love of dissipation take such hold upon him?</p>
<p>But one of their vows together Marriott, it seemed, had completely forgotten. Just now, at any rate, it lay too far in the background of his memory to be recalled.</p>
<p>Through the half-open door—the bedroom led out of the sitting-room and had no other door—came the sound of deep, long-drawn breathing, the regular, steady breathing of a tired man, so tired that, even to listen to it made Marriott almost want to go to sleep himself.</p>
<p>&#8220;He needed it,&#8221; reflected the student, &#8220;and perhaps it came only just in time!&#8221;</p>
<p>Perhaps so; for outside the bitter wind from across the Forth howled cruelly and drove the rain in cold streams against the window-panes, and down the deserted streets. Long before Marriott settled down again properly to his reading, he heard distantly, as it were, through the sentences of the book, the heavy, deep breathing of the sleeper in the next room.</p>
<p>A couple of hours later, when he yawned and changed his books, he still heard the breathing, and went cautiously up to the door to look round.</p>
<p>At first the darkness of the room must have deceived him, or else his eyes were confused and dazzled by the recent glare of the reading lamp. For a minute or two he could make out nothing at all but dark lumps of furniture, the mass of the chest of drawers by the wall, and the white patch where his bath stood in the centre of the floor.</p>
<p>Then the bed came slowly into view. And on it he saw the outline of the sleeping body gradually take shape before his eyes, growing up strangely into the darkness, till it stood out in marked relief—the long black form against the white counterpane.</p>
<p>He could hardly help smiling. Field had not moved an inch. He watched him a moment or two and then returned to his books. The night was full of the singing voices of the wind and rain. There was no sound of traffic; no hansoms clattered over the cobbles, and it was still too early for the milk carts. He worked on steadily and conscientiously, only stopping now and again to change a book, or to sip some of the poisonous stuff that kept him awake and made his brain so active, and on these occasions Field&#8217;s breathing was always distinctly audible in the room. Outside, the storm continued to howl, but inside the house all was stillness. The shade of the reading lamp threw all the light upon the littered table, leaving the other end of the room in comparative darkness. The bedroom door was exactly opposite him where he sat. There was nothing to disturb the worker, nothing but an occasional rush of wind against the windows, and a slight pain in his arm.</p>
<p>This pain, however, which he was unable to account for, grew once or twice very acute. It bothered him; and he tried to remember how, and when, he could have bruised himself so severely, but without success.</p>
<p>At length the page before him turned from yellow to grey, and there were sounds of wheels in the street below. It was four o&#8217;clock. Marriott leaned back and yawned prodigiously. Then he drew back the curtains. The storm had subsided and the Castle Rock was shrouded in mist. With another yawn he turned away from the dreary outlook and prepared to sleep the remaining four hours till breakfast on the sofa. Field was still breathing heavily in the next room, and he first tip-toed across the floor to take another look at him.</p>
<p>Peering cautiously round the half-opened door his first glance fell upon the bed now plainly discernible in the grey light of morning. He stared hard. Then he rubbed his eyes. Then he rubbed his eyes again and thrust his head farther round the edge of the door. With fixed eyes he stared harder still, and harder.</p>
<p>But it made no difference at all. He was staring into an empty room.</p>
<p>The sensation of fear he had felt when Field first appeared upon the scene returned suddenly, but with much greater force. He became conscious, too, that his left arm was throbbing violently and causing him great pain. He stood wondering, and staring, and trying to collect his thoughts. He was trembling from head to foot.</p>
<p>By a great effort of the will he left the support of the door and walked forward boldly into the room.</p>
<p>There, upon the bed, was the impress of a body, where Field had lain and slept. There was the mark of the head on the pillow, and the slight indentation at the foot of the bed where the boots had rested on the counterpane. And there, plainer than ever—for he was closer to it—was the breathing!</p>
<p>Marriott tried to pull himself together. With a great effort he found his voice and called his friend aloud by name!</p>
<p>&#8220;Field! Is that you? Where are you?&#8221;</p>
<p>There was no reply; but the breathing continued without interruption, coming directly from the bed. His voice had such an unfamiliar sound that Marriott did not care to repeat his questions, but he went down on his knees and examined the bed above and below, pulling the mattress off finally, and taking the coverings away separately one by one. But though the sounds continued there was no visible sign of Field, nor was there any space in which a human being, however small, could have concealed itself. He pulled the bed out from the wall, but the sound stayed where it was. It did not move with the bed.</p>
<p>Marriott, finding self-control a little difficult in his weary condition, at once set about a thorough search of the room. He went through the cupboard, the chest of drawers, the little alcove where the clothes hung—everything. But there was no sign of anyone. The small window near the ceiling was closed; and, anyhow, was not large enough to let a cat pass. The sitting-room door was locked on the inside; he could not have got out that way. Curious thoughts began to trouble Marriott&#8217;s mind, bringing in their train unwelcome sensations. He grew more and more excited; he searched the bed again till it resembled the scene of a pillow fight; he searched both rooms, knowing all the time it was useless,—and then he searched again. A cold perspiration broke out all over his body; and the sound of heavy breathing, all this time, never ceased to come from the corner where Field had lain down to sleep.</p>
<p>Then he tried something else. He pushed the bed back exactly into its original position—and himself lay down upon it just where his guest had lain. But the same instant he sprang up again in a single bound. The breathing was close beside him, almost on his cheek, and between him and the wall! Not even a child could have squeezed into the space.</p>
<p>He went back into his sitting-room, opened the windows, welcoming all the light and air possible, and tried to think the whole matter over quietly and clearly. Men who read too hard, and slept too little, he knew were sometimes troubled with very vivid hallucinations. Again he calmly reviewed every incident of the night; his accurate sensations; the vivid details; the emotions stirred in him; the dreadful feast—no single hallucination could ever combine all these and cover so long a period of time. But with less satisfaction he thought of the recurring faintness, and curious sense of horror that had once or twice come over him, and then of the violent pains in his arm. These were quite unaccountable.</p>
<p>Moreover, now that he began to analyse and examine, there was one other thing that fell upon him like a sudden revelation: During the whole time Field had not actually uttered a single word! Yet, as though in mockery upon his reflections, there came ever from that inner room the sound of the breathing, long-drawn, deep, and regular. The thing was incredible. It was absurd.</p>
<p>Haunted by visions of brain fever and insanity, Marriott put on his cap and macintosh and left the house. The morning air on Arthur&#8217;s Seat would blow the cobwebs from his brain; the scent of the heather, and above all, the sight of the sea. He roamed over the wet slopes above Holyrood for a couple of hours, and did not return until the exercise had shaken some of the horror out of his bones, and given him a ravening appetite into the bargain.</p>
<p>As he entered he saw that there was another man in the room, standing against the window with his back to the light. He recognised his fellow-student Greene, who was reading for the same examination.</p>
<p>&#8220;Read hard all night, Marriott,&#8221; he said, &#8220;and thought I&#8217;d drop in here to compare notes and have some breakfast. You&#8217;re out early?&#8221; he added, by way of a question. Marriott said he had a headache and a walk had helped it, and Greene nodded and said &#8220;Ah!&#8221; But when the girl had set the steaming porridge on the table and gone out again, he went on with rather a forced tone, &#8220;Didn&#8217;t know you had any friends who drank, Marriott?&#8221;</p>
<p>This was obviously tentative, and Marriott replied drily that he did not know it either.</p>
<p>&#8220;Sounds just as if some chap were &#8216;sleeping it off&#8217; in there, doesn&#8217;t it, though?&#8221; persisted the other, with a nod in the direction of the bedroom, and looking curiously at his friend. The two men stared steadily at each other for several seconds, and then Marriott said earnestly—</p>
<p>&#8220;Then you hear it too, thank God!&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Of course I hear it. The door&#8217;s open. Sorry if I wasn&#8217;t meant to.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh, I don&#8217;t mean that,&#8221; said Marriott, lowering his voice. &#8220;But I&#8217;m awfully relieved. Let me explain. Of course, if you hear it too, then it&#8217;s all right; but really it frightened me more than I can tell you. I thought I was going to have brain fever, or something, and you know what a lot depends on this exam. It always begins with sounds, or visions, or some sort of beastly hallucination, and I—&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Rot!&#8221; ejaculated the other impatiently. &#8220;What are you talking about?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Now, listen to me, Greene,&#8221; said Marriott, as calmly as he could, for the breathing was still plainly audible, &#8220;and I&#8217;ll tell you what I mean, only don&#8217;t interrupt.&#8221; And thereupon he related exactly what had happened during the night, telling everything, even down to the pain in his arm. When it was over he got up from the table and crossed the room.</p>
<p>&#8220;You hear the breathing now plainly, don&#8217;t you?&#8221; he said. Greene said he did. &#8220;Well, come with me, and we&#8217;ll search the room together.&#8221; The other, however, did not move from his chair.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been in already,&#8221; he said sheepishly; &#8220;I heard the sounds and thought it was you. The door was ajar—so I went in.&#8221;</p>
<p>Marriott made no comment, but pushed the door open as wide as it would go. As it opened, the sound of breathing grew more and more distinct.</p>
<p>&#8220;Someone must be in there,&#8221; said Greene under his breath.</p>
<p>&#8220;Someone is in there, but where?&#8221; said Marriott. Again he urged his friend to go in with him. But Greene refused point-blank; said he had been in once and had searched the room and there was nothing there. He would not go in again for a good deal.</p>
<p>They shut the door and retired into the other room to talk it all over with many pipes. Greene questioned his friend very closely, but without illuminating result, since questions cannot alter facts.</p>
<p>&#8220;The only thing that ought to have a proper, a logical, explanation is the pain in my arm,&#8221; said Marriott, rubbing that member with an attempt at a smile. &#8220;It hurts so infernally and aches all the way up. I can&#8217;t remember bruising it, though.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Let me examine it for you,&#8221; said Greene. &#8220;I&#8217;m awfully good at bones in spite of the examiners&#8217; opinion to the contrary.&#8221; It was a relief to play the fool a bit, and Marriott took his coat off and rolled up his sleeve.</p>
<p>&#8220;By George, though, I&#8217;m bleeding!&#8221; he exclaimed. &#8220;Look here! What on earth&#8217;s this?&#8221; On the forearm, quite close to the wrist, was a thin red line. There was a tiny drop of apparently fresh blood on it. Greene came over and looked closely at it for some minutes. Then he sat back in his chair, looking curiously at his friend&#8217;s face.</p>
<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve scratched yourself without knowing it,&#8221; he said presently.</p>
<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s no sign of a bruise. It must be something else that made the arm ache.&#8221;</p>
<p>Marriott sat very still, staring silently at his arm as though the solution of the whole mystery lay there actually written upon the skin.</p>
<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s the matter? I see nothing very strange about a scratch,&#8221; said Greene, in an unconvincing sort of voice. &#8220;It was your cuff links probably. Last night in your excitement—&#8221;</p>
<p>But Marriott, white to the very lips, was trying to speak. The sweat stood in great beads on his forehead. At last he leaned forward close to his friend&#8217;s face.</p>
<p>&#8220;Look,&#8221; he said, in a low voice that shook a little. &#8220;Do you see that red mark? I mean underneath what you call the scratch?&#8221;</p>
<p>Greene admitted he saw something or other, and Marriott wiped the place clean with his handkerchief and told him to look again more closely.</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes, I see,&#8221; returned the other, lifting his head after a moment&#8217;s careful inspection. &#8220;It looks like an old scar.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;It is an old scar,&#8221; whispered Marriott, his lips trembling. &#8220;Now it all comes back to me.&#8221; &#8220;All what?&#8221; Greene fidgeted on his chair. He tried to laugh, but without success. His friend seemed bordering on collapse.</p>
<p>&#8220;Hush! Be quiet, and—I&#8217;ll tell you,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Field made that scar.&#8221;</p>
<p>For a whole minute the two men looked each other full in the face without speaking.</p>
<p>&#8220;Field made that scar!&#8221; repeated Marriott at length in a louder voice.</p>
<p>&#8220;Field! You mean—last night?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;No, not last night. Years ago—at school, with his knife. And I made a scar in his arm with mine.&#8221; Marriott was talking rapidly now.</p>
<p>&#8220;We exchanged drops of blood in each other&#8217;s cuts. He put a drop into my arm and I put one into his—&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;In the name of heaven, what for?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;It was a boys&#8217; compact. We made a sacred pledge, a bargain. I remember it all perfectly now. We had been reading some dreadful book and we swore to appear to one another—I mean, whoever died first swore to show himself to the other. And we sealed the compact with each other&#8217;s blood. I remember it all so well—the hot summer afternoon in the playground, seven years ago—and one of the masters caught us and confiscated the knives—and I have never thought of it again to this day—&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;And you mean—&#8221; stammered Greene.</p>
<p>But Marriott made no answer. He got up and crossed the room and lay down wearily upon the sofa, hiding his face in his hands.</p>
<p>Greene himself was a bit non-plussed. He left his friend alone for a little while, thinking it all over again. Suddenly an idea seemed to strike him. He went over to where Marriott still lay motionless on the sofa and roused him. In any case it was better to face the matter, whether there was an explanation or not. Giving in was always the silly exit.</p>
<p>&#8220;I say, Marriott,&#8221; he began, as the other turned his white face up to him. &#8220;There&#8217;s no good being so upset about it. I mean—if it&#8217;s all an hallucination we know what to do. And if it isn&#8217;t—well, we know what to think, don&#8217;t we?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I suppose so. But it frightens me horribly for some reason,&#8221; returned his friend in a hushed voice. &#8220;And that poor devil—&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;But, after all, if the worst is true and—and that chap has kept his promise—well, he has, that&#8217;s all, isn&#8217;t it?&#8221;</p>
<p>Marriott nodded.</p>
<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s only one thing that occurs to me,&#8221; Greene went on, &#8220;and that is, are you quite sure that—that he really ate like that—I mean that he actually ate anything at all?&#8221; he finished, blurting out all his thought.</p>
<p>Marriott stared at him for a moment and then said he could easily make certain. He spoke quietly. After the main shock no lesser surprise could affect him.</p>
<p>&#8220;I put the things away myself,&#8221; he said, &#8220;after we had finished. They are on the third shelf in that cupboard. No one&#8217;s touched &#8216;em since.&#8221;</p>
<p>He pointed without getting up, and Greene took the hint and went over to look.</p>
<p>&#8220;Exactly,&#8221; he said, after a brief examination; &#8220;just as I thought. It was partly hallucination, at any rate. The things haven&#8217;t been touched. Come and see for yourself.&#8221;</p>
<p>Together they examined the shelf. There was the brown loaf, the plate of stale scones, the oatcake, all untouched. Even the glass of whisky Marriott had poured out stood there with the whisky still in it.</p>
<p>&#8220;You were feeding—no one,&#8221; said Greene &#8220;Field ate and drank nothing. He was not there at all!&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;But the breathing?&#8221; urged the other in a low voice, staring with a dazed expression on his face.</p>
<p>Greene did not answer. He walked over to the bedroom, while Marriott followed him with his eyes. He opened the door, and listened. There was no need for words. The sound of deep, regular breathing came floating through the air. There was no hallucination about that, at any rate. Marriott could hear it where he stood on the other side of the room.</p>
<p>Greene closed the door and came back. &#8220;There&#8217;s only one thing to do,&#8221; he declared with decision. &#8220;Write home and find out about him, and meanwhile come and finish your reading in my rooms. I&#8217;ve got an extra bed.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Agreed,&#8221; returned the Fourth Year Man; &#8220;there&#8217;s no hallucination about that exam; I must pass that whatever happens.&#8221;</p>
<p>And this was what they did.</p>
<p>It was about a week later when Marriott got the answer from his sister. Part of it he read out to Greene—</p>
<p>&#8220;It is curious,&#8221; she wrote, &#8220;that in your letter you should have enquired after Field. It seems a terrible thing, but you know only a short while ago Sir John&#8217;s patience became exhausted, and he turned him out of the house, they say without a penny. Well, what do you think? He has killed himself. At least, it looks like suicide. Instead of leaving the house, he went down into the cellar and simply starved himself to death. . . . They&#8217;re trying to suppress it, of course, but I heard it all from my maid, who got it from their footman. . . . They found the body on the 14th and the doctor said he had died about twelve hours before. . . . He was dreadfully thin. . . .&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Then he died on the 13th,&#8221; said Greene.</p>
<p>Marriott nodded.</p>
<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the very night he came to see you.&#8221;</p>
<p>Marriott nodded again.</p>
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		<title>At the Gate</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=42</link>
		<comments>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=42#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:10:24 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ghost Stories]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=42</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[At the Gate by Myla Jo Closser A shaggy Airedale scented his way along the highroad. He had not been there before, but he was guided by the trail of his brethren who had preceded him. He had gone unwillingly upon this journey, yet with the perfect training of dogs he had accepted it without [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>At the Gate<br />
by Myla Jo Closser</p>
<p>A shaggy Airedale scented his way along the highroad. He had not been there before, but he was guided by the trail of his brethren who had preceded him. He had gone unwillingly upon this journey, yet with the perfect training of dogs he had accepted it without complaint. The path had been lonely, and his heart would have failed him, traveling as he must without his people, had not these traces of countless dogs before him promised companionship of a sort at the end of the road.<br />
The landscape had appeared arid at first, for the translation from recent agony into freedom from pain had been so numbing in its swiftness that it was some time before he could fully appreciate the pleasant dog-country through which he was passing. There were woods with leaves upon the ground through which to scurry, long grassy slopes for extended runs, and lakes into which he might plunge for sticks and bring them back to—But he did not complete his thought, for the boy was not with him. A little wave of homesickness possessed him.</p>
<p>It made his mind easier to see far ahead a great gate as high as the heavens, wide enough for all. He understood that only man built such barriers and by straining his eyes he fancied he could discern humans passing through to whatever lay beyond. He broke into a run that he might the more quickly gain this inclosure made beautiful by men and women; but his thoughts outran his pace, and he remembered that he had left the family behind, and again this lovely new compound became not perfect, since it would lack the family.</p>
<p>The scent of the dogs grew very strong now, and coming nearer, he discovered, to his astonishment that of the myriads of those who had arrived ahead of him thousands were still gathered on the outside of the portal. They sat in a wide circle spreading out on each side of the entrance, big, little, curly, handsome, mongrel, thoroughbred dogs of every age, complexion, and personality. All were apparently waiting for something, someone, and at the pad of the Airedale&#8217;s feet on the hard road they arose and looked in his direction.</p>
<p>That the interest passed as soon as they discovered the new-comer to be a dog puzzled him. In his former dwelling-place a four-footed brother was greeted with enthusiasm when he was a friend, with suspicious diplomacy when a stranger, and with sharp reproof when an enemy; but never had he been utterly ignored.</p>
<p>He remembered something that he had read many times on great buildings with lofty entrances. &#8220;Dogs not admitted,&#8221; the signs had said, and he feared this might be the reason for the waiting circle outside the gate. It might be that this noble portal stood as the dividing-line between mere dogs and humans. But he had been a member of the family, romping with them in the living-room, sitting at meals with them in the dining-room, going upstairs at night with them, and the thought that he was to be &#8220;kept out&#8221; would be unendurable.</p>
<p>He despised the passive dogs. They should be treating a barrier after the fashion of their old country, leaping against it, barking, and scratching the nicely painted door. He bounded up the last little hill to set them an example, for he was still full of the rebellion of the world; but he found no door to leap against. He could see beyond the entrance dear masses of people, yet no dog crossed the threshold. They continued in their patient ring, their gaze upon the winding road.</p>
<p>He now advanced cautiously to examine the gate. It occurred to him that it must be fly-time in this region, and he did not wish to make himself ridiculous before all these strangers by trying to bolt through an invisible mesh like the one that had baffled him when he was a little chap. Yet there were no screens, and despair entered his soul. What bitter punishment these poor beasts must have suffered before they learned to stay on this side the arch that led to human beings! What had they done on earth to merit this? Stolen bones troubled his conscience, runaway days, sleeping in the best chair until the key clicked in the lock. These were sins.</p>
<p>At that moment an English bull-terrier, white, with liver-colored spots and a jaunty manner, approached him, snuffling in a friendly way. No sooner had the bull-terrier smelt his collar than he fell to expressing his joy at meeting him. The Airedale&#8217;s reserve was quite thawed by this welcome, though he did not know just what to make of it.</p>
<p>&#8220;I know you! I know you!&#8221; exclaimed the bull-terrier, adding inconsequently, &#8220;What&#8217;s your name?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Tam o&#8217;Shanter. They call me Tammy,&#8221; was the answer, with a pardonable break in the voice.</p>
<p>&#8220;I know them,&#8221; said the bull-terrier. &#8220;Nice folks.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Best ever,&#8221; said the Airedale, trying to be nonchalant, and scratching a flea which was not there. &#8220;I don&#8217;t remember you. When did you know them?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;About fourteen tags ago, when they were first married. We keep track of time here by the license-tags. I had four.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;This is my first and only one. You were before my time, I guess.&#8221; He felt young and shy.</p>
<p>&#8220;Come for a walk, and tell me all about them,&#8221; was his new friend&#8217;s invitation.</p>
<p>&#8220;Aren&#8217;t we allowed in there?&#8221; asked Tam, looking toward the gate.</p>
<p>&#8220;Sure. You can go in whenever you want to. Some of us do at first, but we don&#8217;t stay.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Like it better outside?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;No, no; it isn&#8217;t that.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Then why are all you fellows hanging around here? Any old dog can see it&#8217;s better beyond the arch.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;You see, we&#8217;re waiting for our folks to come.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Airedale grasped it at once, and nodded understandingly.</p>
<p>&#8220;I felt that way when I came along the road. It wouldn&#8217;t be what it&#8217;s supposed to be without them. It wouldn&#8217;t be the perfect place.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Not to us,&#8221; said the bull-terrier.</p>
<p>&#8220;Fine! I&#8217;ve stolen bones, but it must be that I have been forgiven, if I&#8217;m to see them here again. It&#8217;s the great good place all right. But look here,&#8221; he added as a new thought struck him, &#8220;do they wait for us?&#8221;</p>
<p>The older inhabitant coughed in slight embarrassment.</p>
<p>&#8220;The humans couldn&#8217;t do that very well. It wouldn&#8217;t be the thing to have them hang around outside for just a dog—not dignified.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Quite right,&#8221; agreed Tam. &#8220;I&#8217;m glad they go straight to their mansions. I&#8217;d—I&#8217;d hate to have them missing me as I am missing them.&#8221; He sighed. &#8220;But, then, they wouldn&#8217;t have to wait so long.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh, well, they&#8217;re getting on. Don&#8217;t be discouraged,&#8221; comforted the terrier. &#8220;And in the meantime it&#8217;s like a big hotel in summer—watching the new arrivals. See, there is something doing now.&#8221;</p>
<p>All the dogs were aroused to excitement by a little figure making its way uncertainly up the last slope. Half of them started to meet it, crowding about in a loving, eager pack.</p>
<p>&#8220;Look out; don&#8217;t scare it,&#8221; cautioned the older animals, while word was passed to those farthest from the gate: &#8220;Quick! Quick! A baby&#8217;s come!&#8221;</p>
<p>Before they had entirely assembled, however, a gaunt yellow hound pushed through the crowd, gave one sniff at the small child, and with a yelp of joy crouched at its feet. The baby embraced the hound in recognition, and the two moved toward the gate. Just outside the hound stopped to speak to an aristocratic St. Bernard who had been friendly:</p>
<p>&#8220;Sorry to leave you, old fellow,&#8221; he said, &#8220;but I&#8217;m going in to watch over the kid. You see, I&#8217;m all she has up here.&#8221;</p>
<p>The bull-terrier looked at the Airedale for appreciation.</p>
<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the way we do it,&#8221; he said proudly.</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes, but—&#8221; the Airedale put his head on one side in perplexity.</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes, but what?&#8221; asked the guide.</p>
<p>&#8220;The dogs that don&#8217;t have any people—the nobodies&#8217; dogs?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the best of all. Oh, everything is thought out here. Crouch down,—you must be tired,—and watch,&#8221; said the bull-terrier.</p>
<p>Soon they spied another small form making the turn in the road. He wore a Boy Scout&#8217;s uniform, but he was a little fearful, for all that, so new was this adventure. The dogs rose again and snuffled, but the better groomed of the circle held back, and in their place a pack of odds and ends of the company ran down to meet him. The Boy Scout was reassured by their friendly attitude, and after petting them impartially, he chose an old-fashioned black and tan, and the two passed in.</p>
<p>Tam looked questioningly.</p>
<p>&#8220;They didn&#8217;t know each other!&#8221; he exclaimed.</p>
<p>&#8220;But they&#8217;ve always wanted to. That&#8217;s one of the boys who used to beg for a dog, but his father wouldn&#8217;t let him have one. So all our strays wait for just such little fellows to come along. Every boy gets a dog, and every dog gets a master.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I expect the boy&#8217;s father would like to know that now,&#8221; commented the Airedale. &#8220;No doubt he thinks quite often, &#8216;I wish I&#8217;d let him have a dog.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>The bull-terrier laughed.</p>
<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re pretty near the earth yet, aren&#8217;t you?&#8221;</p>
<p>Tam admitted it.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve a lot of sympathy with fathers and with boys, having them both in the family, and a mother as well.&#8221;</p>
<p>The bull-terrier leaped up in astonishment.</p>
<p>&#8220;You don&#8217;t mean to say they keep a boy?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Sure; greatest boy on earth. Ten this year.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Well, well, this is news! I wish they&#8217;d kept a boy when I was there.&#8221;</p>
<p>The Airedale looked at his new friend intently.</p>
<p>&#8220;See here, who are you?&#8221; he demanded.</p>
<p>But the other hurried on:</p>
<p>&#8220;I used to run away from them just to play with a boy. They&#8217;d punish me, and I always wanted to tell them it was their fault for not getting one.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Who are you, anyway?&#8221; repeated Tam. &#8220;Talking all this interest in me, too. Whose dog were you?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve already guessed. I see it in your quivering snout. I&#8217;m the old dog that had to leave them about ten years ago.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Their old dog Bully?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes, I&#8217;m Bully.&#8221; They nosed each other with deeper affection, then strolled about the glades shoulder to shoulder. Bully the more eagerly pressed for news. &#8220;Tell me, how are they getting along?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Very well indeed; they&#8217;ve paid for the house.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I—I suppose you occupy the kennel?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;No. They said they couldn&#8217;t stand it to see another dog in your old place.&#8221;</p>
<p>Bully stopped to howl gently.</p>
<p>&#8220;That touches me. It&#8217;s generous in you to tell it. To think they missed me!&#8221;</p>
<p>For a little while they went on in silence, but as evening fell, and the light from the golden streets inside of the city gave the only glow to the scene, Bully grew nervous and suggested that they go back.</p>
<p>&#8220;We can&#8217;t see so well at night, and I like to be pretty close to the path, especially toward morning.&#8221;</p>
<p>Tam assented.</p>
<p>&#8220;And I will point them out. You might not know them just at first.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh, we know them. Sometimes the babies have so grown up they&#8217;re rather hazy in their recollection of how we look. They think we&#8217;re bigger than we are; but you can&#8217;t fool us dogs.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s understood,&#8221; Tam cunningly arranged, &#8220;that when he or she arrives you&#8217;ll sort of make them feel at home while I wait for the boy?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s the best plan,&#8221; assented Bully, kindly. &#8220;And if by any chance the little fellow should come first,—there&#8217;s been a lot of them this summer—of course you&#8217;ll introduce me?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I shall be proud to do it.&#8221;</p>
<p>And so with muzzles sunk between their paws, and with their eyes straining down the pilgrims&#8217; road, they wait outside the gate.</p>
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		<title>A Case of Eavesdropping</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:09:08 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[A Case of Eavesdropping by Algernon Blackwood Jim Shorthouse was the sort of fellow who always made a mess of things. Everything with which his hands or mind came into contact issued from such contact in an unqualified and irremediable state of mess. His college days were a mess: he was twice rusticated. His schooldays [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Case of Eavesdropping<br />
by Algernon Blackwood</p>
<p>Jim Shorthouse was the sort of fellow who always made a mess of things. Everything with which his hands or mind came into contact issued from such contact in an unqualified and irremediable state of mess. His college days were a mess: he was twice rusticated. His schooldays were a mess: he went to half a dozen, each passing him on to the next with a worse character and in a more developed state of mess. His early boyhood was the sort of mess that copy-books and dictionaries spell with a big &#8220;M,&#8221; and his babyhood—ugh! was the embodiment of howling, yowling, screaming mess.<br />
At the age of forty, however, there came a change in his troubled life, when he met a girl with half a million in her own right, who consented to marry him, and who very soon succeeded in reducing his most messy existence into a state of comparative order and system.</p>
<p>Certain incidents, important and otherwise, of Jim&#8217;s life would never have come to be told here but for the fact that in getting into his &#8220;messes&#8221; and out of them again he succeeded in drawing himself into the atmosphere of peculiar circumstances and strange happenings. He attracted to his path the curious adventures of life as unfailingly as meat attracts flies, and jam wasps. It is to the meat and jam of his life, so to speak, that he owes his experiences; his after-life was all pudding, which attracts nothing but greedy children. With marriage the interest of his life ceased for all but one person, and his path became regular as the sun&#8217;s instead of erratic as a comet&#8217;s.</p>
<p>The first experience in order of time that he related to me shows that somewhere latent behind his disarranged nervous system there lay psychic perceptions of an uncommon order. About the age of twenty-two—I think after his second rustication—his father&#8217;s purse and patience had equally given out, and Jim found himself stranded high and dry in a large American city. High and dry! And the only clothes that had no holes in them safely in the keeping of his uncle&#8217;s wardrobe.</p>
<p>Careful reflection on a bench in one of the city parks led him to the conclusion that the only thing to do was to persuade the city editor of one of the daily journals that he possessed an observant mind and a ready pen, and that he could &#8220;do good work for your paper, sir, as a reporter.&#8221; This, then, he did, standing at a most unnatural angle between the editor and the window to conceal the whereabouts of the holes.</p>
<p>&#8220;Guess we&#8217;ll have to give you a week&#8217;s trial,&#8221; said the editor, who, ever on the lookout for good chance material, took on shoals of men in that way and retained on the average one man per shoal. Anyhow it gave Jim Shorthouse the wherewithal to sew up the holes and relieve his uncle&#8217;s wardrobe of its burden.</p>
<p>Then he went to find living quarters; and in this proceeding his unique characteristics already referred to—what theosophists would call his Karma—began unmistakably to assert themselves, for it was in the house he eventually selected that this sad tale took place.</p>
<p>There are no &#8220;diggings&#8221; in American cities. The alternatives for small incomes are grim enough—rooms in a boarding-house where meals are served, or in a room-house where no meals are served—not even breakfast. Rich people live in palaces, of course, but Jim had nothing to do with &#8220;sich-like.&#8221; His horizon was bounded by boarding-houses and room-houses; and, owing to the necessary irregularity of his meals and hours, he took the latter.</p>
<p>It was a large, gaunt-looking place in a side street, with dirty windows and a creaking iron gate, but the rooms were large, and the one he selected and paid for in advance was on the top floor. The landlady looked gaunt and dusty as the house, and quite as old. Her eyes were green and faded, and her features large.</p>
<p>&#8220;Waal,&#8221; she twanged, with her electrifying Western drawl, &#8220;that&#8217;s the room, if you like it, and that&#8217;s the price I said. Now, if you want it, why, just say so; and if you don&#8217;t, why, it don&#8217;t hurt me any.&#8221;</p>
<p>Jim wanted to shake her, but he feared the clouds of long-accumulated dust in her clothes, and as the price and size of the room suited him, he decided to take it.</p>
<p>&#8220;Anyone else on this floor?&#8221; he asked.</p>
<p>She looked at him queerly out of her faded eyes before she answered.</p>
<p>&#8220;None of my guests ever put such questions to me before,&#8221; she said; &#8220;but I guess you&#8217;re different. Why, there&#8217;s no one at all but an old gent that&#8217;s stayed here every bit of five years. He&#8217;s over thar,&#8221; pointing to the end of the passage.</p>
<p>&#8220;Ah! I see,&#8221; said Shorthouse feebly. &#8220;So I&#8217;m alone up here?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Reckon you are, pretty near,&#8221; she twanged out, ending the conversation abruptly by turning her back on her new &#8220;guest,&#8221; and going slowly and deliberately downstairs.</p>
<p>The newspaper work kept Shorthouse out most of the night. Three times a week he got home at 1 a.m., and three times at 3 a.m. The room proved comfortable enough, and he paid for a second week. His unusual hours had so far prevented his meeting any inmates of the house, and not a sound had been heard from the &#8220;old gent&#8221; who shared the floor with him. It seemed a very quiet house.</p>
<p>One night, about the middle of the second week, he came home tired after a long day&#8217;s work. The lamp that usually stood all night in the hall had burned itself out, and he had to stumble upstairs in the dark. He made considerable noise in doing so, but nobody seemed to be disturbed. The whole house was utterly quiet, and probably everybody was asleep. There were no lights under any of the doors. All was in darkness. It was after two o&#8217;clock.</p>
<p>After reading some English letters that had come during the day, and dipping for a few minutes into a book, he became drowsy and got ready for bed. Just as he was about to get in between the sheets, he stopped for a moment and listened. There rose in the night, as he did so, the sound of steps somewhere in the house below. Listening attentively, he heard that it was somebody coming upstairs—a heavy tread, and the owner taking no pains to step quietly. On it came up the stairs, tramp, tramp, tramp—evidently the tread of a big man, and one in something of a hurry.</p>
<p>At once thoughts connected somehow with fire and police flashed through Jim&#8217;s brain, but there were no sounds of voices with the steps, and he reflected in the same moment that it could only be the old gentleman keeping late hours and tumbling upstairs in the darkness. He was in the act of turning out the gas and stepping into bed, when the house resumed its former stillness by the footsteps suddenly coming to a dead stop immediately outside his own room.</p>
<p>With his hand on the gas, Shorthouse paused a moment before turning it out to see if the steps would go on again, when he was startled by a loud knocking on his door. Instantly, in obedience to a curious and unexplained instinct, he turned out the light, leaving himself and the room in total darkness.</p>
<p>He had scarcely taken a step across the room to open the door, when a voice from the other side of the wall, so close it almost sounded in his ear, exclaimed in German, &#8220;Is that you, father? Come in.&#8221;</p>
<p>The speaker was a man in the next room, and the knocking, after all, had not been on his own door, but on that of the adjoining chamber, which he had supposed to be vacant.</p>
<p>Almost before the man in the passage had time to answer in German, &#8220;Let me in at once,&#8221; Jim heard someone cross the floor and unlock the door. Then it was slammed to with a bang, and there was audible the sound of footsteps about the room, and of chairs being drawn up to a table and knocking against furniture on the way. The men seemed wholly regardless of their neighbour&#8217;s comfort, for they made noise enough to waken the dead.</p>
<p>&#8220;Serves me right for taking a room in such a cheap hole,&#8221; reflected Jim in the darkness. &#8220;I wonder whom she&#8217;s let the room to!&#8221;</p>
<p>The two rooms, the landlady had told him, were originally one. She had put up a thin partition—just a row of boards—to increase her income. The doors were adjacent, and only separated by the massive upright beam between them. When one was opened or shut the other rattled.</p>
<p>With utter indifference to the comfort of the other sleepers in the house, the two Germans had meanwhile commenced to talk both at once and at the top of their voices. They talked emphatically, even angrily. The words &#8220;Father&#8221; and &#8220;Otto&#8221; were freely used. Shorthouse understood German, but as he stood listening for the first minute or two, an eavesdropper in spite of himself, it was difficult to make head or tail of the talk, for neither would give way to the other, and the jumble of guttural sounds and unfinished sentences was wholly unintelligible. Then, very suddenly, both voices dropped together; and, after a moment&#8217;s pause, the deep tones of one of them, who seemed to be the &#8220;father,&#8221; said, with the utmost distinctness—</p>
<p>&#8220;You mean, Otto, that you refuse to get it?&#8221;</p>
<p>There was a sound of someone shuffling in the chair before the answer came. &#8220;I mean that I don&#8217;t know how to get it. It is so much, father. It is too much. A part of it—&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;A part of it!&#8221; cried the other, with an angry oath, &#8220;a part of it, when ruin and disgrace are already in the house, is worse than useless. If you can get half you can get all, you wretched fool. Half-measures only damn all concerned.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;You told me last time—&#8221; began the other firmly, but was not allowed to finish. A succession of horrible oaths drowned his sentence, and the father went on, in a voice vibrating with anger—</p>
<p>&#8220;You know she will give you anything. You have only been married a few months. If you ask and give a plausible reason you can get all we want and more. You can ask it temporarily. All will be paid back. It will re-establish the firm, and she will never know what was done with it. With that amount, Otto, you know I can recoup all these terrible losses, and in less than a year all will be repaid. But without it. . . . You must get it, Otto. Hear me, you must. Am I to be arrested for the misuse of trust moneys? Is our honoured name to be cursed and spat on?&#8221; The old man choked and stammered in his anger and desperation.</p>
<p>Shorthouse stood shivering in the darkness and listening in spite of himself. The conversation had carried him along with it, and he had been for some reason afraid to let his neighbourhood be known. But at this point he realised that he had listened too long and that he must inform the two men that they could be overheard to every single syllable. So he coughed loudly, and at the same time rattled the handle of his door. It seemed to have no effect, for the voices continued just as loudly as before, the son protesting and the father growing more and more angry. He coughed again persistently, and also contrived purposely in the darkness to tumble against the partition, feeling the thin boards yield easily under his weight, and making a considerable noise in so doing. But the voices went on unconcernedly, and louder than ever. Could it be possible they had not heard?</p>
<p>By this time Jim was more concerned about his own sleep than the morality of overhearing the private scandals of his neighbours, and he went out into the passage and knocked smartly at their door. Instantly, as if by magic, the sounds ceased. Everything dropped into utter silence. There was no light under the door and not a whisper could be heard within. He knocked again, but received no answer.</p>
<p>&#8220;Gentlemen,&#8221; he began at length, with his lips close to the keyhole and in German, &#8220;please do not talk so loud. I can overhear all you say in the next room. Besides, it is very late, and I wish to sleep.&#8221;</p>
<p>He paused and listened, but no answer was forthcoming. He turned the handle and found the door was locked. Not a sound broke the stillness of the night except the faint swish of the wind over the skylight and the creaking of a board here and there in the house below. The cold air of a very early morning crept down the passage, and made him shiver. The silence of the house began to impress him disagreeably. He looked behind him and about him, hoping, and yet fearing, that something would break the stillness. The voices still seemed to ring on in his ears; but that sudden silence, when he knocked at the door, affected him far more unpleasantly than the voices, and put strange thoughts in his brain—thoughts he did not like or approve.</p>
<p>Moving stealthily from the door, he peered over the banisters into the space below. It was like a deep vault that might conceal in its shadows anything that was not good. It was not difficult to fancy he saw an indistinct moving to-and-fro below him. Was that a figure sitting on the stairs peering up obliquely at him out of hideous eyes? Was that a sound of whispering and shuffling down there in the dark halls and forsaken landings? Was it something more than the inarticulate murmur of the night?</p>
<p>The wind made an effort overhead, singing over the skylight, and the door behind him rattled and made him start. He turned to go back to his room, and the draught closed the door slowly in his face as if there were someone pressing against it from the other side. When he pushed it open and went in, a hundred shadowy forms seemed to dart swiftly and silently back to their corners and hiding-places. But in the adjoining room the sounds had entirely ceased, and Shorthouse soon crept into bed, and left the house with its inmates, waking or sleeping, to take care of themselves, while he entered the region of dreams and silence.</p>
<p>Next day, strong in the common sense that the sunlight brings, he determined to lodge a complaint against the noisy occupants of the next room and make the landlady request them to modify their voices at such late hours of the night and morning. But it so happened that she was not to be seen that day, and when he returned from the office at midnight it was, of course, too late.</p>
<p>Looking under the door as he came up to bed he noticed that there was no light, and concluded that the Germans were not in. So much the better. He went to sleep about one o&#8217;clock, fully decided that if they came up later and woke him with their horrible noises he would not rest till he had roused the landlady and made her reprove them with that authoritative twang, in which every word was like the lash of a metallic whip.</p>
<p>However, there proved to be no need for such drastic measures, for Shorthouse slumbered peacefully all night, and his dreams—chiefly of the fields of grain and flocks of sheep on the far-away farms of his father&#8217;s estate—were permitted to run their fanciful course unbroken.</p>
<p>Two nights later, however, when he came home tired out, after a difficult day, and wet and blown about by one of the wickedest storms he had ever seen, his dreams—always of the fields and sheep—were not destined to be so undisturbed.</p>
<p>He had already dozed off in that delicious glow that follows the removal of wet clothes and the immediate snuggling under warm blankets, when his consciousness, hovering on the borderland between sleep and waking, was vaguely troubled by a sound that rose indistinctly from the depths of the house, and, between the gusts of wind and rain, reached his ears with an accompanying sense of uneasiness and discomfort. It rose on the night air with some pretence of regularity, dying away again in the roar of the wind to reassert itself distantly in the deep, brief hushes of the storm.</p>
<p>For a few minutes Jim&#8217;s dreams were coloured only—tinged, as it were, by this impression of fear approaching from somewhere insensibly upon him. His consciousness, at first, refused to be drawn back from that enchanted region where it had wandered, and he did not immediately awaken. But the nature of his dreams changed unpleasantly. He saw the sheep suddenly run huddled together, as though frightened by the neighbourhood of an enemy, while the fields of waving corn became agitated as though some monster were moving uncouthly among the crowded stalks. The sky grew dark, and in his dream an awful sound came somewhere from the clouds. It was in reality the sound downstairs growing more distinct.</p>
<p>Shorthouse shifted uneasily across the bed with something like a groan of distress. The next minute he awoke, and found himself sitting straight up in bed—listening. Was it a nightmare? Had he been dreaming evil dreams, that his flesh crawled and the hair stirred on his head?</p>
<p>The room was dark and silent, but outside the wind howled dismally and drove the rain with repeated assaults against the rattling windows. How nice it would be—the thought flashed through his mind—if all winds, like the west wind, went down with the sun! They made such fiendish noises at night, like the crying of angry voices. In the daytime they had such a different sound. If only——</p>
<p>Hark! It was no dream after all, for the sound was momentarily growing louder, and its cause was coming up the stairs. He found himself speculating feebly what this cause might be, but the sound was still too indistinct to enable him to arrive at any definite conclusion.</p>
<p>The voice of a church clock striking two made itself heard above the wind. It was just about the hour when the Germans had commenced their performance three nights before. Shorthouse made up his mind that if they began it again he would not put up with it for very long. Yet he was already horribly conscious of the difficulty he would have of getting out of bed. The clothes were so warm and comforting against his back. The sound, still steadily coming nearer, had by this time become differentiated from the confused clamour of the elements, and had resolved itself into the footsteps of one or more persons.</p>
<p>&#8220;The Germans, hang &#8216;em!&#8221; thought Jim. &#8220;But what on earth is the matter with me? I never felt so queer in all my life.&#8221;</p>
<p>He was trembling all over, and felt as cold as though he were in a freezing atmosphere. His nerves were steady enough, and he felt no diminution of physical courage, but he was conscious of a curious sense of malaise and trepidation, such as even the most vigorous men have been known to experience when in the first grip of some horrible and deadly disease. As the footsteps approached this feeling of weakness increased. He felt a strange lassitude creeping over him, a sort of exhaustion, accompanied by a growing numbness in the extremities, and a sensation of dreaminess in the head, as if perhaps the consciousness were leaving its accustomed seat in the brain and preparing to act on another plane. Yet, strange to say, as the vitality was slowly withdrawn from his body, his senses seemed to grow more acute.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the steps were already on the landing at the top of the stairs, and Shorthouse, still sitting upright in bed, heard a heavy body brush past his door and along the wall outside, almost immediately afterwards the loud knocking of someone&#8217;s knuckles on the door of the adjoining room.</p>
<p>Instantly, though so far not a sound had proceeded from within, he heard, through the thin partition, a chair pushed back and a man quickly cross the floor and open the door.</p>
<p>&#8220;Ah! it&#8217;s you,&#8221; he heard in the son&#8217;s voice. Had the fellow, then, been sitting silently in there all this time, waiting for his father&#8217;s arrival? To Shorthouse it came not as a pleasant reflection by any means.</p>
<p>There was no answer to this dubious greeting, but the door was closed quickly, and then there was a sound as if a bag or parcel had been thrown on a wooden table and had slid some distance across it before stopping.</p>
<p>&#8220;What&#8217;s that?&#8221; asked the son, with anxiety in his tone.</p>
<p>&#8220;You may know before I go,&#8221; returned the other gruffly. Indeed his voice was more than gruff: it betrayed ill-suppressed passion.</p>
<p>Shorthouse was conscious of a strong desire to stop the conversation before it proceeded any further, but somehow or other his will was not equal to the task, and he could not get out of bed. The conversation went on, every tone and inflexion distinctly audible above the noise of the storm.</p>
<p>In a low voice the father continued. Jim missed some of the words at the beginning of the sentence. It ended with: &#8221; . . . but now they&#8217;ve all left, and I&#8217;ve managed to get up to you. You know what I&#8217;ve come for.&#8221; There was distinct menace in his tone.</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; returned the other; &#8220;I have been waiting.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;And the money?&#8221; asked the father impatiently.</p>
<p>No answer.</p>
<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve had three days to get it in, and I&#8217;ve contrived to stave off the worst so far—but to-morrow is the end.&#8221;</p>
<p>No answer.</p>
<p>&#8220;Speak, Otto! What have you got for me? Speak, my son; for God&#8217;s sake, tell me.&#8221;</p>
<p>There was a moment&#8217;s silence, during which the old man&#8217;s vibrating accents seemed to echo through the rooms. Then came in a low voice the answer—</p>
<p>&#8220;I have nothing.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Otto!&#8221; cried the other with passion, &#8220;nothing!&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;I can get nothing,&#8221; came almost in a whisper.</p>
<p>&#8220;You lie!&#8221; cried the other, in a half-stifled voice. &#8220;I swear you lie. Give me the money.&#8221;</p>
<p>A chair was heard scraping along the floor. Evidently the men had been sitting over the table, and one of them had risen. Shorthouse heard the bag or parcel drawn across the table, and then a step as if one of the men was crossing to the door.</p>
<p>&#8220;Father, what&#8217;s in that? I must know,&#8221; said Otto, with the first signs of determination in his voice. There must have been an effort on the son&#8217;s part to gain possession of the parcel in question, and on the father&#8217;s to retain it, for between them it fell to the ground. A curious rattle followed its contact with the floor. Instantly there were sounds of a scuffle. The men were struggling for the possession of the box. The elder man with oaths, and blasphemous imprecations, the other with short gasps that betokened the strength of his efforts. It was of short duration, and the younger man had evidently won, for a minute later was heard his angry exclamation.</p>
<p>&#8220;I knew it. Her jewels! You scoundrel, you shall never have them. It is a crime.&#8221;</p>
<p>The elder man uttered a short, guttural laugh, which froze Jim&#8217;s blood and made his skin creep. No word was spoken, and for the space of ten seconds there was a living silence. Then the air trembled with the sound of a thud, followed immediately by a groan and the crash of a heavy body falling over on to the table. A second later there was a lurching from the table on to the floor and against the partition that separated the rooms. The bed quivered an instant at the shock, but the unholy spell was lifted from his soul and Jim Shorthouse sprang out of bed and across the floor in a single bound. He knew that ghastly murder had been done—the murder by a father of his son.</p>
<p>With shaking fingers but a determined heart he lit the gas, and the first thing in which his eyes corroborated the evidence of his ears was the horrifying detail that the lower portion of the partition bulged unnaturally into his own room. The glaring paper with which it was covered had cracked under the tension and the boards beneath it bent inwards towards him. What hideous load was behind them, he shuddered to think.</p>
<p>All this he saw in less than a second. Since the final lurch against the wall not a sound had proceeded from the room, not even a groan or a foot-step. All was still but the howl of the wind, which to his ears had in it a note of triumphant horror.</p>
<p>Shorthouse was in the act of leaving the room to rouse the house and send for the police—in fact his hand was already on the door-knob—when something in the room arrested his attention. Out of the corner of his eyes he thought he caught sight of something moving. He was sure of it, and turning his eyes in the direction, he found he was not mistaken.</p>
<p>Something was creeping slowly towards him along the floor. It was something dark and serpentine in shape, and it came from the place where the partition bulged. He stooped down to examine it with feelings of intense horror and repugnance, and he discovered that it was moving toward him from the other side of the wall. His eyes were fascinated, and for the moment he was unable to move. Silently, slowly, from side to side like a thick worm, it crawled forward into the room beneath his frightened eyes, until at length he could stand it no longer and stretched out his arm to touch it. But at the instant of contact he withdrew his hand with a suppressed scream. It was sluggish—and it was warm! and he saw that his fingers were stained with living crimson.</p>
<p>A second more, and Shorthouse was out in the passage with his hand on the door of the next room. It was locked. He plunged forward with all his weight against it, and, the lock giving way, he fell headlong into a room that was pitch dark and very cold. In a moment he was on his feet again and trying to penetrate the blackness. Not a sound, not a movement. Not even the sense of a presence. It was empty, miserably empty!</p>
<p>Across the room he could trace the outline of a window with rain streaming down the outside, and the blurred lights of the city beyond. But the room was empty, appallingly empty; and so still. He stood there, cold as ice, staring, shivering listening. Suddenly there was a step behind him and a light flashed into the room, and when he turned quickly with his arm up as if to ward off a terrific blow he found himself face to face with the landlady. Instantly the reaction began to set in.</p>
<p>It was nearly three o&#8217;clock in the morning, and he was standing there with bare feet and striped pyjamas in a small room, which in the merciful light he perceived to be absolutely empty, carpetless, and without a stick of furniture, or even a window-blind. There he stood staring at the disagreeable landlady. And there she stood too, staring and silent, in a black wrapper, her head almost bald, her face white as chalk, shading a sputtering candle with one bony hand and peering over it at him with her blinking green eyes. She looked positively hideous.</p>
<p>&#8220;Waal?&#8221; she drawled at length, &#8220;I heard yer right enough. Guess you couldn&#8217;t sleep! Or just prowlin&#8217; round a bit—is that it?&#8221;</p>
<p>The empty room, the absence of all traces of the recent tragedy, the silence, the hour, his striped pyjamas and bare feet—everything together combined to deprive him momentarily of speech. He stared at her blankly without a word.</p>
<p>&#8220;Waal?&#8221; clanked the awful voice.</p>
<p>&#8220;My dear woman,&#8221; he burst out finally, &#8220;there&#8217;s been something awful—&#8221; So far his desperation took him, but no farther. He positively stuck at the substantive.</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh! there hasn&#8217;t been nothin&#8217;,&#8221; she said slowly still peering at him. &#8220;I reckon you&#8217;ve only seen and heard what the others did. I never can keep folks on this floor long. Most of &#8216;em catch on sooner or later—that is, the ones that&#8217;s kind of quick and sensitive. Only you being an Englishman I thought you wouldn&#8217;t mind. Nothin&#8217; really happens; it&#8217;s only thinkin&#8217; like.&#8221;</p>
<p>Shorthouse was beside himself. He felt ready to pick her up and drop her over the banisters, candle and all.</p>
<p>&#8220;Look there,&#8221; he said, pointing at her within an inch of her blinking eyes with the fingers that had touched the oozing blood; &#8220;look there, my good woman. Is that only thinking?&#8221;</p>
<p>She stared a minute, as if not knowing what he meant.</p>
<p>&#8220;I guess so,&#8221; she said at length.</p>
<p>He followed her eyes, and to his amazement saw that his fingers were as white as usual, and quite free from the awful stain that had been there ten minutes before. There was no sign of blood. No amount of staring could bring it back. Had he gone out of his mind? Had his eyes and ears played such tricks with him? Had his senses become false and perverted? He dashed past the landlady, out into the passage, and gained his own room in a couple of strides. Whew! . . . the partition no longer bulged. The paper was not torn. There was no creeping, crawling thing on the faded old carpet.</p>
<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s all over now,&#8221; drawled the metallic voice behind him. &#8220;I&#8217;m going to bed again.&#8221;</p>
<p>He turned and saw the landlady slowly going downstairs again, still shading the candle with her hand and peering up at him from time to time as she moved. A black, ugly, unwholesome object, he thought, as she disappeared into the darkness below, and the last flicker of her candle threw a queer-shaped shadow along the wall and over the ceiling.</p>
<p>Without hesitating a moment, Shorthouse threw himself into his clothes and went out of the house. He preferred the storm to the horrors of that top floor, and he walked the streets till daylight. In the evening he told the landlady he would leave next day, in spite of her assurances that nothing more would happen.</p>
<p>&#8220;It never comes back,&#8221; she said—&#8221;that is, not after he&#8217;s killed.&#8221;</p>
<p>Shorthouse gasped.</p>
<p>&#8220;You gave me a lot for my money,&#8221; he growled.</p>
<p>&#8220;Waal, it aren&#8217;t my show,&#8221; she drawled. &#8220;I&#8217;m no spirit medium. You take chances. Some&#8217;ll sleep right along and never hear nothin&#8217;. Others, like yourself, are different and get the whole thing.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Who&#8217;s the old gentleman?—does he hear it?&#8221; asked Jim.</p>
<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s no old gentleman at all,&#8221; she answered coolly. &#8220;I just told you that to make you feel easy like in case you did hear anythin&#8217;. You were all alone on the floor.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Say now,&#8221; she went on, after a pause in which Shorthouse could think of nothing to say but unpublishable things, &#8220;say now, do tell, did you feel sort of cold when the show was on, sort of tired and weak, I mean, as if you might be going to die?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;How can I say?&#8221; he answered savagely; &#8220;what I felt God only knows.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Waal, but He won&#8217;t tell,&#8221; she drawled out. &#8220;Only I was wonderin&#8217; how you really did feel, because the man who had that room last was found one morning in bed—&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;In bed?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;He was dead. He was the one before you. Oh! You don&#8217;t need to get rattled so. You&#8217;re all right. And it all really happened, they do say. This house used to be a private residence some twenty-five years ago, and a German family of the name of Steinhardt lived here. They had a big business in Wall Street, and stood &#8216;way up in things.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Ah!&#8221; said her listener.</p>
<p>&#8220;Oh yes, they did, right at the top, till one fine day it all bust and the old man skipped with the boodle—&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Skipped with the boodle?&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s so,&#8221; she said; &#8220;got clear away with all the money, and the son was found dead in his house, committed soocide it was thought. Though there was some as said he couldn&#8217;t have stabbed himself and fallen in that position. They said he was murdered. The father died in prison. They tried to fasten the murder on him, but there was no motive, or no evidence, or no somethin&#8217;. I forget now.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Very pretty,&#8221; said Shorthouse.</p>
<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll show you somethin&#8217; mighty queer any-ways,&#8221; she drawled, &#8220;if you&#8217;ll come upstairs a minute. I&#8217;ve heard the steps and voices lots of times; they don&#8217;t pheaze me any. I&#8217;d just as lief hear so many dogs barkin&#8217;. You&#8217;ll find the whole story in the newspapers if you look it up—not what goes on here, but the story of the Germans. My house would be ruined if they told all, and I&#8217;d sue for damages.&#8221;</p>
<p>They reached the bedroom, and the woman went in and pulled up the edge of the carpet where Shorthouse had seen the blood soaking in the previous night.</p>
<p>&#8220;Look thar, if you feel like it,&#8221; said the old hag. Stooping down, he saw a dark, dull stain in the boards that corresponded exactly to the shape and position of the blood as he had seen it.</p>
<p>That night he slept in a hotel, and the following day sought new quarters. In the newspapers on file in his office after a long search he found twenty years back the detailed story, substantially as the woman had said, of Steinhardt &#038; Co.&#8217;s failure, the absconding and subsequent arrest of the senior partner, and the suicide, or murder, of his son Otto. The landlady&#8217;s room-house had formerly been their private residence.</p>
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		<title>A Haunted Island</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=38</link>
		<comments>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=38#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:06:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>admin</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Ghost Stories]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=38</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[A Haunted Island by Algernon Blackwood The following events occurred on a small island of isolated position in a large Canadian lake, to whose cool waters the inhabitants of Montreal and Toronto flee for rest and recreation in the hot months. It is only to be regretted that events of such peculiar interest to the [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>A Haunted Island<br />
by Algernon Blackwood</p>
<p>The following events occurred on a small island of isolated position in a large Canadian lake, to whose cool waters the inhabitants of Montreal and Toronto flee for rest and recreation in the hot months. It is only to be regretted that events of such peculiar interest to the genuine student of the psychical should be entirely uncorroborated. Such unfortunately, however, is the case.<br />
Our own party of nearly twenty had returned to Montreal that very day, and I was left in solitary possession for a week or two longer, in order to accomplish some important &#8220;reading&#8221; for the law which I had foolishly neglected during the summer.</p>
<p>It was late in September, and the big trout and maskinonge were stirring themselves in the depths of the lake, and beginning slowly to move up to the surface waters as the north winds and early frosts lowered their temperature. Already the maples were crimson and gold, and the wild laughter of the loons echoed in sheltered bays that never knew their strange cry in the summer.</p>
<p>With a whole island to oneself, a two-storey cottage, a canoe, and only the chipmunks, and the farmer&#8217;s weekly visit with eggs and bread, to disturb one, the opportunities for hard reading might be very great. It all depends!</p>
<p>The rest of the party had gone off with many warnings to beware of Indians, and not to stay late enough to be the victim of a frost that thinks nothing of forty below zero. After they had gone, the loneliness of the situation made itself unpleasantly felt. There were no other islands within six or seven miles, and though the mainland forests lay a couple of miles behind me, they stretched for a very great distance unbroken by any signs of human habitation. But, though the island was completely deserted and silent, the rocks and trees that had echoed human laughter and voices almost every hour of the day for two months could not fail to retain some memories of it all; and I was not surprised to fancy I heard a shout or a cry as I passed from rock to rock, and more than once to imagine that I heard my own name called aloud.</p>
<p>In the cottage there were six tiny little bedrooms divided from one another by plain unvarnished partitions of pine. A wooden bedstead, a mattress, and a chair, stood in each room, but I only found two mirrors, and one of these was broken.</p>
<p>The boards creaked a good deal as I moved about, and the signs of occupation were so recent that I could hardly believe I was alone. I half expected to find someone left behind, still trying to crowd into a box more than it would hold. The door of one room was stiff, and refused for a moment to open, and it required very little persuasion to imagine someone was holding the handle on the inside, and that when it opened I should meet a pair of human eyes.</p>
<p>A thorough search of the floor led me to select as my own sleeping quarters a little room with a diminutive balcony over the verandah roof. The room was very small, but the bed was large, and had the best mattress of them all. It was situated directly over the sitting-room where I should live and do my &#8220;reading,&#8221; and the miniature window looked out to the rising sun. With the exception of a narrow path which led from the front door and verandah through the trees to the boat-landing, the island was densely covered with maples, hemlocks, and cedars. The trees gathered in round the cottage so closely that the slightest wind made the branches scrape the roof and tap the wooden walls. A few moments after sunset the darkness became impenetrable, and ten yards beyond the glare of the lamps that shone through the sitting-room windows—of which there were four—you could not see an inch before your nose, nor move a step without running up against a tree.</p>
<p>The rest of that day I spent moving my belongings from my tent to the sitting-room, taking stock of the contents of the larder, and chopping enough wood for the stove to last me for a week. After that, just before sunset, I went round the island a couple of times in my canoe for precaution&#8217;s sake. I had never dreamed of doing this before, but when a man is alone he does things that never occur to him when he is one of a large party.</p>
<p>How lonely the island seemed when I landed again! The sun was down, and twilight is unknown in these northern regions. The darkness comes up at once. The canoe safely pulled up and turned over on her face, I groped my way up the little narrow pathway to the verandah. The six lamps were soon burning merrily in the front room; but in the kitchen, where I &#8220;dined,&#8221; the shadows were so gloomy, and the lamplight was so inadequate, that the stars could be seen peeping through the cracks between the rafters.</p>
<p>I turned in early that night. Though it was calm and there was no wind, the creaking of my bedstead and the musical gurgle of the water over the rocks below were not the only sounds that reached my ears. As I lay awake, the appalling emptiness of the house grew upon me. The corridors and vacant rooms seemed to echo innumerable footsteps, shufflings, the rustle of skirts, and a constant undertone of whispering. When sleep at length overtook me, the breathings and noises, however, passed gently to mingle with the voices of my dreams.</p>
<p>A week passed by, and the &#8220;reading&#8221; progressed favourably. On the tenth day of my solitude, a strange thing happened. I awoke after a good night&#8217;s sleep to find myself possessed with a marked repugnance for my room. The air seemed to stifle me. The more I tried to define the cause of this dislike, the more unreasonable it appeared. There was something about the room that made me afraid. Absurd as it seems, this feeling clung to me obstinately while dressing, and more than once I caught myself shivering, and conscious of an inclination to get out of the room as quickly as possible. The more I tried to laugh it away, the more real it became; and when at last I was dressed, and went out into the passage, and downstairs into the kitchen, it was with feelings of relief, such as I might imagine would accompany one&#8217;s escape from the presence of a dangerous contagious disease.</p>
<p>While cooking my breakfast, I carefully recalled every night spent in the room, in the hope that I might in some way connect the dislike I now felt with some disagreeable incident that had occurred in it. But the only thing I could recall was one stormy night when I suddenly awoke and heard the boards creaking so loudly in the corridor that I was convinced there were people in the house. So certain was I of this, that I had descended the stairs, gun in hand, only to find the doors and windows securely fastened, and the mice and black-beetles in sole possession of the floor. This was certainly not sufficient to account for the strength of my feelings.</p>
<p>The morning hours I spent in steady reading; and when I broke off in the middle of the day for a swim and luncheon, I was very much surprised, if not a little alarmed, to find that my dislike for the room had, if anything, grown stronger. Going upstairs to get a book, I experienced the most marked aversion to entering the room, and while within I was conscious all the time of an uncomfortable feeling that was half uneasiness and half apprehension. The result of it was that, instead of reading, I spent the afternoon on the water paddling and fishing, and when I got home about sundown, brought with me half a dozen delicious black bass for the supper-table and the larder.</p>
<p>As sleep was an important matter to me at this time, I had decided that if my aversion to the room was so strongly marked on my return as it had been before, I would move my bed down into the sitting-room, and sleep there. This was, I argued, in no sense a concession to an absurd and fanciful fear, but simply a precaution to ensure a good night&#8217;s sleep. A bad night involved the loss of the next day&#8217;s reading,—a loss I was not prepared to incur.</p>
<p>I accordingly moved my bed downstairs into a corner of the sitting-room facing the door, and was moreover uncommonly glad when the operation was completed, and the door of the bedroom closed finally upon the shadows, the silence, and the strange fear that shared the room with them.</p>
<p>The croaking stroke of the kitchen clock sounded the hour of eight as I finished washing up my few dishes, and closing the kitchen door behind me, passed into the front room. All the lamps were lit, and their reflectors, which I had polished up during the day, threw a blaze of light into the room.</p>
<p>Outside the night was still and warm. Not a breath of air was stirring; the waves were silent, the trees motionless, and heavy clouds hung like an oppressive curtain over the heavens. The darkness seemed to have rolled up with unusual swiftness, and not the faintest glow of colour remained to show where the sun had set. There was present in the atmosphere that ominous and overwhelming silence which so often precedes the most violent storms.</p>
<p>I sat down to my books with my brain unusually clear, and in my heart the pleasant satisfaction of knowing that five black bass were lying in the ice-house, and that to-morrow morning the old farmer would arrive with fresh bread and eggs. I was soon absorbed in my books.</p>
<p>As the night wore on the silence deepened. Even the chipmunks were still; and the boards of the floors and walls ceased creaking. I read on steadily till, from the gloomy shadows of the kitchen, came the hoarse sound of the clock striking nine. How loud the strokes sounded! They were like blows of a big hammer. I closed one book and opened another, feeling that I was just warming up to my work.</p>
<p>This, however, did not last long. I presently found that I was reading the same paragraphs over twice, simple paragraphs that did not require such effort. Then I noticed that my mind began to wander to other things, and the effort to recall my thoughts became harder with each digression. Concentration was growing momentarily more difficult. Presently I discovered that I had turned over two pages instead of one, and had not noticed my mistake until I was well down the page. This was becoming serious. What was the disturbing influence? It could not be physical fatigue. On the contrary, my mind was unusually alert, and in a more receptive condition than usual. I made a new and determined effort to read, and for a short time succeeded in giving my whole attention to my subject. But in a very few moments again I found myself leaning back in my chair, staring vacantly into space.</p>
<p>Something was evidently at work in my sub-consciousness. There was something I had neglected to do. Perhaps the kitchen door and windows were not fastened. I accordingly went to see, and found that they were! The fire perhaps needed attention. I went in to see, and found that it was all right! I looked at the lamps, went upstairs into every bedroom in turn, and then went round the house, and even into the ice-house. Nothing was wrong; everything was in its place. Yet something was wrong! The conviction grew stronger and stronger within me.</p>
<p>When I at length settled down to my books again and tried to read, I became aware, for the first time, that the room seemed growing cold. Yet the day had been oppressively warm, and evening had brought no relief. The six big lamps, moreover, gave out heat enough to warm the room pleasantly. But a chilliness, that perhaps crept up from the lake, made itself felt in the room, and caused me to get up to close the glass door opening on to the verandah.</p>
<p>For a brief moment I stood looking out at the shaft of light that fell from the windows and shone some little distance down the pathway, and out for a few feet into the lake.</p>
<p>As I looked, I saw a canoe glide into the pathway of light, and immediately crossing it, pass out of sight again into the darkness. It was perhaps a hundred feet from the shore, and it moved swiftly.</p>
<p>I was surprised that a canoe should pass the island at that time of night, for all the summer visitors from the other side of the lake had gone home weeks before, and the island was a long way out of any line of water traffic.</p>
<p>My reading from this moment did not make very good progress, for somehow the picture of that canoe, gliding so dimly and swiftly across the narrow track of light on the black waters, silhouetted itself against the background of my mind with singular vividness. It kept coming between my eyes and the printed page. The more I thought about it the more surprised I became. It was of larger build than any I had seen during the past summer months, and was more like the old Indian war canoes with the high curving bows and stern and wide beam. The more I tried to read, the less success attended my efforts; and finally I closed my books and went out on the verandah to walk up and down a bit, and shake the chilliness out of my bones.</p>
<p>The night was perfectly still, and as dark as imaginable. I stumbled down the path to the little landing wharf, where the water made the very faintest of gurgling under the timbers. The sound of a big tree falling in the mainland forest, far across the lake, stirred echoes in the heavy air, like the first guns of a distant night attack. No other sound disturbed the stillness that reigned supreme.</p>
<p>As I stood upon the wharf in the broad splash of light that followed me from the sitting-room windows, I saw another canoe cross the pathway of uncertain light upon the water, and disappear at once into the impenetrable gloom that lay beyond. This time I saw more distinctly than before. It was like the former canoe, a big birch-bark, with high-crested bows and stern and broad beam. It was paddled by two Indians, of whom the one in the stern—the steerer—appeared to be a very large man. I could see this very plainly; and though the second canoe was much nearer the island than the first, I judged that they were both on their way home to the Government Reservation, which was situated some fifteen miles away upon the mainland.</p>
<p>I was wondering in my mind what could possibly bring any Indians down to this part of the lake at such an hour of the night, when a third canoe, of precisely similar build, and also occupied by two Indians, passed silently round the end of the wharf. This time the canoe was very much nearer shore, and it suddenly flashed into my mind that the three canoes were in reality one and the same, and that only one canoe was circling the island!</p>
<p>This was by no means a pleasant reflection, because, if it were the correct solution of the unusual appearance of the three canoes in this lonely part of the lake at so late an hour, the purpose of the two men could only reasonably be considered to be in some way connected with myself. I had never known of the Indians attempting any violence upon the settlers who shared the wild, inhospitable country with them; at the same time, it was not beyond the region of possibility to suppose. . . . But then I did not care even to think of such hideous possibilities, and my imagination immediately sought relief in all manner of other solutions to the problem, which indeed came readily enough to my mind, but did not succeed in recommending themselves to my reason.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, by a sort of instinct, I stepped back out of the bright light in which I had hitherto been standing, and waited in the deep shadow of a rock to see if the canoe would again make its appearance. Here I could see, without being seen, and the precaution seemed a wise one.</p>
<p>After less than five minutes the canoe, as I had anticipated, made its fourth appearance. This time it was not twenty yards from the wharf, and I saw that the Indians meant to land. I recognised the two men as those who had passed before, and the steerer was certainly an immense fellow. It was unquestionably the same canoe. There could be no longer any doubt that for some purpose of their own the men had been going round and round the island for some time, waiting for an opportunity to land. I strained my eyes to follow them in the darkness, but the night had completely swallowed them up, and not even the faintest swish of the paddles reached my ears as the Indians plied their long and powerful strokes. The canoe would be round again in a few moments, and this time it was possible that the men might land. It was well to be prepared. I knew nothing of their intentions, and two to one (when the two are big Indians!) late at night on a lonely island was not exactly my idea of pleasant intercourse.</p>
<p>In a corner of the sitting-room, leaning up against the back wall, stood my Marlin rifle, with ten cartridges in the magazine and one lying snugly in the greased breech. There was just time to get up to the house and take up a position of defence in that corner. Without an instant&#8217;s hesitation I ran up to the verandah, carefully picking my way among the trees, so as to avoid being seen in the light. Entering the room, I shut the door leading to the verandah, and as quickly as possible turned out every one of the six lamps. To be in a room so brilliantly lighted, where my every movement could be observed from outside, while I could see nothing but impenetrable darkness at every window, was by all laws of warfare an unnecessary concession to the enemy. And this enemy, if enemy it was to be, was far too wily and dangerous to be granted any such advantages.</p>
<p>I stood in the corner of the room with my back against the wall, and my hand on the cold rifle-barrel. The table, covered with my books, lay between me and the door, but for the first few minutes after the lights were out the darkness was so intense that nothing could be discerned at all. Then, very gradually, the outline of the room became visible, and the framework of the windows began to shape itself dimly before my eyes.</p>
<p>After a few minutes the door (its upper half of glass), and the two windows that looked out upon the front verandah, became specially distinct; and I was glad that this was so, because if the Indians came up to the house I should be able to see their approach, and gather something of their plans. Nor was I mistaken, for there presently came to my ears the peculiar hollow sound of a canoe landing and being carefully dragged up over the rocks. The paddles I distinctly heard being placed underneath, and the silence that ensued thereupon I rightly interpreted to mean that the Indians were stealthily approaching the house. . . .</p>
<p>While it would be absurd to claim that I was not alarmed—even frightened—at the gravity of the situation and its possible outcome, I speak the whole truth when I say that I was not overwhelmingly afraid for myself. I was conscious that even at this stage of the night I was passing into a psychical condition in which my sensations seemed no longer normal. Physical fear at no time entered into the nature of my feelings; and though I kept my hand upon my rifle the greater part of the night, I was all the time conscious that its assistance could be of little avail against the terrors that I had to face. More than once I seemed to feel most curiously that I was in no real sense a part of the proceedings, nor actually involved in them, but that I was playing the part of a spectator—a spectator, moreover, on a psychic rather than on a material plane. Many of my sensations that night were too vague for definite description and analysis, but the main feeling that will stay with me to the end of my days is the awful horror of it all, and the miserable sensation that if the strain had lasted a little longer than was actually the case my mind must inevitably have given way.</p>
<p>Meanwhile I stood still in my corner, and waited patiently for what was to come. The house was as still as the grave, but the inarticulate voices of the night sang in my ears, and I seemed to hear the blood running in my veins and dancing in my pulses.</p>
<p>If the Indians came to the back of the house, they would find the kitchen door and window securely fastened. They could not get in there without making considerable noise, which I was bound to hear. The only mode of getting in was by means of the door that faced me, and I kept my eyes glued on that door without taking them off for the smallest fraction of a second.</p>
<p>My sight adapted itself every minute better to the darkness. I saw the table that nearly filled the room, and left only a narrow passage on each side. I could also make out the straight backs of the wooden chairs pressed up against it, and could even distinguish my papers and inkstand lying on the white oilcloth covering. I thought of the gay faces that had gathered round that table during the summer, and I longed for the sunlight as I had never longed for it before.</p>
<p>Less than three feet to my left the passage-way led to the kitchen, and the stairs leading to the bedrooms above commenced in this passage-way, but almost in the sitting-room itself. Through the windows I could see the dim motionless outlines of the trees: not a leaf stirred, not a branch moved.</p>
<p>A few moments of this awful silence, and then I was aware of a soft tread on the boards of the verandah, so stealthy that it seemed an impression directly on my brain rather than upon the nerves of hearing. Immediately afterwards a black figure darkened the glass door, and I perceived that a face was pressed against the upper panes. A shiver ran down my back, and my hair was conscious of a tendency to rise and stand at right angles to my head.</p>
<p>It was the figure of an Indian, broad-shouldered and immense; indeed, the largest figure of a man I have ever seen outside of a circus hall. By some power of light that seemed to generate itself in the brain, I saw the strong dark face with the aquiline nose and high cheek-bones flattened against the glass. The direction of the gaze I could not determine; but faint gleams of light as the big eyes rolled round and showed their whites, told me plainly that no corner of the room escaped their searching.</p>
<p>For what seemed fully five minutes the dark figure stood there, with the huge shoulders bent forward so as to bring the head down to the level of the glass; while behind him, though not nearly so large, the shadowy form of the other Indian swayed to and fro like a bent tree. While I waited in an agony of suspense and agitation for their next movement little currents of icy sensation ran up and down my spine and my heart seemed alternately to stop beating and then start off again with terrifying rapidity. They must have heard its thumping and the singing of the blood in my head! Moreover, I was conscious, as I felt a cold stream of perspiration trickle down my face, of a desire to scream, to shout, to bang the walls like a child, to make a noise, or do anything that would relieve the suspense and bring things to a speedy climax.</p>
<p>It was probably this inclination that led me to another discovery, for when I tried to bring my rifle from behind my back to raise it and have it pointed at the door ready to fire, I found that I was powerless to move. The muscles, paralysed by this strange fear, refused to obey the will. Here indeed was a terrifying complication!</p>
<p>There was a faint sound of rattling at the brass knob, and the door was pushed open a couple of inches. A pause of a few seconds, and it was pushed open still further. Without a sound of footsteps that was appreciable to my ears, the two figures glided into the room, and the man behind gently closed the door after him.</p>
<p>They were alone with me between the four walls. Could they see me standing there, so still and straight in my corner? Had they, perhaps, already seen me? My blood surged and sang like the roll of drums in an orchestra; and though I did my best to suppress my breathing, it sounded like the rushing of wind through a pneumatic tube.</p>
<p>My suspense as to the next move was soon at an end—only, however, to give place to a new and keener alarm. The men had hitherto exchanged no words and no signs, but there were general indications of a movement across the room, and whichever way they went they would have to pass round the table. If they came my way they would have to pass within six inches of my person. While I was considering this very disagreeable possibility, I perceived that the smaller Indian (smaller by comparison) suddenly raised his arm and pointed to the ceiling. The other fellow raised his head and followed the direction of his companion&#8217;s arm. I began to understand at last. They were going upstairs, and the room directly overhead to which they pointed had been until this night my bedroom. It was the room in which I had experienced that very morning so strange a sensation of fear, and but for which I should then have been lying asleep in the narrow bed against the window.</p>
<p>The Indians then began to move silently around the room; they were going upstairs, and they were coming round my side of the table. So stealthy were their movements that, but for the abnormally sensitive state of the nerves, I should never have heard them. As it was, their cat-like tread was distinctly audible. Like two monstrous black cats they came round the table toward me, and for the first time I perceived that the smaller of the two dragged something along the floor behind him. As it trailed along over the floor with a soft, sweeping sound, I somehow got the impression that it was a large dead thing with outstretched wings, or a large, spreading cedar branch. Whatever it was, I was unable to see it even in outline, and I was too terrified, even had I possessed the power over my muscles, to move my neck forward in the effort to determine its nature.</p>
<p>Nearer and nearer they came. The leader rested a giant hand upon the table as he moved. My lips were glued together, and the air seemed to burn in my nostrils. I tried to close my eyes, so that I might not see as they passed me; but my eyelids had stiffened, and refused to obey. Would they never get by me? Sensation seemed also to have left my legs, and it was as if I were standing on mere supports of wood or stone. Worse still, I was conscious that I was losing the power of balance, the power to stand upright, or even to lean backwards against the wall. Some force was drawing me forward, and a dizzy terror seized me that I should lose my balance, and topple forward against the Indians just as they were in the act of passing me.</p>
<p>Even moments drawn out into hours must come to an end some time, and almost before I knew it the figures had passed me and had their feet upon the lower step of the stairs leading to the upper bedrooms. There could not have been six inches between us, and yet I was conscious only of a current of cold air that followed them. They had not touched me, and I was convinced that they had not seen me. Even the trailing thing on the floor behind them had not touched my feet, as I had dreaded it would, and on such an occasion as this I was grateful even for the smallest mercies.</p>
<p>The absence of the Indians from my immediate neighbourhood brought little sense of relief. I stood shivering and shuddering in my corner, and, beyond being able to breathe more freely, I felt no whit less uncomfortable. Also, I was aware that a certain light, which, without apparent source or rays, had enabled me to follow their every gesture and movement, had gone out of the room with their departure. An unnatural darkness now filled the room, and pervaded its every corner so that I could barely make out the positions of the windows and the glass doors.</p>
<p>As I said before, my condition was evidently an abnormal one. The capacity for feeling surprise seemed, as in dreams, to be wholly absent. My senses recorded with unusual accuracy every smallest occurrence, but I was able to draw only the simplest deductions.</p>
<p>The Indians soon reached the top of the stairs, and there they halted for a moment. I had not the faintest clue as to their next movement. They appeared to hesitate. They were listening attentively. Then I heard one of them, who by the weight of his soft tread must have been the giant, cross the narrow corridor and enter the room directly overhead—my own little bedroom. But for the insistence of that unaccountable dread I had experienced there in the morning, I should at that very moment have been lying in the bed with the big Indian in the room standing beside me.</p>
<p>For the space of a hundred seconds there was silence, such as might have existed before the birth of sound. It was followed by a long quivering shriek of terror, which rang out into the night, and ended in a short gulp before it had run its full course. At the same moment the other Indian left his place at the head of the stairs, and joined his companion in the bedroom. I heard the &#8220;thing&#8221; trailing behind him along the floor. A thud followed, as of something heavy falling, and then all became as still and silent as before.</p>
<p>It was at this point that the atmosphere, surcharged all day with the electricity of a fierce storm, found relief in a dancing flash of brilliant lightning simultaneously with a crash of loudest thunder. For five seconds every article in the room was visible to me with amazing distinctness, and through the windows I saw the tree trunks standing in solemn rows. The thunder pealed and echoed across the lake and among the distant islands, and the flood-gates of heaven then opened and let out their rain in streaming torrents.</p>
<p>The drops fell with a swift rushing sound upon the still waters of the lake, which leaped up to meet them, and pattered with the rattle of shot on the leaves of the maples and the roof of the cottage. A moment later, and another flash, even more brilliant and of longer duration than the first, lit up the sky from zenith to horizon, and bathed the room momentarily in dazzling whiteness. I could see the rain glistening on the leaves and branches outside. The wind rose suddenly, and in less than a minute the storm that had been gathering all day burst forth in its full fury.</p>
<p>Above all the noisy voices of the elements, the slightest sounds in the room overhead made themselves heard, and in the few seconds of deep silence that followed the shriek of terror and pain I was aware that the movements had commenced again. The men were leaving the room and approaching the top of the stairs. A short pause, and they began to descend. Behind them, tumbling from step to step, I could hear that trailing &#8220;thing&#8221; being dragged along. It had become ponderous!</p>
<p>I awaited their approach with a degree of calmness, almost of apathy, which was only explicable on the ground that after a certain point Nature applies her own anæsthetic, and a merciful condition of numbness supervenes. On they came, step by step, nearer and nearer, with the shuffling sound of the burden behind growing louder as they approached.</p>
<p>They were already half-way down the stairs when I was galvanised afresh into a condition of terror by the consideration of a new and horrible possibility. It was the reflection that if another vivid flash of lightning were to come when the shadowy procession was in the room, perhaps when it was actually passing in front of me, I should see everything in detail, and worse, be seen myself! I could only hold my breath and wait—wait while the minutes lengthened into hours, and the procession made its slow progress round the room.</p>
<p>The Indians had reached the foot of the staircase. The form of the huge leader loomed in the doorway of the passage, and the burden with an ominous thud had dropped from the last step to the floor. There was a moment&#8217;s pause while I saw the Indian turn and stoop to assist his companion. Then the procession moved forward again, entered the room close on my left, and began to move slowly round my side of the table. The leader was already beyond me, and his companion, dragging on the floor behind him the burden, whose confused outline I could dimly make out, was exactly in front of me, when the cavalcade came to a dead halt. At the same moment, with the strange suddenness of thunderstorms, the splash of the rain ceased altogether, and the wind died away into utter silence.</p>
<p>For the space of five seconds my heart seemed to stop beating, and then the worst came. A double flash of lightning lit up the room and its contents with merciless vividness.</p>
<p>The huge Indian leader stood a few feet past me on my right. One leg was stretched forward in the act of taking a step. His immense shoulders were turned toward his companion, and in all their magnificent fierceness I saw the outline of his features. His gaze was directed upon the burden his companion was dragging along the floor; but his profile, with the big aquiline nose, high cheek-bone, straight black hair and bold chin, burnt itself in that brief instant into my brain, never again to fade.</p>
<p>Dwarfish, compared with this gigantic figure, appeared the proportions of the other Indian, who, within twelve inches of my face, was stooping over the thing he was dragging in a position that lent to his person the additional horror of deformity. And the burden, lying upon a sweeping cedar branch which he held and dragged by a long stem, was the body of a white man. The scalp had been neatly lifted, and blood lay in a broad smear upon the cheeks and forehead.</p>
<p>Then, for the first time that night, the terror that had paralysed my muscles and my will lifted its unholy spell from my soul. With a loud cry I stretched out my arms to seize the big Indian by the throat, and, grasping only air, tumbled forward unconscious upon the ground.</p>
<p>I had recognised the body, and the face was my own!. . . .</p>
<p>It was bright daylight when a man&#8217;s voice recalled me to consciousness. I was lying where I had fallen, and the farmer was standing in the room with the loaves of bread in his hands. The horror of the night was still in my heart, and as the bluff settler helped me to my feet and picked up the rifle which had fallen with me, with many questions and expressions of condolence, I imagine my brief replies were neither self-explanatory nor even intelligible.</p>
<p>That day, after a thorough and fruitless search of the house, I left the island, and went over to spend my last ten days with the farmer; and when the time came for me to leave, the necessary reading had been accomplished, and my nerves had completely recovered their balance.</p>
<p>On the day of my departure the farmer started early in his big boat with my belongings to row to the point, twelve miles distant, where a little steamer ran twice a week for the accommodation of hunters. Late in the afternoon I went off in another direction in my canoe, wishing to see the island once again, where I had been the victim of so strange an experience.</p>
<p>In due course I arrived there, and made a tour of the island. I also made a search of the little house, and it was not without a curious sensation in my heart that I entered the little upstairs bedroom. There seemed nothing unusual.</p>
<p>Just after I re-embarked, I saw a canoe gliding ahead of me around the curve of the island. A canoe was an unusual sight at this time of the year, and this one seemed to have sprung from nowhere. Altering my course a little, I watched it disappear around the next projecting point of rock. It had high curving bows, and there were two Indians in it. I lingered with some excitement, to see if it would appear again round the other side of the island; and in less than five minutes it came into view. There were less than two hundred yards between us, and the Indians, sitting on their haunches, were paddling swiftly in my direction.</p>
<p>I never paddled faster in my life than I did in those next few minutes. When I turned to look again, the Indians had altered their course, and were again circling the island.</p>
<p>The sun was sinking behind the forests on the mainland, and the crimson-coloured clouds of sunset were reflected in the waters of the lake, when I looked round for the last time, and saw the big bark canoe and its two dusky occupants still going round the island. Then the shadows deepened rapidly; the lake grew black, and the night wind blew its first breath in my face as I turned a corner, and a projecting bluff of rock hid from my view both island and canoe.</p>
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		<title>The Goodwood Ghost</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=36</link>
		<comments>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=36#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:04:32 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Ghost Stories]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Goodwood Ghost by Charles Dickens My wife&#8217;s sister, Mrs M——, was left a widow at the age of thirty-five, with two children, girls, of whom she was passionately fond. She carried on the draper&#8217;s business at Bognor, established by her husband. Being still a very handsome woman, there were several suitors for her hand. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Goodwood Ghost<br />
by Charles Dickens</p>
<p>My wife&#8217;s sister, Mrs M——, was left a widow at the age of thirty-five, with two children, girls, of whom she was passionately fond. She carried on the draper&#8217;s business at Bognor, established by her husband. Being still a very handsome woman, there were several suitors for her hand. The only favoured one amongst them was a Mr Barton. My wife never liked this Mr Barton, and made no secret of her feelings to her sister, whom she frequently told that Mr Barton only wanted to be master of the little haberdashery shop in Bognor. He was a man in poor circumstances, and had no other motive in his proposal of marriage, so my wife thought, than to better himself.<br />
On the 23rd of August 1831 Mrs M—— arranged to go with Barton to a picnic party at Goodwood Park, the seat of the Duke of Richmond, who had kindly thrown open his grounds to the public for the day. My wife, a little annoyed at her going out with this man, told her she had much better remain at home to look after her children and attend to the business. Mrs M——, however, bent on going, made arrangements about leaving the shop, and got my wife to promise to see to her little girls while she was away.</p>
<p>The party set out in a four-wheeled phaeton, with a pair of ponies driven by Mrs M——, and a gig for which I lent the horse.</p>
<p>Now we did not expect them to come back till nine or ten o&#8217;clock, at any rate. I mention this particularly to show that there could be no expectation of their earlier return in the mind of my wife, to account for what follows.</p>
<p>At six o&#8217;clock that bright summer&#8217;s evening my wife went out into the garden to call the children. Not finding them, she went all round the place in her search till she came to the empty stable; thinking they might have run in there to play, she pushed open the door; there, standing in the darkest corner, she saw Mrs M——. My wife was surprised to see her, certainly; for she did not expect her return so soon; but, oddly enough, it did not strike her as being singular to see her there. Vexed as she had felt with her all day for going, and rather glad, in her woman&#8217;s way, to have something entirely different from the genuine casus belli to hang a retort upon, my wife said: &#8220;Well, Harriet, I should have thought another dress would have done quite as well for your picnic as that best black silk you have on.&#8221; My wife was the elder of the twain, and had always assumed a little of the air of counsellor to her sister. Black silks were thought a great deal more of at that time than they are just now, and silk of any kind was held particularly inconsistent wear for Wesleyan Methodists, to which denomination we belonged.</p>
<p>Receiving no answer, my wife said: &#8220;Oh, well, Harriet, if you can&#8217;t take a word of reproof without being sulky, I&#8217;ll leave you to yourself&#8221;; and then she came into the house to tell me the party had returned and that she had seen her sister in the stable, not in the best of tempers. At the moment it did not seem extraordinary to me that my wife should have met her sister in the stable.</p>
<p>I waited indoors some time, expecting them to return my horse. Mrs M—— was my neighbour, and, being always on most friendly terms, I wondered that none of the party had come in to tell us about the day&#8217;s[Pg 295] pleasure. I thought I would just run in and see how they had got on. To my great surprise the servant told me they had not returned. I began, then, to feel anxiety about the result. My wife, however, having seen Harriet in the stable, refused to believe the servant&#8217;s assertion; and said there was no doubt of their return, but that they had probably left word to say they were not come back, in order to offer a plausible excuse for taking a further drive, and detaining my horse for another hour or so.</p>
<p>At eleven o&#8217;clock Mr Pinnock, my brother-in-law, who had been one of the party, came in, apparently much agitated. As soon as she saw him, and before he had time to speak, my wife seemed to know what he had to say.</p>
<p>&#8220;What is the matter?&#8221; she said; &#8220;something has happened to Harriet, I know!&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;Yes&#8221; replied Mr Pinnock; &#8220;if you wish to see her alive, you must come with me directly to Goodwood.&#8221;</p>
<p>From what he said it appeared that one of the ponies had never been properly broken in; that the man from whom the turn-out was hired for the day had cautioned Mrs M—— respecting it before they started; and that he had lent it reluctantly, being the only pony to match in the stable at the time, and would not have lent it at all had he not known Mrs M—— to be a remarkably good whip.</p>
<p>On reaching Goodwood, it seems, the gentlemen of the party had got out, leaving the ladies to take a drive round the park in the phaeton. One or both of the ponies must then have taken fright at something in the road, for Mrs M—— had scarcely taken the reins when the ponies shied. Had there been plenty of room she would readily have mastered the difficulty; but it was in a narrow road, where a gate obstructed the way. Some men rushed to open the gate—too late. The three other ladies jumped out at the beginning of the accident; but Mrs M—— still held on to the reins, seeking to control her ponies, until, finding it was impossible for the men to get the gate open in time, she too sprang forward; and at the same instant the ponies came smash on to the gate. She had made her spring too late, and fell heavily to the ground on her head. The heavy, old-fashioned comb of the period, with which her hair was looped up, was driven into her skull by the force of the fall. The Duke of Richmond, a witness to the accident, ran to her assistance, lifted her up, and rested her head upon his knees. The only words Mrs M—— had spoken were uttered at the time: &#8220;Good God, my children!&#8221; By direction of the Duke she was immediately conveyed to a neighbouring inn, where every assistance, medical and otherwise, that forethought or kindness could suggest was afforded her.</p>
<p>At six o&#8217;clock in the evening, the time at which my wife had gone into the stable and seen what we now knew had been her spirit, Mrs M——, in her sole interval of returning consciousness, had made a violent but unsuccessful attempt to speak. From her glance having wandered round the room, in solemn awful wistfulness, it had been conjectured she wished to see some relative or friend not then present. I went to Goodwood in the gig with Mr Pinnock, and arrived in time to see my sister-in-law die at two o&#8217;clock in the morning. Her only conscious moments had been those in which she laboured unsuccessfully to speak, which had occurred at six o&#8217;clock. She wore a black silk dress.</p>
<p>When we came to dispose of her business, and to wind up her affairs, there was scarcely anything left for the two orphan girls. Mrs M——&#8217;s father, however, being well-to-do, took them to bring up. At his death, which happened soon afterwards, his property went to his eldest son, who speedily dissipated the inheritance. During a space of two years the children were taken as[Pg 297] visitors by various relations in turn, and lived an unhappy life with no settled home.</p>
<p>For some time I had been debating with myself how to help these children, having many boys and girls of my own to provide for. I had almost settled to take them myself, bad as trade was with me, at the time, and bring them up with my own family, when one day business called me to Brighton. The business was so urgent that it necessitated my travelling at night.</p>
<p>I set out from Bognor in a close-headed gig on a beautiful moonlight winter&#8217;s night, when the crisp frozen snow lay deep over the earth, and its fine glistening dust was whirled about in little eddies on the bleak night-wind—driven now and then in stinging powder against my tingling cheek, warm and glowing in the sharp air. I had taken my great &#8220;Bose&#8221; (short for &#8220;Boatswain&#8221;) for company. He lay, blinking wakefully, sprawled out on the spare seat of the gig beneath a mass of warm rugs.</p>
<p>Between Littlehampton and Worthing is a lonely piece of road, long and dreary, through bleak and bare open country, where the snow lay knee-deep, sparkling in the moonlight. It was so cheerless that I turned round to speak to my dog, more for the sake of hearing the sound of a voice than anything else. &#8220;Good Bose,&#8221; I said, patting him, &#8220;there&#8217;s a good dog!&#8221; Then suddenly I noticed he shivered, and shrank underneath the wraps. Then the horse required my attention, for he gave a start, and was going wrong, and had nearly taken me into the ditch.</p>
<p>Then I looked up. Walking at my horse&#8217;s head, dressed in a sweeping robe, so white that it shone dazzling against the white snow, I saw a lady, her back turned to me, her head bare; her hair dishevelled and strayed, showing sharp and black against her white dress.</p>
<p>I was at first so much surprised at seeing a lady, so dressed, exposed to the open night, and such a night as this, that I scarcely knew what to do. Recovering myself, I called out to know if I could render assistance—if she wished to ride? No answer. I drove faster, the horse blinking, and shying, and trembling the while, his ears laid back in abject terror. Still the figure maintained its position close to my horse&#8217;s head. Then I thought that what I saw was no woman, but perchance a man disguised for the purpose of robbing me, seeking an opportunity to seize the bridle and stop the horse. Filled with this idea, I said, &#8220;Good Bose! hi! look at it, boy!&#8221; but the dog only shivered as if in fright. Then we came to a place where four cross-roads meet.</p>
<p>Determined to know the worst, I pulled up the horse. I fetched Bose, unwilling, out by the ears. He was a good dog at anything from a rat to a man, but he slunk away that night into the hedge, and lay there, his head between his paws, whining and howling. I walked straight up to the figure, still standing by the horse&#8217;s head. As I walked, the figure turned, and I saw Harriet&#8217;s face as plainly as I see you now—white and calm—placid, as idealised and beautified by death. I must own that, though not a nervous man, in that instant I felt sick and faint. Harriet looked me full in the face with a long, eager, silent look. I knew then it was her spirit, and felt a strange calm come over me, for I knew it was nothing to harm me. When I could speak, I asked what troubled her. She looked at me still, never changing that cold fixed stare. Then I felt in my mind it was her children, and I said:</p>
<p>&#8220;Harriet! is it for your children you are troubled?&#8221;</p>
<p>No answer.</p>
<p>&#8220;Harriet,&#8221; I continued, &#8220;if for these you are troubled, be assured they shall never want while I have power to help them. Rest in peace!&#8221;</p>
<p>Still no answer.</p>
<p>I put up my hand to wipe from my forehead the cold perspiration which had gathered there. When I took my hand away from shading my eyes, the figure was gone. I was alone on the bleak snow-covered ground. The breeze, that had been hushed before, breathed coolly and gratefully on my face, and the cold stars glimmered and sparkled sharply in the far blue heavens. My dog crept up to me and furtively licked my hand, as who would say, &#8220;Good master, don&#8217;t be angry. I have served you in all but this.&#8221;</p>
<p>I took the children and brought them up till they could help themselves.</p>
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		<title>The Botathen Ghost</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=34</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:03:06 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Ghost Stories]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Botathen Ghost by the Rev. S.R. Hawker The legend of Parson Rudall and the Botathen Ghost will be recognised by many Cornish people as a local remembrance of their boyhood. It appears from the diary of this learned master of the grammar-school—for such was his office, as well as perpetual curate of the parish,—&#8221; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Botathen Ghost<br />
by the Rev. S.R. Hawker</p>
<p>The legend of Parson Rudall and the Botathen Ghost will be recognised by many Cornish people as a local remembrance of their boyhood.<br />
It appears from the diary of this learned master of the grammar-school—for such was his office, as well as perpetual curate of the parish,—&#8221; that a pestilential disease did break forth in our town in the beginning of the year a.d. 1665; yea, and it likewise invaded my school, insomuch that therewithal certain of the chief scholars sickened and died.&#8221; &#8220;Among others who yielded to the malign influence was Master John Eliot, the eldest son and the worshipful heir of Edward Eliot, Esquire of Trebursey, a stripling of sixteen years of age, but of uncommon parts and hopeful ingenuity. At his own especial motion and earnest desire I did consent to preach his funeral sermon.&#8221; It should be remembered here that, howsoever strange and singular it may sound to us that a mere lad should formally solicit such a performance at the hands of his master, it was in consonance with the habitual usage of those times. The old services for the dead had been abolished by law, and in the stead of sacrament and ceremony, month&#8217;s mind and year&#8217;s mind, the sole substitute which survived was the general desire &#8220;to partake,&#8221; as they called it, of a posthumous discourse, replete with lofty eulogy and flattering remembrance of the living and the dead. The diary proceeds:</p>
<p>&#8220;I fulfilled my undertaking and preached over the coffin in the presence of a full assemblage of mourners and lachrymose friends. An ancient gentleman who was then and there in the church, a Mr Bligh of Botathen, was much affected by my discourse, and he was heard to repeat to himself certain parentheses therefrom, especially a phrase from Maro Virgilius, which I had applied to the deceased youth, &#8216;Et puer ipse fuit cantari dignus.&#8217;</p>
<p>&#8220;The cause wherefore this old gentleman was thus moved by my applications was this: He had a first-born and only son—a child who, but a very few months before, had been not unworthy of the character I drew of young Master Eliot, but who, by some strange accident, had of late quite fallen away from his parent&#8217;s hopes, and become moody, and sullen, and distraught. When the funeral obsequies were over, I had no sooner come out of the church than I was accosted by this aged parent, and he besought me incontinently, with a singular energy, that I would resort with him forthwith to his abode at Botathen that very night; nor could I have delivered myself from his importunity, had not Mr Eliot urged his claim to enjoy my company at his own house. Hereupon I got loose, but not until I had pledged a fast assurance that I would pay him, faithfully, an early visit the next day.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;The Place,&#8221; as it was called, of Botathen, where old Mr Bligh resided, was a low-roofed gabled manor-house of the fifteenth century, walled and mullioned, and with clustered chimneys of dark-grey stone from the neighbouring quarries of Ventor-gan. The mansion was flanked by a pleasaunce or enclosure in one space, of garden and lawn, and it was surrounded by a solemn grove of stag-horned trees. It had the sombre aspect of age and of solitude, and looked the very scene of strange and supernatural events. A legend might well belong to every gloomy glade around, and there must surely be a haunted room somewhere within its walls. Hither, according to his appointment, on the morrow, Parson Rudall betook himself. Another clergyman, as it appeared, had been invited to meet him, who, very soon after his arrival, proposed a walk together in the pleasaunce, on the pretext of showing him, as a stranger, the walks and trees, until the dinner-bell should strike. There, with much prolixity, and with many a solemn pause, his brother minister proceeded to &#8220;unfold the mystery.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;A singular infelicity,&#8221; he declared, &#8220;had befallen young Master Bligh, once the hopeful heir of his parents and of the lands of Botathen. Whereas he had been from childhood a blithe and merry boy, &#8216;the gladness,&#8217; like Isaac of old, of his father&#8217;s age, he had suddenly of late become morose and silent—nay, even austere and stern—dwelling apart, always solemn, often in tears. The lad had at first repulsed all questions as to the origin of this great change, but of late he had yielded to the importunate researches of his parents, and had disclosed the secret cause. It appeared that he resorted, every day, by a pathway across the fields, to this very clergyman&#8217;s house, who had charge of his education, and grounded him in the studies suitable to his age. In the course of his daily walk he had to pass a certain heath or down where the road wound along through tall blocks of granite with open spaces of grassy sward between. There in a certain spot and always in one and the same place, the lad declared that he had encountered, every day, a woman with a pale and troubled face, clothed in a long loose garment of frieze, with one hand always stretched forth, and the other pressed against her side. Her name, he said, was Dorothy Dinglet, for he had known her well from his childhood, and she often used to come to his parents&#8217; house; but that which troubled him was, that she had now been dead three years, and he himself had been with the neighbours at her burial; so that, as the youth alleged, with great simplicity, since he had seen her body laid in the grave, this that he saw every day must needs be her soul or ghost. &#8216;Questioned again and again,&#8217; said the clergyman, &#8216;he never contradicts himself; but he relates the same and the simple tale as a thing that cannot be gainsaid. Indeed, the lad&#8217;s observance is keen and calm for a boy of his age. The hair of the appearance, sayeth he, is not like anything alive, but it is so soft and light that it seemeth to melt away while you look; but her eyes are set, and never blink—no, not when the sun shineth full upon her face. She maketh no steps, but seemeth to swim along the top of the grass; and her hand, which is stretched out alway, seemeth to point at something far away, out of sight. It is her continual coming; for she never faileth to meet him, and to pass on, that hath quenched his spirits; and although he never seeth her by night, yet cannot he get his natural rest.&#8217;</p>
<p>&#8220;Thus far the clergyman; whereupon the dinner clock did sound, and we went into the house. After dinner, when young Master Bligh had withdrawn with his tutor, under excuse of their books, the parents did forthwith beset me as to my thoughts about their son. Said I, warily, &#8216;The case is strange, but by no means impossible. It is one that I will study, and fear not to handle, if the lad will be free with me, and fulfil all that I desire.&#8217; The mother was overjoyed, but I perceived that old Mr Bligh turned pale, and was downcast with some thought which, however, he did not express. Then they bade that Master Bligh should be called to meet me in the pleasaunce forthwith. The boy came, and he rehearsed to me his tale with an open countenance, and, withal, a modesty of speech. Verily he seemed &#8216;ingenui vultus puer ingenuique pudoris.&#8217; Then I signified to him my purpose. &#8216;To-morrow,&#8217; said I, &#8216;we will go together to the place; and if, as I doubt not, the woman shall appear, it will be for me to proceed according to knowledge, and by rules laid down in my books.&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>The unaltered scenery of the legend still survives, and, like the field of the forty footsteps in another history, the place is still visited by those who take interest in the supernatural tales of old. The pathway leads along a moorland waste, where large masses of rock stand up here and there from the grassy turf, and clumps of heath and gorse weave their tapestry of golden purple garniture on every side. Amidst all these, and winding along between the rocks, is a natural footway worn by the scant, rare tread of the village traveller. Just midway, a somewhat larger stretch than usual of green sod expands, which is skirted by the path, and which is still identified as the legendary haunt of the phantom, by the name of Parson Rudall&#8217;s Ghost.</p>
<p>But we must draw the record of the first interview between the minister and Dorothy from his own words. &#8220;We met,&#8221; thus he writes, &#8220;in the pleasaunce very early, and before any others in the house were awake; and together the lad and myself proceeded towards the field. The youth was quite composed, and carried his Bible under his arm, from whence he read to me verses, which he said he had lately picked out, to have always in his mind. These were Job vii. 14, &#8216;Thou scarest me with dreams, and terrifiest me through visions&#8217;; and Deuteronomy xxviii. 67, &#8216;In the morning thou shalt say, Would to God it were the evening, and in the evening thou shalt say, Would to God it were morning; for the fear of thine heart wherewith thou shalt fear, and for the sight of thine eyes which thou shalt see.&#8217;</p>
<p>&#8220;I was much pleased with the lad&#8217;s ingenuity in these pious applications, but for mine own part I was somewhat anxious and out of cheer. For aught I knew this might be a dæmonium meridianum, the most stubborn spirit to govern and guide that any man can meet, and the most perilous withal. We had hardly reached the accustomed spot, when we both saw her at once gliding towards us; punctually as the ancient writers describe the motion of their &#8216;lemures, which swoon along the ground, neither marking the sand nor bending the herbage.&#8217; The aspect of the woman was exactly that which had been related by the lad. There was the pale and stony face, the strange and misty hair, the eyes firm and fixed, that gazed, yet not on us, but something that they saw far, far away; one hand and arm stretched out, and the other grasping the girdle of her waist. She floated along the field like a sail upon a stream, and glided past the spot where we stood, pausingly. But so deep was the awe that overcame me, as I stood there in the light of day, face to face with a human soul separate from her bones and flesh, that my heart and purpose both failed me. I had resolved to speak to the spectre in the appointed form of words, but I did not. I stood like one amazed and speechless, until she had passed clean out of sight. One thing remarkable came to pass. A spaniel dog, the favourite of young Master Bligh, had followed us, and lo! when the woman drew nigh, the poor creature began to yell and bark piteously, and ran backward and away, like a thing dismayed and appalled. We returned to the house, and after I had said all that I could to pacify the lad, and to soothe the aged people, I took my leave for that time, with a promise that when I had fulfilled certain business elsewhere, which I then alleged, I would return and take orders to assuage these disturbances and their cause.</p>
<p>&#8220;January 7, 1665.—At my own house, I find, by my books, what is expedient to be done; and then, Apage, Sathanas!</p>
<p>&#8220;January 9, 1665.—This day I took leave of my wife and family, under pretext of engagements elsewhere, and made my secret journey to our diocesan city, wherein the good and venerable bishop then abode.</p>
<p>&#8220;January 10.—Deo gratias, in safe arrival at Exeter; craved and obtained immediate audience of his lordship; pleading it was for counsel and admonition on a weighty and pressing cause; called to the presence; made obeisance; and then by command stated my case—the Botathen perplexity—which I moved with strong and earnest instances and solemn asseverations of that which I had myself seen and heard. Demanded by his lordship, what was the succour that I had come to entreat at his hands? Replied, licence for my exorcism, that so I might, ministerially, allay this spiritual visitant, and thus render to the living and the dead release from this surprise. &#8216;But,&#8217; said our bishop, &#8216;on what authority do you allege that I am intrusted with faculty so to do? Our Church, as is well known, hath abjured certain branches of her ancient power, on grounds of perversion and abuse.&#8217; &#8216;Nay, my Lord,&#8217; I humbly answered, &#8216;under favour, the seventy-second of the canons ratified and enjoined on us, the clergy, anno Domini 1604, doth expressly provide, that &#8220;no minister, unless he hath the licence of his diocesan bishop, shall essay to exorcise a spirit, evil or good.&#8221; Therefore it was,&#8217; I did here mildly allege, &#8216;that I did not presume to enter on such a work without lawful privilege under your lordship&#8217;s hand and seal.&#8217; Hereupon did our wise and learned bishop, sitting in his chair, condescend upon the theme at some length with many gracious interpretations from ancient writers and from Holy Scripture, and I did humbly rejoin and reply, till the upshot was that he did call in his secretary and command him to draw the aforesaid faculty, forthwith and without further delay, assigning him a form, insomuch that the matter was incontinently done; and after I had disbursed into the secretary&#8217;s hands certain moneys for signitary purposes, as the manner of such officers hath always been, the bishop did himself affix his signature under the sigillum of his see, and deliver the document into my hands. When I knelt down to receive his benediction, he softly said, &#8216;Let it be secret, Mr R. Weak brethren! weak brethren!&#8217;&#8221;</p>
<p>This interview with the bishop, and the success with which he vanquished his lordship&#8217;s scruples, would seem to have confirmed Parson Rudall very strongly in his own esteem, and to have invested him with that courage which he evidently lacked at his first encounter with the ghost.</p>
<p>The entries proceed: &#8220;January 11, 1665.—Therewithal did I hasten home and prepare my instruments, and cast my figures for the onset of the next day. Took out my ring of brass, and put it on the index-finger of my right hand, with the scutum Davidis traced thereon.</p>
<p>&#8220;January 12, 1665.—Rode into the gateway at Botathen, armed at all points, but not with Saul&#8217;s armour, and ready. There is danger from the demons, but so there is in the surrounding air every day. At early morning then, and alone,—for so the usage ordains,—I betook me towards the field. It was void, and I had thereby due time to prepare. First, I paced and measured out my circle on the grass. Then did I mark my pentacle in the very midst, and at the intersection of the five angles I did set up and fix my crutch of raun (rowan). Lastly, I took my station south, at the true line of the meridian, and stood facing due north. I waited and watched for a long time. At last there was a kind of trouble in the air, a soft and rippling sound, and all at once the shape appeared, and came on towards me gradually. I opened my parchment scroll, and read aloud the command. She paused, and seemed to waver and doubt; stood still; then I rehearsed the sentence, sounding out every syllable like a chant. She drew near my ring, but halted at first outside, on the brink. I sounded again, and now at the third time I gave the signal in Syriac,—the speech which is used, they say, where such ones dwell and converse in thoughts that glide.</p>
<p>&#8220;She was at last obedient, and swam into the midst of the circle, and there stood still, suddenly. I saw, moreover, that she drew back her pointing hand. All this while I do confess that my knees shook under me, and the drops of sweat ran down my flesh like rain. But now, although face to face with the spirit, my heart grew calm, and my mind was composed. I knew that the pentacle would govern her, and the ring must bind, until I gave the word. Then I called to mind the rule laid down of old, that no angel or fiend, no spirit, good or evil, will ever speak until they have been first spoken to. N.B.—This is the great law of prayer. God Himself will not yield reply until man hath made vocal entreaty, once and again. So I went on to demand, as the books advise; and the phantom made answer, willingly. Questioned wherefore not at rest? Unquiet, because of a certain sin. Asked what, and by whom? Revealed it; but it is sub sigillo, and therefore nefas dictu; more anon. Inquired, what sign she could give that she was a true spirit and not a false fiend? Stated, before next Yule-tide a fearful pestilence would lay waste the land and myriads of souls would be loosened from their flesh, until, as she piteously said, &#8216;our valleys will be full.&#8217; Asked again, why she so terrified the lad? Replied: &#8216;It is the law; we must seek a youth or a maiden of clean life, and under age, to receive messages and admonitions.&#8217; We conversed with many more words, but it is not lawful for me to set them down. Pen and ink would degrade and defile the thoughts she uttered, and which my mind received that day. I broke the ring, and she passed, but to return once more next day. At even-song, a long discourse with that ancient transgressor, Mr B. Great horror and remorse; entire atonement and penance; whatsoever I enjoin; full acknowledgment before pardon.</p>
<p>&#8220;January 13, 1665.—At sunrise I was again in the field. She came in at once, and, as it seemed, with freedom. Inquired if she knew my thoughts, and what I was going to relate? Answered, &#8216;Nay, we only know what we perceive and hear; we cannot see the heart.&#8217; Then I rehearsed the penitent words of the man she had come up to denounce, and the satisfaction he would perform. Then said she, &#8216;Peace in our midst.&#8217; I went through the proper forms of dismissal, and fulfilled all as it was set down and written in my memoranda; and then, with certain fixed rites, I did dismiss that troubled ghost, until she peacefully withdrew, gliding towards the west. Neither did she ever afterward appear, but was allayed until she shall come in her second flesh to the valley of Armageddon on the last day.&#8221;</p>
<p>These quaint and curious details from the &#8220;diurnal&#8221; of a simple-hearted clergyman of the seventeenth century appear to betoken his personal persuasion of the truth of what he saw and said, although the statements are strongly tinged with what some may term the superstition, and others the excessive belief, of those times. It is a singular fact, however, that the canon which authorises exorcism under episcopal licence is still a part of the ecclesiastical law of the Anglican Church, although it might have a singular effect on the nerves of certain of our bishops if their clergy were to resort to them for the faculty which Parson Rudall obtained. The general facts stated in his diary are to this day matters of belief in that neighbourhood; and it has been always accounted a strong proof of the veracity of the Parson and the Ghost, that the plague, fatal to so many thousands, did break out in London at the close of that very year. We may well excuse a triumphant entry, on a subsequent page of the &#8220;diurnal,&#8221; with the date of July 10, 1665: &#8220;How sorely must the infidels and heretics of this generation be dismayed when they know that this Black Death, which is now swallowing its thousands in the streets of the great city, was foretold six months agone, under the exorcisms of a country minister, by a visible and suppliant ghost! And what pleasures and improvements do such deny themselves who scorn and avoid all opportunity of intercourse with souls separate, and the spirits, glad and sorrowful, which inhabit the unseen world!&#8221;</p>
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		<title>The Pool in the Graveyard</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=32</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 22:01:02 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Ghost Stories]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Pool in the Graveyard by Greville MacDonald By this corner of the graveyard the red dawn discovered to Jonas a little pool of clear water, with mosses and parsley-ferns all around it, and so clear and cool-looking that he must drink. The larger part of it was still shadowed by the wall. On knees [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Pool in the Graveyard<br />
by Greville MacDonald</p>
<p>By this corner of the graveyard the red dawn discovered to Jonas a little pool of clear water, with mosses and parsley-ferns all around it, and so clear and cool-looking that he must drink. The larger part of it was still shadowed by the wall. On knees and hands, he put his lips to it and drank. The refreshment was wonderful. He rose with a sense that he should find the lost sheep yet and bring her home. He looked down once more into the clear pool. It was wider than he had thought—indeed, he had been mistaken; it was a great tarn on the mountain-side! Then he saw that wonderful things were happening on the face of and all round the water. What appeared to be little glow-worms were lying motionless in groups on the mosses in a still-shadowed region by the side of the water. From beneath a low arch in the wall, where the water was slowly flowing away in a river, there came, against stream and wave and wind, a fishing-boat. Its great red sail was spread, and its pennant shone silvery blue in the sun. It came alongside a pier of mossy stones, and cast anchor. From it leapt twelve strong young fishermen, all with bright faces. They took up the little creatures with the glowing lights, and carried them aboard; then back again to other groups, until all were gathered in. For they were all sleeping human forms, close-wrapped in grave-clothes, but with their light still living, as might be seen by anyone who had suffered. When all were safe aboard, the men cast off and the boat disappeared under the arch.</p>
<p>*From How Jonas Found his Enemy: a Romance of the South Downs (1916).</p>
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		<title>The Haunted Cove</title>
		<link>http://www.ghoststories.co.uk/?p=30</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 29 Jun 2010 21:59:30 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Ghost Stories]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The Haunted Cove by Sir George Douglas, Bart. Commonplace in itself and showing positive vulgarity in the style in which its pleasure-grounds are laid out, Clyffe, near Berwick-on-Tweed, has yet one delightful feature of its own,—to wit, a private bay to which access is obtained by a tunnel seventy or eighty yards long, cut through [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The Haunted Cove<br />
by Sir George Douglas, Bart.</p>
<p>Commonplace in itself and showing positive vulgarity in the style in which its pleasure-grounds are laid out, Clyffe, near Berwick-on-Tweed, has yet one delightful feature of its own,—to wit, a private bay to which access is obtained by a tunnel seventy or eighty yards long, cut through the soft formation of the cliff from the sloping gardens above. The result is that, if you are a visitor at Clyffe, you have your own private bathing ground, your own private beach where the children may play, without fear of being encroached upon, unless, indeed, a boat should be run in among the rocks from seaward. In the early nineties of the last century, the only daughter of the house of Clyffe was engaged to be married to a young officer quartered at the military depot at Berwick. They were a blameless but not particularly interesting couple, and one of their hobbies was to meet and promenade on the smooth sands of Clyffe bay in the brilliant autumn moonlight. In order to prevent possible intrusion from the sea, the seaward end of the tunnel was closed by a heavy iron gate, and upon the inner side of this gate the Lieutenant was to wait until his fiancée should steal forth bringing with her the key which should give access to the beach. It was all very foolish and romantic, no doubt, for they might have met just as conveniently in the conservatory of Clyffe House, where their privacy would have been equally respected, and where Miss Alix&#8217;s satin shoes and diaphanous draperies would have exposed her to no risk of a chill. Lovers are like that, however, and had they not been so on this occasion, I should have had no story to tell.<br />
Like the exemplary swain he was, Dick arrived early at the rendezvous,—that is to say, early in respect to the time agreed upon, though, as a matter of fact, it was nearly eleven o&#8217;clock. There he lit a cigarette, and approaching the heavy iron bars of the locked gate, looked forth upon the peaceful scene beyond. It was a perfect night, the harvest moon riding through fleecy cloud aloft, whilst the breaking of the sea between the rocky points to right and left was soothing in its gentle iteration. Dick had been on parade extremely early that morning, and, tell it not in Gath! his eyes involuntarily closed. Starting awake again, he saw with surprise that, though Alix had not yet come forward, he was no longer alone. No! the sacred beach had been invaded, and a female figure clad in light draperies was pacing slowly in the moonlight betwixt himself and the distant rocks. Who on earth could she be, and how had she got there? were the questions he asked himself, his first sensation being one of annoyance at so unexpected and so ill-timed an intrusion. But as the moments passed and the figure came more clearly into view, impatience gave way to curiosity, and curiosity to something like awe.</p>
<p>What he saw was the tall and slender form of a young girl whose hands were clasped in front of her, and whose eyes were fixed on the ground in a pensive, not to say sorrowful, attitude. Clear as was the moonlight, at least in the intervals of the moon&#8217;s passage through the broken clouds, her features were not plainly visible; but her every movement was instinct with grace. What could she be doing there? Under other circumstances, possibly Dick might have felt inclined to pass the gate and himself step forth on to the sands. But, besides thatTHE HAUNTED COVEBy Sir George Douglas, Bart.</p>
<p>Commonplace in itself and showing positive vulgarity in the style in which its pleasure-grounds are laid out, Clyffe, near Berwick-on-Tweed, has yet one delightful feature of its own,—to wit, a private bay to which access is obtained by a tunnel seventy or eighty yards long, cut through the soft formation of the cliff from the sloping gardens above. The result is that, if you are a visitor at Clyffe, you have your own private bathing ground, your own private beach where the children may play, without fear of being encroached upon, unless, indeed, a boat should be run in among the rocks from seaward. In the early nineties of the last century, the only daughter of the house of Clyffe was engaged to be married to a young officer quartered at the military depot at Berwick. They were a blameless but not particularly interesting couple, and one of their hobbies was to meet and promenade on the smooth sands of Clyffe bay in the brilliant autumn moonlight. In order to prevent possible intrusion from the sea, the seaward end of the tunnel was closed by a heavy iron gate, and upon the inner side of this gate the Lieutenant was to wait until his fiancée should steal forth bringing with her the key which should give access to the beach. It was all very foolish and romantic, no doubt, for they might have met just as conveniently in the conservatory of Clyffe House, where their privacy would have been equally respected, and where Miss Alix&#8217;s satin shoes and diaphanous draperies would have exposed her to no risk of a chill. Lovers are like that, however, and had they not been so on this occasion, I should have had no story to tell.</p>
<p>Like the exemplary swain he was, Dick arrived early at the rendezvous,—that is to say, early in respect to the time agreed upon, though, as a matter of fact, it was nearly eleven o&#8217;clock. There he lit a cigarette, and approaching the heavy iron bars of the locked gate, looked forth upon the peaceful scene beyond. It was a perfect night, the harvest moon riding through fleecy cloud aloft, whilst the breaking of the sea between the rocky points to right and left was soothing in its gentle iteration. Dick had been on parade extremely early that morning, and, tell it not in Gath! his eyes involuntarily closed. Starting awake again, he saw with surprise that, though Alix had not yet come forward, he was no longer alone. No! the sacred beach had been invaded, and a female figure clad in light draperies was pacing slowly in the moonlight betwixt himself and the distant rocks. Who on earth could she be, and how had she got there? were the questions he asked himself, his first sensation being one of annoyance at so unexpected and so ill-timed an intrusion. But as the moments passed and the figure came more clearly into view, impatience gave way to curiosity, and curiosity to something like awe.</p>
<p>What he saw was the tall and slender form of a young girl whose hands were clasped in front of her, and whose eyes were fixed on the ground in a pensive, not to say sorrowful, attitude. Clear as was the moonlight, at least in the intervals of the moon&#8217;s passage through the broken clouds, her features were not plainly visible; but her every movement was instinct with grace. What could she be doing there? Under other circumstances, possibly Dick might have felt inclined to pass the gate and himself step forth on to the sands. But, besides that the gate was locked, he gradually became conscious of a singular delicacy or unwillingness to intrude upon the privacy of this solitary, inexplicable, and impressive figure. He was content, therefore, to watch her noiseless progress, and, as he did so, even his untrained masculine eye seemed to note something unusual—out of date, it might be—in the fashion of her garments. So perhaps might some old-world portrait have appeared, had it stept down from its frame against the wall. This, however, stirred him little. What he was not prepared for was the gesture of anguish, nay, of positive despair, with which, when about opposite him, the figure threw her head back and her arms aloft, as if in mute and agonised appeal to Heaven. The action was heart-rending even to look on; nor, to a male eye, did it lose aught from the fact that, as the moonlight now fell for the first time on her upturned face, it showed it to be deathly pale indeed, but also exquisitely lovely. Another moment or two, and the graceful and appealing form had passed beyond his field of vision, for, as the locked gate stood some little way back from the mouth of the tunnel, his view was restricted.</p>
<p>A short time only, though he knew not exactly how long, had passed when Alix stood beside him.</p>
<p>&#8220;I had some difficulty,&#8221; she archly explained, &#8220;in eluding prying eyes.&#8221;</p>
<p>For an ardent lover, Dick&#8217;s greetings were perfunctory; after which, being still powerfully under the impression of what he had just seen, he told Alix all about it.</p>
<p>&#8220;We shall soon see who she is,&#8221; replied that practical young lady, as she placed the heavy key in the cumbrous lock, &#8220;and I shall also take leave to inform her that this bit of coast is strictly private.&#8221;</p>
<p>And strictly private it appeared to be when they emerged from the tunnel. For though their eyes swept the beach to right and left, and though the moon just then was unobscured, they saw no trace of any living form.</p>
<p>&#8220;She must have landed from a boat,&#8221; said Alix; but as little trace of a boat could they discover.</p>
<p>Still it was quite possible that she might pass unobserved against the dark rocks, so they turned first to the right, then to the left, keeping a keen look-out for any sign of motion.</p>
<p>They detected nothing.</p>
<p>And by this time I am bound to confess that a slightly uncomplimentary suspicion had more than once crossed the brain of Alix. She knew that, as a rule, her Dick was a pattern of moderation. But even the most prudent may be liable to be occasionally overtaken. And she recalled his having mentioned that this was to be a guest-night at the mess. Indeed, it was chiefly upon that account that the assignation had been fixed so late. This present portentous solemnity was certainly most unlike him. Was it possible that the poor fellow had taken just one more whisky-and-soda than he could conveniently carry? Outspoken by nature, she blurted out her suspicion, which was strengthened rather than the reverse by the great earnestness with which he repelled it.</p>
<p>Less convinced than before, Alix then exclaimed: &#8220;Look here, Dick! If, as you say, the young woman passed this way, she must have left tracks on the smooth sand. Where do you say the place was?&#8221;</p>
<p>With some uncertainty, Dick then led her to what he took to be the place. No tracks were there. He then tried further back from the mouth of the tunnel, and with as little success. It was true the tide was coming up, but it could scarcely yet have reached footmarks which had been imprinted so far inshore as he supposed these to have been.</p>
<p>In a spirit of levity which jarred on him, Alix now recommended her lover to go back to his quarters and have a good sleep; and then, having again passed through the gate and pushed their way up the tunnel, the two young people parted in something very like a tiff.</p>
<p>Dick did not call at Clyffe House the next day, and when he called on the day following, Alix met him in a complaisant mood. After all, she had no wish to quarrel with him. And very soon she said, &#8220;Going back to what you told me you had seen the other night, Dick, it occurred to me, after you were gone, that it fits in rather curiously with an old story connected with this place.&#8221; And then, at his request, she proceeded to tell him how, some thirty years ago, her grandmother had had a favourite maid, a friendless orphan girl named Barbara, to whom attached a mystery. Barbara was a very lovely creature of refinement and education above her station, and she had of course numerous admirers. Young as she was, her discretion was faultless, with the sole exception that her native amiability and desire to please sometimes betrayed her into conduct which meant less than her admirers wished to think it did. Well, at last Barbara became plighted to a respectable young fisherman, part-owner of a boat sailing from The Greenses, and, though details were vague, it was generally understood that, as a consequence, several hearts were severely damaged. As Barbara had no relatives, it was arranged by her employer that she should remain in her situation until the wedding-day and should be married from Clyffe House. Considerable preparations had also been made to do honour to the occasion, when—judge of the consternation of the inmates of the house!—upon the morning of the wedding-day Barbara was not to be found. She was believed to have retired to rest on the previous night as usual, yet her bed had not been slept in. Nor, although most of her clothes were packed in anticipation of her change of domicile, had she apparently taken anything with her. Nothing in the least unusual had been observed in her demeanour; nor could the unhappy bridegroom suggest any possible motive for her conduct. Exhaustive inquiries and exhaustive search were made; but, to cut the story short, nothing had ever again been seen or heard of the fair Barbara to that day. Her mistress, who had been sincerely attached to her, had long mourned for her, and in after times would often sing her praises. But, in order to be quite candid, it must be acknowledged that there were others, not a few, who declined to believe that the girl had come to an untimely end; and, who, knowing that she had several suitors, and had sometimes appeared uncertain which to favour, preferred to think that she had changed her mind at the last moment, and, deciding to throw over her fisherman, had made her escape from Clyffe House during the night to join some more eligible swain. This would have been a desperate step indeed; nor could her conduct in withholding subsequent explanations be absolved of heartlessness. But, after all, she was the sort of girl who, where no actual misconduct was involved, might easily allow herself to be over-persuaded. And certainly the tangled skein of love does sometimes present a knot which must be cut rather than untied.</p>
<p>The Lieutenant professed himself profoundly interested in this narrative, which he and Alix then proceeded to discuss in all its bearings, and more particularly, of course, in its relation to the figure seen by him in the cove. It is true that Alix never quite believed in the genuineness of the apparition; but, seeing that Dick really wished to have it taken seriously, she decided tactfully to humour him, and made quite a nine days&#8217; wonder of the mysterious occurrence. Their own wedding-day was, however, fast drawing on, so they soon found other things to talk and think of. To be brief, they were in due course married, and, amid the cares and pleasures of wedded life, the story, though not forgotten, came to be very seldom referred to. So twenty years passed; at the end of which time the Colonel (as he now was), accompanied by his wife and several youngsters, paid one of his not very frequent visits to his wife&#8217;s parents at Clyffe House.</p>
<p>On the first night of the visit, after dinner, Alix&#8217;s father had significantly recalled the story of the maid Barbara&#8217;s disappearance, and, after stating that the mystery had now been finally cleared up, had gone on to relate the following particulars:—A few days previously there had lain at the point of death in the infirmary at Berwick an aged fisherman, who had long been known in the seaport town for his solitary habits and morose and violent ways. As death drew near, it became evident that his mind was sorely troubled, and to one of the nurses or doctors who had sought to comfort him he had been led to make the acknowledgment that a guilty secret weighed upon his soul, making him fearful to confront his Maker. He then told how, as a young man, he had passionately loved a pretty servant-girl employed at Clyffe House. Misled by those smiles and that graciousness of manner which in the guileless amiability of her nature the girl lavished upon all alike, he had for a moment imagined himself her favoured suitor. How bitter, then, was the blow, and how rude the awakening when he learned that a younger brother of his own, a mere boy, was preferred before himself! Nor was it only unrequited love that grieved him. No, he believed, or managed to persuade himself, that an unfair advantage had been taken of him, by which he had been made the lovers&#8217; dupe. A silent man, he took no one into his confidence, but abode his time until the eve of the wedding-day. On that day he had accidentally intercepted a note from the girl Barbara, addressed to his brother, in which she had agreed to meet her bridegroom of the morrow in the cove below Clyffe House one hour before midnight, to spend a final hour together before the momentous crisis in their lives. Instantly it had occurred to the elder brother to use the knowledge gained from the note in order to make one last desperate appeal on his own account to the sweet girl he loved so madly. Accordingly he kept back the missive, and, to make assurance doubly sure, mixed a soporific drug with his brother&#8217;s drink when the latter came in from fishing. Then, whilst the youngster slumbered heavily, he himself embarked in a cockle-boat and, unobserved, rowed quietly round the headland, into Clyffe cove, where he ran his boat into a safe creek he knew of, and jumped ashore. Poor Barbara had come down to the water&#8217;s edge to meet the boat, and great was her consternation on finding herself confronted by the wrong brother.</p>
<p>Then an impassioned scene was enacted, in which the seaman used every means of persuasion known to him to get the girl to give up his brother and plight herself to him. But though alternately distressed and terrified, Barbara had stood her ground, and, gentle and yielding though she appeared to be, neither threats nor vows had had the slightest effect upon her constancy. And then, of a sudden, the reckless brother had &#8220;seen red.&#8221; If he could not have this girl to wife, then neither should another, and a moment later her white form lay stretched upon the dark rocks at his feet.</p>
<p>The sight brought him to himself. There was no room for doubt that life was extinct; and if he was to escape suspicion, he must act at once, for the summer night was short and the dread interview had lasted long. He accordingly placed the body in the boat, and, having collected several heavy stones, proceeded to make use of his seacraft by binding them closely and firmly about the poor girl&#8217;s body by means of her clothing. Then he rowed out to sea, some mile or more, and there quietly dropped the body overboard. Such, in essentials, was the story told by the dying fisherman, and so it had come about that the bride of that fatal morning was never seen or heard of more. Though possibly intended to be regarded as confidential, certain it is that the confession had leaked out, and very soon became public property. For a few days it attracted great attention; and then, like other more important things which had preceded it, it ceased, save very occasionally, to be alluded to at all. But the Colonel never forgot it, any more than he ever forgot the lovely and inexplicable vision which had appeared to him for so brief an interval, in the moonlight, on the shore below Clyffe House. It is true that he seldom referred to it. Nor did that stately dame, who had once been Miss Alix and who was now believed to command the regiment, encourage him to do so. For she had observed that he was always most ready to tell the story after an exceptionally good dinner. And, with her high sense of what was due to his rank, she fancied that it made him mildly ridiculous. Neither, it might be, had her earliest doubts been ever wholly laid to rest. But members of the fair sex, when they are practical, are apt to be very practical indeed. the gate was locked, he gradually became conscious of a singular delicacy or unwillingness to intrude upon the privacy of this solitary, inexplicable, and impressive figure. He was content, therefore, to watch her noiseless progress, and, as he did so, even his untrained masculine eye seemed to note something unusual—out of date, it might be—in the fashion of her garments. So perhaps might some old-world portrait have appeared, had it stept down from its frame against the wall. This, however, stirred him little. What he was not prepared for was the gesture of anguish, nay, of positive despair, with which, when about opposite him, the figure threw her head back and her arms aloft, as if in mute and agonised appeal to Heaven. The action was heart-rending even to look on; nor, to a male eye, did it lose aught from the fact that, as the moonlight now fell for the first time on her upturned face, it showed it to be deathly pale indeed, but also exquisitely lovely. Another moment or two, and the graceful and appealing form had passed beyond his field of vision, for, as the locked gate stood some little way back from the mouth of the tunnel, his view was restricted.</p>
<p>A short time only, though he knew not exactly how long, had passed when Alix stood beside him.</p>
<p>&#8220;I had some difficulty,&#8221; she archly explained, &#8220;in eluding prying eyes.&#8221;</p>
<p>For an ardent lover, Dick&#8217;s greetings were perfunctory; after which, being still powerfully under the impression of what he had just seen, he told Alix all about it.</p>
<p>&#8220;We shall soon see who she is,&#8221; replied that practical young lady, as she placed the heavy key in the cumbrous lock, &#8220;and I shall also take leave to inform her that this bit of coast is strictly private.&#8221;</p>
<p>And strictly private it appeared to be when they emerged from the tunnel. For though their eyes swept the beach to right and left, and though the moon just then was unobscured, they saw no trace of any living form.</p>
<p>&#8220;She must have landed from a boat,&#8221; said Alix; but as little trace of a boat could they discover.</p>
<p>Still it was quite possible that she might pass unobserved against the dark rocks, so they turned first to the right, then to the left, keeping a keen look-out for any sign of motion.</p>
<p>They detected nothing.</p>
<p>And by this time I am bound to confess that a slightly uncomplimentary suspicion had more than once crossed the brain of Alix. She knew that, as a rule, her Dick was a pattern of moderation. But even the most prudent may be liable to be occasionally overtaken. And she recalled his having mentioned that this was to be a guest-night at the mess. Indeed, it was chiefly upon that account that the assignation had been fixed so late. This present portentous solemnity was certainly most unlike him. Was it possible that the poor fellow had taken just one more whisky-and-soda than he could conveniently carry? Outspoken by nature, she blurted out her suspicion, which was strengthened rather than the reverse by the great earnestness with which he repelled it.</p>
<p>Less convinced than before, Alix then exclaimed: &#8220;Look here, Dick! If, as you say, the young woman passed this way, she must have left tracks on the smooth sand. Where do you say the place was?&#8221;</p>
<p>With some uncertainty, Dick then led her to what he took to be the place. No tracks were there. He then tried further back from the mouth of the tunnel, and with as little success. It was true the tide was coming up, but it could scarcely yet have reached footmarks which had been imprinted so far inshore as he supposed these to have been.</p>
<p>In a spirit of levity which jarred on him, Alix now recommended her lover to go back to his quarters and have a good sleep; and then, having again passed through the gate and pushed their way up the tunnel, the two young people parted in something very like a tiff.</p>
<p>Dick did not call at Clyffe House the next day, and when he called on the day following, Alix met him in a complaisant mood. After all, she had no wish to quarrel with him. And very soon she said, &#8220;Going back to what you told me you had seen the other night, Dick, it occurred to me, after you were gone, that it fits in rather curiously with an old story connected with this place.&#8221; And then, at his request, she proceeded to tell him how, some thirty years ago, her grandmother had had a favourite maid, a friendless orphan girl named Barbara, to whom attached a mystery. Barbara was a very lovely creature of refinement and education above her station, and she had of course numerous admirers. Young as she was, her discretion was faultless, with the sole exception that her native amiability and desire to please sometimes betrayed her into conduct which meant less than her admirers wished to think it did. Well, at last Barbara became plighted to a respectable young fisherman, part-owner of a boat sailing from The Greenses, and, though details were vague, it was generally understood that, as a consequence, several hearts were severely damaged. As Barbara had no relatives, it was arranged by her employer that she should remain in her situation until the wedding-day and should be married from Clyffe House. Considerable preparations had also been made to do honour to the occasion, when—judge of the consternation of the inmates of the house!—upon the morning of the wedding-day Barbara was not to be found. She was believed to have retired to rest on the previous night as usual, yet her bed had not been slept in. Nor, although most of her clothes were packed in anticipation of her change of domicile, had she apparently taken anything with her. Nothing in the least unusual had been observed in her demeanour; nor could the unhappy bridegroom suggest any possible motive for her conduct. Exhaustive inquiries and exhaustive search were made; but, to cut the story short, nothing had ever again been seen or heard of the fair Barbara to that day. Her mistress, who had been sincerely attached to her, had long mourned for her, and in after times would often sing her praises. But, in order to be quite candid, it must be acknowledged that there were others, not a few, who declined to believe that the girl had come to an untimely end; and, who, knowing that she had several suitors, and had sometimes appeared uncertain which to favour, preferred to think that she had changed her mind at the last moment, and, deciding to throw over her fisherman, had made her escape from Clyffe House during the night to join some more eligible swain. This would have been a desperate step indeed; nor could her conduct in withholding subsequent explanations be absolved of heartlessness. But, after all, she was the sort of girl who, where no actual misconduct was involved, might easily allow herself to be over-persuaded. And certainly the tangled skein of love does sometimes present a knot which must be cut rather than untied.</p>
<p>The Lieutenant professed himself profoundly interested in this narrative, which he and Alix then proceeded to discuss in all its bearings, and more particularly, of course, in its relation to the figure seen by him in the cove. It is true that Alix never quite believed in the genuineness of the apparition; but, seeing that Dick really wished to have it taken seriously, she decided tactfully to humour him, and made quite a nine days&#8217; wonder of the mysterious occurrence. Their own wedding-day was, however, fast drawing on, so they soon found other things to talk and think of. To be brief, they were in due course married, and, amid the cares and pleasures of wedded life, the story, though not forgotten, came to be very seldom referred to. So twenty years passed; at the end of which time the Colonel (as he now was), accompanied by his wife and several youngsters, paid one of his not very frequent visits to his wife&#8217;s parents at Clyffe House.</p>
<p>On the first night of the visit, after dinner, Alix&#8217;s father had significantly recalled the story of the maid Barbara&#8217;s disappearance, and, after stating that the mystery had now been finally cleared up, had gone on to relate the following particulars:—A few days previously there had lain at the point of death in the infirmary at Berwick an aged fisherman, who had long been known in the seaport town for his solitary habits and morose and violent ways. As death drew near, it became evident that his mind was sorely troubled, and to one of the nurses or doctors who had sought to comfort him he had been led to make the acknowledgment that a guilty secret weighed upon his soul, making him fearful to confront his Maker. He then told how, as a young man, he had passionately loved a pretty servant-girl employed at Clyffe House. Misled by those smiles and that graciousness of manner which in the guileless amiability of her nature the girl lavished upon all alike, he had for a moment imagined himself her favoured suitor. How bitter, then, was the blow, and how rude the awakening when he learned that a younger brother of his own, a mere boy, was preferred before himself! Nor was it only unrequited love that grieved him. No, he believed, or managed to persuade himself, that an unfair advantage had been taken of him, by which he had been made the lovers&#8217; dupe. A silent man, he took no one into his confidence, but abode his time until the eve of the wedding-day. On that day he had accidentally intercepted a note from the girl Barbara, addressed to his brother, in which she had agreed to meet her bridegroom of the morrow in the cove below Clyffe House one hour before midnight, to spend a final hour together before the momentous crisis in their lives. Instantly it had occurred to the elder brother to use the knowledge gained from the note in order to make one last desperate appeal on his own account to the sweet girl he loved so madly. Accordingly he kept back the missive, and, to make assurance doubly sure, mixed a soporific drug with his brother&#8217;s drink when the latter came in from fishing. Then, whilst the youngster slumbered heavily, he himself embarked in a cockle-boat and, unobserved, rowed quietly round the headland, into Clyffe cove, where he ran his boat into a safe creek he knew of, and jumped ashore. Poor Barbara had come down to the water&#8217;s edge to meet the boat, and great was her consternation on finding herself confronted by the wrong brother.</p>
<p>Then an impassioned scene was enacted, in which the seaman used every means of persuasion known to him to get the girl to give up his brother and plight herself to him. But though alternately distressed and terrified, Barbara had stood her ground, and, gentle and yielding though she appeared to be, neither threats nor vows had had the slightest effect upon her constancy. And then, of a sudden, the reckless brother had &#8220;seen red.&#8221; If he could not have this girl to wife, then neither should another, and a moment later her white form lay stretched upon the dark rocks at his feet.</p>
<p>The sight brought him to himself. There was no room for doubt that life was extinct; and if he was to escape suspicion, he must act at once, for the summer night was short and the dread interview had lasted long. He accordingly placed the body in the boat, and, having collected several heavy stones, proceeded to make use of his seacraft by binding them closely and firmly about the poor girl&#8217;s body by means of her clothing. Then he rowed out to sea, some mile or more, and there quietly dropped the body overboard. Such, in essentials, was the story told by the dying fisherman, and so it had come about that the bride of that fatal morning was never seen or heard of more. Though possibly intended to be regarded as confidential, certain it is that the confession had leaked out, and very soon became public property. For a few days it attracted great attention; and then, like other more important things which had preceded it, it ceased, save very occasionally, to be alluded to at all. But the Colonel never forgot it, any more than he ever forgot the lovely and inexplicable vision which had appeared to him for so brief an interval, in the moonlight, on the shore below Clyffe House. It is true that he seldom referred to it. Nor did that stately dame, who had once been Miss Alix and who was now believed to command the regiment, encourage him to do so. For she had observed that he was always most ready to tell the story after an exceptionally good dinner. And, with her high sense of what was due to his rank, she fancied that it made him mildly ridiculous. Neither, it might be, had her earliest doubts been ever wholly laid to rest. But members of the fair sex, when they are practical, are apt to be very practical indeed.</p>
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