
PseudoPod 902: The Ghost and Half-Past Two
The Ghost
by Catherine Wells
She was a girl of fourteen, and she sat propped up with pillows in an old four-poster bed, coughing a little with the feverish cold that kept her there. She was tired of reading by lamplight, and she lay and listened to the few sounds that she could hear, and looked into the fire. From downstairs, down the wide, rather dark, oak-panelled corridor hung with brown ochre pictures of tremendous naval engagements exploding fierily in their centres, down the broad stone stairs that ended in a heavy, creaking, nail-studded door, there blew in to her remoteness sometimes a gust of dance music. Cousins and cousins and cousins were down there, and Uncle Timothy, as host, leading the fun. Several of them had danced into her room during the day, and said that her illness was a ‘perfect shame,’ told her that the skating in the park was ‘too heavenly,’ and danced out again. Uncle Timothy had been as kind as kind could be. But — downstairs all the full cup of happiness the lonely child had looked forward to so eagerly for a month, was running away like liquid gold. (Continue Reading…)