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The Spectre Revels (2 of 2)

 
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Otzchiim

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Since: May 04, 2007
Posts: 10



(Msg. 1) Posted: Wed Apr 02, 2008 4:50 pm
Post subject: The Spectre Revels (2 of 2)
Archived from groups: alt>books>ghost-fiction (more info?)

Myself and Will Rackaway, who came to help me and old Cassy,
remained in charge of the house to dispatch the furniture. It was a
hard day's work, I assure you. And as the twilight hours passed the
sky grew darker, and the air damper and colder. A gloomier and more
depressing day could scarcely be imagined.

It was nearly night when at length we dispatched! the last
cartload of effects, locked up the house, and got into the old
carryall that had returned for us. \Old Cassy sat with me on the back
seat, and old Hector, who drove for us, sat beside Will Rackaway, in
front. The rain was now falling in a fine, slow drizzle. Perhaps it
was the dark and heavy atmosphere, fatigue, and the approach of night,
that so oppressed my spirits, but I well remember the feeling of gloom
and terror with which I crossed the highway and entered upon the grass-
grown and shadowy road, through the thicket that led to Willow
Cottage. It was a very dark and silent scene no sight but the trees,
that, like lower and heavier clouds, met and hung over our heads; no
sound but the stealthy, muffled turn of the wheels over the wet and
fallen leaves.

"The road to the haunted house is a very ghostly one! I think,
for my part, Mark Tapley would have found this a fine place to get
jolly in," said Will, twisting his head around to look at me.

But he had quickly to recall his attention, for his first words
had so upset the equanimity of our driver that he had allowed his
horse to run full tilt into the trees. Will seized the reins from the
shaking hands of old Hector and soon righted the carryall.

At last we emerged from the thicket, and saw dimly the great open
area girdled with its pine forest, of which I have already spoken.

Only like a denser group of shadow was the old Willow Cottage, in
the midst of its ancient trees, in the center of that open space.

We followed the road through the broom sedge across the field
until we drew up at the rusty iron gate of the cottage.

There we alighted, and, leaving old Hector to drive the carryall
around to the stable door, we entered and went up the long grass-grown
walk between the black oaks, until we reached the house.

The doors and window blinds were all closed, and the faint light
within gleamed fitfully through the chinks where the framework was
warped.

The front door was not locked, and we entered at once into the
hall that ran parallel with the front of the house, and formed, in
fact, a sort of anteroom to the large parlor that lay behind it. From
this hall, besides the central door before us that led into the
parlor, there was a door on the right hand and one on the left,
leading into the side bedchambers in the wings; and by the side of the
right-hand door, nearer the front wall, was the staircase leading up
to the large chamber in the gable end, that was lighted and ventilated
by that fan-shaped window seen in the front of the house over the
portico.

We passed through the hall, and through the large, empty parlor
behind it, and entered the long dining-room in the rear.

There we found Mrs. Hawkins and Alice awaiting us among the piled-
up furniture.

"You look tired and out of spirits, Madeleine. You must have
worked harder than we did."

"How have you got on?" I inquired.

"Why, we have arranged the bedchambers and the kitchen that is
all. We have left the dining-room and parlor and hall to be put to
rights to-morrow. But Hector has got the supper ready, and set the
table in the kitchen; let us go in there; it is warmer. Come, girls--
come, Will."

As I before mentioned, the kitchen, pantry, laundry and servants'
rooms were in a building behind the dwelling- house, not joined to it,
but standing back to back with it at a distance of three feet. So we
had to go out of doors to enter the kitchen.

I remember even now the sense of comfort I experienced on
entering that cozy room. It was a stone room, with a great fireplace,
in which blazed a fine fire, a wide, high dresser, upon which shone,
tier upon tier, rows of bright metal and clean crockery ware; in the
middle of the floor was an inviting table, upon which smoked an
abundant supper.

"Ah!" said Will, with an appreciating glance at the board; "thus
fortified, we can meet the enemy!"

"Can you spend the night with us, Will?" inquired Mrs, Hawkins.

"Oh, no! must return; mother doesn't know I'm out!" replied the
youth.

Accordingly, after supper, Will prepared to take his leave of
us.

"Before you go, Will, I wish you to take Hector and the lantern
and go over every foot of the grounds, and all along the walks, to see
that everything is safe here," said our grandmother.

"Of course, of course, noble lady! Order the seneschal and the
luminary, and I will reconnoitre the state of the fortifications!"
said Will, as he buttoned up his coat.

By the time he had drawn on his gloves Hector appeared at the
door with the lantern, and they sallied forth. I looked through an end
window, and found strange amusement in watching the progress of. that
lantern up one shadowy walk and down another, and along the hedged
wall, until at last it approached the house. Will entered, speaking
gayly.

"Well, Lady Hawkins, I have reconnoitred the defenses, and found
them in an excellent condition! The wall is strong, the hedge on the
inside is high, and that upon the outer side sharp. The enemy could
not attempt to scale without such damage to cuticle from the one, and
bone from the others, as no enemy endowed with 'the better part of
valor' would risk. All is quiet within the garrison; and if you will
send the warden to lock the gate after me, I think the castle will be
impregnable for the night/'

Hector once more received orders to attend the young master, who
now bade us good-night and left the house.

Meanwhile, Cassy had washed up the supper service and restored the
kitchen to order. So that when old Hector returned from his errand,
bearing the key of the gate, nothing remained for us to do but examine
and close the house, offer up our evening worship, and go to bed,
which, as it was very late and we were very tired, we prepared to do
at once. After every room was visited, and every door and window
firmly secured, we went to the dining-room for family prayer, and then
let Cassy and Hector out, and gave them the key to lock the door OB
the outside, so that they might be able to let them-selves in in the
morning to light the fires without disturbing us. After having thus
dismissed them, closed the door, and heard it locked, we turned to
seek our rest.

"I do not consider these lower bedrooms quite dry and safe just
at present, girls; so I have had two beds made up in the room
overhead, which is large and well ventilated. Alice can sleep with me
in the large bed, and you, Madeleine, can occupy the other," said our
grandmother, as she led the way upstairs.

I did not quite like the arrangement, but could not resist Mrs.
Hawkins.

The upper room, notwithstanding the fact of its being in the roof,
was amply high and large enough for a healthful, double-bedded
chamber. Our beds stood parallel, but sufficiently far apart, with
their heads against the north, or back wall, and their feet toward the
front gable, lighted by the fan-shaped window aforesaid. As it was
very damp and chill, and we were very much exhausted, we did not
linger long over our final preparations, but went speedily to bed..

Our grandmother and Alice seemed scarcely to have settled
themselves under their blankets and given me a drowsy good-night when
they slid off into the land of dreams.

I could not sleep! I seldom can the first night in a strange
house, and this was such a house! I felt quite alone as much alone as
if the heavy sleepers in the next bed were a thousand miles away, for
farther still in spirit were they. I thought of the isolated situation
of the house we were in; of the crimes, real or reputed, that had
stained its hearthstone; of the superstitious terror attaching to the
haunted place ; of the hard facts that three several families, not
reputed less wise or brave than their neighbors, had been driven from
the spot by supernatural disturbance as yet unexplained; of the
coincidence that this dreary night was the ghostly Hallow E'en; then
of the superstition that spirits, when they wish to appear to only one
in a room, have the power of casting all others into a profound sleep,
from which the haunted one can- not awake them; and of isolating their
victim from all the natural world--even from the very bedfellow by
their side. The room was very dark and still--solid blackness and dead
silence. It oppressed me like a nightmare. At last, when my senses
grew accustomed to the scenes by straining my eyes, I could dimly
perceive beyond the foot of the bed the segment of a circle formed by
the fan- light window, that now only seemed a thinner darkness; and,
by straining my ears, I could faintly hear the stealthy fall of the
drizzling rain. It was almost worse than the first total silence and
darkness; for it kept my nerves on. a strange +qui vive+ of attention.
Presently this was over, too. The muffled sound of the drizzling
ceased. Yet darker clouds must have lowered over the earth, for the
faint outline of the fanlight window was no longer visible. All was
once more black darkness and intense silence, and again I felt
oppressed almost to suffocation. Welcome now would have been the faint
fall of the fine rain or the dim outline of the window. I strained my
senses in vain; no sight or sound responded. I felt the silence and
the darkness settling like the clods of the, ground upon my breast.

Hoo-oo-o! went something.

Hark! what was that? I thought, starting.

"Hoo-oo-o !

Oh ! the wailing voice of some low, wandering wind, I concluded.

Whirirr-rr-r-r \

Yes ! the wind is rising, but how like a lost spirit it wails.

Urr-rr-rr-r-r-r 1

My Lord! it's not the wind! What is it? Great Heavens!

Urr-rr-rr-rr-r-r-r-r !

I started up in a sitting posture, and, bathed in a cold
perspiration, remained listening, my hair bristling with terror.

Urr-rr-rr-rr-r-r-r-r "Ha ha ha !"

I could bear no more! Springing out, I called:

'"Grandmother ! Grandmother !"

"What's the matter? Why, what ails the child?" exclaimed Mrs.
Hawkins.,

"Oh! listen! listen!"

"Listen at what? You are dreaming!"

"Dreaming, am I? Oh! wait! Listen "

Urr-rr-rr-r-r-r-r "Ha ! ha ! ha !"

It was, as plainly as I ever heard, the sound of the rolling of a
ball, followed by a peal of demoniac laughter.

I turned on Mrs. Hawkins an appalled look.

She was surprised, but self-possessed, and evidently bent on
calmly listening and investigating. She sat straight up in bed with a
strong, concentrated -attention to the sounds. They came again:

Urr-rr-rr-r-r-r-r-e rattle-te-bang! "A ten-strike at lest! O's a
dead shot!"

"A dead shot."

"A dead shot," was echoed all around.

Grandmother calmly threw the quilts off her, stepped out of bed,
and began to dress herself.

"Strike a light, Madeleine," she said.

"What are you going to do, grandmother?"

"Dress myself and examine the premises."

Urr-rr-rr-r-r-r-r "Ha! ha! ha!" sounded once more the demoniac
noise and laughter.

The matchbox nearly dropped from my shaking hands, but I struck
the light.

The sudden flash awoke Alice just as another sonorous roll of the
ball, and fall of the pins, and peal of demon laughter, sounded
hollowly around us.

"Heaven and earth! what is that?" she exclaimed, starting up.

"What do you think it is, Alice?" said I.

"My Lord! my Lord! -- it is the phantoms of the murderer and the
murdered playing over again their last game!" cried the girl, in an
agony of terror.

Just at this moment a distinct knocking was heard at the little
door at the foot of the staircase.

Alice screamed.

I held my breath.

.The knocking was repeated.

"Who is there?" said Mrs. Hawkins, going to the head of the
stairs.

No answer; but the knocking was repeated; and then a frightened,
plaintive voice, crying:

."Ole mist'ess --ole mist'ess --oh! do, for the Lord sake, let me
in, chile! the hair's almos' turn gray on my head."

"Is that you, Cassy?"

"Yes, honey-- yes, what the ghoses has left o' me," re- plied the
poor creature, in a dying voice.

Grandmother went down the stairs and opened the door at the foot,
and Cassy came tumbling up into the room after her. She was absolutely
ashen gray with terror, and her limbs shook so that she could scarcely
stand.

"Oh! did you hear-- did you hear all the ghoses and devils
playing ninepins together in our very house?" she gasped, dropping
into a chair.

As if in answer to her question, once more the phantom ball
rolled in detonating thunder, the pins fell with a loud, rattling
sound, followed by a hollow shout of triumph!

Cassy fell on her knees and crossed herself devoutly.

Alice clung in terror to her grandmother.

I felt that the time to play the heroine was come, and strove to
exhibit self-possession and courage.

"Take up the candle, Cassy, and lead the way downstairs. We must
go and search the house," said Mrs. Hawkins.

"Oh! for the Lord's sake, don't! don't! old mist'ess, honey!
Don't be a temptin' o' Providence! Leave the ghoses alone and stay
here, and fasten the door."

"I shall search the house and grounds," said Mrs. Hawkins, in a
peremptory voice. "Therefore, take up the light and go before me."

"Oh! for de Lord's love, ole mis'tess! ef we mus' go, you go
first, you go first; I dar'n't; Fs such a sinner, I is!" cried Cassy,
wringing her hands in an agony of terror.

Urr-rrr-rr-r-r-r-rattle-te-bang-ang!

"A ten-strike ! Ho ! ho ! ho ! ho ! ho ! ho !" again sounded the
revels.

"Hooley St. Bridget, pray for us! Hail Mary, full of grace! Don't
go, ole mist'ess, honey ! Oh, stay where you is in safety!" pleaded
the old woman, clasping her hands.

"Nonsense! Hold your tongue, Cassy. If ever there was a woman
plagued with a set of cowardly simpletons, it is myself. Let go my
skirts this moment, Alice! Be silent, every one of you, and follow me
as softly as possible," said my grandmother, in a low, stern voice, as
she took up the candle and led the way downstairs. We followed at this
order--Cassy holding on to her mistress' skirts, Alice holding to
Cassy's, and I bringing up the rear, with carnal weapons in one hand
and spiritual ones in the other--that is to say, with a big ruler and
a prayerbook.

A chill, damp air met us at the foot of the stairs--nothing
else.

The front hall was empty and bleak. We tried the doors, and found
them, as secure as we had left them, with the exception of the parlor
door, by which Cassy had entered, and which was on the latch. Mrs.
Hawkins pulled it to and locked it, saying, in a low voice, that she
wished, while examining each room, to keep all the rest locked, that
there might be no escape for any one concealed in the house.

First we went into the right-hand bedroom, opening from the hall.
It was secure, vacant and bleak. We locked the door and drew out the
key.

Next we looked into the left-hand bedroom; it was in precisely
the same condition. We made it fast in the same manner.

Then we opened and entered the parlor. This was the bleakest room
of any large, square, lofty, totally bare, cold and damp.

"Nothing here," said Mrs. Hawkins, looking around.

Urr-rr-rr-r-r-r-r-rattle-te-bang-ang-ang! the phantom ball
rolled, and scattered the ninepins.

"Ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!" shouted the hollow, ghostly voices.

They seemed to be in the very room with us, reverberating in the
very air we breathed, echoing from the four walls around, and from the
ceiling above us!

"Jesu, Mary !" cried Cassy, dropping on her knees.

"Oh ! oh ! oh !" gasped Alice, clinging to me.

"This is very unaccountable," said our grandmother, looking all
around the room, where nothing but bare walls and bare boards met the
view.

We looked at each other in silence for a few moments, and then
Mrs. Hawkins said:

"Come! let us look into the dining-room, and then call up Hector
to assist us in searching the grounds."

We passed on into the next room and locked the door behind us, as
we had locked every one in our tour through the house. That room was
closely packed with furniture, over which we had to clamber our
passage.

While we were doing so, once again sounded the detonating roll of
the ball, the rattling, scattering of the pins, and the hollow peals
of laughter, all echoing around and around us, as it were, in the same
rooms.

Alice again seized her grandmother.

Cassy fell over a stack of washtubs, and called on all the saints
to help her.

Mrs. Hawkins ordered Alice to let her go, and Cassy to get up,
and me to move on.

She was obeyed. A great general was our grandmother, and we all
knew it!

We left the dining-room, locking the last door behind us. We
dodged the dark, blind alley, sheltered the candle from the drizzling
mist, and went around into the kitchen and called Hector from above.

The old man answered, and soon came toddling down the narrow
stairs.

"Hector, have you heard those noises?" inquired Mrs. Hawkins.

"The Lord between us and evil! I've heern, mist'ess! I've
heern!"

"What do you suppose it is?"

A dubious, solemn shake of the head was the old man's only
reply.

"Can't you speak, Hector? How do you account for these noises?
Come! no mysteries; answer if you can; what are they?"

"Dead people!" groaned the old man, with a shudder.

"Pooh!" exclaimed Mrs. Hawkins.

But I could see that even she was paler than usual.

"Come, Hector! There is no one in the house--that is certain. And
no one can get into it while we are gone, because it is locked up. Now
fasten up the kitchen, and let us go and search the grounds, and
unkennel any interlopers that may be lurking there."

We came out and secured the kitchen door, and began our tour of
the garden.

As we left the door, our watchdog ran out to join us.

This circumstance, while it greatly assisted us in our search,
very much increased the perplexity of our minds. Had the dog heard the
noises that had disturbed us, and if so, why had he not given the
alarm?--or, on the other hand, were dogs insensible to supernatural
sights and sounds? We could not tell; but we were glad to have Fidelle
snuffing and trotting along before us, confident that if there were a
human being lurking anywhere in the garden, he would smell him out. So
we went up one grass-grown walk and down another, between rows of
gooseberry bushes, currant bushes, and raspberry bushes, all damp and
dripping with mist, and through alleys of dwarf plum trees, and all
along the hedges of evergreen inside the brick wall, and past the iron
gate, which was still chained, as it had been left, and then around in
the stable, coachhouse, henhouse and smokehouse, each of which we
found securely locked, and, when opened, damp, musty and vacant; and
so we looked over every foot of ground, and into every outbuilding,
finding all safe and leaving all safe; and at last, without having
discovered anything, we arrived again at the dining-room door.

We all entered, locked the door after us, clambered over the
piles of furniture, and passed on into the parlor.

The parlor, as I have said, was as yet unfurnished, damp and
cold. Yet there we paused for a little while to take breath.

"There is nothing concealed in the garden, and nothing in the
house; that is demonstrated. These strange manifestations must admit
of a natural explanation; but I confess myself at a loss to explain
them," said Mrs. Hawkins.

"Oh! ole mist'ess; 'fess it's de ghoses, honey I 'fess it's jde
ghoses! Memorize how nobody was ever able to lib in dis cussed house!"
pleaded Cassy.

"Oh, yes, grandmother, do let's sit up here all night to-night,
and move out early tomorrow morning," en- treated Ally.

"What do you say, Madeline?" inquired my grand* mother.

"I say, brave it out!"

"So do I, my girl!" replied Mrs. Hawkins.

"Oh, for de love o' de Lord, don't ole mist'ess! don't, Miss
Maddyl don't! It's a temptin' o' Providence 1 Leave de 'fernel ole
place to de ghoses, as has de bes' right to it!" prayed Cassy.

"We'll see about that!'* said our grandmother. "But come! all
seems quiet now; we will go to bed, and investigate further to-
morrow."

"Yes, ole mist'ess, honey, I knows all is quiet jest now, but--"

"Ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! Ho! ho! Ho! Ho! ho! ho! ho !" burst
a peal of demoniac laughter, resounding through and through the room,
and close into our ears.

"The Lord between us and Satan!" cried Cassy, drop- ping the
candle, which immediately went out and left us in darkness.

While, peal on peal, sounded the demoniac laughter around us.

Cassy fell on her knees and began praying:

"St. Mary, pray for us! St. Martha pray for us! all ye hooly
vargins and widders, pray for us lone women! St. Peter, pray for us !
St. Powl pray for us ! All hooly 'postles and 'vangellers, pray for us
poor sinners ! Saint-Saint-Saint-- oh ! for de Lor's sake, Miss Ally,
honey, tell me de name o' that hooly saint as met a ghose riding on
Balaam's ass and knows hows--how it feels!"

"It was Saul or Samuel, or the Witch of Endor, I forget which,"
said Alice, whose knowledge of the Old Testament, never very precise,
was frightened out of her.

"St. Saul, St. Samuel, St. Witchywinder, pray for us, as met a
ghost yourself and knows how it feels."

And still, while Cassy prayed her frantic prayers, and poor old
Hector told his beads, and Alice trembled and clung to me, the demon
laughter resounded around and around us. We were in such total
darkness that I had not seen Mrs. Hawkins withdraw herself from the
group, nor suspected her absence until we heard her firm, cheery voice
outside near the dining-room door, saying:

"What can any one think of this? Come here, Hector! Come here,
children!"

We all went expecting some denouement.

Mrs. Hawkins telegraphed to us to be perfectly silent, and to
step lightly. She turned the angle of the house and walked up the
blind alley between the back of the house and the back of the kitchen;
when she had got about midway of the walk, she stopped, and silently
pointed to the rank weeds and bushes that grew closely under the wall
of the house.

"There! what do you think of that?" she said, in a low 'voice.

We looked, and at first could see nothing; but, on a closer
inspection, we perceived a very faint glimmer, a mere thread of red
light, low down among the bushes.

We looked up at Mrs. Hawkins for explanation.

"After the candle fell and went out," she said, "I slipped out,
with the intention of exploring again, and this- time alone, and in
darkness. I came up this blind alley, and, looking sharply, descried
that glimmer of light. And now I am convinced that the revelers, human
or ghostly, are below there, in that old, disused cellar that we were
made to believe was nearly full of water, and required to be drained.
Don't be agitated, children! take it coolly," concluded Mrs. Hawkins,
stooping down to put aside the weeds and bushes.

Just at this moment another detonating roll of the ball, and -
scattering fall of the pins, and peal of hollow laughter, resounded
from below.

Urr-rr-rr-r-r-r-rattle bang-ang-ang ! "Ha ! ha ! ha ! ha ! ha !
Ho ! ho ! ho ! ho ! A dead shot!"

"Too late, young gentlemen! Your fun is all over! Your game is
up ! You are discovered! Come forth!" said Mrs. Hawkins, who, down
upon her knees, pulled away the bushes, turned up the old, broken and
mouldy cellar door, and discovered the scene below.

A rudely fitted-up bowling alley, occupying the further end of
the room, and some eight or ten youths, no longer engaged in rolling
balls, but, on the contrary, standing in various attitudes of detected
culpability.

"Come! come forth!" commanded Mrs. Hawkins.

And they came, climbing up the rotten and moldering steps, and
the very first who put his impudent head up through the door into the
open air was Will Rackaway !

"Oh! Will," exclaimed Alice, reproachfully.

"You! Will?" questioned Mrs. Hawkins, in scandalized
astonishment.

"No! the ghost of O'Donnegan," replied the youth, in a sepulchral
voice.

"Reprobate!" exclaimed our grandmother.

"Now, indeed, indeed, I was only taking the liberty of
entertaining my friends in my kind Aunt Hawkins* cellar. Quite right,
you know! Only don't tell father, and I'll never do so no more!"
pleaded Will, with mock humility.

"Dismiss your comrades, sir! and come into the house! I shall
send for your father tomorrow morning," said Mrs. Hawkins, in a stern
voice.

There was no need to dismiss the intruders; they were climbing up
the dilapidated steps as fast as they could come, and slinking away
with averted heads, trying to conceal their faces, which Mrs. Hawkins
did not insist upon discovering. When they were all gone, Will
followed us into the house.

"Now, then, sir, explain your conduct," ordered Mrs. Hawkins.

And Will, with an air of mock humility and deprecation, obeyed.

The account he gave was briefly this: himself and several other
youths, sons of very strict parents, who proscribed ninepins with
other games, had, out of some old timber and furniture left of
O'Donnegan's old ninepin alley, that had been taken down and carried
away, fitted up the old, disused cellar for their games. They had
played there recently every night, with no other intention than that
of amusing themselves, and of keeping their game concealed with no
thought of enacting a ghostly drama, until, to their astonishment,
they gradually learned that these revels were mistaken for ghostly
orgies, and had given the house its unenviable reputation of being
haunted a joke much too good for human nature, and especially for
boys' human nature, not to carry out Everything favored their
concealment. The cellar was reputed to be half full of water, and was
long disused, and every cellar window, except the narrow, hidden one
that they had turned into a door, was nailed up. Besides, the front
division of the cellar was really two feet deep in water, and when
there was any great risk of discovery they had a means of letting it
in to overflow :he back division, so that their fixtures were all
covered. Thus for months they had played the double game of ninepins
and of a ghostly drama!

Need I say more? Will was let off with a lengthy lecture, which I
have reason to believe did him a vast deal of good, as he is now the
staid father of a family, and pastor of a church. Mrs. Hawkins was for
the next nine days the wonder of the neighborhood for having so
valiantly exorcised the ghosts. And we settled down in perfect content
in the fine old house, to which we possessed the double right of
rental and of conquest.


THE END

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