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Do
you Believe in Ghosts?
by
H.R.F. Keating
"DO you
believe in ghosts?" Bob Bridges asked
the guests. They were sitting in the
half-dark of the great hall of Helston Manor
House, the Yule log on its bed of glowing ashes
in the wide hearth sputtering from time to time
into bright outbursts of flame.
"Oh,
yes, yes, yes."
It was
Adam Lyon’s new American wife, Marilyn, all
enthusiasm, eyes sparkling in the warm light of
the fire as brightly as the diamonds round her
neck and at her ears.
Bob
could not restrain a chuckle. "All right, you’re
entitled," he said. "A newcomer to this country,
you’ve every right to be provided with all we
can offer in the way of a good, old-fashioned
Christmas. Well, that’s what Adam asked me to do
for you when he was called away to America like
that at such short notice."
"Really, to come over from your own home
on Christmas Eve and act as host in Adam’s
place," Marilyn answered. "That’s way beyond the
call of friendship."
Bob
laughed. "Oh, I wasn’t making any huge
sacrifice, you know. I’m all alone in our little
cottage while my wife’s off seeing her parents
in Australia. So I wouldn’t have had a very
cheerful Christmas, although the vicar has done
the Christian thing and invited me for dinner
tomorrow—which is why, incidentally, we’ve
rather put things back to front and have already
consumed that huge goose, that even bigger plum
pudding, all those mince pies and, best of all,
those last few bottles of that wonderful
burgundy from Adam’s cellar tonight."
He
turned to the others in the half-circle round
the fire, acquaintances of the absent Adam Lyon,
originally invited to meet the American girl he
had married. There was Dame Shelagh Mitchel,
"theatrical legend," now in retirement at a
house in the neighbourhood. There was Peter
Watson, an old school chum, now "something in
banking," accompanied by his wife, Brenda. There
was Gerald Martindale, "something in the
galleries world," and there was young Lord
Hareswold, "something in the card-playing
world," apparently very successful.
"But
now," Bob went on, "I think it’s time we
switched the clock back. It’s actually Christmas
Eve, and I think we should, if only for
Marilyn’s benefit, do all the old traditional
things that used to be done on the night before
Christmas, like telling ghost stories while
sitting round a Yule log fire, though, to be
frank, most of the Yule logs one sees nowadays
are about three inches long and made of
chocolate. But we’ll ignore that. So, I asked
‘Do you believe in ghosts?’ And Marilyn said
‘Yes,’ or rather ‘Yes, yes, yes.’"
Bob
turned then towards Dame Shelagh, sitting
upright as a wooden soldier in a high-backed
chair. He was about to speak when the
ever-lively Marilyn burst in. "Okay, okay, I did
say I believe in ghosts. And when I was a kid I
just longed to see one. I even wanted to go to
England just for that. But now that I’m here,
and kind of grown-up, I think if I did really,
really see one I’d just die of
fright."
"Oh,
come on, Marilyn. A tough American girl. I
suspect it’d be the ghost that came off
worst."
"Guess
I hope so. But, come to think of it, I might
just die of fright for real. I’ve got a kind of
funny heart."
Anxious
to steer away from the awkward facts of reality,
Bob hastily turned to the retired actress once
again. "Dame Shelagh, do you believe in
ghosts?"
"There
are haunted theatres, of course, and I have
played in most of them," Dame Shelagh’s richly
vowelled voice proclaimed, "but, no. No, when
any Hamlet saw the ghost of his father as I gave
my Gertrude, I knew very well it was my look of
pained incredulity that made the audience
believe in the ghostly presence which
Shakespeare proposed that the queen could not
see."
She
got, as she had demanded, her appreciative
murmur.
"But
tell me one thing," she said. "That is, unless I
have been told already. You know, one’s memory .
. . Indeed, the last time I played Lady
Bracknell—and I think I was then well into my
eighties—I’m afraid I failed to remember what it
was that the Prism woman had left the baby in.
But, of course, the play must go on. I spoke. Do
you think it likely that the baby was found in
a washbag? Well, the audience thought so;
I saw to that. But, tell me, please, why isn’t
Adam here? He invited me. That’s something I do
distinctly remember."
"Yes,
he did ask you for this evening, Dame Shelagh.
But his employers—he still works for that law
firm, you know—unexpectedly had to deliver some
documents to New York and none of the partners
would go. So . . ."
"Poor
boy, poor boy." Dame Shelagh infused the words
with such poignancy that any audience would have
wept.
"Oh,
he’s not been so badly done by," Marilyn
interjected. "You know, he’d never been to the
States. Nowhere. Ever. So he kind of leapt at
the chance to see New York, if only for a quick
visit. And when you volunteered to take his
place, Bob . . ."
"The
least I could do. But, Brenda, do you believe in
ghosts?"
Brenda
Watson, as always looking pale and washed out
beside her assertive husband, gave a small
shrug. "No," she said. "I don’t. Or not
really."
Bob,
giving politeness its due, turned to Lord
Hareswold sitting next to Brenda. "Well, do you
believe in ghosts?"
"I
believe in luck. Seem to have a bit of that at
the table usually. But, no, I certainly don’t
believe in ghosts."
"Peter?"
"No,
not at all. I don’t believe in Hareswold’s sort
of luck, either. You make your luck by studying
the market and nothing more. You wouldn’t get
very far in the city relying on
superstitions."
"And,
finally, Gerald. Do you believe in
ghosts?"
Gerald
Martindale shook his head with judicious
gravity. "No," he said. "In the art world one
has to have a certain sense for the rightness of
a thing or for its utter wrongness. It’s
something that, you know, goes beyond logic. And
one has it, or one doesn’t. But ghosts? No, I
don’t believe in ghosts."
"Well
then," Bob said, "I see I’m going to have a
pretty skeptical audience. But nevertheless I’m
going to do the traditional Christmas Eve thing,
at least as it used to be, and tell a ghost
story—or a ghost story of a sort, I suppose.
It’s one which Adam told me, though I’ll use my
own words tonight. And it happened in this very
house where, as you probably know, Adam’s family
has lived for—I don’t know—generations,
certainly, in good times and in bad."
"My
poor Adam," Marilyn murmured. "He certainly came
in for some bad times, especially after his
first wife died, and when the dot-com firm he
set up went broke. But at least he met me
eventually."
"Well,
he’s a lucky man. A lucky man indeed. But, now,
listen to the story." And he began.
It was
Christmas Eve, a few years before the turn of
the century and all round Helston Manor the snow
lay white and deep. At the hearth in the great
hall there were gathered six souls.
First
there was the Lord of the Manor. Lord of the
Manor indeed, but reduced by financial
stringency to becoming, in early middle age, a
student of medicine. In the firelight he glanced
from time to time at his bride of six weeks,
whom we’ll call Julia, daughter of the head of a
great firm of—shall we say—pill makers. Then
there was an aged neighbour, Lady Mortmain,
sitting beside her nephew James and James’ wife,
Alice. Opposite Julia in the half-circle round
the fire sat the bachelor vicar of the parish,
the Reverend Montague South.
It was
he who broke a somewhat long silence. "And are
we to see the much-feared Helston Manor ghost
tonight?" he asked. "Christmas Eve, I believe,
is the one day in the year it is said to
walk."
"Oh,
no. I hope not," Julia exclaimed. "My dear
husband told me that terrible story only
yesterday, how into our very bedroom there steps
at midnight the figure of a lady dressed all in
white, and, if there should be anyone, man or
woman, alone there, leans over them and puts on
their brow a kiss. An icily cold kiss. And in
the morning they are found dead, the white mark
of the ice still where it was placed. No, I
really cannot bear it."
Her
husband chuckled. "My dear wife," he said, "I
was perhaps wrong to tell you the tale. But that
terrible fate is said to have happened in this
house not once but twice in the course of the
years, and I thought it best you should know.
However, as I shall be there at your side all
night, you can sleep as quietly as a babe.
Remember it is only the solitary soul that this
phantom can touch with that cold
kiss."
"As a
clergyman," Mr. South put in, "I must set my
face against all such tales of bugaboos and
ghouls." He paused for a moment, looked at the
old flagstones at his feet. "However. . ." he
said.
And
said no more.
It was
then at the far end of the wide and gloom-filled
hall, just beside the flickering light of the
tall Christmas tree with its array of
tiny-flamed candles, a door opened. Under the
big mistletoe bough hung each year on the
lintel, there stood an ancient family servant,
black-coated, stooped of frame,
silver-haired.
Slowly
as a shiny black beetle, he made his way down
the length of the immense room to where his
master sat. No one spoke, though none of them
could have said why they felt compelled to keep
silent as the old retainer crept towards
them.
At last
he was within a few feet of his master’s
chair.
"Sir,
there is a message."
"A
message? At this time of night? On Christmas
Eve? Who on earth sends me a message
now?"
The old
servant made no reply but handed his master a
folded sheet of paper, which bore the grime of
much handling. He jerked it open, then turned it
towards the fire to get a better light. But,
when evidently he had read the few words there
seemed to be on the sheet, he sat there saying
nothing.
"My
dear, what is it?" his young wife asked at
last.
He bit
his lip. "It’s nothing. No. No, my dear. I am
very much afraid it is something. A matter, it
seems, of life or death, and I must go out
immediately."
Each
person there saw the look of sudden fear on
Julia’s youthful face.
"I
really ought to leave at once," her husband
gabbled. "It’s damnably urgent. I—I’d like to
explain, but the truth is that there isn’t
time." He shot up from his chair then, crossed
swiftly over to his wife, brushed a kiss onto
her cheek and, before any of the party had
properly taken it in, vanished.
The
guests sat in silence for more than a minute,
astonished and mystified. By the time the vicar
had thought to call out to the servant to ask
who had brought the message, the old man had
crept, beetle-like, out of the door.
Then
Julia spoke, with a little harsh laugh that
might have been half a sob. "So I shall be
sleeping alone in that room tonight. On
Christmas Eve."
"Now, I
am sure there is nothing to be concerned about,"
Mr. South at once reassured her.
"Of
course not," Lady Mortmain quickly added. "You
are not truly worried, are you, my
dear?"
"No,
no. Why should I be worried? Nobody nowadays
believes in ghosts. Tell me, tell me the truth,
each one of you. Do you believe in
ghosts?"
Then,
one by one, each of the others solemnly assured
Julia, at greater or lesser length, that of
course they did not believe in
ghosts.
"Very
well," she said when the roll call had come to
its conclusion. "Then I think I shall go to bed,
if you will excuse me. I am suddenly very
tired."
They
rose from their chairs. Someone asked Julia if
she would like something warm to drink. Old Mr.
South inquired whether there was a bedroom in
the house standing empty. There was not. Mr.
South looked for an instant a little perturbed,
but then, with a sharp straightening of his
bowed shoulders and a muttered, "No, no," he
followed Julia out.
But it
was Lady Mortmain who, although she had shown no
particular signs of anxiety at the fireside,
felt impelled, as the hour of midnight
approached, to go creeping from her room along
the wide, oak-floored passages of the old house
till she reached the door of the chamber where
Julia should have been lying deep in
sleep.
She
gave the door a light tap, tap, tap. And was
rewarded with hearing a tiny shriek of
dismay.
She
entered at once.
"Not
asleep, my dear?" she said. "I feared as much.
To lie alone in that bed on this night of all
nights is really too trying for the nerves.
However, I find my own bed is quite large enough
for two, and I insist on you coming to share it
with me. Your husband told me only the other day
that your heart was not quite what the medical
men would like it to be. Any sudden apparition,
be it a ghost or even just a bat in the chimney,
might quite well bring on a faint. Or something
even more grave."
Julia
made some protests. But her heart was not in
them. However, she was not immediately to fall
comfortably asleep beside kindly Lady Mortmain.
As they approached the older ladies room, a door
almost opposite opened and Lady Mortmain’s
nephew, James, poked his head out.
"I
thought I heard voices," he said.
Lady
Mortmain, ushering Julia, who was clad only in a
nightdress, into the room explained briefly what
had happened when she had gone along to the
famed haunted chamber.
James
retired to his own room. There, in answer to his
wife’s demands, he explained what had
happened.
"And
you know what I am going to do?" he concluded.
"I am going to spend the remainder of the night
in Julia’s place in that room. It is not yet
midnight, but when it is, I shall see what I
shall see."
His
wife (they had been married for two or three
years) laughed. "And if I were to go anywhere
near that door," she said, "I should hear what I
should hear. The sound of your
snores."
So, in
the haunted room, huddled under Julia’s
bedclothes James was more than determined to lie
awake. Soon enough the twelve strokes of
midnight rang out into the whirling snowflakes
of the night from the clock over the
stables.
As the
sound faded away, one of the doors of a huge old
oaken armoire in the far corner of the room
opened with a slow grinding creak. James, head
almost buried under the blankets, peered
out.
A
figure in flowing white seemed to be slowly
approaching.
James
lay there rigid as an iron bar.
Could
this be . . . Are there . . . Are there really
such things as ghosts? The figure was at the
bedside. It tugged for a moment at the pillow
beside James’ head, lifting it away. James
squirmed yet lower under the blankets. In the
deep darkness of the big old room the figure
bent towards him.
Then he
felt on his pale forehead, the only part of
himself that in any way protruded, a sudden
touch of ice. The next moment the pillow that
had been pulled away descended onto his head,
heavy as a weighted bag. It brought him
instantly to life.
He shot
up, hands clutching thin air. And found an
instant later that his right hand had clutched
more than air. In it—he knew that this was
so—was a small piece of ice.
Now his
brain was truly active.
Ice? A
small piece of freezingly cold ice. It could not
be anything but reality. Reality from somewhere
outside on this cold, cold night. Reality from
anywhere. Then he was out of bed, stumbling
towards that grim old armoire to which the
figure in white was slipping away. He was not
quick enough in the dark to seize the fleeing
figure. But, with his head inside the armoire,
he heard at once, from what appeared to be a
deep and narrow spiral staircase running
downwards from its hollow back, the sound of
thundering steps.
"And
that," Bob Bridges said, "is really the end of
my Christmas Eve ghost story, which, as I said,
was perhaps only a sort of ghost story. The man
who had set out to dispose of his wealthy wife
was, of course, arrested. But he was not even
found guilty of attempted murder. Much was said
in court about a gruesome practical joke. So he
served only a comparatively short gaol
term."
"And to
think all that happened in this very house!"
Marilyn said with a shiver. "But I’m glad it was
so many years ago. When was it you said, Bob,
Christmas Eve a few years before the turn the
century?"
"Well,
yes, I did begin my tale like that. It seemed
right for a ghost story. But, you know, over the
years the century has turned a good many times.
Once quite recently. We’ve only just emerged
from the twentieth century, after
all."
"You
mean . . .? Do you really mean the man who tried
that ice trick . . . Hey, I guess that piece
just came right out of a twentieth-century
freezer. Do you mean he’s free and out of prison
at this moment?"
"Of
course."
Then,
in the firelight, Marilyn shot to her
feet.
"Adam," she said.
"Where is Adam?"
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