THE FLOATING HEAD OF THE BENRACHETT
INN, NEAR THE PERTH
ROAD, DUNDEE
Some years ago, when I was engaged
in collecting cases for a book I contemplated publishing,
on Haunted Houses in England and Wales, I was
introduced to an Irish clergyman, whose name I have
forgotten, and whom I have never met since. Had
the incident he related taken place in England or
Wales, I should have noted it down carefully, but as
it occurred in Scotland (and I had no intention then
of bringing out a volume on Scottish phantasms), I
did not do so.
My memory, however, I can assure my
readers, in spite of the many ghost tales committed
to it,-for scarcely a day passes that I
do not hear one,-seldom fails, and the
Irish clergyman’s story, which I am about to
relate, comes back to me now with startling vividness.
One summer evening, early in the eighties,
Mr. Murphy-the name by which I will designate
the originator of this story-and his wife
arrived in Dundee. The town was utterly unknown
to them, and they were touring Scotland for the first
time. Not knowing where to put up for the night,
and knowing no one to whom they could apply for information,
they consulted a local paper, and from the long list
of hotels and boarding-houses advertised therein selected
the Benrachett Inn, near the Perth Road, as being
the one most likely to meet their modest requirements.
They were certainly not disappointed with the exterior
of the hotel they had chosen, for as soon as they saw
it they exclaimed simultaneously, “What a delightful
old place!” And old it certainly was, for the
many-gabled, oaken structure and projecting windows
unquestionably indicated the sixteenth century, whilst,
to enhance the effect and give it a true touch in
detail of “ye ancient times,” a huge antique
lantern was hung over the entrance. Nor did the
interior impress them less favourably. The rooms
were large, and low, the ceilings, walls, floors,
and staircase all of oak. The diamond-lattice
windows, and narrow, tortuous passages, and innumerable
nooks and crannies and cupboards, created an atmosphere
of combined quaintness and comfort that irresistibly
appealed to the Murphys. Viewed under the searching
rays of the sun, and cheered by the voices of the
visitors, the interior of the house, for artistic
taste and cheerfulness, would indeed be hard to beat;
but, as Mrs. Murphy’s eyes wandered up the stairs
and down the corridors, she was filled with misgivings
as to how the place would strike her at night.
Though not nervous naturally, and
by no means superstitious, at night, when the house
was dark and silent, and the moon called forth the
shadows, she was not without that feeling of uneasiness
which most people-even avowed sceptics,
experience when passing the night in strange and novel
quarters.
The room they engaged-I
cannot say selected, as, the hotel being full, they
had “Hobson’s choice”-was
at the end of a very long passage, at the back of
the house, and overlooking the yard. It was a
large apartment, and in one of its several recesses
stood the bed, a gigantic, ebony four-poster, with
spotlessly clean valance, and, what was of even greater
importance, well-aired sheets. The other furniture
in the room, being of the same sort as that in the
majority of old-fashioned hostels, needs no description;
but a fixture in the shape of a cupboard, a deep,
dark cupboard, let into the wall facing the bed, instantly
attracted Mrs. Murphy’s attention. There
is always something interesting in cupboards, particularly
old and roomy cupboards, when it is night-time and
one is about to get into bed. It is then that
they suggest all manner of fascinating possibilities.
It was to this cupboard, then, that
Mrs. Murphy paid the greatest attention, before commencing
to undress prior to getting into bed. She poked
about in it for some moments, and then, apparently
satisfied that no one was hidden there, continued
her investigation of the room. Mr. Murphy did
not assist-he pleaded fatigue, and sat on
the corner of the bed munching a gingerbread and reading
the Dundee Advertiser till the operation was
over. He then helped Mrs. Murphy unpack their
portmanteau, and, during the process, whiled away so
much time in conversation, that they were both startled
when a clock from some adjacent church solemnly boomed
twelve. They were then seized with something
approaching a panic, and hastened to disrobe.
“I wish we had a night-light,
John,” Mrs. Murphy said, as she got up from
her prayers. “I suppose it wouldn’t
do to keep one of the candles burning. I am not
exactly afraid, only I don’t fancy being left
in the dark. I had a curious sensation when I
was in the cupboard just now-I can’t
exactly explain it-but I feel now that I
would like the light left burning.”
“It certainly is rather a gloomy
room,” Mr. Murphy remarked, raising his eyes
to the black oak ceiling, and then allowing them to
dwell in turn on each of the angles and recesses.
“And I agree with you it would be nice if we
had a night-light, or, better still, gas. But
as we haven’t, my dear, and we shall be on our
feet a good deal to-morrow, I think we ought to try
and get to sleep as soon as possible.”
He blew out the candle as he spoke,
and quickly scrambled into bed. A long hush followed,
broken only by the sound of breathing, and an occasional
ticking as of some long-legged creature on the wall
and window-blind. Mrs. Murphy could never remember
if she actually went to sleep, but she is sure her
husband did, as she distinctly heard him snore-and
the sound, so detestable to her as a rule, was so welcome
to her then. She was lying listening to it, and
wishing with all her soul she could get to sleep,
when she suddenly became aware of a smell-a
most offensive, pungent odour, that blew across the
room and crept up her nostrils. The cold perspiration
of fear at once broke out on her forehead. Nasty
as the smell was, it suggested something more horrible,
something she dared not attempt to analyse. She
thought several times of rousing her husband, but,
remembering how tired he had been, she desisted, and,
with all her faculties abnormally on the alert, she
lay awake and listened. A deathlike hush hung
over the house, interrupted at intervals by the surreptitious
noises peculiar to the night-enigmatical
creaks and footsteps, rustlings as of drapery, sighs
and whisperings-all very faint, all very
subtle, and all possibly, just possibly, attributable
to natural causes. Mrs. Murphy caught herself-why,
she could not say-waiting for some definite
auditory manifestation of what she instinctively felt
was near at hand. At present, however, she could
not locate it, she could only speculate on its whereabouts-it
was somewhere in the direction of the cupboard.
And each time the stench came to her, the conviction
that its origin was in the cupboard grew. At last,
unable to sustain the suspense any longer, and urged
on by an irresistible fascination, she got softly
out of bed, and, creeping stealthily forward, found
her way with surprisingly little difficulty (considering
it was pitch dark and the room was unfamiliar to her)
to the cupboard.
With every step she took the stink
increased, and by the time she had reached the cupboard
she was almost suffocated. For some seconds she
toyed irresolutely with the door handle, longing to
be back again in bed, but unable to tear herself away
from the cupboard. At last, yielding to the demands
of some pitilessly exacting unknown influence, she
held her breath and swung open the door. The moment
she did so the room filled with the faint, phosphorescent
glow of decay, and she saw, exactly opposite her,
a head-a human head-floating
in mid-air. Petrified with terror, she lost every
atom of strength, and, entirely bereft of the power
to move or articulate a sound, she stood stock-still
staring at it. That it was the head of a man,
she could only guess from the matted crop of short
red hair that fell in a disordered entanglement over
the upper part of the forehead and ears. All
else was lost in a loathsome, disgusting mass of detestable
decomposition, too utterly vile and foul to describe.
On the abnormal thing beginning to move forward, the
spell that bound Mrs. Murphy to the floor was broken,
and, with a cry of horror, she fled to the bed and
awoke her husband.
The head was by this time close to
them, and had not Mrs. Murphy dragged her husband
forcibly out of its way, it would have touched him.
His terror was even greater than hers;
but for the moment neither could speak. They
stood clutching one another in an awful silence.
Mrs. Murphy at length gasped out, “Pray, John,
pray! Command the thing in the name of God to
depart.” Mr. Murphy made a desperate effort
to do so, but not a syllable would come. The
head now veered round and was moving swiftly towards
them, its awful stench causing them both to retch
and vomit. Mr. Murphy, seizing his stick, lashed
at it with all his might. The result was one
they might well have expected. The stick met
with no resistance, and the head continued to advance.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Murphy then made a frantic attempt
to find the door, the head still pursuing them, and,
tripping over something in their wild haste, fell
together on the floor. There was now no hope,
the head had caught them up; it hovered immediately
above them, and, descending lower, lower, and lower,
finally passed right through them, through the floor,
and out of sight. It was long ere either of them
could sufficiently recover to stir from the floor,
and when they did move, it was only to totter to their
bed, and to lie with the bedclothes well over their
heads, quivering and quaking till the morning.
The hot morning sun dissipating their
fears, they got up, and, hurrying downstairs, demanded
an interview with their landlord. It was in vain
the latter argued it was all a nightmare they showed
the absurdity of such a theory by vehemently attesting
they had both simultaneously experienced the phenomena.
They were about to take their departure, when the
landlord, retracting all he had said, offered them
another room and any terms they liked, “if only
they would stay and hold their tongues.”
“I know every word of what you
say is true,” he said, in such submissive tones
that the tender hearts of Mr. and Mrs. Murphy instantly
relented, and they promised to remain. “But
what am I to do? I cannot shut up a house which
I have taken on a twenty years’ lease, because
one room in it is haunted-and, after all,
there is only one visitor in twenty who is disturbed
by the apparition. What is the history of the
head? Why, it is said to be that of a pedlar who
was murdered here over a hundred years ago. The
body was hidden behind the wainscoting, and his head
under the cupboard floor. The miscreants were
never caught; they are supposed to have gone down in
a ship that sailed from this port just about that
time and was never heard of again.”
This is the gist of the story the
clergyman told me, and, believing it as I undoubtedly
do to be true, there is every reason to suppose that
the inn, to which I have, of course, given a fictitious
name, if still in existence, is still haunted.