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Ghosts (standard:Ghost stories, 2363 words) | |||
Author: Ian Hobson | Added: Jul 25 2004 | Views/Reads: 4064/2644 | Story vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
'Behave myself?' exclaimed Bosworth, indignantly. 'I'm a ghost! I'm supposed to get up to mischief.' | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story 'Jolly good,' said the male guest. 'Oh, Gerald!' exclaimed Maureen, his wife of only six hours and thirteen minutes. 'You didn't tell me we'd be in the Honeymoon Suite.' She made to follow the porter but was stopped by her husband. 'Hold on here a moment, Darling.' Gerald wrapped an arm around his bride's waist, took a coin from his pocket, and handed it to Arthur as he came back out of the room. 'Oh, thank you, sir. If you need anything, just ask. I'm afraid the central heating is on the blink at the moment, so if you want a fire, just let me know... Oh, there's one other thing, err... Oh, it's nothing, sir... madam. I hope you enjoy your stay.' Arthur gave the couple his best smile and walked off along the corridor. 'What are we holding on for, Gerald?' asked Maureen. 'This!' Gerald stooped and, sweeping Maureen off her feet, he carried her into the room. 'Oh, Gerald, you are romantic.' Maureen wrapped her arms around Gerald's neck, closed her eyes, and gave him a long and lingering kiss, before screaming with laughter as he dropped her onto the bed and jumped on top of her. 'Gerald darling, I think you better close the door first.' She managed to say between giggles. 'Oh, Gerald! Look, it's a four-poster bed! Oh.... Oh, Gerald... I think it's a five-poster... You better get that door closed before somebody comes... Oh, Gerald!' *** 'Do you ever miss eating, Bell?' Bella and Bosworth were up on the roof of the west wing, each leaning between a gap in the mock battlement wall, and watching the sunset. 'No, not really. Why?' 'Well I do. Sometimes.' Bosworth leaned out and watched as an elderly couple in evening dress strolled, arm in arm, around the building. 'Before we died, I didn't know that ghosts never got to eat anything... I think I miss your Yorkshire puddings the most.' 'Do you, Love?' 'Aye... and tripe. I miss tripe and onions. And bread and dripping. And a pint of best bitter. And...' 'Oh, shut up. There's no point going on about what you can't have anymore. We're lucky to be here. Just imagine having to haunt a dungeon or something. At least we have this beautiful hotel to roam around in, and this lovely view from the roof.' 'Lucky to be here? Bosworth stepped back from the wall and stared at Bella's ample backside. 'But we're bloody dead, Bell!' 'Mind your language!' Bella scolded, as she turned to face her companion. 'And whose fault is it we're dead anyway?' 'Oh, don't start that again.' Bosworth turned back to his gap in the wall and watched as the sun dipped below the horizon. 'The fire wasn't my fault.' 'It was your pipe that started it... That and the rum that sent you off to sleep... Oh... look at the red sky. It should be a nice day tomorrow.' 'You had some rum, as well. An, anyway, I reckon it were a log rolled out of the hearth, what started the fire. An if I hadn't pulled you out of bed and jumped out of the window with you, we'd have been burned alive.' 'Instead of falling thirty feet and being dashed all over the paving, you mean?' 'Well at least it was quick.' Bosworth sprang up onto the top of the battlements and began to do an imaginary high-wire act, tilting left and right and windmilling his arms as though he was in danger of falling. 'We should never have been in that room in the first place,' said Bella, looking up at her clowning companion. 'We were supposed to be caretakers, not guests.' 'Well... we had to make the best of things. There was a war on. We could have been bombed by the Luftwaffe at any moment... If I'd have been ten years younger, I'd have been getting ready to go over to France again, to do my bit.' Bosworth shouldered an imaginary riffle and began to march up and down the wall, ignoring the gaps. 'Yes, I can imagine what bits you'd have been doing.' 'Bella darling, whatever do you mean?' Bosworth stopped marching and resumed his high-wire act. 'Don't darling me, you old lech.' Bella clicked her fingers and disappeared. 'Hey, wait for me!' Bosworth stopped his circus act and stood clicking his fingers. 'How does she do that?' *** 'It's a long way to that bathroom.' Gerald closed the bedroom door and slipped off his dressing gown, then crossed the room and switched off his bedside lamp, before climbing back into bed with Maureen. 'And it's dammed cold out there.' 'I know, and it's cold in here too. Perhaps we should have asked for the fire to be lit. I wish I'd brought my thicker nightie.' Maureen snuggled closer to her new husband. 'I think this nightie's thick enough, Darling.' 'Hey, your hands are cold!' 'Sorry, Darling. But you do have nice hand-warmers.' 'Oh, Gerald, you are a one... Oh, Gerald! Your feet are freezing! Where have you had them?' 'Sorry, Darling; I forgot to bring my slippers.' 'What time is it?' Maureen yawned and rotated in Gerald's arms. 'I don't know. About one o'clock, I think.' Gerald nestled closer to his bride and held her tight. 'We're just like two spoons, aren't we Gerald?' 'Spoons?' 'Like two spoons in the cutlery tray... snuggled together.' 'Oh... I see what you mean.' Gerald yawned. Maureen yawned again. 'That was a lovely dinner we had, and you looked so smart in your dinner jacket.' 'And you looked absolutely beautiful, Darling.' Gerald yawned again, and relaxed his hold on Maureen. 'Oh, thank you, Darling.' There was a pause before Maureen spoke again. 'Gerald?' 'Umm?' Gerald was beginning to drift off to sleep. Maureen was close to sleep too, but managed to whisper, 'Do you love me, Gerald?' 'Oh, yes, Darling,' came the whispered reply. 'How much do you love me?' 'As much as all the tea in China, and as much as all the spiders in this bed.' 'Spiders?' Maureen was almost asleep, but not quite. 'Yes, spiders... There are lots of spiders.' 'Oh, Gerald, stop it; that tickles. And stop pretending to snore... Gerald!' 'What?' Gerald woke up with a start. 'Did you say something?' 'I said, stop tickling my leg, Gerald. It's time we got some sleep.' 'I wasn't tickling your leg, Darling. But you're right; it is time we got some sleep.' Gerald rolled over and fluffed his pillow and yawned again. 'Goodnight, Darling.' 'Night-night, Gerald,' replied Maureen. 'Night-night, spiders,' whispered Bosworth, as he tickled Maureen's leg again. Maureen screamed and sat up in bed. 'What was that?' 'What?' exclaimed Gerald. 'Something was crawling up my leg.' 'You must have imagined it.' 'I didn't. And why do you keep talking about spiders?' 'Spiders? I wasn't talking about spiders. That was you.' Gerald reached towards the bedside light and switched it on, but as soon as he did so, the bulb went out with a ping; but not before he'd caught a glimpse of an old woman in a nightgown, standing near the door. 'Bloody hell!' 'What's the matter, Gerald?' 'There's somebody in the room! Who's there? Put your lamp on, Maureen.' Maureen reached for the lamp at her side of the bed and switched it on, and the two of them looked around the room, but there was no one there. 'It must have been my dressing gown.' Gerald sounded relieved. His dressing gown was hanging on a hook on the back of the door. 'I could have sworn it was a woman though. In a white nightie.' Maureen lifted the sheet and blanket at her side of the bed and shivered as she looked underneath. 'And I could have sworn that something was crawling up my leg. It was just you tickling me, wasn't it, Gerald?' 'No, you must have imagined it. It's been a long day. We must both be imagining things. Turn your light out and we'll get some sleep.' Maureen turned off the lamp and the two of them snuggled together again. 'Night-night,' whispered Maureen. 'Night-night, Darling,' whispered Gerald. 'Mind the bugs don't bite,' whispered Bosworth, as he slid down from the top of the four-poster bed, ready for the grand finale. 'Don't be silly, Gerald.' 'What do you mean, don't be silly?' Gerald rolled over in bed, turning his back to Maureen and beginning to get a little annoyed. 'Trying to frighten me again.' Maureen turned her back to Gerald and pulled the sheet and blankets up to her chin. 'I wish they'd get the heating fixed. It's freezing in here. And you feel like ice.' 'So do you,' replied Gerald. 'Gerald?' 'Now what, Maureen?' Now Gerald really was getting annoyed. 'What's that noise, and that light, over there?' 'What noise? What light?' 'That crackling noise. It's coming from over there. Where the fireplace is.' Gerald could hear the noise too, and it was getting louder. And he could see a flickering light reflected on the bedroom wall. He lifted his head and looked over towards the fireplace. The fire was lit, and there was an old man, asleep in the chair beside the fire, with a pipe in one hand and a bottle in the other. 'Bloody hell! There is someone in the room!' Gerald turned to look at Maureen, just as she was turning to look at him. 'Arrggghh!' They both screamed and sprang out of bed as they saw, in the firelight, the ghostly figure of an old woman, lying between them. Gerald sprang so high he banged his head on the crossbeam of the four-poster bed, almost knocking himself unconscious, whilst Maureen simply fainted. 'Darling!' exclaimed Gerald, as, ignoring the intruders, he staggered around the bed to where Maureen lay on the floor. As he bent over her, there was a sound from near the fireplace, as something fell and smashed, and then suddenly the whole of that side of the room was in flames. Gerald lifted his bride and backed into the corner of the room, feeling the heat from the fire and smelling the smoke. And he watched in horror as the old man leapt out of the flames, ran over to the bed, took the old woman in his arms and carried her over to the closed window and, inexplicably, jumped straight through it. Then suddenly the room was in darkness. There was no fire. No crackling flames. No smell of smoke. Just a knock on the door. 'Is everything alright, Sir?' It was Arthur, the porter. 'I though I heard a scream.' *** 'Oh dear,' said Bella, as she and Bosworth looked out of the window. Below them, Gerald and Maureen had just climbed into a taxi. 'There goes another honeymoon couple... I don't really like this haunting business; it seems very unkind.' 'Well,' said Bosworth. 'At least we can have our room back.' Tweet
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