COMPLEX HAUNTINGS AND OCCULT BESTIALITIES
What are occult bestialities?
Are they the spirits of human beings who, when inhabiting
material bodies, led thoroughly criminal lives; are
they the phantasms of dead beasts-cats
and dogs, etc.; or are they things that were
never carnate? I think they may be either one
or the other-that any one of these alternatives
is admissible. There is a house, for example,
in a London square, haunted by the apparition of a
nude woman with long, yellow, curly hair and a pig’s
face. There is no mistaking the resemblance-eyes,
snout, mouth, jaw, jowls, all are piggish, and the
appearance of the thing is hideously suggestive of
all that is bestial. What, then, is it?
From the fact that in all probability a very sensuous,
animal-minded woman once lived in the house, I am
led to suppose that this may be her phantasm-or-one
only of her many phantasms. And in this latter
supposition lies much food for reflection. The
physical brain, as we know, consists of multitudinous
cells which we may reasonably take to be the homes
of our respective faculties. Now, as each material
cell has its representative immaterial inhabitant,
so each immaterial inhabitant has its representative
phantasm. Thus each representative phantasm, on
the dissolution of the material brain, would be either
earth-bound or promoted to the higher spiritual plane.
Hence, one human being may be represented by a score
of phantasms, and it is quite possible for a house
to be haunted by many totally different phenomena
of the same person. I know, for instance, of
a house being subjected to the hauntings of a dog,
a sensual-looking priest, the bloated shape of an
indescribable something, and a ferocious-visaged sailor.
It had had, prior to my investigation, only one tenant,
a notorious rake and glutton; no priest or sailor had
ever been known to enter the house; and so I concluded
the many apparitions were but phantasms of the same
person-phantasms of his several, separate,
and distinct personalities. He had brutal tendencies,
sacerdotal (not spiritual) tendencies, gluttonous,
and nautical tendencies, and his whole character being
dominated by carnal cravings, on the dissolution of
his material body each separate tendency would remain
earth-bound, represented by the phantasm most closely
resembling it. I believe this theory may explain
many dual hauntings, and it holds good with regard
to the case I have quoted, the case of the apparition
with the pig’s head. The ghost need not
necessarily have been the spirit of a dead woman in
toto, but merely the phantasm of one of her grosser
personalities; her more spiritual personalities, represented
by other phantasms, having migrated to the higher
plane. Let me take, as another example, the case
which I personally investigated, and which interested
me deeply. The house was then haunted (and, as
far as I know to the contrary, is still haunted) by
a blurred figure, suggestive of something hardly human
and extremely nasty, that bounded up the stairs two
steps at a time; by a big, malignant eye-only
an eye-that appeared in one of the top
rooms; and by a phantasm resembling a lady in distinctly
modern costume. The house is old, and as, according
to tradition, some crime was committed within its
walls many years ago, the case may really be an instance
of separate hauntings-the bounding figure
and the eye (the latter either belonging to the figure
or to another phantasm) being the phantasms of the
principal, or principals, in the ancient tragedy; the
lady, either the phantasm of someone who died there
comparatively recently, or of someone still alive,
who consciously, or unconsciously, projects her superphysical
ego to that spot. On the other hand, the three
different phenomena might be three different phantasms
of one person, that person being either alive or dead-for
one can unquestionably, at times, project phantasms
of one’s various personalities before physical
dissolution. The question of occult phenomena,
one may thus see, is far more complex than it would
appear to be at first sight, and naturally so,-the
whole of nature being complex from start to finish.
Just as minerals are not composed of one atom but
of countless atoms, so the human brain is not constituted
of one cell but of many; and as with the material
cerebrum, so with the immaterial-hence
the complexity. With regard to the phenomena of
superphysical bestialities such as dogs, bears, etc.,
it is almost impossible to say whether the phantasm
would be that of a dead person, or rather that representing
one of some dead person’s several personalities-the
phantasm of a genuine animal, of a vagrarian, or of
some other type of elemental.
One can only surmise the identity
of such phantasms, after becoming acquainted with
the history of the locality in which such manifestations
appear. The case to which I referred in my previous
works, Some Haunted Houses of England and Wales,
and Ghostly Phenomena, namely, that of the
apparition of a nude man being seen outside an unused
burial-ground in Guilsborough, Northamptonshire, furnishes
a good example of alternatives. Near to the spot,
at least within two or three hundred yards of it,
was a barrow, close to which a sacrificial stone had
been unearthed; consequently the phantasm may have
been a barrowvian; and again, as the locality is much
wooded and but thinly populated, it may have been
a vagrarian; and again, the burial-ground being in
such close proximity, the apparition may well have
been the phantasm of one of the various personalities
of a human being interred there.
One night, as I was sitting reading
alone in an isolated cottage on the Wicklow hills,
I was half-startled out of my senses by hearing a loud,
menacing cry, half-human and half-animal, and apparently
in mid-air, directly over my head. I looked up,
and to my horror saw suspended, a few feet above me,
the face of a Dalmatian dog-of a long since
dead Dalmatian dog, with glassy, expressionless eyes,
and yellow, gaping jaws. The phenomenon did not
last more than half a minute, and with its abrupt
disappearance came a repetition of the cry. What
was it? I questioned the owner of the cottage,
and she informed me she had always had the sensation
something uncanny walked the place at night, but had
never seen anything. “One of my children
did, though,” she added; “Mike-he
was drowned at sea twelve months ago. Before he
became a sailor he lived with me here, and often used
to see a dog-a big, spotted cratur, like
what we called a plum-pudding dog. It was a nasty,
unwholesome-looking thing, he used to tell me, and
would run round and round his room-the
room where you sleep-at night. Though
a bold enough lad as a rule, the thing always scared
him; and he used to come and tell me about it, with
a face as white as linen-’Mother!’
he would say, ’I saw the spotted cratur again
in the night, and I couldn’t get as much as
a wink of sleep.’ He would sometimes throw
a boot at it, and always with the same result-the
boot would go right through it.” She then
told me that a former tenant of the house, who had
borne an evil reputation in the village-the
peasants unanimously declaring she was a witch-had
died, so it was said, in my room. “But,
of course,” she added, “it wasn’t
her ghost that Mike saw.” Here I disagreed
with her. However, if she could not come to any
conclusion, neither could I; for though, of course,
the dog may have been the earth-bound spirit of some
particularly carnal-minded occupant of the cottage-or,
in other words, a phantasm representing one of that
carnal-minded person’s several personalities,-it
may have been the phantasm of a vagrarian, of a barrowvian,
or, of some other kind of elemental, attracted to the
spot by its extreme loneliness, and the presence there,
unsuspected by man, of some ancient remains, either
human or animal. Occult dogs are very often of
a luminous, semi-transparent bluish-grey-a
bluish-grey that is common to many other kinds of
superphysical phenomena, but which I have never seen
in the physical world.
I have heard of several houses in
Westmoreland and Devon, always in the vicinity of
ancient burial-places, being haunted by blue dogs,
and sometimes by blue dogs without heads. Indeed,
headless apparitions of all sorts are by no means
uncommon. A lady, who is well known to me, had
a very unpleasant experience in a house in Norfolk,
where she was awakened one night by a scratching on
her window-pane, which was some distance from the
ground, and, on getting out of bed to see what was
there, perceived the huge form of a shaggy dog, without
a head, pressed against the glass.
Fortunately for my informant, the
manifestation was brief. The height of the window
from the ground quite precluded the possibility of
the apparition being any natural dog, and my friend
was subsequently informed that what she had seen was
one of the many headless phantasms that haunted the
house. Of course, it does not follow that because
one does not actually see a head, a head is not objectively
there-it may be very much there, only not
materialised. A story of one of these seemingly
headless apparitions was once told me by a Mrs Forbes
du Barry whom I met at Lady D.’s house in Eaton
Square. I remember the at-home to which I refer,
particularly well, as the entertainment on that occasion
was entirely entrusted to Miss Lilian North, who as
a reciter and raconteur is, in my opinion, as far
superior to any other reciter and raconteur as the
stars are superior to the earth. Those who have
not heard her stories, have not listened to her eloquent
voice-that appeals not merely to the heart,
but to the soul-are to be pitied. But
there-I am digressing. Let me proceed.
It was, I repeat, on the soul-inspiring occasion above
mentioned that I was introduced to Mrs Forbes du Barry,
who must be held responsible for the following story.
“I was reading one of your books
the other day, Mr O’Donnell,” she began,
“and some of your experiences remind me of one
of my own-one that occurred to me many
years ago, when I was living in Worthing, in the old
part of the town, not far from where the Public Library
now stands. Directly after we had taken the house,
my husband was ordered to India. However, he
did not expect to be away for long, so, as I was not
in very good health just then, I did not go with him,
but remained with my little boy, Philip, in Worthing.
Besides Philip and myself, my household only consisted
of a nursery-governess, cook, housemaid, and kitchen-maid.
The hauntings began before we had been in our new quarters
many days. We all heard strange noises, scratchings,
and whinings, and the servants complained that often,
when they were at meals, something they could not
see, but which they could swear was a dog, came sniffing
round them, jumping up and placing its invisible paws
on their lap. Often, too, when they were in bed
the same thing entered their room, they said, and
jumped on the top of them. They were all very
much frightened, and declared that if the hauntings
continued they would not be able to stay in the house.
Of course, I endeavoured to laugh away their fears,
but the latter were far too deeply rooted, and I myself,
apart from the noises I had heard, could not help feeling
that there was some strangely unpleasant influence
in the house. The climax was brought about by
Philip. One afternoon, hearing him cry very loudly
in the nursery, I ran upstairs to see what was the
matter. On the landing outside the nursery I
narrowly avoided a collision with the governess, who
came tearing out of the room, her eyes half out of
her head with terror, and her cheeks white as a sheet.
She said nothing-and indeed her silence
was far more impressive than words-but,
rushing past me, flung herself downstairs, half a
dozen steps at a time, and ran into the garden.
In an agony of fear-for I dreaded to think
what had happened-I burst into the nursery,
and found Philip standing on the bed, frantically
beating the air with his hands. ’Take it
away-oh, take it away!’ he cried;
‘it is a horrid dog; it has no head!’ Then,
seeing me, he sprang down and, racing up to me, leaped
into my open arms. As he did so, something darted
past and disappeared through the open doorway.
It was a huge greyhound without a head! I left
the house the next day-I was fortunately
able to sublet it-and went to Bournemouth.
But, do you know, Mr O’Donnell, that dog followed
us! Wherever we went it went too, nor did it
ever leave Philip till his death, which took place
in Egypt on his twenty-first birthday. Now, what
do you think of that?”
“I think,” I replied,
“that the phantasm was very probably that of
a real dog, and that it became genuinely attached
to your son. I do not think it was headless,
but that, for some reason unknown for the present,
its head never materialised. What was the history
of the house?”
“It had no history as far as
I could gather,” Mrs Forbes du Barry said.
“A lady once lived there who was devoted to dogs,
but no one thinks she ever had a greyhound.”
“Then,” I replied thoughtfully,
“it is just possible that the headless dog was
the phantasm of the lady herself, or, at least, of
one of her personalities!”
Mrs du Barry appeared somewhat shocked,
and I adroitly changed the conversation. However,
I should not be at all surprised if this were the
case.
The improbability of any ancient remains
being interred under or near the house, precludes
the idea of barrowvians, whilst the thickly populated
nature of the neighbourhood and the entire absence
of loneliness, renders the possibility of vagrarians
equally unlikely. That being so, one only has
to consider the possibility of its being a vice elemental
attracted to the house by the vicious lives and thoughts
of some former occupant, and I am, after all, inclined
to favour the theory that the phantasm was the phantasm
of the old dog-loving lady herself, attaching itself
in true canine fashion to the child Philip.
The most popular animal form amongst
spirits-the form assumed by them more often
than any other-is undoubtedly the dog.
I hear of the occult dog more often than of any other
occult beast, and in many places there is yet a firm
belief that the souls of the wicked are chained to
this earth in the shape of monstrous dogs. According
to Mr Dyer, in his Ghost World, a man who hanged
himself at Broomfield, near Salisbury, manifested
himself in the guise of a huge black dog; whilst the
Lady Howard of James I.’s reign, for her many
misdeeds, not the least of which was getting rid of
her husbands, was, on her death, transformed into
a hound and compelled to run every night, between midnight
and cock-crow, from the gateway of Fitzford, her former
residence, to Oakhampton Park, and bring back to the
place, from whence she started, a blade of grass in
her mouth; and this penance she is doomed to continue
till every blade of grass is removed from the park,
which feat she will not be able to effect till the
end of the world. Mr Dyer also goes on to say
that in the hamlet of Dean Combe, Devon, there once
lived a weaver of great fame and skill, who the day
after his death was seen sitting working away at the
loom as usual. A parson was promptly fetched,
and the following conversation took place.
“Knowles!” the parson
commanded (not without, I shrewdly suspect, some fear),
“come down! This is no place for thee!”
“I will!” said the weaver, “as soon
as I have worked out my quill.” “Nay,”
said the vicar, “thou hast been long enough
at thy work; come down at once.” The spirit
then descended, and, on being pelted with earth and
thrown on the ground by the parson, was converted
into a black hound, which apparently was its ultimate
shape.
Some years ago, Mr Dyer says, there
was an accident in a Cornish mine whereby several
men lost their lives, and, rather than that their
relatives should be shocked at the sight of their mangled
remains, some bystander, with all the best intentions
in the world, threw the bodies into a fire, with the
result that the mine has ever since been haunted by
a troop of little black dogs.
According to the Book of Days,
ii. , there is a widespread belief in most parts
of England in a spectral dog, “large, shaggy,
and black,” but not confined to any one particular
species. This phantasm is believed to haunt localities
that have witnessed crimes, and also to foretell catastrophes.
The Lancashire people, according to Harland and Wilkinson
in their Lancashire Folk-lore, call it the “stuker”
and “trash”: the latter name being
given it on account of its heavy, slopping walk; and
the former appellation from its curious screech, which
is a sure indication of some approaching death or calamity.
To the peasantry of Norfolk and Cambridgeshire it
is known as “the shuck,” an apparition
that haunts churchyards and other lonely places.
In the Isle of Man a similar kind of phantasm, called
“the Mauthe dog,” was said to walk Peel
Castle; whilst many of the Welsh lanes-particularly
that leading from Mowsiad to Lisworney Crossways-are,
according to Wirt Sikes’ British Goblins,
haunted by the gwyllgi, a big black dog of the most
terrifying aspect.
Cases of hauntings by packs of spectral
hounds have from time to time been reported from all
parts of the United Kingdom; but mostly from Northumberland,
Yorkshire, Lancashire, Cumberland, Wales, Devon, and
Cornwall. In the northern districts they are designated
“Gabriel’s hounds”; in Devon, “the
Wisk, Yesk, or Heath hounds”; in Wales, “the
Cwn Annwn or Cwn y Wybr” (see Dyer’s Ghost
World); and in Cornwall, “the devil and
his dandy dogs.” My own experiences fully
coincide with the traditional belief that the dog
is a very common form of spirit phenomena; but I can
only repeat (the same remark applying to other animal
manifestations), that it is impossible to decide with
any degree of certainty to what category of phantasms,
in addition to the general order of occult bestialities,
the dog belongs. It seems quite permissible to
think that the spirits of ladies, with an absorbing
mania for canine pets, should be eventually earth-bound
in the form of dogs-a fate which many of
the fair sex have assured me would be “absolutely
divine,” and far preferable to the orthodox heaven.
I cannot see why the shape of a dog
should be appropriated by the less desirable denizens
of the occult world. But, that it is so, there
is no room to doubt, as the following illustration
shows. As soon as the trial of the infamous slaughterer
X- was over, and the verdict of
death generally known, a deep sigh of relief was heaved
by the whole of civilisation-saving, of
course, those pseudo-humanitarians who always pity
murderers and women-beaters, and who, if the law was
at all sensible and just, should be hanged with their
bestial proteges. From all classes of
men, I repeat, with the exception of those pernicious
cranks, were heard the ejaculations: “Well!
he’s settled. What a good thing! I
am glad! The world will be well rid of him!”
Then I smiled. The world well
rid of him! Would it be rid of him? Not if
I knew anything about occult phenomena. Indeed,
the career on earth for such an epicure in murder
as X- had only just begun; in fact,
it could hardly be said to begin till physical dissolution.
The last drop-that six feet or so plunge
between grim scaffolding-might in the case
of some criminals, mere tyros at the trade, terminate
for good their connection with this material plane;
but not, decidedly not, in the case of this bosom
comrade of vice elementals.
From both a psychological and superphysical
point of view the case had interested me from the
first. I had been anxious to see the man, for
I felt sure, even if he did not display any of the
ordinary physiognomical danger signals observable
in many bestial criminals, there would nevertheless
be a something about or around him, that would immediately
warn as keen a student of the occult as myself of his
close association with the lowest order of phantasms.
I was not, however, permitted an interview, and so
had to base my deductions upon the descriptions of
him given me, first hand, by two experts in psychology,
and upon photographs. In the latter I recognised-though
not with the readiness I should have done in the photo’s
living prototype-the presence of the unknown
brain, the grey, silent, stealthy, ever-watchful, ever-lurking
occult brain. As I gazed at his picture, as in
a crystal, it faded away, and I saw the material man
sitting alone in his study before a glowing fire.
From out of him there crept a shadow, the shadow of
something big, bloated, and crawling. I could
distinguish nothing further. On reaching the
door it paused, and I felt it was eyeing him-or
rather his material body-anxiously.
Perhaps it feared lest some other shadow, equally
baleful, equally sly and subtle, would usurp its home.
Its hesitation was, however, but momentary, and, passing
through the door, it glided across the dimly lighted
hall and out into the freedom of the open air.
Picture succeeding picture with great rapidity, I followed
it as it curled and fawned over the tombstones in
more than one churchyard; moved with a peculiar waddling
motion through foul alleys, halting wherever the garbage
lay thickest, rubbed itself caressingly on the gory
floors of slaughter-houses, and finally entered a
dark, empty house in a road that, if not the Euston
Road, was a road in every way resembling it.
The atmosphere of the place was so
suggestive of murder that my soul sickened within
me; and so much so, in fact, that when I saw several
grisly forms gliding down the gloomy staircases and
along the sombre, narrow passages, where X-’s
immaterial personality was halting, apparently to
greet it, I could look no longer, but shut my eyes.
For some seconds I kept them closed, and, on re-opening
them, found the tableau had changed-the
material body before the fire was re-animated, and
in the depths of the bleared, protruding eyes I saw
the creeping, crawling, waddling, enigmatical shadow
vibrating with murder. Again the scene changed,
and I saw the physical man standing in the middle of
a bedroom, listening-listening with blanched
face and slightly open mouth, a steely glimmer of
the superphysical, of the malignant, devilish superphysical,
in his dilated pupils. What he is anticipating
I cannot say, I dare not think-unless-unless
the repetition of a scream; and it comes-I
cannot hear it, but I can feel it, feel the reverberation
through the crime-kissed walls and vicious, tainted
atmosphere.
Something is at the door-it
presses against it; I can catch a glimpse of its head,
its face; my blood freezes-it is horrible.
It enters the room, grey and silent-it
lays one hand on the man’s sleeve and drags
him forward. He ascends to the room above, and,
with all the brutality of those accustomed to the
dead and dying, drags the- But I
will not go on. The grey unknown, the occult
something, sternly issues its directions, and the
merely physical obeys them. It is all over; the
plot of the vice elementals has triumphed, and as
they gleefully step away, one by one, patting their
material comrade on the shoulder, the darkness, the
hellish darkness of that infamous night lightens, and
in through the windows steal the cold grey beams of
early morning. I am assured; I have had enough;
I pitch the photograph into the grate. The evening
comes-the evening after the execution.
A feeling of the greatest, the most unenviable curiosity
urges me to go, to see if what I surmise, will actually
happen. I leave Gipsy Hill by an early afternoon
train, I spend a few hours at a literary club, I dine
at a quiet-an eminently quiet-restaurant
in Oxford Street, and at eleven o’clock I am
standing near a spot which I believe-I have
no positive proof-I merely believe, was
frequented by X . It is more than
twelve hours since he was executed; will anything-will
the shape, the personality, I anticipate-come?
The night air grows colder; I shrink deeper and deeper
into the folds of my overcoat, and wish-devoutly
wish-myself back again by my fireside.
The minutes glide by slowly.
The streets are very silent now. With the exception
of an occasional toot-toot from a taxi and the shrill
whistle of a goods train, no other sounds are to be
heard. It is the hour when nearly all material
London sleeps and the streets are monopolised by shadows,
interspersed with something rather more substantial-namely,
policemen. A few yards away from me there slips
by a man in a blue serge suit; and then, tip-toeing
surreptitiously behind him, with one hand in his trousers-pocket
and the other carrying a suspicious-looking black
bag, comes a white-faced young man, dressed in shabby
imitation of a West End swell; an ill-fitting frock-coat,
which, even in the uncertain flicker of the gas-lamps,
pronounces itself to be ready made, and the typical
shopwalker’s silk hat worn slightly on one side.
Whether this night bird goes through life on tiptoe,
as many people do, or whether he only adopts that
fashion on this particular occasion, is a conundrum,
not without interest to students of character to whom
a man’s walk denotes much.
For a long time the street is deserted,
and then a bedraggled figure in a shawl, with a big
paper parcel under her arm, shuffles noiselessly by
and disappears down an adjacent turning. Then
there is another long interval, interrupted by a pretentious
clock sonorously sounding two. A feeling of drowsiness
creeps over me; my eyelids droop. I begin to lose
cognisance of my surroundings and to imagine myself
in some far-away place, when I am recalled sharply
to myself by an intensely cold current of air.
Intuitively I recognise the superphysical; it is the
same species of cold which invariably heralds its
approach. I have been right in my surmises after
all; this spot is destined to be haunted. My eyes
are wide enough open now, and every nerve in my body
tingles with the keenest expectation. Something
is coming, and, if that something is not the phantasm
of him whom I believe is earthbound, whose phantasm
is it? There is a slight noise of scratching
from somewhere close beside me. It might have
been the wind rustling the leaves against the masonry,
or it might have been-I look round and
see nothing. The sound is repeated and with the
same result-NOTHING! A third time I
heard it, and then from the dark road on one side
of me there waddles-I recognise the waddling
at once-a shadow that, gradually becoming
a little more distinct, develops into the rather blurry
form of a dog-a gaunt, hungry-looking mongrel.
In a few seconds it stops short and looks at me with
big swollen eyes that glitter with a something that
is not actually bestial or savage, something strange
yet not altogether strange, something enigmatic yet
not entirely enigmatic. I am nonplussed; it was,
and yet it was not, what I expected. With restless,
ambling steps it slinks past me, disappearing through
the closed gate by my side. Then satisfied, yet
vaguely puzzled, I come away, wondering, wondering-wondering
why on earth dogs should thus be desecrated.
Contrary to what one would imagine
to be the case from the close association of cats
with witches and magic, phantasms in a feline form
are comparatively rare, and their appearance is seldom,
if ever, as repulsive as that of the occult dog.
I have seen phantasm cats several times, but, though
they have been abnormally large and alarming, only
once-and I am anxious to forget that time-were
they anything like as offensive as many of the ghostly
dogs that have manifested themselves to me. In
my Haunted Houses of England and Wales I have
given an instance of dual haunting, in which one of
the phenomena was a big black cat with a fiendish
expression in its eyes, but otherwise normal; and,
a propos of cats, there now comes back to me
a story I was once told in the Far West-the
Golden State of California. I was on my way back
to England, after a short but somewhat bitter absence,
and I was staying for the night at a small hotel in
San Francisco. The man who related the anecdote
was an Australian, born and bred, on his way home to
his native land after many years’ sojourn in
Texas. I was sitting on the sofa in the smoke-room
reading, when he threw himself down in a chair opposite
me and we gradually got into conversation. It
was late when we began talking, and the other visitors,
one by one, yawned, rose, and withdrew to their bedrooms,
until we found ourselves alone-absolutely
alone. The night was unusually dark and silent.
Leaning over the little tile-covered
table at which we sat, the stranger suddenly said:
“Do you see anything by me? Look hard.”
Much surprised at his request, for I confess that
up to then I had taken him for a very ordinary kind
of person, I looked, and, to my infinite astonishment
and awe, saw, floating in mid-air, about two yards
from him, and on a level with his chair, the shadowy
outlines of what looked like an enormous cat-a
cat with very little hair and unpleasant eyes-decidedly
unpleasant eyes. My flesh crawled!
“Well?” said the stranger-who,
by-the-by, had called himself Gallaher,-in
very anxious tones, “Well-you don’t
seem in a hurry, nor yet particularly pleased-what
is it?”
“A cat!” I gasped. “A cat-and
a cat in mid-air!”
The stranger swore. “D-
it!” he cried, dashing his fist on the table
with such force that the match-box flew a dozen or
so feet up the room-“Cuss! the infernal
thing! I guessed it was near me, I could feel
its icy breath!” He glanced sharply round as
he spoke, and hurled his tobacco pouch at the shape.
It passed right through it and fell with a soft squash
on the ground. Gallaher picked it up with an oath.
“I will tell you the history of that cat,”
he went on, as he resumed his seat, “and a d-d
queer history it is.”
Pouring himself out a bumper of whisky
and refilling his pipe, he cleared his throat and
began: “As a boy I always hated cats-God
knows why-but the sight of a cat made me
sick. I could not stand their soft, sleek fur;
nor their silly, senseless faces; nor their smell-the
smell of their skins, which most people don’t
seem able to detect. I could, however; I could
recognise that d-d scent a mile
off, and could always tell, without seeing it, when
there was a cat in the house. If any of the boys
at school wanted to play me a trick they let loose
half a dozen mangy tabbies in our yard, or sent me
a hideous ‘Tom’ trussed up like a fowl
in a hamper, or made cats’ noises in the dead
of night under my window. Everyone in the village,
from the baker to the bone-setter, knew of my hatred
of cats, and, consequently, I had many enemies-chiefly
amongst the old ladies. I must tell you, however,
much as I loathed and abominated cats, I never killed
one. I threw stones and sticks at them; I emptied
jugs, and cans, and many pails of water on them; I
pelted them with turnips; I hurled cushions, bolsters,
pillows, anything I could first lay my hands on, at
them; and”-here he cast a furtive
look at the shadow-“I have pinched
and trodden on their tails; but I have never killed
one. When I grew up, my attitude towards them
remained the same, and wherever I went I won the reputation
for being the inveterate, the most poignantly inveterate,
enemy of cats.
“When I was about twenty-five,
I settled in a part of Texas where there were no cats.
It was on a ranch in the upper valley of the Colorado.
I was cattle ranching, and having had a pretty shrewd
knowledge of the business before I left home, I soon
made headway, and-between ourselves, mate,
for there are mighty ‘tough uns’ in
these town hotels-a good pile of dollars.
I never had any of the adventures that befall most
men out West, never but once, and I am coming to that
right away.
“I had been selling some hundred
head of cattle and about the same number of hogs,
at a town some twenty or so miles from my ranch, and
feeling I would like a bit of excitement, after so
many months of monotony-the monotony of
the desert life-I turned into the theatre-a
wooden shanty-where a company of touring
players, mostly Yankees, were performing. Sitting
next to me was a fellow who speedily got into conversation
with me and assured me he was an Australian. I
did not believe him, for he had not the cut of an
Australian,-until he mentioned one or two
of the streets I knew in Adelaide, and that settled
me. We drank to each other’s health straight
away, and he invited me to supper at his hotel.
I accepted; and as soon as the performance was over,
and we had exchanged greetings with some half-dozen
of the performers, in whisky, he slipped his arm through
mine and we strolled off together. Of course
it was very foolish of me, seeing that I had a belt
full of money; but then I had not had an outing for
a long time, and I thirsted for adventure as I thirsted
for whisky, and God alone knows how much of THAT I
had already drunk. We arrived at the hotel.
It was a poor-looking place in a sinister neighbourhood,
abounding with evil-eyed Dagos and cut-throats of
all kinds. Still I was young and strong, and
well armed, for I never left home in those days without
a six-shooter. My companion escorted me into
a low room in the rear of the premises, smelling villainously
of foul tobacco and equally foul alcohol. Some
half-cooked slices of bacon and suspicious-looking
fried eggs were placed before us, which, with huge
hunks of bread and a bottle of very much belabelled-too
much belabelled-Highland whisky, completed
the repast. But it was too unsavoury even for
my companion, whose hungry eyes and lantern jaws proclaimed
he had a ravenous appetite. However, he ate the
bacon and I the bread; the eggs we emptied into a flower-pot.
The supper-the supper of which he had led
me to think so much-over, we filled our
glasses, or at least he poured out for both, for his
hands were steadier-even in my condition
of semi-intoxication I noticed they were steadier-than
mine. Then he brought me a cigar and took me to
his bedroom, a bare, grimy apartment overhead.
There was no furniture, saving a bed showing unmistakable
signs that someone had been lying on it in dirty boots,
a small rectangular deal table, and one chair.
“In a stupefied condition I
was hesitating which of the alternatives to choose-the
chair or the table, for, oddly enough, I never thought
of the bed, when my host settled the question by leading
me forcibly forward and flinging me down on the mattress.
He then took a wooden wedge out of his pocket, and,
going to the door, thrust it in the crack, giving
the handle a violent tug to see whether the door stood
the test. ‘There now, mate,’ he said
with a grin-a grin that seemed to suggest
something my tipsy brain could not grasp, ’I
have just shut us in snug and secure so that we can
chat away without fear of interruption. Let us
drink to a comfortable night’s sleep. You
will sleep sound enough here, I can tell you!’
He handed me a glass as he spoke. ‘Drink!’
he said with a leer. ‘You are not half
an Australian if you cannot hold that! See!’
and pouring himself out a tumbler of spirits and water
he was about to gulp it down, when I uttered an ejaculation
of horror. The light from the single gas jet
over his head, falling on his face as he lifted it
up to drink the whisky, revealed in his wide open,
protruding pupils, the reflection of a cat-I
can swear it was a cat. Instantly my intoxication
evaporated and I scented danger. How was it I
had not noticed before that the man was a typical
ruffian-a regular street-corner loiterer,
waiting, hawklike, to pounce upon and fleece the first
well-to-do looking stranger he saw. Of course
I saw it all now like a flash of lightning: he
had seen me about the town during the earlier part
of the day, had found out I was there on business,
that I was an Australian, and one or two other things-it
is surprising how soon one’s affairs get mooted
in a small town,-and guessing I had the
receipts of my sales on my person, had decided to
rob me. Accordingly, with this end in view, he
had followed me into the theatre, and, securing the
seat next me, had broken the ice by pretending he
was an Australian. He had then plied me with
drink and brought me, already more than half drunk,
to this cut-throat den. And I owed the discovery
to a cat! My first thought was to feel for my
revolver. I did, and found it was-gone.
My hopes sank to zero; for though I might have been
more than a match for the wiry framed stranger had
we both been unarmed, I had not the slightest chance
with him were he armed, as he undoubtedly was, with
my revolver as well as his own. Though it takes
some time to explain this, it all passed through my
mind in a few seconds-before he had finished
drinking. ’Now, mate!’ he said, putting
down his glass, the first WHOLE glass even of whisky
and water he had taken that night, ’that’s
my share, now for yours.’
“‘Wait a bit!’ I
stammered, pretending to hiccough, ’wait a bit.
I don’t feel that I can drink any more just
yet! Maybe I will in a few minutes.’
We sat down, and I saw protruding from his hip pocket
the butt end of a revolver. If only I could get
it! Determined to try, I edged slightly towards
him. He immediately drew away, a curious, furtive,
bestial smile lurking in the corner of his lips.
I casually repeated the manoeuvre, and he just as
casually repeated his. Then I glanced at the window-the
door I knew was hopeless,-and it was iron
barred. I gazed again at the man, and his eyes
grinned evilly as they met mine. Without a doubt
he meant to murder me. The ghastliness of my
position stunned me. Even if I shrieked for help,
who would hear me save desperadoes, in all probability
every whit as ready as my companion to kill me.
“A hideous stupor now began
to assert itself, and as I strained to keep my lids
from closing, I watched with a thrill of terror a fiendish
look of expectancy creep into the white, gleaming
face of the stranger. I realised, only too acutely,
that he was waiting for me to fall asleep so as the
more conveniently to rob and murder me. The man
was a murderer by instinct-his whole air
suggested it-his very breath was impregnated
with the sickly desire to kill. Physically, he
was the ideal assassin. It was strange that I
had not observed it before; but in this light, this
yellow, piercing glare, all the criminality of his
features was revealed with damning clearness:
the high cheek-bones, the light, protruding eyes,
the abnormally developed forehead and temporal regions,
the small, weak chin, the grossly irregular teeth,
the poisonous breath, the club-shaped finger-tips
and thick palms. Where could one find a greater
combination of typically criminal characteristics?
The man was made for destroying his fellow creatures.
When would he begin his job and how?
“I am not narrow minded, I can
recognise merit even in my enemies; and though I was
so soon to be his victim, I could not but admire the
thoroughly professional manner, indicative of past
mastership, with which he set about his business.
So far all his plans, generated with meteor-like quickness,
had been successful; he was now showing how devoted
he was to his vocation, and how richly he appreciated
the situation, by abandoning himself to a short period
of greedy, voluptuous anticipation, fully expressed
in his staring eyes and thinly lipped mouth, before
experiencing the delicious sensation of slitting my
windpipe and dismembering me. My drowsiness, which
I verily believe was in a great measure due to the
peculiar fascination he had for me, steadily increased,
and it was only with the most desperate efforts, egged
on by the knowledge that my very existence depended
on it, that I could keep my eyelids from actually
coming together and sticking fast. At last they
closed so nearly as to deceive my companion, who, rising
stealthily to his feet, showed his teeth in a broad
grin of satisfaction, and whipping from his coat pocket
a glittering, horn-handled knife, ran his dirty, spatulate
thumb over the blade to see if it was sharp.
Grinning still more, he now tiptoed to the window,
pulled the blind as far down as it would go, and, after
placing his ear against the panel of the door to make
sure no one was about, gaily spat on his palms, and,
with a soft, sardonic chuckle, crept slowly towards
me. Had he advanced with a war-whoop it would
have made little or no difference-the man
and his atmosphere paralysed me-I was held
in the chair by iron bonds that swathed themselves
round hands, and feet, and tongue. I could neither
stir nor utter a sound,-only look, look
with all the pent-up agonies of my soul through my
burning, quivering eye-lashes. A yard, a foot,
an inch, and the perspiring fingers of his left hand
dexterously loosened the gaudy coloured scarf that
hid my throat. A second later and I felt them
smartly transferred to my long, curly hair. They
tightened, and my neck was on the very verge of being
jerked back, when between my quivering eyelids I saw
on the sheeny surface of his bulging eye-balls,-the
cat-the damnable, hated cat. The effect
was magical. A wave of the most terrific, the
most ungovernable fury surged through me. I struck
out blindly, and one of my fists alighting on the
would-be murderer’s face made him stagger back
and drop the knife. In an instant the weapon
was mine, and ere he could draw his six-shooter-for
the suddenness of the encounter and my blow had considerably
dazed him-I had hurled myself upon him,
and brought him to the ground.
“The force with which I had
thrown him, together with my blow, had stunned him,
and I would have left him in that condition had it
not been for the cat-the accursed cat-that,
peeping up at me from every particle of his prostrate
body, egged me on to kill him. My intense admiration
for his genius now manifested itself in the way in
which I imitated all his movements, from the visit
to the door and window, to the spitting on his palms;
and with a grin-the nearest counterpart
that I could get, after prodigious efforts, to the
one that so fascinated me-I approached
his recumbent figure, and, bending over it, removed
his neckerchief. I sat and admired the gently
throbbing whiteness of his throat for some seconds,
and then, with a volley of exécrations at the
cat, commenced my novel and by no means uninteresting
work. I am afraid I bungled it sadly, for I was
disturbed when in the midst of it, by the sound of
scratching, the violent and frantic scratching, of
some animal on the upper panels of the door.
The sound flustered me, and, my hand shaking in consequence,
I did not make such a neat job of it as I should have
liked. However, I did my best, and at all events
I killed him; and I enjoyed the supreme satisfaction
of knowing that I had killed him-killed
the cat. But my joy was of short duration, and
I now bitterly regret my rash deed. Wherever
I go in the daytime, the shadowy figure of the cat
accompanies me, and at night, crouching on my bedclothes,
it watches-watches me with the expression
in its eyes and mouth of my would-be murderer on that
memorable night.”
As he concluded, for an instant, only
for an instant, the shadow by his side grew clearer,
and I saw the cat, saw it watching him with murder,
ghastly murder lurking in its eyes. I struck a
match, and, as I had anticipated, the phenomenon vanished.
“It will return,” the
Australian said gloomily; “it always does.
I shall never get rid of it!” And as I fully
concurred with this statement, and had no suggestions
to offer, I thanked him for his story, and wished him
good night. But I did not leave him alone.
He still had his cat. I saw it return to him
as I passed through the doorway. Of course, I
had no means of verifying his story; it might have
been true, or it might not. But there was the
cat!-thoroughly objective and as perfect
a specimen of a feline, occult bestiality as I have
ever seen or wish to see again.
That a spirit should appear in the
form of a pig need not seem remarkable when we remember
that those who live foul lives, i.e. the sensual
and greedy, must, after death, assume the shape that
is most appropriate to them; indeed, in these circumstances,
one might rather be surprised that a phantasm in the
shape of a hog is not a more frequent occurrence.
There are numerous instances of hauntings
by phenomena of this kind, in some cases the phantasms
being wholly animal, and in other cases semi-animal.
What I have said with regard to the
phantasms of dogs-namely, the difficulty,
practically the impossibility, of deciding whether
the manifestation is due to an elemental or to a spirit
of the dead-holds good in the case of “pig”
as well as every other kind of bestial phenomenon.
The phantasm in the shape of a horse
I am inclined to attribute to the once actually material
horse and not to elementals.
With regard to phantom birds-and
there are innumerable cases of occult bird phenomena-I
fancy it is otherwise, and that the majority of bird
hauntings are caused either by the spirits of dead
people, or by vicious forms of elementals.
Though one hears of few cases of occult
bestialities in the shape of tigers, lions, or any
other wild animal-saving bears and wolves,
phantasms of which appear to be common-I
nevertheless believe, from hearsay evidence, that
they are to be met with in certain of the jungles
and deserts in the East, and that for the most part
they are the phantasms of the dead animals themselves,
still hankering to be cruel-still hankering
to kill.