Carnacki the Ghost Finder
by
William Hope Hodgson
Author of "The Boats of the 'Glen Carrig,'" "The House on
the Borderland," "The Ghost Pirates," etc.
No. 2
THE HOUSE AMONG THE LAURELS
From The Idler, February 1910
"This is a curious yarn that I am going to tell
you," said Carnacki, as after a quiet little dinner we made
ourselves comfortable in his cosy dining-room.
"I have just got back from the West of
Ireland," he continued. "Wentworth, a friend of mine, has
lately had rather an unexpected legacy, in the shape of a large
estate and manor, about a mile and a half outside of the village of
Korunton. This place is named Gannington Manor, and has been empty
a great number of years; as you will find is almost always the case
with Houses reputed to be haunted, as it is usually termed.
"It seems that when Wentworth went over to take
possession, he found the place in very poor repair, and the estate
totally uncared for, and, as I know, looking very desolate and
lonesome generally. He went through the big house by himself, and
he admitted to me that it had an uncomfortable feeling about it;
but, of course, that might be nothing more than the natural
dismalness of a big, empty house, which has been long uninhabited,
and through which you are wandering alone.
"When he had finished his look round, he went
down to the village, meaning to see the one-time Agent of the
Estate, and arrange for someone to go in as caretaker. The Agent,
who proved by the way to be a Scotchman, was very willing to take
up the management of the Estate once more; but he assured Wentworth
that they would get no one to go in as caretaker; and that his the
Agent's advice was to have the house pulled down, and a new one
built.
"This, naturally, astonished my friend, and, as
they went down to the village, he managed to get a sort of
explanation from the man. It seems that there had been always
curious stories told about the place, which in the early days was
called Landru Castle, and that within the last seven years there
had been two extraordinary deaths there. In each case they had
been tramps, who were ignorant of the reputation of the house, and
had probably thought the big empty place suitable for a night's
free lodging. There had been absolutely no signs of violence, to
indicate the method by which death was caused, and on each occasion
the body had been found in the great entrance hall.
"By this time they had reached the inn where
Wentworth had put up, and he told the Agent that he would prove
that it was all rubbish about the haunting, by staying a night or
two in the Manor himself. The death of the tramps was certainly
curious; but did not prove that any supernatural agency had been at
work. They were but isolated accidents, spread over a large number
of years by the memory of the villagers, which was natural enough
in a little place like Korunton. Tramps had to die some time, and
in some place, and it proved nothing that two, out of possibly
hundreds who had slept in the empty house, had happened to take the
opportunity to die under shelter.
"But the Agent took his remark very seriously,
and both he and Dennis the landlord of the inn, tried their best to
persuade him not to go. For his 'sowl's sake,' Irish Dennis begged
him to do no such thing; and because of his 'life's sake,' the
Scotchman was equally in earnest.
"It was late afternoon at the time, and as
Wentworth told me, it was warm and bright, and it seemed such utter
rot to hear those two talking seriously about the impossible. He
felt full of pluck, and he made up his mind he would smash the
story of the haunting, at once by staying that very night, in the
Manor. He made this quite clear to them, and told them that it
would be more to the point and to their credit, if they offered to
come up along with him, and keep him company. But poor old Dennis
was quite shocked, I believe, at the suggestion; and though Tabbit,
the Agent, took it more quietly, he was very solemn about it.
"It seems that Wentworth did go; and though, as
he said to me, when the evening began to come on, it seemed a very
different sort of thing to tackle.
"A whole crowd of the villagers assembled to
seem him off; for by this time they all knew of his intention.
Wentworth had his gun with him, and a big packet of candles; and he
made it clear to them all that it would not be wise for anyone to
play any tricks; as he intended to shoot 'at sight.' And then, you
know, he got a hint of how serious they considered the whole thing;
for one of them came up to him, leading a great bull-mastiff, and
offered it to him, to take to keep him company. Wentworth patted
his gun; but the old man who owned the dog, shook his head and
explained that the brute might warn him in sufficient time for him
to get away from the castle. For it was obvious that he did not
consider the gun would prove of any use.
"Wentworth took the dog, and thanked the man.
He told me that, already, he was beginning to wish that he had not
said definitely that he would go; but, as it was, he was simply
forced to. He went through the crowd of men, and found suddenly
that they had all turned in a body and were keeping him company.
They stayed with him all the way to the Manor, and then went right
over the whole place with him.
"It was still daylight when this was finished;
though turning to dusk; and, for a while, the men stood about,
hesitating, as if they felt ashamed to go away and leave Wentworth
there all alone. He told me that, by this time, he would gladly
have given fifty pounds to be going back with them. And then,
abruptly, an idea came to him. He suggested that they should stay
with him, and keep him company through the night. For a time they
refused, and tried to persuade him to go back with them; but
finally he made a proposition that got home to them all. He
planned that they should all go back to the inn, and there get a
couple of dozen bottles of whisky, a donkey-load of turf and wood,
and some more candles. Then they would come back, and make a great
fire in the big fire-place, light all the candles, and put them
round the place, open the whisky and make a night of it. And, by
Jove! he got them to agree.
"They set off back, and were soon at the inn,
and here, whilst the donkey was being loaded, and the candles and
whisky distributed. Dennis was doing his best to keep Wentworth
from going back; but he was a sensible man in his way; for when he
found that it was no use, he stopped. You see, he did not want to
frighten the others from accompanying Wentworth.
"'I tell ye, sorr,' he told him, ''tis of no
use at all, thryin' ter reclaim ther castle. 'Tis curst with
innocent blood, an' ye'll be betther pullin' it down, an' buildin'
a fine new wan. But if ye be intendin' to shtay this night, kape
the big dhoor open whide, an' watch for the bhlood-dhrip. If so
much as a single dhrip falls, don't shtay though all the gold in
the worrld was offered ye.'
"Wentworth asked him what he meant by the
blood-drip.
"'Shure,' he said, ''tis the bhlood av thim as
ould Black Mick 'way back in the ould days kilt in their shlape.
'Twas a feud as he pretendid to patch up, an' he invited thim the
O'Haras they was siventy av thim. An' he fed thim, an' shpoke
soft to thim, an' thim thrustin' him, sthayed to shlape with him.
Thin, he an' thim with him, stharted in an' mhurdered thim was an'
all as they slep'. 'Tis from me father's grandfather ye have the
sthory. An' sence thin 'tis death to any, so they say, to pass the
night in the castle whin the bhlood-dhrip comes. 'Twill put out
candle an' fire, an' thin in the darkness the Virgin Herself would
be powerless to protect ye.'
"Wentworth told me he laughed at this; chiefly
because, as he put it: 'One always must laugh at that sort of
yarn, however it makes it makes you feel inside.' He asked old
Dennis whether he expected him to believe it.
"'Yes, sorr,' said Dennis, 'I do mane ye to
b'lieve it; an' please God, if ye'll b'lieve, ye may be back safe
befor' mornin'.' The man's serious simplicity took hold of
Wentworth, and he held out his hand. But, for all that, he went;
and I must admire his pluck.
"There were now about forty men, and when they
got back to the Manor or castle as the villagers always call
it they were not long in getting a big fire going, and lighted
candles all round the great hall. They had all brought sticks; so
that they would have been a pretty formidable lot to tackle by
anything simply physical; and, of course, Wentworth had his gun.
He kept the whisky in his own charge; for he intended to keep them
sober; but he gave them a good strong tot all round first, so as to
make things seem cheerful; and to get them yearning. If you once
let a crowd of men like that grow silent, they begin to think, and
then to fancy things.
"The big entrance door had been left wide open,
by his orders; which shows that he had taken some notice of Dennis.
It was a quiet night, so this did not matter, for the lights kept
steady, and all went on in a jolly sort of fashion for about three
hours. He had opened a second lot of bottles, and everyone was
feeling cheerful; so much so that one of the men called out aloud
to the ghosts to come out and show themselves. And then, you know
a very extraordinary thing happened; for the ponderous main door
swung quietly and steadily to, as though pushed by an invisible
hand, and shut with a sharp click.
"Wentworth stared, feeling suddenly rather
chilly. Then he remembered the men, and looked round at them.
Several had ceased their talk, and were staring in a frightened way
at the big door; but the great number had never noticed, and were
talking and yarning. He reached for his gun, and the following
instant the great bull-mastiff set up a tremendous barking, which
drew the attention of the whole company.
"The hall I should tell you is oblong. The
south wall is all windows; but the north and east have rows of
doors, leading into the house, whilst the west wall is occupied by
the great entrance. The rows of doors leading into the house were
all closed, and it was towards one of these in the north wall that
the big dog ran; yet he would not go very close; and suddenly the
door began to move slowly open, until the blackness of the passage
beyond was shown. The dog came back among the men, whimpering, and
for a minute there was an absolute silence.
"Then Wentworth went out from the men a little,
and aimed his gun at the doorway.
"'Whoever is there, come out, or I shall fire,'
he shouted; but nothing came, and he blazed forth both barrels into
the dark. As though the report had been a signal, all the doors
along the north and east walls moved slowly open, and Wentworth and
his men were staring, frightened into the black shapes of the empty
doorways.
"Wentworth loaded his gun quickly, and called
to the dog; but the brute was burrowing away in among the men; and
this fear on the dog's part frightened Wentworth more, he told me,
than anything. Then something else happened. Three of the candles
over in the corner of the hall went out; and immediately about half
a dozen in different parts of the place. More candles were put
out, and the hall had become quite dark in the corners.
"The men were all standing now, holding their
clubs, and crowded together. And no one said a word. Wentworth
told me he felt positively ill with fright. I know the feeling.
Then, suddenly, something splashed on to the back of his left hand.
He lifted it, and looked. It was covered with a great splash of
red that dripped from his fingers. An old Irishman near to him,
saw it, and croaked out in a quavering voice: 'The bhlood-dhrip!'
When the old man called out, they all looked, and in the same
instant others felt it upon them. There were frightened cries
of: 'The bhlood-dhrip! The bhlood-dhrip!' And then, about a
dozen candles went out simultaneously, and the hall was suddenly
dark. The dog let out a great, mournful howl, and there was a
horrible little silence, with everyone standing rigid. Then the
tension broke, and there was a mad rush for the main door. They
wrenched it open, and tumbled out into the dark; but something
slammed it with a crash after them, and shut the dog in; for
Wentworth heard it howling as they raced down the drive. Yet no
one had the pluck to go back to let it out, which does not surprise
me.
"Wentworth send for me the following day. He
had heard of me in connection with that Steeple Monster Case. I
arrived by the night mail, and put up with Wentworth at the inn.
The next day we went up to the old Manor, which certainly lies in
rather a wilderness; though what struck me most was the
extraordinary number of laurel bushes about the house. The place
was smothered with them; so that the house seemed to be growing up
out of a sea of green laurel. These, and the grim, ancient look of
the old building, made the place look a bit dank and ghostly, even
by daylight.
"The hall was a big place, and well lit by
daylight; for which I was not sorry. You see, I had been rather
wound-up by Wentworth's yarn. We found one rather funny thing, and
that was the great bull-mastiff, lying stiff with its neck broken.
This made me feel very serious; for it showed that whether the
cause was supernatural or not, there was present in the house some
force exceedingly dangerous to life.
"Later, whilst Wentworth stood guard with his
shot-gun, I made an examination of the hall. The bottles and mugs
from which the men had drunk their whisky were scattered about; and
all over the place were the candles, stuck upright in their own
grease. But in the somewhat brief and general search, I found
nothing; and decided to begin my usual exact examination of every
square foot of the place not only of the hall, in this case, but
of the whole interior of the castle.
"I spent three uncomfortable weeks, searching;
but without result of any kind. And, you know, the care I take at
this period is extreme; for I have solved hundreds of cases of
so-called 'hauntings' at this early stage, simply by the most
minute investigation, and the keeping of a perfectly open mind.
But, as I have said, I found nothing. During the whole of the
examination, I got Wentworth to stand guard with his loaded
shot-gun; and I was very particular that we were never caught there
after dusk.
"I decided now to make the experiment of
staying a night in the great hall, of course 'protected.' I spoke
about it to Wentworth; but his own attempt had made him so nervous
that he begged me to do no such thing. However, I though it well
worth the risk, and I managed in the end to persuade him to be
present.
"With this in view, I went to the neighbouring
town of Gaunt, and by an arrangement with the Chief Constable I
obtained the services of six policemen with their rifles. The
arrangement was unofficial, of course, and the men were allowed to
volunteer, with a promise of payment.
"When the constables arrived early that evening
at the inn, I gave them a good feed; and after that we all set out
for the Manor. We had four donkeys with us, loaded with fuel and
other matters; also two great boar-hounds, which one of the police
led. When we reached the house, I set the men to unload the
donkeys; whilst Wentworth and I set-to and sealed all the doors,
except the main entrance, with tape and wax; for if the doors were
really opened, I was going to be sure of the fact. I was going to
run no risk of being deceived by ghostly hallucination, or mesmeric
influence.
"By the time that this was done, the policemen
had unloaded the donkeys, and were waiting, looking about them,
curiously. I set two of them to lay a fire in the big grate, and
the others I used as I required them. I took one of the
boar-hounds to the end of the hall furthest from the entrance, and
there I drove a staple into the floor, to which I tied the dog with
a short tether. Then, round him, I drew upon the floor the figure
of a Pentacle, in chalk. Outside of the Pentacle, I made a circle
with garlic. I did exactly the same thing with the other hound; but
over more in the north-east corner of the big hall, where the two
rows of doors make the angle.
"When this was done, I cleared the whole centre
of the hall, and put one of the policemen to sweep it; after which
I had all my apparatus carried into the cleared space. Then I went
over to the main door and hooked it open, so that the hook would
have to be lifted out of the hasp, before the door could be closed.
After that, I placed lighted candles before each of the sealed
doors, and one in each corner of the big room; and then I lit the
fire. When I saw that it was properly alight, I got all the men
together, by the pile of things in the centre of the room, and took
their pipes from them; for, as the Sigsand MS. has it: 'Theyre
must noe lyght come from wythin the barryier.' And I was going to
make sure.
"I got my tape-measure then, and measured out
a circle thirty-three feet in diameter, and immediately chalked it
out. The police and Wentworth were tremendously interested, and I
took the opportunity to warn them that this was no piece of silly
mumming on my part; but done with a definite intention of erecting
a barrier between us and any ab-human thing that the night might
show to us. I warned them that, as they valued their lives, and
more than their lives it might be, no one must on any account
whatsoever pass beyond the limits of the barrier that I was making.
"After I had drawn the circle, I took a bunch
of the garlic, and smudged it right round the chalk circle, a
little outside of it. When this was complete, I called for candles
from my stock of material. I set the police to lighting them, and
as they were lit, I took them, and sealed them down on the floor,
just within the chalk circle, five inches apart. As each candle
measured approximately one inch in diameter, it took sixty-six
candles to complete the circle; and I need hardly say that every
number and measurement has a significance.
"Then, from candle to candle I took a 'gayrd'
of human hair, entwining it alternately to the left and to the
right, until the circle was completed, and the ends of the hair
shod with silver, and pressed into the wax of the sixty-sixth
candle.
"It had now been dark some time, and I made
haste to get the 'Defense' complete. To this end, I got the men
well together, and began to fit the Electric Pentacle right around
us, so that the five points of the Defensive Star came just within
the Hair-Circle. This did not take me long, and a minute later I
had connected up the batteries, and the weak blue glare of the
intertwining vacuum tubes shone all around us. I felt happier
then; for this Pentacle is, as you all know, a wonderful 'Defense.'
I have told you before, how the idea came to me, after reading
Professor Garder's 'Experiments with a Medium.' He found that a
current, of a certain number of vibrations, in vacuo, 'insulated'
the medium. It is difficult to suggest an explanation
non-technically, and if you are really interested you should read
Garder's lecture on 'Astarral Vibrations Compared with
Matero-involuted Vibrations below the Six-Billion Limit.'
"As I stood up from my work, I could hear
outside in the night a constant drip from the laurels, which as I
have said, come right up around the house, very thick. By the
sound, I knew that a 'soft' rain had set in; and there was
absolutely no wind, as I could tell by the steady flames of the
candles.
"I stood a moment or two, listening, and then
one of the men touched my arm, and asked me in a low voice, what
they should do. By his tone, I could tell that he was feeling
something of the strangeness of it all; and the other men,
including Wentworth, were so quiet that I was afraid they were
beginning to get shaky.
"I set-to, then, and arranged them with their
backs to one common centre; so that they were sitting flat upon the
floor, with their feet radiating outwards. Then, by compass, I
laid their legs to the eight chief points, and afterwards I drew a
circle with chalk around them; and opposite to their feet, I made
the Eight Signs of the Saamaaa Ritual. The eighth place was, of
course, empty; but ready for me to occupy at any moment; for I had
omitted to make the Sealing Sign to that point, until I had
finished all my preparations, and could enter the Inner Star.
"I took a last look round the great hall, and
saw that the two big hounds were lying quietly, with their noses
between their paws. The fire was big and cheerful, and the candles
before the two rows of doors, burnt steadily, as well as the
solitary ones in the corners. Then I went round the little star of
men, and warned them not to be frightened whatever happened; but to
trust to the 'Defense'; and to let nothing tempt or drive
them to cross the Barriers. Also, I told them to watch their
movements, and to keep their feet strictly to their places. For
the rest, there was to be no shooting, unless I gave the word.
"And now at last, I went to my place, and,
sitting down, made the Eighth sign just beyond my feet. Then I
arranged my camera and flashlight handy, and examined my revolver.
"Wentworth sat behind the First Sign, and as
the numbering went round reversed, that put him next to me on my
left. I asked him, in a low voice, how he felt; and he told me,
rather nervous; but that he felt confidence in my knowledge and was
resolved to go through with the matter, whatever happened.
"We settled down to wait. There was no
talking, except that, once or twice, the police bent towards one
another, and whispered odd remarks concerning the hall, that
appeared queerly audible in the intense silence. But in a while
there was not even a whisper from anyone, and only the monotonous
drip, drip of the quiet rain without the great entrance, and the
low, dull sound of the fire in the big fireplace.
"It was a queer group that we made sitting
there, back to back, with our legs starred outwards; and all around
us the strange blue glow of the Pentacle, and beyond that the
brilliant shining of the great ring of lighted candles. Outside of
the glare of the candles, the large empty hall looked a little
gloomy, by contrast, except where the lights shone before the
sealed doors, and the blaze of the big fire made a good honest mass
of flame. And the feeling of mystery! Can you picture it all?
"It might have been an hour later that it came
to me suddenly that I was aware of an extraordinary sense of
dreeness, as it were, come into the air of the place. Not the
nervous feeling of mystery that had been with us all the time; but
a new feeling, as if there were something going to happen any
moment.
"Abruptly, there came a slight noise from the
east end of the hall, and I felt the star of men move suddenly.
'Steady! Keep steady!' I shouted, and they quietened. I looked up
the hall, and saw that the dogs were upon their feet, and staring
in an extraordinary fashion towards the great entrance. I turned
and stared, also, and felt the men move as they craned their heads
to look. Suddenly, the dogs set up a tremendous barking, and I
glanced across to them, and found they were still 'pointing' for
the big doorway. They ceased their noise just as quickly, and
seemed to be listening. In the same instant, I heard a faint chink
of metal to my left, that set me staring at the hook which held the
great door wide. It moved, even as I looked. Some invisible thing
was meddling with it. A queer, sickening thrill went through me,
and I felt all the men about me, stiffen and go rigid with
intensity. I had a certainty of something impending: as it might
be the impression of an invisible, but overwhelming, Presence. The
hall was full of a queer silence, and not a sound came from the
dogs. Then I saw the hook slowly raised from out of its
hasp, without any visible thing touching it. Then a sudden
power of movement came to me. I raised my camera, with the
flashlight fixed, and snapped it at the door. There came the great
blare of the flashlight, and a simultaneous roar of barking from
the two dogs.
"The intensity of the flash made all the place
seem dark for some moments, and in that time of darkness, I heard
a jingle in the direction of the door, and strained to look. The
effect of the bright light passed, and I could see clearly again.
The great entrance door was being slowly closed. It shut with a
sharp snick, and there followed a long silence, broken only by the
whimpering of the dogs.
"I turned suddenly, and looked at Wentworth.
He was looking at me.
"'Just as it did before,' he whispered.
"'Most extraordinary,' I said, and he nodded
and looked round, nervously.
"The policemen were pretty quiet, and I judged
that they were feeling rather worse than Wentworth; though, for
that matter, you must not think that I was altogether natural; yet
I have seen so much that is extraordinary, that I daresay I can
keep my nerves steady longer than most people.
"I looked over my shoulder at the men, and
cautioned them, in a low voice, not to move outside of the
Barriers, whatever happened; not even though the
house should seem to be rocking and about to tumble on to them; for
well I knew what some of the great Forces are capable of doing.
Yet, unless it should prove to be one of the cases of the more
terrible Saiitii Manifestation, we were almost certain of safety,
so long as we kept to our order within the Pentacle.
"Perhaps an hour and a half passed, quietly,
except when, once in a way, the dogs would whine distressfully.
Presently, however, they ceased even from this, and I could see
them lying on the floor with their paws over their noses, in a most
peculiar fashion, and shivering visibly. The sight made me feel
more serious, as you can understand.
"Suddenly, the candle in the corner furthest
from the main door, went out. An instant later, Wentworth jerked
my arm, and I saw that the candle before one of the sealed doors
had been put out. I held my camera ready. Then, one after another,
every candle about the hall was put out, and with such speed and
irregularity, that I could never catch one in the actual act of
being extinguished. Yet, for all that, I took a flashlight of the
hall in general.
"There was a time in which I sat half-blinded
by the great glare of the flash, and I blamed myself for not having
remembered to bring a pair of smoked goggles, which I have
sometimes used at these times. I had felt the men jump, at the
sudden light, and I called out loud to them to sit quiet, and to
keep their feet exactly to their proper places. My voice, as you
can imagine, sounded rather horrid and frightening in the great
room, and altogether it was a beastly moment.
"Then, I was able to see again, and I stared
here and there about the hall; but there was nothing showing
unusual; only, of course, it was dark now over in the corners.
"Suddenly, I saw that the great fire was
blackening. It was going out visibly, as I looked. If I said that
some monstrous, invisible, impossible creature sucked the life from
it, I could best explain the way the light and flame went out of
it. It was most extraordinary to watch. In the time that I
watched it, every vestige of fire was gone from it, and there was
no light outside of the ring of candles around the Pentacle.
"The deliberateness of the thing troubled me
more than I can make clear to you. It conveyed to me such a sense
of a calm Deliberate Force present in the hall: The steadfast
intention to 'make a darkness' was horrible. The extent of
the Power to affect the Material was now the one constant, anxious
questioning in my brain. You can understand?
"Behind me, I heard the policemen moving again,
and I knew that they were getting thoroughly frightened. I turned
half round, and told them, quietly but plainly, that they were safe
only so long as they stayed within the Pentacle, in the position in
which I had put them. If they once broke, and went outside of the
Barrier, no knowledge of mine could state the full extent of the
dreadfulness of the danger.
"I steadied them up, by this quiet, straight
reminder; but if they had known, as I knew, that there is no
certainty in any 'Protection,' they would have suffered a
great deal more, and probably have broken the 'Defense,' and made
a mad, foolish run for an impossible safety.
"Another hour passed, after this, in an
absolute quietness. I had a sense of awful strain and oppression,
as though I were a little spirit in the company of some invisible,
brooding monster of the unseen world, who, as yet, was scarcely
conscious of us. I leant across to Wentworth, and asked him in a
whisper whether he had a feeling as if something were in the room.
He looked very pale, and his eyes kept always on the move. He
glanced just once at me, and nodded; then stared away round the
hall again. And when I came to think, I was doing the same thing.
"Abruptly, as though a hundred unseen hands had
snuffed them, every candle in the Barrier went dead out, and we
were left in a darkness that seemed, for a little, absolute; for
the light from the Pentacle was too weak and pale to penetrate far
across the great hall.
"I tell you, for a moment, I just sat there as
though I had been frozen solid. I felt the 'creep' go all over me,
and seem to stop in my brain. I felt all at once to be given a
power of hearing that was far beyond the normal. I could hear my
own heart thudding most extraordinarily loud. I began, however, to
feel better, after a while; but I simply had not the pluck to move.
You can understand?
"Presently, I began to get my courage back. I
gripped at my camera and flashlight, and waited. My hands were
simply simply soaked with sweat. I glanced once at Wentworth. I
could see him only dimly. His shoulders were hunched a little, his
head forward; but though it was motionless, I knew that his eyes
were not. It is queer how one knows that sort of thing at times.
The police were just as silent. And thus a while passed.
"A sudden sound broke across the silence. From
two sides of the room there came faint noises. I recognised them
at once, as the breaking of the sealing-wax. The sealed
doors were opening. I raised the camera and flashlight,
and it was a peculiar mixture of fear and courage that helped me to
press the button. As the great flare of light lit up the hall. I
felt the men all about me, jump. The darkness fell like a clap of
thunder, if you can understand, and seemed tenfold. Yet, in the
moment of brightness, I had seen that all the sealed doors were
wide open.
"Suddenly, all around us, there sounded a drip,
drip, drip, upon the floor of the great hall. I thrilled with a
queer, realising emotion, and a sense of a very real and present
danger imminent. The 'blood-drip' had commenced. And
the grim question was now whether the Barriers could save us from
whatever had come into the huge room.
"Through some awful minutes the 'blood-drip'
continued to fall in an increasing rain; and presently some began
to fall within the Barriers. I saw several great drops splash and
star upon the pale glowing intertwining tubes of the Electric
Pentacle; but, strangely enough, I could not trace that any fell
among us. Beyond the strange horrible noise of the 'drip,' there
was no other sound. And then, abruptly, from the boar-hound over
in the far corner, there came a terrible yelling howl of agony,
followed instantly by a sickening, breaking noise, and an immediate
silence. If you have ever, when out shooting, broken a rabbit's
neck, you will know the sound in miniature! Like lightning, the
thought sprang into my brain: IT has crossed the
Pentacle. For you will remember that I had made one about
each of the dogs. I thought instantly, with a sick apprehension, of
our own Barriers. There was something in the hall with us that had
passed the Barrier of the Pentacle about one of the dogs. In the
awful succeeding silence, I positively quivered. And suddenly, one
of the men behind me, gave out a scream, like any woman, and bolted
for the door. He fumbled, and had it open in a moment. I yelled to
the others not to move; but they followed like sheep, and I heard
them kick the candles flying, in their panic. One of them stepped
on the Electric Pentacle, and smashed it, and there was an utter
darkness. In an instant, I realised that I was defenceless against
the powers of the Unknown World, and with one savage leap I was out
of the useless Barriers, and instantly through the great doorway,
and into the night. I believe I yelled with sheer funk.
"The men were a little ahead of me, and I never
ceased running, and neither did they. Sometimes, I glanced back
over my shoulder; and I kept glancing into the laurels which grew
all along the drive. The beastly things kept rustling, rustling in
a hollow sort of way, as though something were keeping parallel
with me, among them. The rain had stopped, and a dismal little
wind kept moaning through the grounds. It was disgusting.
"I caught Wentworth and the police at the lodge
gate. We got outside, and ran all the way to the village. We
found old Dennis up, waiting for us, and half the villagers to keep
him company. He told us that he had known in his 'sowl' that we
should come back, that is, if we came back at all; which is not a
bad rendering of his remark.
"Fortunately, I had brought my camera away from
the house possibly because the strap had happened to be over my
head. Yet, I did not go straight away to develop; but sat with the
rest of the bar, where we talked for some hours, trying to be
coherent about the whole horrible business.
"Later, however, I went up to my room, and
proceeded with my photography. I was steadier now, and it was just
possible, so I hoped, that the negatives might show something.
"On two of the plates, I found nothing unusual:
but on the third, which was the first one that I snapped, I saw
something that made me quite excited. I examined it very carefully
with a magnifying glass; then I put it to wash, and slipped a pair
of rubber over-shoes over my boots.
"The negative had showed me something very
extraordinary, and I had made up my mind to test the truth of what
it seemed to indicate, without losing another moment. It was no
use telling anything to Wentworth and the police, until I was
certain; and, also, I believed that I stood a greater chance to
succeed by myself; though, for that matter, I do not suppose
anything would have taken them up to the Manor again that night.
"I took my revolver, and went quietly
downstairs, and into the dark. The rain had commenced again; but
that did not bother me. I walked hard. When I came to the lodge
gates, a sudden, queer instinct stopped me from going through, and
I climbed the wall into the park. I kept away from the drive, and
approached the building through the dismal, dripping laurels. You
can imagine how beastly it was. Every time a leaf rustled, I
jumped.
"I made my way round to the back of the big
house, and got in through a little window which I had taken note of
during my search; for, of course, I knew the whole place from roof
to cellars. I went silently up the kitchen stairs, fairly
quivering with funk; and at the top, I went to the left, and then
into a long corridor that opened, through one of the doorways we
had sealed, into the big hall. I looked up it, and saw a faint
flicker of light away at the end; and I tip-toed silently towards
it, holding my revolver ready. As I came near to the open door, I
heard men's voices, and then a burst of laughing. I went on, until
I could see into the hall. There were several men there, all in a
group. They were well dressed, and one, at least, I saw was armed.
They were examining my 'Barriers' against the Supernatural, with a
good deal of unkind laughter. I never felt such a fool in my life.
"It was plain to me that they were a gang of
men who had made use of the empty Manor, perhaps for years, for
some purpose of their own; and now that Wentworth was attempting to
take possession, they were acting up the traditions of the place,
with the view of driving him away, and keeping so useful a place
still at their disposal. But what they were, I mean whether
coiners, thieves, inventors, or what, I could not imagine.
"Presently, they left the Pentacle, and
gathered round the living boar-hound, which seemed curiously quiet,
as though it were half-drugged. There was some talk as to whether
to let the poor brute live, or not; but finally they decided it
would be good policy to kill it. I saw two of them force a twisted
loop of rope into its mouth, and the two bights of the loop were
brought brought together at the back of the hound's neck. Then a
third man thrust a thick walking-stick through the two loops. The
two men with the rope, stooped to hold the dog, so that I could not
see what was done; but the poor beast gave a sudden awful howl, and
immediately there was a repetition of the uncomfortable breaking
sound, I had heard earlier in the night, as you will remember.
"The men stood up, and left the dog lying
there, quiet enough now, as you may suppose. For my part, I fully
appreciated the calculated remorselessness which had decided upon
the animal's death, and the cold determination with which it had
been afterwards executed so neatly. I guessed that a man who might
get into the 'light' of those particular men, would be likely to
come to quite as uncomfortable an ending.
"A minute later, one of the men called out to
the rest that they should 'shift the wires.' One of the men came
towards the doorway of the corridor in which I stood, and I ran
quickly back into the darkness of the upper end. I saw the man
reach up, and take something from the top of the door, and I heard
the slight, ringing jangle of steel wire.
"When he had gone, I ran back again, and saw
the men passing, one after another, through an opening in the
stairs, formed by one of the marble steps being raised. When the
last man had vanished, the slab that made the step was shut down,
and there was not a sign of the secret door. It was the seventh
step from the bottom, as I took care to count: and a splendid
idea; for it was so solid that it did not ring hollow, even to a
fairly heavy hammer, as I found later.
"There is little more to tell. I got out of
the house as quickly and quietly as possible, and back to the inn.
The police came without any coaxing, when they knew the 'ghosts'
were normal flesh and blood. We entered the park and the Manor in
the same way that I had done. Yet, when we tried to open the step,
we failed, and had finally to smash it. This must have warned the
haunters; for when we descended to a secret room which we found at
the end of a long and narrow passage in the thickness of the walls,
we found no one.
"The police were horribly disgusted, as you can
imagine; but for my part, I did not care either way. I had 'laid
the ghost,' as you might say, and that was what I set out to do.
I was not particularly afraid of being laughed at by the others;
for they had all been thoroughly 'taken in'; and in the end, I had
scored, without their help.
"We searched right through the secret ways, and
found that there was an exit, at the end of a long tunnel, which
opened in the side of a well, out in the grounds. The ceiling of
the hall was hollow, and reached by a little secret stairway inside
of the big staircase. The 'blood-drip' was merely coloured water,
dropped through the minute crevices of the ornamented ceiling. How
the candles and the fire were put out, I do not know; for the
haunters certainly did not act quite up to tradition, which held
that the lights were put out by the 'blood-drip.' Perhaps it was
too difficult to direct the fluid, without positively squirting it,
which might have given the whole thing away. The candles and the
fire may possibly have been extinguished by the agency of carbonic
acid gas; but how suspended, I have no idea.
"The secret hiding paces were, of course,
ancient. There was also, did I tell you? a bell which they had
rigged up to ring, when anyone entered the gates at the end of the
drive. If I had not climbed the wall, I should have found nothing,
for may pains; for the bell would have warned them, had I gone in
through the gateway."
"What was on the negative?" I asked, with
much curiosity.
"A picture of the fine wire with which they
were grappling for the hook that held the entrance door open. They
were doing it from one of the crevices in the ceiling. They had
evidently made no preparations for lifting the hook. I suppose
they never thought that anyone would make use of it, and so they
had to improvise a grapple. The wire was too fine to be seen by
the amount of light we had in the hall; but the flashlight 'picked
it out.' Do you see?
"The opening of the inner doors was managed by
wires, as you will have guessed, which they unshipped after use, or
else I should soon have found them, when I made my search.
"I think I have now explained everything. The
hound was killed, of course, by the men direct. You see, they made
the place as dark as possible, first. Of course, if I had managed
to take a flashlight just at that instant, the whole secret of the
haunting would have been exposed. But Fate just ordered it the
other way."
"And the tramps?" I asked.
"Oh, you mean the two tramps who were found
dead in the Manor," said Carnacki. "Well, of course it
is impossible to be sure, one way or the other. Perhaps they
happened to find out something, and were given a hypodermic. Or it
is just as probable that they had come to the time of their dying,
and just died naturally. It is conceivable that a great many
tramps had slept in the old house, at one time or another."
Carnacki stood up, and knocked out his pipe. We
rose also, and went for our coats and hats.
"Out you go!" said Carnacki, genially,
using the recognised formula. And we went out on to the Embankment,
and presently through the darkness to our various homes.
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