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Connecticut 1905
I
was a business associate of Mr. Scott and had, of late, become a frequent
visitor to the Scott home and was with the family on a Halloween night that
I'll never forget. The leaves were as crisp as rice paper and the wind as
cold as the tin on the roof. The two girls were in their room on the
second floor, preparing for the night's festivities, as I sat by the fire with Mr. Scott, carving a
pumpkin and enjoying the
spiced cider and chocolate confections that Mrs. Scott was renown for.
Mr. Scott and I had been in the business of exchanging spooky
tales throughout the evening, and each tale seemed more frightening than the one
before it. Mrs. Scott seemed not to mind the fearsome path of our
discussion. Far from it. As she stood before the mantel, she
occasionally added a quip or two as she jabbed the burning coals into a raging fire with a poker
to ward off the autumn chill that snuck through the windowpanes.
At half past nine, I stood with match and
candle, ready to take my pumpkin to the front porch where its terrifying visage would delight the
children as they left for the town festival. I'd just put the candle
inside, lit it, and assigned the jack-o-lantern to the pedestal that Mrs. Scott had sat out for it
when I heard a scream.
I dashed into the lower hall just before Mr. and Mrs. Scott
arrived there. Then we rushed upstairs at once to find the youngest girl,
Eileen on the floor, her white Princess lace in a big puff all about her, legs
and face nearly hidden in an assault of crinoline. Elizabeth, the other
girl, dressed as Cleopatra with a serpentine headpiece, was shaking so that a
December wind might have crossed her soul. Mrs. Scott put her arms around
the girl while Mr. Scott helped the youngest to her feet. The moment
Eileen opened her
eyes, one word came from her mouth: "Monk."
You'd think that Mr. Scott had just seen a ghost as
well, for he went as white as ice milk and stood on unsteady legs as Elizabeth
continued.
"It was a monk, Papa. After we'd dressed, we
heard a light tapping at the bedroom door, and thinking it was you or Mama,
Eileen went to open it--"
"Only the monk stood there," Eileen piped in. He
was tall, his hood draped over his face. He wore a skull ring, which
seemed to be alive. The face glared. The eyes glowed red. It was so terrifying that I fainted."
"I saw the ring too," Elizabeth said.
"After Eileen screamed, I ran to the door and saw the monk float away and enter
the closet down the hall. I ran to
the closet and locked it in with the spare key that I keep in my pocket."
We all looked that way, our faces carved
with fear. Then I turned to Elizabeth. "Are you always in the habit of
keeping a spare key to the linen closet?"
Elizabeth only nodded, but Eileen could be counted on
to provide the rest of
the details.
"She's afraid of the linen closet. She thinks
there's a ghost in there. She saw it two weeks ago. So Mama and Papa gave
her the key so that she could lock it in if she ever saw it again."
"What a clever idea," I said, trying to appease the girls' fear. "Now let's see if you did, in fact, catch the specter. If
so, we'll dispatch the nasty fellow posthaste."
I took the key from the girl's trembling hand and was the first to march
down the hall. I paused before a door at the end and pointed to it.
"This one?" I asked as there was another door on the opposite side.
The girls both nodded, inching closer, parents not far behind
them. I put the key in the lock and slowly turned it--everyone scarcely breathing as
the door opened.
But alas, there was nothing there that was out of the
ordinary with the exception of a rather large cobweb which housed a startled
spider. A hooded figure,
or anything remotely resembling it, however, was not found.
Mr. Scott, whose thoughts seemed distant, didn't seem surprised. He nervously
rubbed a palm with his knuckles as he paced the hardwood floor and said. "Come,
we must go downstairs. There's something that I must tell you."
We eagerly followed and gathered around the dining
room table, the center of which had been decorated with a fragrant bouquet of
autumn leaves, golden rod,
yellow chrysanthemums, and strings of cranberries. We waited for Mr. Scott
to speak his piece, but he was suddenly reluctant to breech the ponderous
subject that was on his mind, and so we sat in silence for several minutes,
admiring the festive decor and straining to absorb some of the warming rays from
the fireplace before he finally blurted out a declaration. "We can't go out
tonight."
"What?" said Mrs. Scott.
"The festival, Papa..." said
Eileen.
"Papa, we've been waiting for this evening for months,"
Elizabeth added. "Mama has worked so hard on our
costumes, and--"
"We must stay put!" he thundered.
His voice echoed through the room and then silence fell
heavy again, before Mr. Scott attempted an explanation. "I know that monk well,
you see. He
has visited my family for centuries, and he only appears on the day that there
will be a death in the family."
The frowns fell from the girls' disappointed faces to be replaced
by fear.
"Do you mean..." I began.
"Yes. One of us will die tonight!" said Mr. Scott.
"Has the monk ever been wrong?" I asked, fascinated by
the tale.
Mr. Scott shook his head. "I wish it were so, but
alas, he's always correct."
"But perhaps his foreboding is for none of you,
but for a distant relative
in England." I said.
"To my knowledge, sir, I have no living relatives in
England. We are the last of the Scotts--we four in this room. Which is why
my family and I must stay here together tonight. Perhaps, if we remain together,
there's a possibility that we can
overcome this thing. Surely if we all sit here at this table,
nothing bad can befall us. Come now, children, give me your hands. Eileen,
take Mama's. I want us to form a circle and pray. Maybe our prayers will
ward off this terrible evil."
They bowed their heads as did I, but Inwardly, I thought this all a bunch of hokey pokey
superstition. It certainly appeared to be real to Mr. Scott and to his wife, who
raised her head after the prayer and stared into nowhere, knuckles as white as
bone China as she clasped her husband's hand.
"I take it that you too have had experience with the monk," I queried her.
She looked hard at me, and I saw the depth of the fear in her
dark eyes.
"Yes. I saw it when George's father died. It was quite terrifying, to say
the least."
Mr. Scott nodded. "I saw it that day too. I've
seen it many times and hoped I'd never see it again. The last time I saw
it, I was walking with my cousin Ellen in the garden. We were accompanied
by my brother and sister. Ellen was showing us her prize roses. When
all of the sudden the monk appeared, rose in a mist from the ground, stretching out its long,
boney
arm and touching her chest with that terrible ring. Though the rest of us saw it,
she never did. I don't believe that she felt its touch either. For the
remainder of the day, she'd seemed
perfectly fine--in her usual good health and spirit, but by nightfall, for no
apparent reason, she suddenly
died."
"But it never touched one of you today?" I said.
"Not that we are aware of, but perhaps, like dear
Cousin Ellen, one of us was touched without knowing it," said
Mrs. Scott.
"What do you think it is?" I asked. "Is
it an apparition of
what was once a living person?"
"No. Something much more terrifying and
powerful than an ordinary ghost," Scott declared. "I believe that it's an evil spirit or
earth elemental, which, for some mysterious reason, attached itself to my family ages ago."
"Papa, how long must we sit here like this?"
Eileen asked, squirming in her seat.
"Until after midnight," he said.
"You, of course, should go, dear man," said Mr. Scott,
studying me thoughtfully. "There's no reason why you should miss the festivities over a matter that doesn't
concern you."
"Why, dear God, no. I could not make merry while
a friend is in such a state. I will stay with you until this dreadful thing has passed and give my
assistance where I can."
"If that is your wish, sir, then you are welcome
to stay."
"That is my wish, sir," I said as I rose. Then I took some candles
from the mantel, lit them, and sat them on both ends of the table. "White light," I
said, "to ward off evil spirits."
Mr. Scott nodded, apparently unassuaged by
my actions.
I'd spoken in
jest, of course. I didn't believe a word of this evil spirit business.
As for the specter, I
thought the girls were merely spooked from the Halloween atmosphere.
Perhaps one of them had drifted downstairs earlier and heard one of our ghost stories. Or perhaps the
Scotts were all good actors and were merely attempting to play a Halloween prank on me.
Whatever the case, the whole thing was, nevertheless, entertaining, and I was determined to stay and
see it to the end.
And yet, like the rest of them, I nearly jumped when
someone cranked the doorbell.
Mrs. Scott rose from her seat, but Mr. Scott grabbed
her hand. "Don't go to the door! It could be someone who intends to bring death to this house."
She nodded blankly and sat back down, and as she did, it appeared that she'd already resolved herself to death and was
grieving the anticipated loss. Surely the woman's terror grew each time the
mysterious visitor cranked the bloody bell.
"Let me answer the door," I said. "If it is the monk,
he can't hurt me. And I wouldn't mind getting a look at the fellow for
myself. Think of the stories that I could tell when I return to London in
the spring. If it's not the monk, I'll send the visitor on his merry way.
The bell rang again, and shortly afterward, nerves
giving way at last, Mr. Scott reluctantly agreed to
let me see who it was. I returned to the dining room a few minutes later
and handed him a sealed missive, which he opened immediately and read out loud.
"Dear Mr. J. A. Scott. I regret that I
must bring you bad
tidings; however, it is of a necessity that I inform you that May Alexander Scott is in poor health.
Furthermore, sir, she's not expected to live into winter. As you are her only living heir, she
hopes that you will help her settle her worldly matters before she returns to
her maker. Please reply at once."
As he laid the missive on the table, Mrs.
Scott gave a sigh of relief. "Then you do have a relative."
Mr. Scott squinted as if trying to see something
distant. "I don't remember having an Aunt May."
"Nevertheless, you have one, and she's on her deathbed,"
Mrs. Scott said, waving the letter. "Thus the reason for the monk's visit."
Shaking his head with disbelief, Mr. Scott appeared to
still be searching for the
lost memory of the mysterious aunt who couldn't have come into his life at a
better time. "Maybe a child of Henry...no...perhaps the offspring of my great uncle James..."
"Oh, what does it matter?" Mrs. Scott said. The important thing is
that it's over. It's past. We're safe."
"You're right. Of course. You're right," he
said joyously. He leapt to his feet to take his wife into his arms as the
girls all gave a cheer and twirled around in unison, eager to cast aside all
thoughts of the horrible specter and return to their Halloween fun.
"I think that if we hurry, we can still make it to the
festival," I said.
The girls gave another cheer, and Mrs. Scott added,
"Yes. We should make it. Get your capes, girls."
We gathered our things and made our way to the front
hallway, Mrs. Scott in her shawl and hat, and carrying a box of her chocolates
to share at the gathering, Mr. Scott in his jacket and cap, and the girls in
their wool capes and scarves. I put my hat and coat on and was the last
one out the door, and as I reached in to pull the inner door closed, I paused
and nearly gasped, ingesting the ungodly taste of my own Halloween terror. For a bit of long brown sleeve had slipped out from beneath my white shirt and coat,
nearly giving me away.
I quickly tucked it back in, gave a long sigh of relief, and followed the
Scott's out onto the porch with a triumphant smile.
Yes, it would be interesting indeed to see this thing play
out. It would be the first time that I'd ever claimed four souls in a single
night.
-The End-
Author's Notes:
This fictional account was actually inspired by several true stories I'd read
about spectral monks. In my paranormal research, I came upon many accounts of
families being haunted by a spectral monk who bears a foreboding of death
similar to that of a
banshee. Some families are even haunted by nuns. What these
apparitions are is anyone's guess, but they're certainly the type of ghost that you don't
want to meet.
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