Darkness was gradually closing over the sedate little village of Edgeville, and night was drawing on apace. The subdued twilight was giving place to gloom deep and opaque; night was settling down over Edgeville and its quaint old church under the hill, on which the bell was now tolling.
Nearby the little church being, in fact, only separated from it by the churchyard, was a small, neat cottage, the dwelling of the sexton, a little, withered old man, who, having been born in the village, and never having made a day's journey away from it, was a sort of pensioner of the village, who considered him a village institution, and withal looked up to him as an oracle.
Adam Hill was town-clerk as well as sexton, and postmaster besides although his postal duties consisted in distributing the half-dozen or so of letters which arrived weekly by the mail-rider. As he could actually pronounce the majority of the polysyllable words scattered through the columns of the newspaper which occasionally strayed into Edgeville from the great outside world, and as he was known to have quoted Latin once in his youth, he was considered a person of boundless sagacity and erudition, and was a prominent man in Edgeville.
While the bell had been tolling, Adam Hill's hale old wife had been composedly knitting, in the demure society of the smoldering fire, the purring cat, and snoring hound curled up on the red brick hearth raising her head ever and anon to glance out of the window across the graveyard to the church where her good man was tolling the bell in memory of 'Squire Lovell, who had departed from Edgeville and this world five years before, at the age of sixty-one. On the anniversary of his death, the church-bell was tolled every year. Why, no one could tell; for, though the 'squire had been rich, he had also been snug, if not miserly, and exacting, as many an unfortunate tenant of ills and he had owned half the village could testify perhaps the reason was that as 'Squire Lovell had been held in awful respect by the simple villagers during life, their veneration for him resulted in keeping his anniversary by tolling the bell as it had been tolled at his funeral five years previously.
There hung a mystery over his death. He lived in the old family mansion on the skirts of the village, and, although known to possess wealth, had lived entirely alone, as he had no relations. True, he had a nephew, Eugene Lovell, a harum-scarum boy of sixteen, who, having rebelled against the authority of his severe and exacting uncle, ran away, and had never since been heard of. This occurred a short time previous to the 'squire's death. The old man, brooding and revengeful by nature, cut his nephew off without a shilling, leaving all of his accumulated wealth to the son of his old nurse. The will was drawn on the 9th of October, 184-, and the next morning the 'squire was found dead in his bed.
Stricken by heart disease, some said; apoplexy, suggested others. But not a few whispers floated about that, as the 'squire had been of robust habit, and on the day of the drawing of the will had been in excellent health, his sudden death was marvelous and suspicious. But no marks of violence were perceived on his person, and the old 'squire was buried, the house was closed up to all saving bats, owls, rats, mice, and spiders, and the fortunate heir obtained possession of his fortune.
But although the 'squire was dead, he was not forgotten. On every anniversary, when Adam Hill tolled the church-bell at sunset, the villagers would think kindly of the stern old 'squire, whom in. life they feared, and speculate on the cause of his death. Each succeeding anniversary augmented the number of those who believed the old man had met with foul play, until finally, on the present one, not a man or woman in the village had a different opinion. But suspicion attached itself to no one, and no attempt was ever made to ascertain the cause of his death. As previously mentioned, the 'squire bequeathed his entire property to the son of his old nurse, Gilbert Ray. Prior to the 'squire's death, "Gill Ray," as he was familiarly called, had been employed by the neighboring farmers in common farm labor. He was a young man of industrious habits, but close-fisted and moody; and, being, morose, vengeful, and averse to the society of his acquaintances, had acquired the name of "Dark Gil," though he was never addressed by this sobriquet, as he possessed a terrible temper, and visited vengeance on those who provoked it.
After the 'squire's death, Dark Gil went out to farm service no more, but shrewdly invested that portion of the inheritance which consisted of money, and employed himself in attending to his tenants.
The tenantry had deemed the 'squire an exacting landlord, but Dark Gil proved far more so. Woe to the unfortunate delinquent, for he showed him no mercy. On rent-day he regularly appeared, and coldly demanded the rent, if it was forthcoming, he received it in silence; if not, no matter how reason, able the excuse advanced by the tenant, it was no avail, for Dark Gil would seize household goods to its equivalent value. He was inexorable, and the villagers' dislike of him increased every rent-day.
It was a subject of occasional comment among the villagers that Dark Gil never visited the mansion-house. Indeed, he seemed to avoid it; for since the 'squire's death he had not visited it, and allowed it to run to decay quietly. The sexton's wife sat knitting until the bell ceased to toll. Soon afterward the door burst open, and in came Adam Hill, excited and trembling, with a look of awe and alarm on his wrinkled face.
"Husband I husband!" cried the goodwife, as Adam sank into the nearest chair.
"Nannette, I've seen the 'squires' ghost!" whispered the old sexton, involuntarily looking over his shoulder in the direction of the church.
"Seen the 'squire's ghost!" gasped his frightened helpmeet.
"Ay! Just as he used to look when he and I were young and rivals for the favor of my Nannette. I was pulling the rope on the last stroke - the sixty-first - when a current of cold air swept over me, and looking up, I saw the 'squire's face (no more), looking as he looked at twenty-one. The blue eyes looked calmly onto mine for barely a moment; then they disappeared, and I left the church -losing no time, I can tell you."
"Lord preserve us! And you are sure you saw his young face?"
"Sure!"
And the expression of awed conviction on the old sexton's face left no doubt in his wife's mind.
A pause ensued, during which the old couple looked at the smoldering fire. Then said Nannette:
"What does it mean, Adam?"
"Foul play!" responded old Adam gloomily. "
"Mercy on us!"
"I always thought the 'squire didn't die a natural death, and now I know it!" declared Adam, striking his knee, with his clenched fist. "For why did his young face appear to me but to remind me of the boyish love we bore each other, and for the sake of that love to set wrong right, that an old man might rest easy in his grave? Nannette, the 'squire was always good to me, always - though I did get the lovely Nannette, for whose sake he lived and died a bachelor and now I'll do a good turn for him if I can; and to boot! Get the lantern, Nannette, and my oak stick, and sit here by the fire until I get back - there's a dear girl - for I go to the squire's house tonight."
"Lord preserve us! You surely can't be so mad!" cried Nannette, as Adam rose. "To the 'squire's house! Why, do you know they say it is haunted?"
"I know they say it is haunted, and after what I've seen I know it is! It is haunted by the spirit of an old man who can't sleep easy in his grave because foul play goes unpunished." Then he said sturdily: "Don't be skeered, Nannette; the 'squire's ghost won't harm old Adam Hill, his best friend."
But Nannette clung to him. "Adam! Adam!" she implored; "do not go - don't! You'll never come back again if you do, promise me you won't go."
"No, Nannette," said Adam sturdily,” it is my duty to go, and go I must and will. Don't be afreed, old lady, the 'squire's ghost will never hurt the squire's best friend!"
So saying, Adam bustled about, procured his lantern and oak stick, and, resisting the entreaties of his anxious spouse, set out on his expedition, leaving Nannette by the hearth, shaking like a leaf, with her face buried in her hands. Up the quiet, grass-grown, village street, Adam Hill's lantern bobbed and glimmered, casting fantastic shadows round about, and giving to his moving legs a shadow resembling a piece of machinery.
The squire's house was situated at the other side of the village, at the extremity of a long, wide lane, between two rows of lofty poplars, which threw the lane into dense obscurity. Even in vivid moonlight - and this night was dark and murky - the lane was of inky darkness, and, as it led to the old house. It was avoided by the simple villagers who regarded it with dread. Perhaps for several years no human foot had trodden the lane after darkness had fallen, and the children feared to frolic in its shades, though its attractions to them were manifold.
But Adam Hill, though superstitious and usually as afraid of the ghostly lane as his neighbors, neither looked to the right or left, as, plunging into its obscurity, he strode toward the old house. His eyes were bent upon the luminous spot made on the ground by his lantern, and he was deeply pondering over the cause of the apparition which had alarmed and amazed him so in the church. He finally became abstracted, and was abruptly brought to his senses by a concussion which caused him to look up.
He had run against the crazy old gate which of yore used to exclude the cows of the villagers from the tasteful grounds, but since the squire's death the premises had gone to decay. The fences rotted and fell in many places, leaving great gaps which afforded the village animals ingress to the luxuriant herbage of the lawn. Like the fences, the gate was crazy, and, with a slight push, Adam passed through it, and strode steadily up the graveled walk toward the house.
As he walked along, he could not fail, even in the deep gloom, to observe the decay and desolation that had fallen over the grounds, and to contrast them with their former elegance. The last time he had set foot on the premises was on the day of the 'squire's burial, when house and surroundings were well-known and attractive; and now, as he looked about on the decadence, old Adam felt sad at heart.
He walked up the graveled path, and soon arrived before the house. The mansion was large and rambling, of two stories, with a piazza on the ground floor extending the whole length of the house, and a corresponding one on the floor. Numerous doors and windows opened out on these open piazzas, and in its former days the house was a pleasant one, facing the south, commanding view of pretty Edgeville nestling among its groves, and of a smiling landscape beyond. The roof was square, like the house, slanting gently up to a graceful cupola, which had a window in each side. In this cupola the 'squire had been wont to sit in the dying day, smoking his pipe and reading his book for 'Squire Lovell had been happy in a refined literary taste. Many a time, in passing by, Adam had seen the 'squire's gray head in the window of the cupola; and now, as the remembrance occurred to him, he mechanically raised his eyes to the place.
What was his alarm - ay, terror - at beholding a white face framed in the window! - the face of the 'squire as he had looked when a boy of twenty. The face was plainly visible, albeit the night was dark and the atmosphere thick, and so distinctly did Adam see it that he shuddered under the dark eyes which were steadfastly regarding him with a look of deep significance.
Perhaps the sexton may have had some lurking doubts whether he indeed saw the face in the church. If he had, they were not dissipated; for in the cupola above him where it had formerly been seen was the Squire's boyish face turned steadfastly toward him.
For a moment old Adam was terrified, notwithstanding his natural fearlessness, and the firm belief that the 'squire's ghost would occasion him no evil; for there is something in the apparition of a dead friend which appalls the stoutest heart. But Adam's terror was only momentary. With a strong effort he collected his senses, and regained his courage, as the face slowly faded, became a nebulous blur in the window, and finally disappeared.
Adam looked steadfastly at the window. He now could only determine its locality by distinguishing the white window-casing through the gloom. One keen look satisfied him that the face had disappeared. Then, grasping his oak stick more firmly, he sprang with youthful agility upon the piazza.
"It is a chain! a chain!" he cried "He appeared to me in the church, and again here. Does that mean for me to follow him here? Of course it does and old Adam Hill will follow 'Squire Lovell in death as he did in life!"
With this declaration, the sexton shifted his cudgel to his left hand, and tried the ponderous front door. Adam himself had securely locked the house after the 'squire had been laid in his grave, and he clearly remembered securing this one with bolt and lock. He was confident that no one had entered the house since that time, for the villagers would rather have risked their lives than venture in the grounds after nightfall, and studiously kept aloof in broad daylight; and no pedestrian travelers wandered to Edgeville, for it was remote from the bustling towns of the world. Nevertheless, to his surprise, the door yielded readily to his arm, and swung back with a dismal creaking, an unusual sound, which caused a scampering of rats and mice throughout the hall and the adjoining rooms.
There is no sound so dismal, so creative of awe, so fraught with dread, as a night wind moaning through a deserted house. But Adam Hill strode sturdily down the hall, striving to repress the indefinable fear that was gradually pervading him. He essayed to whistle; although he could whistle like a flageolet his lips refusal to obey. He was well acquainted with the house, and went directly to the broad staircase at the further end of the hall, for he had determined on ascending to the cupola, where he had first seen the face. His foot was on the lower step, when he halted abruptly, and listened, while icy chills traversed his spine, and crept among the roots of his hair.
Was it the night wind that had caused the unearthly sound at the door? Adam looked, and every particle of color forsook his face.
Standing by the door, distinctly visible in the doorway, was the youthful figure of the 'squire, standing with white face turned toward Adam, who shook like a leaf. One arm was extended, pointing to the floor; and old Adam could not refrain from a startled outcry as he remembered on that very spot the 'squire had been last seen alive.
Adam's courage departed, and, sinking on the stairs, he buried his face in his hands. He was stricken with terror. Down the hall came heavy foot-falls, directly toward him. The apparition was approaching him, but he was unable to move even to fly. Terror had paralyzed him.
The footsteps advanced to his side, and a hand was laid upon his shoulder. Adam screamed.
"Fear not," said a calm voice, whose accents he well recognized. "Have you then quailed so soon? Have courage; No harm befalls the innocent but justice shall overtake the guilty. Cast off your terror, for which you have no cause - and follow me."
The calm voice and evident friendliness of the speaker, if not dissipating Adam's terror, so far reassured him that strength returned to his limbs, and, rising, he mechanically followed the apparition, which stalked up the stairs.
Ere they had reached the landing above, Adam became vaguely aware that the apparition was a strange spectre, for his gait resembled that of a living person, and his footfalls equaled his own in heaviness. To Adam, the idea of a ghost was a draped vapor, in the semblance of a mortal, gliding through the air noiselessly, penetrating walls and passing through doors with the greatest facility, and speechless; whereas the 'squire's spirit had spoken, his footfalls sounded heavily on the stairs, and, on arriving at the landing, he was obviously short of breath.
Without even looking to see whether the sexton was following, the spectre stalked up the long "upper-hall," as it was called, and entered an open door at the further extremity of the 'squire's room, Adam saw by the dim light of his lantern. The room was precisely as it had been left after its occupant's burial.
The furniture was disarranged, and the book he had been reading on the evening before his death lay on the stand by his bedside, in company with his half-smoked pipe, tobacco box, the lamp, and match-safe. His slippers, unmolested by mice, lay on the floor by the bed, his dressing-gown was lying across a chair, and the bed itself - mildewed and thickly covered with dust - was disordered precisely as the neighbors had discovered it when they lifted the 'squire from it to lay him in his shroud. A monstrous rat leaped from under the bed, and ran across the room, passing between him and his ghostly companion. The incident was trial, but it sent Adam's heart throbbing in his throat. A bat flitted about the room, and his knees shook; and his hair fairly rose as a blind banged in a distant window, and the high-wind moaned through the corridors. Then the conviction came overwhelmingly upon him that he would never leave the haunted house alive.
The spectre had been standing by the bedside, gazing steadfastly down upon the bed; but he now stalked toward a closet across the room. As he did so, he looked significantly at Adam, who, divining his meaning, followed him.
The door of the closet was ajar, and, as he observed it. Adam remembered that in the excitement consequent upon the 'squire's, death the closet had not been opened. Extending his arm, the spectre noiselessly opened the door, and motioned Adam to enter.
The sexton obeyed tremblingly, and when he arrived in the door he raised his lantern and looked about the closet. Articles of wearing apparel were hanging about the room, which Adam passed over with a cursory glance; but on the floor were two articles which elicited a cry of surprise and anger from him. One was a peculiar handkerchief of dark material, decked with sickly yellow squares; the other was a vial, whose label bore a death's-head and cross-bone s, and the startling warning, 'Prussic Acid: Deadly Poison!"
"Foul play! I knew it!" screamed Adam, almost dropping his lantern in his excitement. “And, O Heaven! I know the murderer."
The spectre spoke.
"Your coming in this house of dread and ill omen, at dead of night, and in the face of hereditary superstition and simple apprehension, is laudable, and shall be rewarded. It is not strange that you quail. But listen, and know all."
The village clock had struck the hour of twelve before Adam returned to his Nannette, who, terrified by his prolonged stay, was almost frantic. Sobbing for joy, she flung herself into his arms with the ardor of a bride. Although Adam returned her caresses, he did so, mechanically, for his manner was preoccupied.
The worthy old soul, not lacking in the voluble inquisitiveness of feminine old age, harassed Adam with a legion of questions, which he evaded as well as he could without giving offense; but the good dame, piqued at her master's seeming churlishness in refusing to satisfy her curiosity, finally went to bed in a pet, while Adam absently followed her example.
Nannette fidgeted all night, unable to sleep a moment until Adam should reveal the secrets of his expedition. That something strange had happened she well knew by the unusual thoughtfulness of his face, but to her persistent questions he merely returned a shrug of his shoulders.
They were sitting at breakfast, when Adam suddenly struck the table a mighty blow with his fist.
"I never would have dreamed it!" said he, with another blow.
"Dreamed what, Adam?" eagerly inquired Dame Nannette.
"That the moon was made of green cheese!"
Nannette grew red and her eyes sparkled; but, restraining her anger, she essayed one more question.
"Adam, tell me; what did you see last night?"
"The Evil One," replied Adam. Thereupon, Nannette burst into tears and flounced away from the table in high dudgeon.
Adam apparently did not notice his wife's indignation, but ate his breakfast absent-mindedly, rose from the table, got his oak stick, and left the house, leaving poor Nannette bathed in tears, and seething with curiosity.
Adam Hill walked briskly across the village toward Gilbert Ray's residence, with eyes downcast in meditation, and bringing his oak stick down with a thump. The landlord, pursuant to his close disposition, lived hermit-like in a desolate cottage on the opposite side of the village from the mansion-house. Adam soon arrived at the cottage, walked up to the door, and knocked sharply.
"Well come in!" was growled, rather than spoken, by a voice which the sexton recognized as that of Dark Gil. He entered a small, meanly furnished room, cold and cheerless, and saw Dark Gil seated at his desk poring over his rent-roll.
"Well, what do you want, sexton?" demanded Dark Gil sharply, eying Adam savagely. "Want your cottage repaired, I suppose. I generally receive a similar petition every day. Pest! as if they couldn't live in a house as good s their landlord's. They are better than mine," he continued, casting a glance round on the bare floor.
"Which is not saying much," Adam thought.
But he discreetly kept his own counsel, only saying, as he took a chair:
"Since you won't invite me to sit down, Mr. Ray, I'll do so uninvited?"
"What is your business?" again demanded the landlord impatiently. "Be quick, for I'm hurried this morning."
Adam cast a look out of the window. Three men were approaching the house; he turned again to Dark Gil.
"What do you suppose I saw last night?"' he inquired, looking steadfastly at the other.
"Pest! How should I know?" snapped Dark Gil.
"The ghost of 'Squire Lovell!"
"What!" shouted Dark Gil, starting to his feet with an ashy face, and over-turning his chair.
"The ghost of 'Squire Lovell!"
"Ha!"
Dark Gil made no other comment, but glared in fury and terror at Adam, who bore it without flinching.
"Yes," resumed the sexton, casting a second look out of the window, "and facts have come to light which prove that the 'squire met his death by foul play. Murder will out."
" Murder! It Is false!" cried Dark Gil, with white lips. "'Sq-- he died of apoplexy."
"He died of poison!" thundered the sexton. "See, here are the accusers, -- silent, but, oh, how true!"
And he took from his breast the peculiar handkerchief and the vial he had seen in the closet of the 'squire's room. Dark Gil glared at Adam and his face was terrible to see.
'"Where did you get them!" he gasped.
"Where they had been dropped by the murderer. Ha! Hands off! Help!"
Dark Gil had sprung upon Adam to seize the accusing articles. The force of his attempt was so great that the old man was hurled to the floor but three men rushed into the cottage, and throwing themselves on Dark Oil, secured him after a desperate struggle, bound him with stout cords they had evidently brought for that purpose, and laid him upon his bed. Then one young man advanced -- so precisely like the spectre of the previous night that even if Adam had not formed his acquaintance he would instantly have recognized him.
"Villain," he said sternly, "your deed is discovered, and the hand of Fate brought it about. I am the nephew of 'Squire Lovell, returned from foreign lands to avenge murder. Listen, all," he said, addressing his coadjutors and Dark Gil, to whom he related the marvelous occurrences which had led to the detection of 'Squire Lovell's murderer.
Eugene Lovell, having run away from his uncle, betook himself to a seafaring life, and by diligence and ability had attained the captaincy of a New York vessel plying between that port and Liverpool. During his last voyage a mutiny occurred among his crew, which he suppressed, mortally wounding the ringleader, and a desperate man, who, accidentally discovering that Captain Lowell was a nephew to the 'squire, made a startling dying confession. Five years before he had escaped from prison, wherein he had been confined for smuggling. He fled to Edgeville, and the officers were on his track, when Dark Gil, who had reasons of his own for assisting him, harbored him until the officers abandoned the search. Then he demanded a requital, and on the day the 'squire's will was drawn in his favor, he prevailed upon the man, by the guaranty of a large sum, to steal into the 'squire's bedroom at night, stupefy the old man with chloroform, and then take his life by poison.
Brutes can be grateful, and so was the felon. He did the deed but, fearing the gallows, surreptitiously used for administering the chloroform one of Dark Gil's peculiar handkerchiefs, well known throughout the adjacent country, and after the deed was done threw both handkerchief and vial into the closet, in order to divert suspicion from himself. Strange to state, the closet was never opened, and had not the marvelous chain of events led to the detection of the murderer, Dark Gil might have lived and died unsuspected by the simple villagers.
By the time Captain Lowell concluded, Dark Gil was raging, and in a few hours' time was a raving maniac. He was immediately conveyed to the mad-house at the neighboring town of Ware, where he may be seen to this day (for we believe he is yet alive) raging in his cell. He is "dangerous," and his insanity consists of his laboring under the mortal terror of an imaginary enemy, who is constantly attempting to apply to his nostrils a handkerchief saturated with chloroform, in order that he may poison him while in a state of stupefaction. He lives in continual terror, starting up out of his sleep, shrieking, and beating off his implacable foe; and the sight of a bottle or handkerchief will throw him into convulsions.
Captain Lovell succeeded to the property, and liberally rewarded Adam Hill for his zeal. The mansion was entirely repaired and refurnished, the grounds were rejuvenated, and the premises underwent a general and beneficial change. And now, on every anniversary of the 'squire's death, old Adam Hill is the lion of the day, which he spends in relating the story of The 'Squire's Ghost.