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Saturday, September 1, 2007

After The Storm

After The StormTom had never been one to call a spade anything but a spade and there were time when he wished he wasn’t so outspoken; people he found, rarely cared for that brand of honesty. He sat reluctantly outside the swing doors of the Intensive Care Ward and waited impatiently. Just having to be there was bad enough without being forced to wait in a draughty corridor. Glancing at his watch, without noticing what it said, he wondered if his wife Sheila would be long. He stared at the doors to the ward through which came the pulsating bleep of some piece of high tech and his eyes travelled on the wings of his imagination to Ethel’s bedside.Ethel was his mother-in-law, the epitome of every joke ever cracked on the subject. Tom had never taken to her and had sensed that the antipathy was mutual; they were too much alike in many ways. Ethel was down to earth but what irked him the most was the way in which she ran her family as though they were all still dependant children despite the fact that they were all married with youngsters of their own. He felt more than a qualm at having to visit her; he had not seen her since the big bust up two years ago. Sheila still went to the compulsory Sunday teas but he did not. Not any more. Just listening to Ethel gabbling on was more than he could comfortably bear. Anyway, the argument had spared that ordeal; he was no longer expected to visit and that was why he objected, albeit mildly under the circumstances, to this visit to the hospital. Sure the old bat had had a massive heart attack, and he was sympathetic, but whose fault was it? Certainly not his. If she had concentrated more on her own life instead of the goings on of her five daughters she would never have come under so much stress.Sheila’s heels echoed over the polished tiles of the corridor but he barely registered them as his mind carried him back to that last stand with Ethel. Forty quid had gone missing from the tin that she kept her catalogue payments in. It had happened at one of those Sunday get togethers and he had been blamed because, when he was younger, he had been in a bit of trouble with the law. Anyone in the house could have taken it but the finger had been pointed at him. A lot had been said, most of untrue, and all of it too loudly. He had stormed out after showing that his pockets were empty but Ethel had had the final word by saying that he must have stashed it outside somewhere."Why haven’t you gone in?"He looked up at his wife. "Are you kidding?""Anybody with her now?""Your Carol I think.""Come on then," Sheila took his hand, "let’s get it over with."As they strode together on to the ward Carol stood up at the sight of Tom. Sheila’s eyes anxiously took in the complicated apparatus connected to her mother. The ECG blipped with a regularity that should have been soothing. Tom ignored his sister-in-law and looked down at the old woman. She appeared tranquil; her eyes were closed and her face so relaxed that the lines around her mouth and eyes were less harsh than he remembered."Are the others here yet?" Carol sounded choked."They’re on their way up," Sheila answered none too warmly."Here they are now," Tom almost groaned as the sisters entered and flocked around the bed. A nurse came across and drew the curtains round them. The sound of his voice caused Ethel to open her eyes. She smiled when Tom returned her gaze uncertainly. He did not smile back. Her mouth began to work but no sound came out; Sheila gave her a sip of water."It’s good to see you Tom. I’m glad you came." Tom nodded but his expression showed his indifference. "I hoped you’d come," she continued in a weak voice. "I’m not long for this world." She paused to gain a little strength. Two of her daughters began to sob. "I did you a big wrong, lad. I know that you didn’t take that money. Carol told me it wasn’t you."Tom’s eyes flashed at Carol who burst into tears. Her words were barely audible through her sobs."It was me, Tom. I took it. I needed it for the kids."Tom stood up and turned his back; he could feel his anger rising and this was no place for a blow-out. Carol rushed out of the ward with Sheila hot on her heels. She to had gone through a lot over the past two years with skits and black looks. When someone left the room they had always made a point of taking their handbag with them; it had been as bad for her as it had been for Tom. No way was she going to let Carol get away with it. Tom took a step to follow."Don’t go yet, Tom." For the first time he heard a pleading note in her voice. He turned to her and saw tears streaming down her cheeks. She held out a hand to him. "Come here, lad." He took her hand and sat on the edge of the bed. "You know, we were always too much alike to really get on, almost like we came from the same mould." She squeezed his fingers. "Maybe that’s why I always looked on you like the son I never had."Tom felt the hate, the cold hate he had nurtured at such cost to himself, begin to fade a little."I had to make my peace with you, Tom. Don’t worry about Sheila and Carol. They’ll have their words and clear the air. Nothing more will come of it. I’ve told our Carol what’s expected of her. And she’ll do it."Even on her deathbed she was still in command of her girls. Tom looked down at her, struggling to find something to say. Nothing came to mind so he leaned over and kissed her forehead. Ethel smiled."Go get my girls for me now Tom." He gave her a lingering look. There was no way he could forgive her but, if it meant so much, he could pretend. He slipped out to find his wife and sister-in-law.

The Prowler

Moira looked out through the bedroom window. The deep golden rays of evening sunlight seemed to transform the garden, giving it a magical atmosphere. Everything looked fresh. She smiled contentedly as her eyes fastened on the pink hydrangea bush by the gate. Never in her life had she seen one in such beautiful condition with its even distribution of flower heads. It had grabbed her attention when they first came to view the house; that one shrub had stood out against the rest of the drab foliage."Must be a bit of good ground there," her husband Ken had said in a tone that had made him sound knowledgeable. "They probably had their compost heap there at some time."Moira had nodded. Neither of them knew much about gardening but Ken had made a real effort to learn and it showed in the job he had done with the rest of the garden. He had wanted to move the hydrangea to a more prominent position but she had made her protest and won. The ground where it was obviously suited it.As she watched, the sun continued to slip behind the houses opposite throwing them into stark silhouette. She drew the curtains only when the last of the sunlight had gone. Though she loved to look out over the garden she feared that the man might return. Though he never did anything, merely stood there, she was still afraid; and he always seemed to turn up when Ken was working the night shift. How he got into the garden she couldn’t imagine; a six foot fence went all the way round the garden with a gate of equal proportions which was kept bolted at top and bottom. And Ken had just left for work.She made her way down the stairs into the kitchen where she began to make some supper, intending to have an early night. Major, their Alsation, lay sprawled on the mat near the door leading to the garden. He opened one inquisitive eye, sighed, then returned to that shallow sleep that is peculiar to dogs. He had already been fed so had little interest in the food she was preparing.Suddenly he shot to his feet and let out a low menacing growl. Moira jumped and then trembled when she took in the dog's appearance. He was standing facing the door with the hair between his shoulders bristling, his teeth bared. Closing the curtains she then checked that the bolts on the door were slid home. Major continued to growl, ignoring Moira when she spoke to him."I ought to let you at him, Major. You'd soon see him off wouldn't you? And why not? He has no right to be there frightening folk. If he got hurt it would be his own fault."Reaching up she slid back the bolt at the top of the door. Major sensed her intention and stepped back excitedly, making just enough room for her to open the door. No sooner had she started to open the door than he was through the gap and bounding up the garden, his loud bark echoing through the night air.She watched as he sped towards the man then stop, cower and turn with his tail between his legs. When he reached her he was whimpering like a puppy. The man remained motionless, his hands clasped together over his ample stomach, his face calm. The dog was hardly through the door when Moira slammed it shut, shooting the bolts home and turning the key in its lock. She turned on the dog."A lot of good you are." Something inside her snapped; she’d had enough of it.The police seemed to take their time answering the phone but their action was actually swift. Her description of the man was radioed to various mobile patrols who closed in to seal off the area. The loud knock on the front door startled her. She led the two officers into the kitchen after the male detective issued orders through his radio to seal the adjacent gardens."This description you gave us tallies with that of the man who previously occupied this house. His wife reported him missing about fourteen months ago. It could be him." The policewoman handed her a photograph."Yes! That's him!" Moira was certain. "But why would he come back here?""Who knows? Perhaps he lost his memory but has recognised the house."Moira stood up, crossed to the window and drew the curtains aside. "But why doesn't he... There he is now. Quick you can get him."The detective charged through the door while the policewoman gave clear instructions into her radio. Moira stood framed in the doorway.The detective had reached the prowler. Moira felt her legs buckle beneath her as the prowler appeared to sink slowly into the ground. Then the detective returned to the house his face ashen."Get a squad down here with spades. Then let's have his wife brought in." He flopped into the offered chair."Christ! Now I've seen everything on this job."

The Turning Point

Burnham-On-Crouch. What a wonderful sounding place but none too easy to get to, if British Rail have their way, but I made it on time despite them. I was probably annoyed long before I boarded the train because Mick cried off literally at the last minute. He had fallen suddenly to some mysterious and debilitating illness, caught, I later learned, at the Sailmaker’s Arms.He had set up the boat delivery in the first place as he knew Pete Reid the owner better than I did although we had sailed together. I remembered Pete as a taciturn sort of bloke with little in the way of a sense of humour. Even so he had entrusted us bring his latest acquisition up the coast to Bridlington.The boat was a twenty-six foot Stella out of Tucker Brown’s yard. A little classic and a boat I am very familiar with. When I arrived Pete was nowhere to be found. I asked at the yard and they told me he had been delayed and wouldn’t be here for at least another three hours. The whole job was going pear-shaped. It was already noon and I had been up since four in order catch the early train from Hull to London then a connection to Burnham-On-Crouch. I could see the boat riding at its mooring in the river but it would have done me no good at all getting rowed out to it because it would be locked up. I could do to be on my way because, as I would now be doing it alone, I wanted to get as far as Great Yarmouth where I planned to put in for the night to break the voyage and give me a chance to rest. At the Crouch the tide was at two so I’d be pushing things if Pete didn’t get a move on. I left my gear with at the yard and sauntered through the small town to kill time; what I really wanted was to rest up. My circuit brought me back to the yard where I shared some coffee with a couple of the men. Pete arrived with something close to a smile playing with his lips.“Mick couldn’t make it,” I said shaking his hand.“You can handle it can’t you?”“No problem. I intend to put into Great Yarmouth tonight.” Pete simply nodded slightly then jerked his head at the boat.“Well she’s all yours then. Oh here.” He passed me a buff envelope. “I reckon you get the full whack as you’re on your tod.”I counted the money quickly before stuffing it into my pocket. If I should pay Davey Jones a visit during the trip at least I wouldn’t be skint.“Tide’s about full,” he said. I knew it was past that stage but said nothing to his retreating back. I got myself rowed out to the little yacht with no name. She had once been called something with SAL in it but most of it had been burned off, probably by Pete, and until he thought of a new name for her she would be nameless. He had no scruples about changing a boat’s name though some sailors would be superstitious about it. I got her underway without delay needing to make the most of what was left of the tide. With the engine throbbing below I conned her through the small flotilla of boats at their moorings until I reached a section where I could safely leave the helm and make sail. It was a great day with pom-pom clouds scattered over a perfect blue sky. I had to get over the bar before the tide ebbed too far and was in a good position to do so. With no winches I felt their absence in my arms as I hauled the mainsail up the mast swigging it until the headboard reached the black band. The headsail was of the roller type making it less of a problem to set. I dashed back to the cockpit and hauled on the sheets to trim the sails.The moment when you harden in the sheets and feel the boat stir and come to life has to be experienced to be fully appreciated. The boat gently heels as she accelerates, the tiller shivers in your hand, gently pulling against you as man, wood and elements are brought together in a trinity so strong that it acts like a drug from which you are never truly free. We seemed to fly down the river, the water like a mill pond with just a slight ripple when the wind dragged across it. For all the excitement of the voyage I still couldn’t calm my suspicions. Mick had said nothing about Pete meeting us here. I tried hard to push the thought to the back of my mind but there they remained, always ready to come to the fore when the task of sailing the boat became automatic. It was my first time on the River Crouch and I was impressed by the clear marking of the channel. The boat began to pitch a little as we neared the sea then began to curtsy before charging at the first wave.I was in my element; if the weather held this would turn out to be a grand sail. As I altered course a little she began to set up a steady rolling motion and I knew that soon I would be feeding the fish, like I always do for the first few hours. The sun blazed down hot even in the breeze. Eventually I was in the shipping lane but comfortably clear of any dangers. Everything was just too damned good and my suspicions f loded back. At that time I didn’t know what Mick’s illness amounted to; did he know something that I didn’t? And when Pete learned that I had to sail on my own why hadn’t he offered to come along? Was there something I didn’t know about the condition of the boat? I had always had a dislike for Pete and the ruthless way he had built up his business. Why had he made this trip from Hull instead of simply handing the keys and paperwork over to either Mick or myself?Setting the boat on a safe course for a few minutes and lashing the helm I ducked below to make a coffee and bring the paperwork on deck to read. Pete had commissioned a reputable surveyor to look the boat over and I read his findings while I steered a course about three miles offshore. A surveyor’s report is a nightmare to work through if you are new to them. They read like a gothic novel listing every defect no matter how small but I found nothing alarming, everything seemed to be in order. Still disatisfied I went below and did a thorough check of my own. This had happened to me once before and I had ended up sailing a sieve, having to pump her out every inch of the way. Everything looked as it should. The bilge was dry enough to carry snuff. On the face of it there was nothing to cause me any concern at all.Four hours underway and we were abeam of Harwich with its thick traffic of ferries, coasters and whatnot. The wind was blowing nicely on the quarter from the south-east, perfect for the whole voyage if it held; the weather forecast that morning held no surprises. I was gagging for a drink and something to eat but couldn’t leave the helm just yet, and to haul in somewhere would spoil the cracking pace we were setting. With the wind in its present position it was impossible to balance the helm. So sit and enjoy was the order of the day.Gradually we left the muck behind and I put her on a heading on which she would balance. It was while I was below that I found the tiller extension. With this fitted I could sit in the companionway and cook while still steering and keeping a look-out f or ships. What a luxurious little ship it was! With a pan clamped on the stove a tin of stew bubbled away. On the horizon were the distinctive shapes of oil rigs but they have to be seen at night to grasp their beauty with all their lights blazing away. Wrapping the pan in a cloth I wedged it between my knees and tucked into the stew with wedges of bread with Lowestoft abeam. My taking a break at Great Yarmouth now came into question. So far the trip had been so good, and I wasn’t feeling the slightest bit tired; the boat had no inclination to stop and neither did I. I had an hour or so to make up my mind what to do.I did and sailed on revelling in the freedom of the sea and a boat that was performing like a dream.The wind backed a little as though it was there purely for our purpose as we changed course to round the bulge of Norfolk. We sailed between the coast and the nearest shoal which is call Hewett. Others spread out to seaward each seemingly named after villages or perhaps ships whose bones now rested on them. Like the lost ships many a village along the east coast of England has ended at the bottom of the sea. It was strange thinking about them as I sailed over them.As darkness crept up on us I slipped below to make up a thermos flask of black coffee for the night watch then altered course again to cross the Wash and the lights of ships coming to and fro from Kings Lynn and Boston. As the night deepened I became aware of that solitude that darkness brings at sea. To starboard the inkiness stretched to infinity; to port it was broken now and then by the flash of a lighthouse or necklace of flickering lights that marked a town or village. It never fails to fill my mind with wonder at the vastness around me and how insignificant and small it make me realise we humans are in the whole set-up of things. The sky was pricked with thousands of stars. Looking up at them it seemed that the masthead was stroking them, polishing them so that they shone brighter. At that moment I thought it the finest voyage I had ever undertaken. Perhaps the fact that I was sailing solo for the first time added its own magic to it. The fact that I had not slept for eighteen hours had no effect on me as we plunged on through the night. I tuned the radio in to BBC Radio 4 to bring some conversation onboard and it worked well through the dark hours in keeping me awake and before I knew it the sun was pushing its head above the horizon. It appeared to frighten the wind away as it dropped to barely a breath. We had all sail set so there was nothing more I could do to further maximise our progress. In fourteen hours we had sailed seventy-five miles by the log. I lashed the helm while I checked our position on the chart. I had a moment’s uncertainty but nothing I could do until we had some real light. I had to put my faith in the new hand-held GPS.I made some strong coffee in the flask to fight off the creeping effects of fatigue. I was beginning to regret not putting in to Great Yarmouth and the next available anchorage was Saltfleet but with an easterly wind it was out of the question; we would find little shelter there. After that was Tetney Haven just inside the mouth of the Humber Estuary but if I overslept there we would find ourselves high and dry resulting in a long wait for the next tide. The best I could do was to keep a check on my tiredness and there was a long way to go - even longer if the wind held off. I took my coffee on deck and waited for the shipping forecast.A thin wispy mist clung to the surface of the sea, glowing pink in the light of the new sun. The coffee did the trick as I soon got my second wind. To make sure I replenished my cup and ate some sandwiches. As the sun rose so the mist was burned off and away in the distance I could see a town. Through my binoculars I identified it as Skegness. I took a bearing and laid it off on the chart. I was exactly where I thought we were. I smiled with relief. The wind picked up with the full daylight and the boat picked up her skirts and raced on. Now I had to squeeze the best out of her before fatigue created an opening for a mistake. As the day wore on I seemed to recover as working the boat and navigating drove the tiredness to the back of my mind. By dusk we were level with Spurn Point on the north bank of the Humber Estuary.Not much further now, I told myself as I downed another pint of coffee. By dawn we would be in Bridlington Harbour all snugged down. The thought of it brought on the tiredness with a vengeance. More coffee and a bag of sultanas for the energy they give.That second night was long and hard punctuated by moments of disorientation, one of which nearly drove me over the edge. The sky was overcast with dense cloud that obliterated the stars, depriving me of their comforting light. All around me was an impenetrable black. The coast was to port but off the starboard bow I could make out groups of lights which I took to be towns. My worn brain could not find the logic in it. Was I sailing the wrong way? Had I dozed off and allowed the boat to turn around on herself? No. The wind was still on my right cheek. It would be too much of a coincidence for that to double back on itself too. I looked long and hard at the glowing compass. That was it! That was why Mick had cried off and why Pete hadn’t offered to sail with me!The compass was faulty!I felt panic rising like a demon inside me. The trip was turning into a nightmare! Surely they were ships? No. Too many lights; they must be towns. I dashed below to the charts and tried to make sense of it all. As I put the pencil down it rolled off the table and disappeared in the dark. I reached the drawer where I knew there was an ample supply. As I rummaged for one my hand closed on a book that prevented me getting to the pencils. I tossed it onto the chart and snatched a pencil. Reading our position from the GPS I marked it with a cross on the chart before flicking through the menu to course. It told me that we were still heading in the right direction; there was nothing wrong with the boat’s compass. With great relief I returned on deck taking the small book with me. Maybe if I read a little I could drive back the sleepiness for just long enough to get into Bridlington.Sitting at the helm I looked around me at the small circle of world that was mine the limit set by the dim red glow of the compass light. The lights that had spooked me has dropped below the horizon making my world so minuscule that I felt claustrophobic. I picked up the book from where I had put it on the seat beside me.It was a bible!I wasn’t a holy Joe by any stretch of the imagination. Religion had ceased to be a part of my life years before that night. But reading would help me keep awake so I opened it and read, my eyes straining to see the small print in the inadequate light.In the beginning God created Heaven and Earth. Now the Earth was a formless void, and there was darkness over the deep, with a divine wind sweeping over the waters.I looked around me again at the darkness over the deep and the divine wind kissed my cheek. Maybe my fatigue made me feel that way. I don’t know. But that night was a turning point in my life.Soon to my left I saw the familiar lights of Hornsea, a small seaside town where I had once lived. Looking north across the bay I saw the welcoming lights of Bridlington, the end of the voyage. But not yet. Although the lights appeared close at hand they were in reality three hours sailing time away and even then I would have to wait a little until the tide gave us enough water to sail in. A little way off the harbour mouth I took in sail, dropped the anchor and cooked a breakfast while I waited. We did not need anything like the full tide; about five o’clock should see us with enough to pull in.At last she was bedded down at her berth. Pete wouldn’t be there to receive her until one in the afternoon so I flopped on one of the bunk and slept like the proverbial. It had been a hard sail but one that had left me a lot wiser.

Band of Gold

The Second World War had finally ended. Sam had returned, after spending several painful months in a military hospital in France, to a so-called land fit for heroes. Not that Sam had done anything brave, or of great distinction, during the war years. He had donated four prime years of his life, and his healthy body, fighting to maintain the freedom the Nazis had threatened. He had gained very little in those years and lost a great deal more.He shuffled painfully through the snow, along streets which had formerly been associated with happy times. Those same streets were now depressing with great gaps in them where German bombs had ruined the geometry of the neat straight rows of sham-fours. When he reached the remains of one terrace he paused with a lump forming in his throat. He had to find this place. Something inside him had driven him here to where he and his wife Eileen had set up home at the outbreak of the war, the humble beginnings for their married life together. Now it was difficult to make out the once prim houses with their small gardens at the front. Only two remained upright, and both were burned out carcasses.A solitary workman was busy among the rubble clearing hazards to allow the main builders to get in. Sam approached him slowly, his artificial leg leaving an unnatural trail in the powdery snow. The workman looked up."Howd’y’do.""Howd’y’do," Sam returned, not for the first time thinking what a strange word it was. The workman slowly looked around him, his lips pursed."Right mess ain’t it.""Yeah," Sam whispered as he too looked around at the real destruction to his life, recognising the plots of those neighbours he’d had little time to get to know before he left to fight.."Are you from round here?"Sam nodded, fighting the hard lump that swelled to choke him. "Once I did. That was my house where you’re standing now.""Oh. Er. Sorry mate." The workman looked around him again but this time his eyes were seeing things how they had been that fateful night. "Real bad night that was. Terrible. The whole terrace was gutted. Everyone on that side bought it. And here a young woman... Oh... That’d be...""My wife."Both men fell into an awkward silence that embarrassed each for his own reasons: Sam because he found it hard to talk about his loss; the other because he felt too much sympathy and sometimes it didn’t do to show it. Folk were funny about people feeling sorry for them. He had been a part of the team that had fought the fire that night and had recovered the charred bodies from the rubble. It had been bad that night. They all hated the incendiaries, probably more than the doodle-bugs, certainly more than the ordinary bombs. They should all have been confined to military or industrial targets not the homes of civilians.Sam had been informed while he was in the French hospital. It had been tough enough losing his leg but the news of his wife’s death had almost finished him; only the skills of the nurses had given him the will to live on.The workman cast sidelong glances at Sam’s back as the crippled soldier picked his way back to the street. Sam had long since abandoned his longing to bridge the gap left by the war. His only brother had been killed at Dunkirk serving with the East Yorkshire Regiment. Now he had no one. Totally alone in the world he shrugged his greatcoat against the cold biting wind feeling somehow akin to the buildings on each side of the street - broken and war-torn.Walking aimlessly on, his head bowed against the elements, his eyes were attracted by something that glittered in the thin covering of snow on the pavement. Stooping awkwardly he retrieved the wedding ring and wiped it clean on his sleeve. He blew the small plug of snow from its centre before carefully turning it round, searching for an inscription. There was nothing.It was a simple, plain band of gold with nothing to distinguish it from millions of others that had been sold during those turbulent years. He had never been dishonest in his life but then he had never been in the dire straits he now found himself in. He knew he should hand it in at the police station on Gordon Street but the rumble in his stomach made him continue in the direction of the Boulevard then on to Hessle Road. It was his intention to pawn it thereby providing himself with a few pounds to tide him over for a while.Hessle Road was busy with people getting on with life. It suddenly filled him with pride in his community and some shame at himself; that they could laugh as though the war had never happened was a tribute to their tenacity. Or was he just bitter in himself? Was that why there was such a marked contrast between them and him? He found himself looking intently into the faces of passers-by, trying to make out if any of them had suffered anything like the losses he had. Nothing showed on their faces but the determination to get on with life, to keep personal grief hidden from the common eye.Slowly a change came over him after months of brooding and self-pity. His heart had ached at the thought of Eileen’s funeral. In the mix up of administration he had not learned of it until weeks afterwards and he wondered if their neighbours had attended. She also had no living relatives and Sam had been tortured by the thought of her not getting a good send off. Now, as he looked at the people around him, that fear was dispelled. They were a community; people bound to each other by a common suffering; they would always look out for each other. He smiled within himself, content that his wife had not gone to the grave like a pauper.As he trudged along his cold fingers toyed with the small change in his pocket; perhaps now he could afford the luxury of a packet of cigarettes. As a light sprinkling of snow began to fall he turned into a small shop but the doorway was blocked by a stout woman and a tribe of kids making their noisy exit. Stepping back he allowed them to pass. It was only then that the postcard, in a rack in the window, caught his eye:Wedding RingLost in the Gordon Street areaReward offered for its returnHe felt a pang of conscience as he read it, then beamed when he realised that the crime of theft had only as yet been committed in his mind. He went into the shop and still made his purchase then, once outside again, made a mental note of the address on the card. As he inhaled on the cigarette he felt peeved that the card bore no name.When you go to the house of someone you’ve never met it never seems so bad if you at least know their name. With a marked spring in his step he set off in the direction of Wassand Street. This took him past the pawn shop where he smiled to himself; at least he found himself in a position to do something to bring a little sunshine into somebody’s life.Wassand Street had also taken a hammering from the bombers but it made itself evident only in the ragged buildings; the people, typical of their kind, had returned to a kind of normality. Boys kicked an old ball; girls gathered in groups skipping with an old length of rope.Finding the house he hesitated before knocking. He had a feeling of isolation similar to the sensation he had experienced in France when he had regained consciousness among the rubble of that farmhouse. He was alone with the rest of the patrol killed. He knew they were all dead because, despite his horrific injuries, he had dragged each one out, one by one, into the yard.In the foot of his artificial leg he felt the pain all over again as he recalled dragging himself out on to the road where he could be found. When he was found they all said he’d been lucky; he wasn’t so sure. Death might have been better than this. He grimaced at the trick his mind and memory played on him, stamping the leg to drive the phantom pain away.He rattled the letterbox. After a few moments the door was opened by an old woman wearing a worn grey dress covered by a flowered apron. Her swollen feet were thrust into a pair of hand-knitted slippers."Yes?""I’ve come about the lost ring."The old woman’s face lit up causing Sam to glow inside. "Eh lad, you’d better come in. You look nithered." She moved aside allowing him to pass her in the narrow passage. Closing the door she squeezed he bulk by him and waddled towards a door leading to the back of the house .Sam followed, conscious that he had not wiped his feet, afraid that he might be leaving a trail of slushy snow on the scrubbed floor. The strong smell of lilac polish was evidence enough that it was freshly cleaned. The aroma of food cooking tormented his empty stomach until it growled.In the small kitchen a young woman stood working at the sink with her back to them."Lad here has found your ring," the old woman said in a voice that bubbled. The young woman turned, her gasp muffled by her hand which shot to her mouth."Sam!""Eilie?""I thought you was..."The old woman looked from one to the other then back again, her face mimicking her confused thoughts."Is this your Sam?"Eileen staggered to a chair, shaking and fighting the sobs that choked her. Sam almost leapt across the room while through the shock came the old woman’s voice. "You was reported missing, believed dead, Sam. Eileen still has the telegram."Sam allowed this to penetrate his confusion."Then who...who was the woman they found in our house?""Oh Sam," Eileen wept, "that was Ada from where I worked. Her house was bombed so she came to live with me. I was on the night shift when our house got hit. At first they thought it was me."Sam thought of how he had searched in vain for her grave. He had looked so hard, trudging every cemetery in town. Now he knew why he couldn’t find it."But they thought it was you. They told me it was you," Sam gasped."I didn’t know you was alive Sam. When the mix-up was sorted out...I didn’t know. There was the telegram...Oh Sam. What you must have been through."He took her shaking hands in his and smiled the first real smile for many months. "Maybe it was worth it for this moment." He reached into his pocket and withdrew the ring. Slowly he slipped it on to her finger which he noticed was much thinner than when he had first placed it there."My God, Sam. What if you hadn’t found it? What if somebody else had found it? How far can coincidence go?""The day I gave you this ring we made a promise, remember? ‘Till death us do part. And we ain’t dead yet."As they held each other close, both lost in their reunion, the old woman wept silently into her immaculate apron.

The Round Mirror

If anyone, a year ago, had asked me if I believed in ghosts my answer would have been a firm and definite no. But that would have had to have been before my wife, Carol, and myself moved into The Laurels, a small cottage we bought on the outskirts of Ripon, in Yorkshire. It was offered at a remarkably low price but it was not just that alone that tempted us to buy. Ripon, besides being a horse racing town, is one of sublime beauty set in the picturesque Yorkshire Dales. Never before had I found myself so completely captivated by any other part of the country. But then I had never been in that part of the country before.The Laurels was a marvellous compliment to the surrounding landscape. I use the word compliment because the cottage had the appearance of being built with the countryside instead of being added as an afterthought by some obscure architect. So well did it fit in and blend with its surroundings, with the character of the rolling hills, that it was a living part of the Dales. It had a front garden with a thick overgrown laurel hedge to shield it from the road that ran between Ripon and West Tanfield. There was a long garden to the rear equally as wild with the same laurel hedge marking its boundary. A few yards beyond where the garden terminated ran the River Ure. The back garden had once been a thriving orchard with apple, pear, plum and cherry trees in abundance. These of course were terribly neglected.We were told by the estate agent that no-one had lived in the house for quite some time but could not be tied down to a specific answer, avoiding our question by going into his patter about the various interesting and original features it contained. We had both fallen for the place and on asking the price realised that we could afford it outright if we sold our new car and bought second-hand. The interior was simple with a walk-in lounge or parlour, a small kitchen at the rear with a small room leading off it that we decided would make a snug dining room. Upstairs was a large bedroom and two smaller bedrooms. There was no bathroom but we decided that in time we would convert the smallest bedroom. For all this, the cottage was a great improvement on the two room flat we rented at the time.Moving in went well but the first sign of trouble showed itself that first night. Carol noticed that there was a small area on the upper landing where it was freezing cold, and this despite it being a warm summer evening. The rest of the cottage was pleasantly warm except for that one spot. We checked for draughts but could find no reason for the drop in temperature. In the parlour, when we first moved in, was an assortment of old furniture which we sold to an antique dealer from York. There was nothing special about them but the cash we got for them would easily pay for the bathroom conversion. There was, however, one piece of old furniture that we would have been glad to get rid of but the dealer showed no interest at all. It was an old round mirror set into the wall of the chimney breast above the fireplace. Ugly is no exaggeration. I have never in my life seen such an awful piece of work. The frame was of some dark, almost black, wood that was intricately carved yet was still an abomination. Perhaps it was because it did not fit in with the general tone of the cottage; it belonged somewhere else. When you looked into it you were gripped by an acute nausea. It was horrible. We determined to have it taken out just as soon as we could afford it.We'd had a long day and at eight-thirty I called a halt and talked Carol into exploring the local drinking hole. She took some convincing that a break was needed because it was virtually impossible to stop her working at feathering our nest. The locals, in variance with the old adage of coolness to outsiders, were very friendly and wanted to know all about the cottage."I can't understand why some young couple in the village hasn't taken it," Carol said, causing more than one pair of eyebrows to rise. An old man coughed nervously and eyed the others before he spoke."Happen you'll know afore long. There's queer things as happened in The Laurels in the past. You ask young Bert there if you don't believe me."We all looked at Bert to see if he was forthcoming but he was hesitant and it took a few drinks before he opened up."An old couple bought The Laurels and they didn't like that old mirror over the fireplace so they asked me to take it out for 'em. Well I tried and I tell you. That mirror just don't want to move. No matter what I tried it attacked me.""What do you mean? The mirror attacked you?" Carol asked."I ain't kidding you Missus. An' I weren't drunk neither. That mirror don't want to be moved.""So what happened to the old couple?" I asked, my instincts telling me that we were becoming the butt of a village joke."They left. Only spent the one night in the place. Upped and 'opped it. Next we know the place is up for sale again.""Aye, an' don't forget them young vandals who broke in that night. They'd been camping and the wind had ripped their tent so they broke into The Laurels to take shelter. They tried to break the frame of the mirror to burn to keep warm. Police found 'em wandering down the road in a right state. All beat up they was."I could see that this conversation was frightening Carol and to tell the truth I was unnerved myself. We drank up and returned to the cottage. The wind had got up and, as we entered the front garden, I heard the sound of glass breaking. The pieces cascaded down onto the doorstep. Looking up I saw that the bedroom windows were intact so was mystified as to where the glass came from. Just one more puzzle in the mystery of The Laurels.The next morning I awoke to find that Carol was already up and about. I was just getting dressed when I heard her on the landing and went to see what she was up to."There's a staircase here somewhere," she said in a very matter of fact tone."What makes you think that?""Come with me. I've found out where that broken glass came from last night." She raced down the stairs and out into the front garden with me following. "Look! Up there near the gable under the ivy."Looking up I caught the glint of the sun on a part of a small window on a level above the bedrooms."You're right. It looks like we've got an attic.""I wonder why the stairs were blocked up?" Carol looked at me as though I would have the answer."Beats me," I answered but bad thoughts were cramming my mind. "In fact there's a whole lot of things I'd like to know about our little nest."Over breakfast we discussed the little we knew, trying to laugh off what we had been told in the pub. We agreed that a cottage as old as The Laurels must appear somewhere in local history so I agreed to go in search of a local historian. There was bound to be one."Right," she said. "You do that while I carry on getting some of our things unpacked. There's no point in both of us skiving off."So after breakfast I set off on my search and was surprised to be told at the local shop of a retired school teacher who had written a number of articles for The Dalesman on the history of the area.David Goldsmith was more than pleased to have someone interested enough in local history to go out of their way to find him. At the mention of the cottage he led me into a richly furnished study where he took from one of the numerous bookshelves a thick volume. He turned the pages until he came to what he had remembered. In the days of the French Revolution a French aristocrat who had fled the threat of the guillotine, and, together with his wife and family, had settled into The Laurels. The cottage was occupied by each generation of the family until 1877, the last being a woman and her daughter. The daughter was totally devoted to her mother who was terminally ill. Shortly before her mother died the girl got involved with a young nobleman who was married and they had a secret affair. His wife was ill and died within a week of the girl's mother. The nobleman was tried for murder and hung while the girl was cleared of all guilt. It was later established that he too was innocent and his body was taken from the prison cemetery and buried in the family vault and his honour publicly restored. The girl pined away in the cottage and died on the fourteenth of June 1877. I asked if he knew of the round mirror or why the attic should have been sealed up. He couldn't help me so when I left him I was not much wiser for my visit.When I entered the cottage I was met by a sight that set my hair bristling and my heart pounding in my chest. Carol lay on the floor in front of the fire with a deep scratch running down the side of her face. At first I thought that she was dead but as I crossed to her she began to moan and murmur my name. Her face was ashen and her eyes rolled wildly. I picked her up and lay her on the sofa while I went for some water to bathe the wound."What have you been doing?" I asked as I sponged at the wound. She turned her head to the mirror and a frown darkened her face."I was trying to get that damned mirror down. Something knocked me off the stool that I was standing on.""But what? You was on your own." I tried to keep my voice casual but it sounded false even to me. I looked over to where I had found her. There was no stool. I tried to recollect if I had picked it up without thinking but I could not be sure. The stool was in its place by the telephone."I don't like it." There was a childlike petulance in her voice that I had never known before. "There's something odd about this place. There's something in the talk we've heard in the village.""Nonsense darling, it's just village talk," I soothed."That mirror is haunted!" She was as near to hysterics as I have ever seen her."But that's ridiculous. How can a mirror be haunted?" Even as I spoke her eyes turned to the mirror and widened in horror."Look!" I looked but saw nothing."It's just an old ugly mirror," I found myself saying but Carol continued to search the offending mirror with her eyes, reminding me of a child who, having awoken from a nightmare and while being soothed by a parent, still searches the room for the bogeyman. I had to make a choice. Either to tell her what little I had gleaned from David Goldsmith or find some way of ridding the cottage of that hideous mirror. I decided on the latter but swore to myself not to leave her alone in the cottage again.When Carol had made herself more presentable we went in search of a builder to do the job and to open up the stairway to the attic. We knew that it was useless to ask in the village so we enquired further afield but no-one was prepared to take on thejob - the fame of the cottage was well known for miles."Maybe we should ask Mark," Carol suggested as we returned to the cottage. "He's good at that sort of thing and there's little that will scare him." Mark is Carol's brother and if anyone could cope with this situation he could. He was no braver than any other man but he could never be convinced of the place being haunted, and especially a by mirror. Carol phoned him and he readily agreed to drive up the next day. That evening was spent in pregnant silence with Carol unable to take her eyes off the mirror. I too found myself arrested by it in a morbid fashion. I did my best to keep my vow about leaving her alone but when nature called I had to. I couldn't have been gone more than a minute when she took the opportunity to attack it with the poker. Her entire personality seemed to have undergone a change since her first encounter with the mirror. She had been secretive about what she had seen on that occasion and no amount of coaxing could draw the details from her. Now, when I was out of the room, she flew in a rage at the source of her fear. She screamed hysterically as she swung the poker with all her strength delivering blow after blow against the unyielding glass. Then her screams turned from rage to terror, then a choking sound that resembled my name. My blood ran cold as I leapt down the stairs and charged into the parlour. I was momentarily mesmerised by the scene before me; the hair rose on the nape of my neck.Carol stood before the mirror and I watched, as in a nightmare, as she wrestled with the spectre reaching out from the glass. Slowly her body was raised up by the neck until a part of her was drawn into the mirror as though there was no glass. The two black-gloved arms with their claw-like hands held her throat in a grip of steel. I heard myself beginning to scream, far, distant and unreal like in a nightmare.It was a nightmare and we were living it!The hands appeared to extend from the mirror which was clouded with a vague outline of a face, old with that ugliness that comes from ill health and holding an expression of hate or jealousy. These things I recalled later but at that moment I had to save Carol from being dragged into the mirror. As I closed in one hand released its hold on Carol and snatched the heavy iron poker from her failing grasp. The ghostly arm swung a vicious blow which glanced off my head. Instead of falling away my momentum carried me on and I grabbed at the arm wielding the poker. The face in the mirror grinned and laughed at my futile attempts to wrench the poker from its murderous grip. At that point it released its hold on Carol and I watched my wife fall to the ground. I thought she was dead but I could not move to help her because of the ghost's supernatural hold on me. And all the time it laughed in that heinous way. It seemed like we struggled for hours but it was only a few minutes before it loosened its hold on me and I was able to fall away from it, but not before it caught me another blow across the head which left me stunned. Then it threw the poker with such force that it was embedded in the wall at the other side of the room. The face remained in the swirling mist of the mirror for a few minutes, laughing like a mischievous child.Sleep that night was impossible. Carol listened intently as I told her about my fact finding visit to David Goldsmith. When I had finished she was silent for a while, with no expression on her bruised and swollen face. At first I put her silence down to the injuries she had received to her neck and then she spoke."If that in the mirror is this French girl then why is she so violent toward us?"I thought about this for some time but could only guess at the answer; we had nothing to go on. Was it pure malice from behind the grave? And why us? Because we had come to live in the cottage that had once been hers? Or was it to defend the mirror itself? And if so why did the mirror mean so much to her? I posed these questions to Carol so that we could kick the idea around between us."I read somewhere that spirits need some object that is their doorway from the other side, a sort of link. That's why spiritualists ask you for a personal item of anyone you want to contact. Maybe that mirror was her most personal possession."I looked at her with concern. Her eyes were red-rimmed and sunk into the puffy and contused face. The worst were the marks left on her neck by those ghostly hands. She was lucky to be alive. We spent the whole of the night sitting at the table in the dining room drinking copious cups of coffee and wishing the night away.At eight o'clock I spotted the postman coming up the path and went out to talk to him. If anyone had the measure of village gossip it would be him. I invited him in but he declined on the excuse that he had too much to do. It was evident to my mindat he was afraid to enter the cottage so I asked him about the mirror."I can't say for sure. I only know the stories from my grandfather.""What stories? That's what we want to know.""'bout the mirror. It seems that some young woman died. Her what was having it off with some nob. The mirror just appeared on the wall.""How did it appear?""Nobody knows. But there it was on the wall when they found her. And it weren't there afore she died." he spread his hands to give weight to his argument."Who found her?""My grandmother. She used to come here every day and clean. The mirror hadn't been there the night before when she left. It was the same time that the staircase disappeared.""How did this young woman die then?"The postman looked at his watch and shuffled the mail in his hands."She just died from what I can gather. Folk said it was a broken heart. Who knows?"He handed me a bundle of mail and made to walk away. He turned and smiled. "Well I hope you and your wife get on all right here. It's a real shame the place should be empty. Nice old place."I watched him ride his bicycle down the hill. Perhap he might have provided us with enough to sort this thing out. The attic. Maybe there was some clue up there that would throw light on the whole situation; it must contain something relevant to the haunting or else why would it be sealed up? I walked down the path and turned at the gate to look up at the small window which was almost hidden from sight by the thick foliage of the ivy. I rushed inside the cottage and up to the bedroom where Carol was getting changed. I told her what I thought about the attic."So what?" was her indifferent answer."Well think about it. Why should the stairs disappear too and at the same time that the mirror suddenly appeared? There must be something up there." I watched her eyes for some reaction."Yes," she answered, "That's just it. We don't know what's up there, do we?""What do you mean?"She let her breath out sharply and threw her hairbrush onto the bed."Haven't you had enough with that thing in the mirror? Because I have. What if there's something else up there? Something worse?""I never thought of that," I admitted and sat on the edge of the bed and thought about it. However much I turned it over in my mind I knew that I would have to go up there and told Carol."Well don't expect me to come up with you."With her question gnawing at my mind and nerves I went out onto the landing and looked up at the oak-beamed ceiling then down at the single step that jutted from the wall. I was right in the centre of the cold area. With rising anticipation I brought ladder and some tools and was about to start when Carol held my arm."Just one more thought. If this is a part of the haunting then it is sealed for a purpose. That French bitch defends her mirror."I looked at the wall, the sledgehammer in my hands then back at Carol. I still had to know.The first blow brought a large piece of plaster down leaving a large hole. I looked at Carol who was biting her lip. Nothing happened."She would have had you by now," Carol joked. While it was good to see her sense of humour returning I was reluctant to laugh; the job wasn't over yet. Another swing let enough light through for me to see the staircase rising into the darkness."There are a lot of cobwebs," I said. "Well so long as that is all there is; the vacuum can sort them."I swung the hammer a couple more times making a hole big enough to get through and was about to start up when a loud banging downstairs stopped me dead in my tracks."It's the door," Carol laughed. "I'll get it. It's probably Mark." I went down with her."Hey, what the hell's happened to you two?""You'd never believe us."As he stepped inside he looked straight at the mirror."So that's the culprit. Ugly bugger ain't it.""That's it but I doubt if you can shift it.""What do you mean?" he laughed as though I had made some joke about his ability as a builder."Because it doesn't exist." His laugh died then returned at half strength while his eyes searched amine for the joke."It doesn't exist? Are you sure you're all right?" Again he looked at our injuries."If you mean am I off my rocker, I'm not.""I'll make us some coffee then we can fill you in," said Carol, ushering us into the dining room where she did not have to look at the mirror. When we finished talking he still had that smile tugging at his lips; he only half believed us."Christ!" he said at last. "You're both serious aren't you? Well I know nothing about these things. I don't think I even believe in them but then I know you both to be telling the truth. So what do we do?""You still want to stay?" Carol asked him. "I'd understand if you went.""What and miss all the fun? Are you writing all this down, Paul? It's good fodder for your typewriter.""I won't forget it in a hurry believe me."When mark had changed into his overalls we both set to work clearing the rest of the plaster from the landing then gingerly we all went up the stairs that had been enclosed for over a hundred years. At the top was a stout door which creaked open with the combined weight of Mark and myself behind it. We had rigged an extension lead and inspection lamp and by its light we entered the large room which covered the full expanse of the house.The floor was covered with an assortment of old trunks and packing cases. Climbing over some of them mark struggled to open the window that overlooked the front garden, and all the time I waited for something to happen. We had entered what I thought to be the centre of the mystery and expected to be punished for it. It was cold up there even though outside the sun beat down on the tiled roof. It must have taken a good ten minutes before the window opened slowly spilling in the first sunlight in over a century into the hidden room. The window was of the double kind and the second one opened with less difficulty.I sat down on a trunk and looked around at the assortment of junk, wondering where to start looking for whatever it was that would end the mirror's reign of terror at The Laurels.We all began to rummage through the jumble taking the loose items first. The clouds of dust that rose, whenever something was disturbed, hung in choking clouds in the still air. We searched until late when Carol decided we should take a break for something to eat. Just as we were about to quit when the light went dim then out went out."Damn! the bulb's gone." I cursed then gasped as something behind Carol began to glow, something that hovered above the cases and trunks; a grey light that had Carol screaming but no sound came from her lips as the light enveloped her. I stepped over and dragged her away as the ghost began to throw articles about in a wild frenzy. Mark ducked behind one of the roof supports as a large heavy trunk sailed dangerously close to his head."Hey! This thing's demented," I heard him shout as another piece flew in his direction. I was easing Carol to where light was showing up the stairs from below but she seemed to be resisting me as though she wanted to stay or because the ghost was drawing her back into the room. She broke away from my grip and stepped towards the apparition and as she did so the frenzy stopped and the light began to take on the form of a young girl. A soft cooing sound filled the air as the girl moved around putting the things back where they had originally been then began what appeared to be a deliberate search. Her movements were like a dancer as she glided between the array of trunks and old furniture with Carol following every step. The ghost stopped at one object and pulled away a large dust cover to reveal an old writing bureaux. When she turned to face us the smile on her face was almost angelic; it was as if she was appealing for our help. Her lips moved silently as she gestured towards the bureaux and a small drawer opened of its own accord. Carol seemed to be receiving instructions from her for her head nodded from time to time and her face was focused in concentration.As Carol reached for the drawer the spectre began to shimmer and divide until there were two ghosts. One was the beautiful young woman while the other was her older contemporary whose face resembled the one we had seen in the mirror. This older one made to grab something from the bureaux but the younger one restrained her, pleading with her silently but the old woman was determined. Although there was no sound it was obvious that she was admonishing the girl and was determined to have her way.Carol snatched the whole drawer from the bureaux and rushed towards me as the old woman shrieked and began to hurl things in our direction. She rushed at Carol to retrieve the drawer but Carol held it tight to her chest refusing to give it up. We were rooted to the spot but Carol ran down the stairs with an agility that defied all natural laws. As I watched she flew down the stairs as though being carried with the small drawer clutched tightly to her breast. We could not follow for the old woman began to hurl objects down the stairs in a fury. The young woman came between us and her counterpart and stove off the assault with gentle motions of her hands and we took the opportunity to make our escape.Once in the comfort of the parlour we were silent as each took in the reality of what had happened. It had been no illusion and to prove it we could still hear the battle raging in the attic. We sat there staring at each other for several minutes, each trying in their own way to come to terms with what had happened. And all the time the battle raged in the attic. In the opaque mist of the mirror I could see the struggle that was taking place. The whole cottage was shaken to its foundations as the spectral gladiators fought it out."The answer is in this diary," Carol said. She had tipped the contents of the drawer onto the floor. "She told me to read her diary." She began to flick through the pages with disgust. "I can't read this. It's all in French. How's your French, Mark?""Good enough to order a bottle of wine," he replied without taking his eyes off the scene in the mirror."I wonder how long they can keep that up?""Until they wreck the place and then some," I answered."I wonder if that David Goldsmith can help us," Carol suggested. "Shall I ring him?"David Goldsmith greeted us warmly despite the late hour and was sympathetic towards Carol who had attempted to hide her bruises beneath heavy make-up and a rollneck sweater. He led us into his study and took the diary from Carol, opened it and began to read slowly to himself, turning the delicate pages with great care."The last four days seem to be more relevant to the problem we have. She describes her agony at his execution and swears to his innocence of any crime. It is a very moving account. Her last entry says,'I am afraid that I will never see him again. I swear to God and the Holy Mother that I will wait until he comes to me even to eternity. Our love has cost him his life and I ache to be with him. He will return I pray, and take my soul to be with him for ever. I will wait for him to come for me.' So you see, she has remained at the cottage in spirit form ever since. It is a remarkable document. She describes how her mother discovered their affair and plotted his downfall.""But what can we do? They're at it hammer and tongs in our attic," I said, trying to instil a light note on the proceedings."They?""Yes, her and we presume her mother.""Good Lord." He placed the diary on his desk and pursed his lips. "We must procure the services of a medium.""But I thought they were all phonies," I put in."Are your ghosts phonies? Who can say what lies beyond death or even try to understand it until one is there. She has waited over a century for your help but who's to say that time exists in the spirit world? These things we can only guess at.""So what do you suggest?" Carol asked. "I have already said that we need the help of a medium. There's an old woman who lives just outside the village. She's quite a character. If she had been born in the middle ages she would have been burned.However, she is good at what she does and if anyone can help it is she. Would you like me to send for her?""Will she come at this late hour?" I asked. He made the call and smiled with satisfaction when he replaced the receiver."You'll simply love Megan Bramley. Straight out of Macbeth. She'll be at The Laurels as soon as she can. You had better return home."Megan Bramley arrived shortly before midnight as she had promised and almost on cue the a peal of thunder echoed across the hills. The storm had been brewing since nightfall an had enveloped the countryside in a blackness that did nothing to alleviate our foreboding. The old woman was dressed in a shabby ankle length grey skirt and a shapeless woollen top, black shawl and and old pair of army issue boots. Her long silver hair hung matted with the rain and her body was stooped to give her a dwarf-like appearance. Her hands were long an animated. She gave us a toothless grin and when she spoke her voice was almost a shriek.She must have walked all the way from her home and was soaked to the skin, her boots were caked in mud. She refused Carol's offer of something dry with a mocking, "Soft living never led to old age." She stared at Mark. "Live soft and die young." This was followed by a bout of insane laughter as she placed herself before the mirror."Ah they are ready. They know that I am here to help them." The noise in the attic had ceased. We all looked at the mirror, at the beautiful smiling face of the young French woman."We must have a table and four chairs in here." Mark and myself obliged by moving them in from the dining room. She motioned for us all to sit round the table."No. Not me. No way." Carol backed away her eyes widening in horror."You must! We must have four!" the old woman rasped at the same time grabbing Carol by the arm and effortlessly dragging her into a chair."Now we must link hands. And be warned, no matter what happens in this room, no matter what you see or hear, do not break the circle. If you do it will all go wrong."The atmosphere was unreal. The four of us seated round the table in the dark with just the glow from the figures in the mirror."Now we must have absolute silence and complete concentration." Her eyes flitted round the table. I saw that Carol was biting her lip while Mark was shuffling uneasily in his seat. Then the old woman's voice was soothing yet I still had a chill running up and down my spine."Now the time approaches. The ether is just right and our friends on the other side are waiting to be called." She began to mumble phrases over and over in a strange language. Her voice rose and fell but never became harsh. I was aware of something crushing me gently like the atmosphere in the room was making its physical presence known to my body. The clock began to strike mid-night; lightning flashed so bright that it seemed to be in the room. In the mirror I saw the reflection of a tall dark man and he was smiling. It was a reflection for the man was stood behind me glowing blue-white and radiating a cold beyond anything I had ever felt. It was a clammy cold and smelled of damp earth. I felt dizzy, as though I was going to faint and only hung on by my will.The young woman came out of the mirror, floating and dancing like she had in the attic. She melted into the man's arms and I heard their sighs.Then ornaments and pictures began to fly across the room as the girl's mother vented her rage. Megan Bramley's drone rose in pitch but still soothing until the old ghost became faint and eventually disappeared leaving the two lovers behind. The windows and door flew wide open as the ghostly couple moved around the room still locked in each other's embrace. They moved slowly towards the door and disappeared into the night. The storm abated to exaggerate the silence. I looked up at the mirror and it was gone. Completely disappeared!The old medium went out and was swallowed up by the darkness before we had chance to thank her for the great service she had performed. Carol was sobbing, her head resting on her arms on the table. Mark was speechless. And I? I was just grateful that we now had the cottage minus the round mirror.In its place I have hung an old portrait that I found among the stuff in the attic. It depicts an old but distinguished looking French officer, and it may simply be my imagination, but I sometimes think he moves.

The Night of the Grey Lady

Donald Maston was in a good frame of mind as he drove from the business meeting in Swindon. Had not the Vice-chairman himself said that he, Maston, was sure to get the promotion he was chasing? He had. Now as he drove home through the quiet Wiltshire countryside he hummed along to the tune that was being played on the car radio.Zeke, his bull terrier, lay on the seat beside him his head resting in his forelegs and his eyes closed in the shallow slumber peculiar to dogs. Now and then, perhaps as the car lurched around a bend, he would open his eyes and look up at the smiling atures of his master.Maston nursed the car through a series of bends just south of Devises. Soon he would reach the right hand turning on to the B3098 that would take him over to the Warminster Road and home. Kathy, his wife, would be pleased with the news he bore. This promotion would mean a few extra thousand per annum. That alone would bring joy to her heart if the thought of bettering himself did not. Not that she did not want him to get on. She did of course, but her mind was not of the calibre to understand the way he struggled ambitiously up the ladder of promotion.He swung the big car into the turn-off with a slight squeal of the tyres. The minor road was empty but he kept his speed down in the fifties as dark clouds scudded across the black sky obliterating the crescent moon. Rain began to spatter the windscreen as thunder rumbled and echoed close by. He had heard the thunder earlier but had mistakenly taken it for artillery fire on Salisbury Plain, which was not far away where sound was concerned.By the time he reached Edington the wipers were struggling to keep the windscreen clear so he turned into the car park of a small pub. He had deliberately refrained from drinking at the business meeting so felt justified in having one on the road. Besides, he excused, the rain might have eased by the time he was ready to leave again. These April showers rarely lasted long.The pub was warm, steam soon fogged his spectacles. He polished them on his handkerchief as he strode to the bar where a buxom barmaid served him with a Scotch and soda.. It was already ten minutes past ten. He had just enough time for a couple of drinks before he would have to leave. He put a match to his pipe and puffed until he was satisfied that it was burning evenly. He pulled himself up on a bar stool and surveyed the locals who sat in groups.He was mid-way through his second drink when he overheard some people at a table nearby discussing someone they referred to as the Grey Lady. It was a hobby of his, collecting stories and legends, which he hoped one day would make a book. He enquired of them who she was."Oh she's been haunting these parts for two hundred years or more. If you're going up towards Westbury you'll likely see her. Tonight's the night of the Grey Lady," explained one who looked like he might be a farmer."Why tonight?" asked Maston."She always walks on the fourteenth of April on account of that was the night her boy was killed by the Squire's coach and four.""Aye. Drawn by the best matched horses you ever did see. And jet black each of them. Like devils," offered a stout woman who could have been his wife."Sometimes you can only hear it. The roar of the wheels. The pounding of the phantom hooves and the snorting of the beasts," said an old man excitedly as he realised his audience was attentive. "Others have seen it and lived to tell the tale. But not for long."Maston listened enthralled by the tales they had to tell of those who had seen the apparition and died violently either there on the spot or later at home. He suspected the tales were embroidered for his benefit but listened just the same, finding them highly entertaining.He left the snug hospitality of the little bar rather relunctantly and ran to his car through for the deluge if anything had increased. As he climbed in his faithful companion merely opened his eyes, cast a bored look at his master before returning toits former position on the seat. Maston started the car on his journey home. He tuned the radio into a talk-in programme and soon forgot the fanciful tales he had heard in the pub.He was forced to drive at a snail's pace as the visibility was reduced by the glare of his own headlights reflecting off the torrential rain. He contented himself that once he reached the main trunk road at Westbury the going would get better and he would soon be home.He had barely gone a couple of miles when the headlights picked out the stooped figure of an old woman walking on his side of the road towards Westbury. He saw through the curtain of rain that she was hobbling and that the shawl covering her head and shoulders was saturated, as was her skirt which clung to her bony frame. He slowed and stopped alongside her before the tales he had heard in the pub flashed like a warning in his mind.He heard the old man saying, "Tonight is the night of The Grey Lady."He grinned sheepishly at the sensations that were conjured up by his imagination. It's ridiculous, he thought as he leaned over the dog and wound the window down."Can I give you a lift? Where are you going?"By way of an answer the old woman pointed to a road sign behind her while struggling to keep he head bowed against the onslaught of the weather. Maston looked up and saw that the sign said Westonbury three miles."Get in, love." He opened the rear door but had to grapple with Zeke as he let out a terrific howl and lunged at the old woman as she scrambled into the car. Maston was instantly aware of the cold, damp smell as he closed the door behind her. A sharp command from him and the dog ceased struggling though he would not lie down but sat facing the woman growling fiercely, his top lip curled in a vicious snarl.Maston glanced over his shoulder to reassure the old woman that she was safe but he saw that her head was bowed as though asleep and her shawl completely covered her face."Where shall I drop you?" he asked as he drove the car forward. He received no reply. "They said nothing about her being deaf and dumb," he muttered to himself then bit his lip when he realised how unkind he was being. Grey Lady indeed. All ladies would be grey in this downpour. Zeke continued to growl at the huddled shape on the back seat.They had not travelled far when the smell of damp decay emanating from the old woman became so strong that he was forced to drive with the window wide open. He was beginning to regret picking her up. He glanced in the rear-view mirror out of curiosity but the woman was still in the same position with her face hidden beneath the shawl, yet Maston had a spine tingling sensation that she was watching him.A mile further up the road he saw two faint lights heading towards them on their side of the road and flashed his main beam. They had the look of coach lamps but this coach was travelling like the wind. As it drew nearer he was able to make out the shapes of the four black horses, lathered and straining at their bits. The hideous coachman, a skeleton wielding a whip, lashed at the wild looking horses as they ran directly at the car.Then it all happened at once. The dog let out a loud chilling sound that was neither bark nor growl and launched itself at the two skeletal arms that encircled Maston's body, holding the powerful car on a collision course with the phantom coach and its driver.Zeke tugged and pulled at the bones in a frenzy. Maston stared, mesmerised by the grotesque face behind him. The wind coming in through the open window blew the shawl away to reveal the grinning skull of the old woman.The Grey Lady.Her eyes, the only flesh left in the yellowed skull were dark and piercing. Her bottom jaw dropped open in a wild inhuman and grating laugh; her head was thrown from side to side by the wild erratic motion of the car.Maston's eyes bulged in their sockets. His face had already taken on the cold grey pallor of the dead, his lips pale and bloodless, stretched back over his teeth and gums in terror. A hysterical sob issued from deep in his throat, all that his fear sickened mind was capable of. No longer was he master of his own actions. He had tried to apply the brakes but his legs would not move to obey him. He fought a losing battle to retain his sanity as the car and coach drew together. At the last moment the hold on his body was gone; the Grey Lady had disappeared. He wrestled with the steering wheel as the car swerved. He had a brief glimpse of the ghostly coach as it sailed over him then the car going into a skid, mounting an embankment before smashing into a gnarled oak tree.The next morning, as the mist began to evaporate into the air, a passing police car stopped to investigate. They found Maston slumped over what remained of the steering wheel. One of the constables leaned into the car. The smell of whiskey was still on the lips of the dead man."Another drunk who should never have driven," he muttered with the cold-heartedness that years on the force had left him with."Shame about the dog though, said his colleague. "He was enjoying that bone when it happened."