“Queer things these big motors are,” he said,
relapsing into generalities as we rose to go. “Often I can scarcely
believe that my new car is merely a machine. It seems to me to possess
an independent life of its own. It is really much more like a
thoroughbred with a wonderfully fine mouth.”
“And the moods of a thoroughbred?” I asked.
“No; it’s got an excellent temper, I’m glad
to say. It doesn’t mind being checked, or even stopped, when it’s
going its best. Some of these big cars can’t stand that. They get
sulky — I assure you it is literally true — if they are checked too
often.”
He paused on his way to ring the bell. “Guy
Elphinstone’s car, for instance,” he said: “it was a bad-tempered
brute, a violent, vicious beast of a car.”
“What make?” I asked.
“Twenty-five horse-power Amédée. They are a
fretful strain of car; too thin, not enough bone — and bone is very
good for the nerves. The brute liked running over a chicken or a rabbit,
though perhaps it was less the car’s ill-temper than Guy’s, poor
chap. Well, he paid for it — he paid to the uttermost farthing. Did
you know him?”
“No; but surely I have heard the name. Ah, yes,
he ran over a child, did he not?”
“Yes,” said Harry, “and then smashed up
against his own park gates.”
“Killed, wasn’t he?”
“Oh, yes, killed instantly, and the car just a
heap of splinters. There’s an old story about it, I’m told, in the
village: rather in your line.”
“Ghosts?” I asked.
“Yes, the ghost of his motor-car. Seems almost
too up-to-date, doesn’t it?”
“And what’s the story?” I demanded.
“Why, just this. His place was outside the
village of Bircham, ten miles out from Norwich; and there’s a long
straight bit of road there— that’s where he ran over the child —
and a couple of hundred yards further on, a rather awkward turn into the
park gates. Well, a month or two ago, soon after the accident, one old
gaffer in the village swore he had seen a motor there coming full tilt
along the road, but without a sound, and it disappeared at the lodge
gates of the park, which were shut. Soon after another said he had heard
a motor whirl by him at the same place, followed by a hideous scream,
but he saw nothing.”
“The scream is rather horrible,” said I.
“Ah, I see what you mean! I only thought of his
syren. Guy had a syren on his exhaust, same as I have. His had a
dreadful frightened sort of wail, and always made me feel creepy.”
“And is that all the story?” I asked: “that
one old man thought he saw a noiseless motor, and another thought he
heard an invisible one?”
Harry flicked the ash off his cigarette into the
grate. “Oh dear no!” he said. “Half a dozen of them have seen
something or heard something. It is quite a heavily authenticated
yarn.”
“Yes, and talked over and edited in the
public-house,” I said.
“Well, not a man of them will go there after
dark. Also the lodge-keeper gave notice a week or two after the
accident. He said he was always hearing a motor stop and hoot outside
the lodge, and he was kept running out at all hours of the night to see
what it was.”
“And what was it?”
“It wasn’t anything. Simply nothing there. He
thought it rather uncanny, anyhow, and threw up a good post. Besides,
his wife was always hearing a child scream, and while her man toddled
out to the gate she would go and see whether the kids were all right.
And the kids themselves—”
“Ah, what of them?” I asked.
“They kept coming to their mother, asking who the
little girl was who walked up and down the road and would not speak to
them or play with them.”
“It’s a many-sided story,” I said. “All the
witnesses seem to have heard and seen different things.”
“Yes, that is just what to my mind makes the yarn
so good,” he said. “Personally I don’t take much stock in spooks
at all. But given that there are such things as spooks, and given that
the death of the child and the death of Guy have caused spooks to play
about there, it seems to me a very good point that different people
should be aware of different phenomena. One hears the car, another sees
it, one hears the child scream, another sees the child. How does that
strike you?”
This, I am bound to say, was a new view to me, and
the more I thought of it the more reasonable it appeared. For the vast
majority of mankind have all those occult senses by which is perceived
the spiritual world (which, I hold, is thick and populous around us),
sealed up, as it were; in other words, the majority of mankind never
hear or see a ghost at all. Is it not, then, very probable that of the
remainder — those, in fact, to whom occult experiences have happened
or can happen — few should have every sense unsealed, but that some
should have the unsealed ear, others the unsealed eye— that some
should be clairaudient, others clairvoyant?
“Yes, it strikes me as reasonable,” I said.
“Can’t you take me over there?”
“Certainly! If you will stop till Friday I’ll
take you over on Thursday. The others all go that day, so that we can
get there after dark.”
I shook my head. “I can’t stop till Friday,
I’m afraid,” I said. “I must leave on Thursday. But how about
to-morrow? Can’t we take it
on the way to or from Hunstanton?”
“No; it’s thirty miles out of our way. Besides,
to be at Bircham after dark means that we shouldn’t get back here till
midnight. And as host to my guests—”
“Ah! things are only heard and seen after dark,
are they?” I asked. “That makes it so much less interesting. It is
like a séance where all lights are put out.”
“Well, the accident happened at night,” he
said. “I don’t know the rules, but that may have some bearing on it,
I should think.”
I had one question more in the back of my mind, but
I did not like to ask it. At
least, I wanted information on this subject without appearing to ask for
it.
“Neither do I know the rules of motors,” I
said; “and I don’t understand you when you say that Guy
Elphinstone’s machine was an irritable, cross-grained brute, that
liked running over chickens and rabbits. But I think you subsequently
said that the irritability may have been the irritability of its owner.
Did he mind being checked?”
“It made him blind-mad if it happened often,”
said Harry.“I shall never
forget a drive I had with him once: there were hay-carts and
perambulators every hundred yards. It was perfectly ghastly; it was like
being with a madman. And when we got inside his gate, his dog came
running out to meet him. He did not go an inch out of
his course: it was worse than that — he went for it, just
grinding his teeth
with rage. I never drove with him again.”
He stopped a moment, guessing what might be in my
mind. “I say, you mustn’t think — you mustn’t think—” he
began.
“No, of course not,” said I.
Harry Combe-Martin’s house stood close to the
weather-eaten, sandy
cliffs of the Suffolk shore, which are being incessantly gnawed
away by the hunger of the insatiable sea. Fathoms deep below it, and now any hundred yards out, lies what was once
the second port in England; but now of the ancient town of Dunwich, and
of its seven great churches, nothing remains but one, and that ruinous
and already half destroyed by the falling cliff and the encroachments
of the sea. Foot by foot, it too is disappearing, and of the
graveyard which surrounded it more than half is gone, so that from the
face of the sandy cliff on which it stands there stick out like straws
in glass, as Dante says, the bones of those who were once committed
there to the kindly and stable earth.
Whether it was the remembrance of this rather grim
spectacle as I had seen it that afternoon, or whether Harry’s story
had caused some trouble in my brain, or whether it was merely that the
keen bracing air of this place, to one who had just come from the sleepy
languor of the Norfolk Broads, kept me sleepless, I do not know; but,
anyhow, the moment I put out my light that night and got into bed, I
felt that all the footlights and gas-jets in the internal theatre of my
mind sprang into flame, and that I was very vividly and alertly awake.
It was in vain that I counted a hundred forwards and a hundred
backwards, that I pictured to myself a flock of visionary sheep coming
singly through a gap in an imaginary hedge, and tried to number their
monotonous and uniform countenances, that I played noughts and crosses
with myself, that I marked out scores of double lawn-tennis courts, —
for with each repetition of these supposedly soporific exercises I only
became more intensely wakeful. It was not in remote hope of sleep that I
continued to repeat these weary performances long after their inefficacy
was proved to the hilt, but because I was strangely unwilling in this
timeless hour of the night to think about those protruding relics of
humanity; also I quite distinctly did not desire to think about that
subject with regard to which I had, a few hours ago, promised Harry that
I would not make it the subject of reflection. For these reasons I
continued during the black hours to practise these narcotic exercises of
the mind, knowing well that if I paused on the tedious treadmill my
thoughts, like some released spring, would fly back to rather gruesome
subjects. I kept my mind, in fact, talking loud to itself, so that it
should not hear what other voices were saying.
Then by degrees these absurd mental occupations
became impossible; my mind simply refused to occupy itself with them
any longer; and next moment I was thinking intently and eagerly, not
about the bones protruding from the gnawed section of sandcliff, but
about the subject I had said I would not dwell upon. And like a flash it
came upon me why Harry had bidden me not think about it. Surely in order
that I should not come to the same conclusion as he had come to.
Now the whole question of “haunt” — haunted
spots, haunted houses, and so forth — has always seemed to me to be
utterly unsolved, and to be neither proved nor disproved to a
satisfactory degree. From the earliest times, certainly from the
earliest known Egyptian records, there has been a belief that the scene
of a crime is often revisited, sometimes by the spirit of him who has
committed it— seeking rest, we must suppose, and finding none;
sometimes, and more inexplicably, by the spirit of his victim, crying
perhaps, like the blood of Abel, for vengeance. And though the stories
of these village gossips in the alehouse about noiseless visions and
invisible noises were all as yet unsifted and unreliable, yet I could
not help wondering if they (such as they were) pointed to something
authentic and to be classed under this head of appearances. But more
striking than the yarns of the gaffers seemed to me the questions of the
lodge-keeper’s children. How should children have imagined the figure
of a child that would not speak to them or play with them? Perhaps it
was a real child, a sulky child. Yes — perhaps. But perhaps not. Then
after this preliminary skirmish I found myself settling down to the
question that I had said I would not think about; in other words, the
possible origin of these phenomena interested me more than the phenomena
themselves. For what exactly had Guy Elphinstone, that savage driver,
done? Had or had not the death of the child been entirely an accident, a
thing (given he drove a motor at all) outside his own control? Or had
he, irritated beyond endurance at the checks and delays of the day, not
pulled up when it was just possible he might have, but had run over the
child as he would have run over a rabbit or a hen, or even his own dog?
And what, in any case, poor wretched brute, must have been his thoughts
in that terrible instant that intervened between the child’s death and
his own, when a moment later he smashed into the closed gates of his own
lodge? Was remorse his — bitter, despairing contrition? That could
hardly have been so; or else surely, knowing only for certain that he
had knocked a child down, he would have stopped; he would have done his
best, whatever that might be, to repair the irreparable harm. But he had
not stopped: he had gone on, it seemed, at full speed, for on the
collision the car had been smashed into matchwood and steel shavings.
Again, with double force, had this dreadful thing been a complete
accident, he would have stopped. So then — most terrible question of
all — had he, after making murder, rushed on to what proved to be his
own death, filled with some hellish glee at what he had done? Indeed, as
in the church-yard on the cliff, bones of the buried stuck starkly out
into the night.
The pale tired light of earliest morning had turned
the window-blinds into glimmering squares before I slept; and when I
woke, the servant who called me was already rattling them briskly up on
their rollers, and letting the calm serenity of the August day stream
into the room. Through the open windows poured in sunlight and sea-wind,
the scent of flowers and the song of birds; and each and all were
wonderfully reassuring, banishing the hooded forms that had haunted the
night, and I thought of the disquietude of the dark hours as a traveller
may think of the billows and tempests of the ocean over which he has
safely journeyed, unable, now that they belong to the limbo of the past,
to recall his qualms and tossings with any vivid uneasiness. Not without
a feeling of relief, too, did I dwell on the knowledge that I was
definitely not going to visit this equivocal spot. Our drive to-day, as
Harry had said, would not take us within thirty miles of it, and
to-morrow I but went to the station and away. Though a thorough-paced
seeker after truth might, no doubt, have regretted that the laws of time
and space did not permit him to visit Bircham after the sinister dark
had fallen, and test whether for him there was visible or audible truth
in the tales of the village gossips, I was conscious of no such regret.
Bircham and its fables had given me a very bad night, and I was
perfectly aware that I did not in the least want to go near it, though
yesterday I had quite truthfully said I should like to do so. In this
brightness, too, of sun and seawind I felt none of the malaise
at my waking moments which a sleepless night usually gives me; I
felt particularly well, particularly pleased to be alive, and also, as I
have said, particularly content not to be going to Bircham. I was quite
satisfied to leave my curiosity unsatisfied.
The motor came round about eleven, and we started
at once, Harry and Mrs. Morrison, a cousin of his, sitting behind in the
big back seat, large enough to hold a comfortable three, and I on the
left of the driver, in a sort of trance — I am not ashamed to confess
it —of expectancy and delight. For this was in the early days of
motors, when there was still the sense of romance and adventure round
them. I did not want to drive, any more than Harry wanted to; for
driving, so I hold, is too absorbing; it takes the attention in too firm
a grip: the mania of the true motorist is not consciously enjoyed. For
the passion for motors is a taste — I had almost said a gift — as
distinct and as keenly individual as the passion for music or
mathematics. Those who use motors most (merely as a means of getting
rapidly from one place to another) are often entirely without it, while
those whom adverse circumstances (over which they have no control)
compel to use them least may have it to a supreme degree. To those who
have it, analysis of their passion is perhaps superfluous; to those who
have it not, explanation is almost unintelligible. Pace, however, and
the control of pace, and above all the sensuous consciousness of pace,
is at the root of it; and pleasure in pace is common to most people,
whether it be in the form of a galloping horse, or the pace of the skate
hissing over smooth ice, or the pace of a free-wheel bicycle humming
down-hill, or, more impersonally, the pace of the smashed ball at
lawn-tennis, the driven ball at golf, or the low boundary hit at
cricket. But the sensuous consciousness of pace, as I have said, is
needful: one might experience it seated in front of the engine of an
express train, though not in a wadded, shut-windowed carriage, where the
wind of movement is not felt. Then add to this rapture of the rush
through riven air the knowledge that huge relentless force is controlled
by a little lever, and directed by a little wheel on which the hands of
the driver seem to lie so negligently. A great untamed devil has there
his bridle, and he answers to it, as Harry had said, like a horse with a
fine mouth. He has hunger and thirst, too, unslakeable, and greedily he
laps of his soup of petrol which turns to fire in his mouth;
electricity, the force that rends clouds asunder, and causes towers to
totter, is the spoon with which he feeds himself; and as he eats he
races onward, and the road opens like torn linen in front of him. Yet
how obedient, how amenable is he! — for with a touch on his snaffle
his speed is redoubled, or melts into thin air, so that before you know
you have touched the rein he has exchanged his swallow-flight for a mere
saunter through the lanes. But he ever loves to run; and knowing this,
you will bid him lift up his voice and tell those who are in his path
that he is coming, so that he will not need the touch that checks.
Hoarse and jovial is his voice, hooting to the wayfarer; and if his
hooting be not heard he has a great guttural falsetto scream that leaps
from octave to octave, and echoes from the hedges that are passing in
blurred lines of hanging green. And, as you go, the romantic isolation
of divers in deep seas is yours; masked and hooded companions may be
near you also, in their driving-dress for this plunge through the swift
tides of air; but you, like them, are alone and isolated, conscious only
of the ripped riband of road, the two great lantern-eyes of the
wonderful monster that look through drooped eyelids by day, but gleam
with fire by night, the two ear-laps of splash-boards, and the long lean
bonnet in front which is the skull and brain-case of that swift,
untiring energy that feeds on fire, and whirls its two tons of weight up
hill and down dale, as if some new law as ever-lasting as gravity, and
like gravity making it go ever swifter, was its sole control.
For the first hour the essence of these joys, any
description of which compared to the real thing is but as a stagnant
pond compared to the bright rushing of a mountain stream, was mine. A
straight switchback road lay in front of us, and the monster plunged
silently down hill, and said below his breath, “Ha-ha — ha-ha —
ha-ha,” as, without diminution of speed, he breasted the opposing
slope. In my control were his great vocal chords (for in those days
hooter and syren were on the driver’s left, and lay convenient to the
hand of him who occupied the box-seat), and it rejoiced me to let him
hoot o a pony-cart, three hundred yards ahead, with a hand on his
falsetto scream if his ordinary tones of conversation were unheard or
disregarded. Then came a road crossing ours at right angles, and the
dear monster seemed to say, “Yes, yes, — see how obedient and
careful I am. I stroll with my hands in my pockets.” Then again a
puppy from a farmhouse staggered warlike into the road, and the monster
said, “Poor little chap! get home to your mother, or I’ll talk to
you in earnest.” The poor little chap did not take the hint, so the
monster slackened speed and just said “Whoof!” Then it chuckled to
itself as the puppy scuttled into the hedge, seriously alarmed; and next
moment our self-made wind screeched and whistled round us again.
Napoleon, I believe, said that the power of an army
lay in its feet: that is true also of the monster. There was a loud
bang, and in thirty seconds we were at a standstill. The monster’s off
fore-foot troubled it, and the chauffeur said, “Yes, sir — burst.”
So the burst boot was taken off and a new one put
on, a boot that had never been on foot before. The foot in question was
held up on a jack during this operation, and the new boot laced up with
a pump. This took exactly twenty-five minutes. Then the monster got his
spoon going again, and said, “Let me run: oh, let me run!”
And for fifteen miles on a straight and empty road
it ran. I timed the miles, but shall not produce their chronology for
the benefit of a forsworn constabulary.
But there were no more dithyrambics that morning.
We should have reached Hunstanton in time for lunch. Instead, we waited
to repair our fourth puncture at 1.45 p.m., twenty-five miles short of
our destination. This fourth puncture was caused by a spicule of flint
three-quarters of an inch long — sharp, it is true, but weighing
perhaps two pennyweights, while we weighed two tons. It seemed an
impertinence. So we lunched at a wayside inn, and during lunch the
pundits held a consultation, of which the upshot was this:
We had no more boots for our monster, for his off
fore-foot had burst once, and punctured once (thus necessitating two
socks and one boot). Similarly, but more so, his off hind-foot had burst
twice (thus necessitating two boots and two socks). Now, there was no
certain shoemaker’s shop at Hunstanton, as far as we knew, but there
was a regular universal store at King’s Lynn, which was about
equidistant.
And, so said the chauffeur, there was something
wrong with the monster’s spoon (ignition), and he didn’t rightly
know what, and therefore it seemed the prudent part not to go to
Hunstanton (lunch, a thing of the preterite, having been the object),
but to the well-supplied King’s Lynn. And we all breathed a pious hope
that we might get there.
Whizz: hoot: purr! The last boot held, the spoon
went busily to the monster’s mouth, and we just flowed into King’s
Lynn. The return journey, so I vaguely gathered, would be made by other
roads; but personally, intoxicated with air and movement, I neither
asked nor desired to know what those roads would be. This one small but
rather salient fact is necessary to record here, that as we waited at
King’s Lynn, and as we buzzed homewards afterwards, no thought of
Bircham entered my head at all. The subsequent hallucination, if
hallucination it was, was not, as far as I know, self-suggested. That we
had gone out of our way for the sake of the garage, I knew, and that was
all. Harry also told me that he did not know where our road would take
us.
The rest that follows is the baldest possible
narrative of what actually occurred. But it seems to me, a humble
student of the occult, to be curious.
While we waited we had tea in an hotel looking on
to a big empty square of houses, and after tea we waited a very long
time for our monster to pick us up. Then the telephone from the garage
inquired for “the gentleman on the motor,” and since Harry had
strolled out to get a local evening paper with news of the last Test
Match, I applied ear and mouth to that elusive instrument. What I heard
was not encouraging: the ignition had gone very wrong indeed, and
“perhaps” in an hour we should be able to start. It was then about
half-past six, and we were just seventy-eight miles from Dunwich.
Harry came back soon after this, and I told him
what the message from the garage had been. What he said was this:
“Then we shan’t get back till long after dinner. We might just as
well have camped out to see your ghost.”
As I have already said, no notion of Bircham was in
my mind, and I mention this as evidence that, even if it had been,
Harry’s remark would have implied that we were not going through
Bircham.
The hour lengthened itself into an hour and a half.
Then the monster, quite well again, came hooting round the corner, and
we got in.
“Whack her up, Jack,” said Harry to the
chauffeur. “The roads will be empty. You had better light up at
once.”
The monster, with its eyes agleam, was whacked up,
and never in my life have I been carried so cautiously and yet so
swiftly. Jack never took a risk or the possibility of a risk, but when
the road was clear and open he let the monster run just as fast as it
was able. Its eyes made day of the road fifty yards ahead, and the
romance of night was fairyland round us. Hares started from the
roadside, and raced in front of us for a hundred yards, then just
wheeled in time to avoid the ear-flaps of the great triumphant brute
that carried us. Moths flitted across, struck sometimes by the lenses of
its eyes, and the miles peeled over our shoulders. When it occurred we
were going top-speed. And this was It — quite unsensational, but to us
quite inexplicable unless my midnight imaginings happened to be true.
As I have said, I was in command of the hooter and
of the syren. We were flying along on a straight down-grade, as fast as
ever we could go, for the engines were working, though the decline was
considerable. Then quite suddenly I saw in front of us a thick cloud of
dust, and knew instinctively and on the instant, without thought or
reasoning, what that must mean. Evidently something going very fast (or
else so large a cloud could not have been raised) was in front of us,
and going in the same direction as ourselves. Had it been something on
the road coming to meet us, we should of course have seen the vehicle
first and run into the dust-cloud afterwards. Had it, again, been
something of low speed — a horse and dog-cart, for instance — no
such dust could have been raised. But, as it was, I knew at once that
there was a motor travelling swiftly just ahead of us, also that it was
not going as fast as we were, or we should have run into its dust much
more gradually. But we went into it as into a suddenly lowered curtain.
Then I shouted to Jack. “Slow down, and put on
the brake,” I shrieked. “There’s something just ahead of us.”
As I spoke I wrought a wild concerto on the hooter,
and with my right hand groped for the syren, but did not find it.
Simultaneously I heard a wild, frightened shriek, just as if I had
sounded the syren myself. Jack had felt for it too, and our hands
fingered each other. Then we entered the dust-cloud.
We slowed down with extraordinary rapidity, and
still peering ahead we went dead-slow through it. I had not put on my
goggles after leaving King’s Lynn, and the dust stung and smarted in
my eyes. It was not, therefore, a belt of fog, but real road-dust. And
at the moment we crept through it I felt Harry’s hands on my shoulder.
“There’s something just ahead,” he said.
“Look! don’t you see the tail light?”
As a matter of fact, I did not; and, still going
very slow, we came out of that dust-cloud. The broad empty road
stretched in front of us; a hedge was on each side, and there was no
turning either to right or left. Only, on the right, was a lodge, and
gates which were closed. The lodge had no lights in any window.
Then we came to a standstill; the air was
dead-calm, not a leaf in the hedgerow trees was moving, not a grain of
dust was lifted from the road. But behind, the dust-cloud still hung in
the air, and stopped dead-short at the closed lodge-gates. We had moved
very slowly for the last hundred yards: it was difficult to suppose that
it was of our making. Then Jack spoke, with a curious crack in his
voice.
“It must have been a motor, sir,” he said.
“But where is it?”
I had no reply to this, and from behind another
voice, Harry’s voice, spoke. For the moment I did not recognise it,
for it was strained and faltering.
“Did you open the syren?” he asked. “It
didn’t sound like our syren. It sounded like, like—”
“I didn’t open the syren,” said I.
Then we went on again. Soon we came to scattered
lights in houses by the wayside.
“What’s this place?” I asked Jack.
“Bircham, sir,” said he.
