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A
GHOST STORY FOR CHRISTMAS
![]() (by Ely OnLine correspondant Alistair Kitching) An Ely Christmas Ghost Story - Day 1 - 21st December |
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Arthur did not appear at Ely railway station to meet me and, not knowing the town, or being able to hail a cab at such a late hour (it was almost 10), I was forced to work my way as intuitively as I could toward the top of the hill. Those same writers who have chipped away so heartlessly at my friend's reputation in recent years, following the re-investigation of the case, would've chuckled to see me blunder through the miasma of fog and snow on such a circuitous and meandering path. This lengthy preamble to my arrival, however, was as nothing to the bizarre events which followed during the next few days and it is only in order to set the account straight that I know lay it down before you. I understand that the great lantern tower of the Cathedral has now been illuminated and is a charming beacon for the flat fenlands that surround the Isle. In those days, the evening of the nineteenth century, no such assistance from on high was available and I only had the memory of the cathedral's bulk, glimpsed briefly and dimly from the train, to orientate me. Arthur, who had just been made a House master at the boy's school, had told me that his quarters were situated close to the great church and with this in mind I ploughed eagerly if erratically on. After half an hour's fruitless endeavour along narrow terraced streets and up a small hill, I noticed an inn through the murky swirl, signposted "The Windmill". I stepped in and stamped my feet noisily on the doormat, dislodging a spray of snow across the hallway. I looked up to see a dozen sets of eyes in the small public bar assessing me. I smiled and gradually the customers returned to their drinks. Approaching the man behind the bar, I asked for a whiskey to scare off the cold. He was a big, red-faced chap, with a nose beginning to show the signs of too much port and a belly beginning to show the signs of not enough exercise. "Apologies
sir," I said. "I didn't quite expect to make such a dramatic entrance." "I'm lost," I continued. "I arrived in Ely just half an hour ago and this blessed fog and snow has confused me terribly. I'm after the King's School. Do you think you could set me right?" The man seemed to take an age and then without taking his eyes off me shouted "Seth!" over his shoulder. A young lad, no more than fourteen, appeared behind him, looking at me as uncertainly as the barman had done. For a moment a very uncomfortable silence fell across our group, until I stammered, once again, "I'm after the King's School?" The boy walked around the bar and out to the front door. He pointed across the road. "See that lane there? Head down there. Left, then right. At the green cross the road and walk left. The school's through the big ol' gateway." And, as tersely as he offered his help he withdrew it, retreating back into the pub and letting the door bang loudly behind him. It was an inauspicious start to my time in Ely, but more importantly it meant I was becoming increasingly late at the school. Arthur would begin to believe I was not turning up. I headed down the road the boy had directed and pretty soon had walked out onto the green he had described. I noted with some shame that I recognised it, and must've passed this way earlier. I crossed the road as instructed and walking to the left soon found the enormous stone gateway the lad had predicted. Beyond it's arch faint yellow lamps indicated a sign of welcome life. I stepped into the alcove and started as a figure almost bumped into me. Like me he had his head bowed to the elements. I apologised for almost colliding with him, but as I turned I could only see his back vanish around the corner I had just traversed. For some reason which I cannot explain I experienced a momentary urge to pursue him, but it was a thought that disappeared as soon as it was conceived. I was cold, hungry and late. What I really needed was a warm fire, food and wine and the generous company of my old college friend. The entrance to the school building, a long venerable looking structure to my right was obvious, a huge wooden door with a large diamond-shaped gas lamp suspended above it. The cathedral must therefore be ... I turned to my left and saw it, or rather sensed it, for visibility was, as I have said, appalling. In the gloom, the huge bulk sat there, just darker than the night that surrounded it, an unknowable mass that would have to wait for the morning. I entered through the school door and, once again, stamped the snow off my boots. This time no sets of eyes looked up to see me. I was on my own in a great entrance hall. Beyond, candles lit several doorways off to the left and right. It was completely still and silent. I took a step forward and listened again. Nothing. Of course, it was just four days before Christmas, and so I did not expect to see too many boys running around, but someone, surely, would be at hand. The first doorway loomed up on my left and I stepped carefully towards it. I knocked and moved my hand to the handle, turning it gently. "Hello?" He was staring fixedly into the remains of the fire. As the last chimes ofmidnight faded, he began to speak. "I have been happy here, please don't imagine that these are the wildfancies of a disillusioned man. Far from it. This place has alreadysurpassed our college days in my mind. I am richly rewarded here, the lifeof a young schoolmaster may not be particularly pecunious, quite thecontrary, but there are other ledgers against which one must make account. The other teachers, one or two exceptions aside, are very friendly, the boysare easy to tutor and the town is a delight. My five years here have reallybeen very contented ones. "Three weeks ago, however, at the start of December, things began to change.We have, had I should say, an old caretaker here, Phillipson. He'd been heresince the Ark, he was that old. Well, all summer it was obvious that he wasbeginning to struggle with his duties and when the leaves began to pile upin the courtyard during October it became obvious that things were reachinga desperate pass. The Headmaster, Dr Carr, has been here many years and wellunderstood the worth that Phillipson brought to this place, but he needed tobalance the needs of the school also and so, rather than offer the oldgentleman a retirement package, he decided to take on an understudy." "Very clever," I said. "The logic being that would infact emphasise just howmuch work needed to be done and therefore put Phillipson's retirementdecision within his own grasp?" "Just so. Carr wished Phillipson to call a conclusion to things himself. Hehoped that Christie's appointment might exacerbate matters." "Christie is the caretaker's understudy?" "Yes. About our age. Tall, rangy chap. We may see him mooching abouttomorrow. At first he was excellent, very helpful, very eager. We thoughtwe'd really solved the problem with something to spare. But after thatfirst week, things began to change. One or two people noticed thatChristie and Phillipson were conversing rather bitterly and that the oldman looked more and more troubled by the exchanges. After two weeksPhillipson handed his notice in. He looked awful and, so the Head told me,not a little heartbroken. Three days ago he collapsed in the street, justfive hundred yards from here, and was dead within minutes. The funeral wastoday, round the corner in St Mary's. I spoke to his daughter, she wasdevastated. Since then, the atmosphere around the school has been very heavy. There arejust a few boys staying over the holiday period but it has been enough tohang a dark cloak of sadness across the place." "And Christie?" "Well, this is the thing. In uncharitable moments I have given myself overto thinking that he would be secretly pleased about the affair, but it is asif he had lost his own father. I have never seen a man so distraught. Thismorning he came to see me and sat in the very chair your in now. I wasamazed as I have barely spoken two sentences to the man since he started,but I am led to believe that he does not come from Ely originally and seemsa fairly lonely figure, yet why he decided to confide in me I'm afraid idon't know. He made no sense, his eyes were wild and he was sweatingprofusely. After much coercing he started to talk and when he did, why Icouldn't stop him! "He told me how upset he was about Phillipson's death and how terribly sadit was that they had parted on bad terms. Then his mood became even moreconspiratorial and he whispered that he had seen the old man, just lastnight, two days after he had been put into the ground!" I gasped, despite myself. "Where? Where did he see him?" "Outside here, the road that leads up to the Cathedral, it is called the'Gallery'. Christie had finished his duties and was walking back home atabout eleven. He says the night constable had just passed him and told himthe time. He lives along the Lynn Road and so would be heading out to thenorth. In front of him a figure approached and he realised as it veeredunerringly towards him that it was Phillipson. He was dumbstruck, frozen tothe spot. He told me he couldn't remember anything after that, but must'vefainted. The night constable found him on his return patrol, presumably atmidnight, and escorted him home." "You don't believe him, Arthur? Surely not? The man is obviously feelingguilty about Phillipson's death. I imagine he has dreamt this whole scenarioup as some form of comfort for those who might miss the caretaker." I stokedthe fire a little, showering hot embers up the chimney. "No, George," said my friend. "Ordinarily I would agree with you. But hestruck me as a man telling the truth. In fact, he was fiercely persuasive. Isent a boy to the constable's office who returned my message in theaffirmative, confirming that Christie had been found in a state of distress. Then, well, then I had verification." "What can you mean?" Arthur looked me in the eye. His voice dropped. "There are three boys hereover the holidays. This evening, I can't quite believe it, but this eveningone of them stopped me in the corridor and asked why Mr Phillipson wasstanding at the school gates."Day 2 (part ii) 22nd December I slept badly. Arthur's story, unbelievable as it was, filtered in and out of my dreams and during the moments when I was awake I could think of nothing else. Consequently,
I rose much later than I had intended and, once dressed, discovered that
Arthur had already left, I assumed for school business. He had told me
that there were still boys in residence and they must therefore require
some level of supervision. If, I deduced, the majority of the masters
had family commitments then it would be logical that the burden of responsibility
for the boarders would fall with my host. And so, with little to do before
his return, I busied myself with assessing my orientation within the school.
Arthur's rooms looked out on two fronts. One, to the road which he had,
if I remembered correctly, called 'The Gallery', beyond which lay a set
of old buildings that I imagined were also part of the school. Adjacent
to this lay the small green I had crossed the previous evening. The fog
had lifted and the snow, which looked fairly thick, gave the scene a tranquil
unruffled air. Through the other set of windows sat the massive south-facing
side of the cathedral. I had seen sketches before but I was unprepared
for the beauty of it. The great lantern tower, unique in all these isles
was a wonder to behold. I wished very much to leave this room and immerse
myself in it, put I had no key and not knowing when Arthur would return
dare not leave. I contented myself with organising a modest breakfast
and sitting in the window seat ready for my companion's return. I stepped out of Arthur's
quarters into a nightmare. I
stopped running. My breath came in great gasps and my heart pounded, I
told myself, with the exercise. But I knew it was more than that. I tried
to listen, for it was the only sense I could trust in the dark. |