The Empty House and Other Ghost Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about The Empty House and Other Ghost Stories.

The Empty House and Other Ghost Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 243 pages of information about The Empty House and Other Ghost Stories.

I heard a sound of laughter, too, somewhere in the air behind me.  The next second Shorthouse came at me with a single bound.

To this day I cannot quite tell how it happened.  It is still a wild confusion and a fever of horror in my mind, but from somewhere I drew more than my usual allowance of strength, and before he could well have realised what I meant to do, I had his throat between my fingers.  He opened his teeth and the knife dropped at once, for I gave him a squeeze he need never forget.  Before, my muscles had felt like so much soaked paper; now they recovered their natural strength, and more besides.  I managed to work ourselves along the rafter until the hay was beneath us, and then, completely exhausted, I let go my hold and we swung round together and dropped on to the hay, he clawing at me in the air even as we fell.

The struggle that began by my fighting for his life ended in a wild effort to save my own, for Shorthouse was quite beside himself, and had no idea what he was doing.  Indeed, he has always averred that he remembers nothing of the entire night’s experiences after the time when he first woke me from sleep.  A sort of deadly mist settled over him, he declares, and he lost all sense of his own identity.  The rest was a blank until he came to his senses under a mass of hay with me on the top of him.

It was the hay that saved us, first by breaking the fall and then by impeding his movements so that I was able to prevent his choking me to death.

THE WOOD OF THE DEAD

One summer, in my wanderings with a knapsack, I was at luncheon in the room of a wayside inn in the western country, when the door opened and there entered an old rustic, who crossed close to my end of the table and sat himself down very quietly in the seat by the bow window.  We exchanged glances, or, properly speaking, nods, for at the moment I did not actually raise my eyes to his face, so concerned was I with the important business of satisfying an appetite gained by tramping twelve miles over a difficult country.

The fine warm rain of seven o’clock, which had since risen in a kind of luminous mist about the tree tops, now floated far overhead in a deep blue sky, and the day was settling down into a blaze of golden light.  It was one of those days peculiar to Somerset and North Devon, when the orchards shine and the meadows seem to add a radiance of their own, so brilliantly soft are the colourings of grass and foliage.

The inn-keeper’s daughter, a little maiden with a simple country loveliness, presently entered with a foaming pewter mug, enquired after my welfare, and went out again.  Apparently she had not noticed the old man sitting in the settle by the bow window, nor had he, for his part, so much as once turned his head in our direction.

Under ordinary circumstances I should probably have given no thought to this other occupant of the room; but the fact that it was supposed to be reserved for my private use, and the singular thing that he sat looking aimlessly out of the window, with no attempt to engage me in conversation, drew my eyes more than once somewhat curiously upon him, and I soon caught myself wondering why he sat there so silently, and always with averted head.

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Project Gutenberg
The Empty House and Other Ghost Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.