“What does it mean, anyway?”
Warde asked, as he followed Roy, breathless and in
suspense. “What are we going to do?
Has he got some some accomplice ”
“Follow me,” was all that Roy said.
“The troop if we’re in danger ”
“Never mind the troop; follow me.”
Silently Roy sped along into an overgrown
cross street, cutting through the doorless wreck of
the Y. M. C. A. shack, over the litter within, and
out on the opposite side. A tall, spectral shadow
soon confronted them, whence emanated that ghostly
voice, loud and beseeching, as they approached.
Their nearness to it dispelled any thought of its being
the inanimate sounds of wind-stirred wreckage or of
some unknown living creature. It moaned and cried
like no voice they had ever heard before. Yet
it was strangely human. The crying of that fleeing,
bewildered apparition was silent now, and there seemed
a note of gloomy solace in the low, plaintive strain.
“Come ahead,” said Roy resolutely, “follow
me. Not scared, are you?”
He ascended the narrow, metal ladder
of the windmill, Warde following. Upon the top
was a tiny platform, and here he turned on his flashlight.
Crouched in a heap was their friend Blythe. He
was in a state of frantic agitation, his whole form
trembling like a leaf. His head was bowed; he
clutched something in his two hands. From it dangled
a cord. Several burned matches lay near him and
wisps and little masses of woven straw littered the
miniature aerial platform.
Roy turned his light above to that
part of the superstructure which revolved with the
wind, enabling the winged wheel to keep in favorable
position for revolving. The moaning voice was
very near now, within arm’s reach almost, and
at that close range was divested of its ghostly suggestiveness.
“Look,” Roy whispered,
directing his light upward. There upon the movable
framework was something that looked like a cigar-box.
It was so placed as always to catch the breeze from
the revolving fan.
“I know what it is,” said
Roy; “hold this light while I take it down.”
He seemed to know that there was no
peace for that distracted, crouching figure, as long
as the weird voice from that compact little mechanism
was audible. He stood upon the framework and,
reaching up, dislodged the harmless box. A last
dying wail accompanied his act. Then the big winged
fan revolved silently above them in the dark night.
“Blythey,” cried Roy gently;
“look up. It’s just Warde and me.
What’s the matter? Tell us, can’t
you? What’s the trouble?”
“I’ve got her I
can see her she called me ”
was all Blythe could say. “Did you hear
her call loud? I knew I
came no no!” he
fairly screamed, as Warde tried to lift his head and
discover what he held. “I came back back
to life I was dead you would
have buried me can’t you see I’m
alive you scouts ”
His head shook, he clutched at his
breast, the hand which Roy tried to grasp trembled
and was like ice. The two scouts saw that there
was no use talking with him. The wretched creature
was out of his senses. Huddling in a posture
of abject terror he clutched the object which he held
tighter against his breast, his head bowed and shaking,
his whole form in convulsion.
“Do you know where you are, Blythey?”
Warde asked.
“In the lower field where they’re
making hay,” Blythe answered.
They tried no more at questioning him.
“We want you to come with us,
Blythey,” Roy said. His voice was friendly,
kindly, albeit he was himself disturbed and fearful.
For neither of the boys knew what this pathetic, demon-haunted
creature might do next.
“We’re your friends,”
Warde added. “Can’t you get up and
come with us and go to bed. Don’t
you remember all about camp-fire, and Pee-wee, and
all the fun we had? There isn’t any voice
now, it’s gone away.”
But for all their kindness and resolve
to help him, they felt certain qualms, both of conscience
and of fear. The all too conclusive proof that
he was a fugitive and that his hands and disordered
brain were red with blood were strengthened by this
uncanny adventure.
To them the vision that he had seen,
the voice that had lured him and brought him to this
pitiful state were the face and voice of his victim a
woman. He had seen her, as such wretched, remorseful
creatures ever do....
The big fan revolving silently above
them in the brisk wind seemed almost to bespeak a
kind of quiet satisfaction that it had brought his
crime back home to him, and laid him low there upon
that ghostly tower.
It was not without a feeling of relief
that the two scouts heard the cheering voices of their
comrades approaching through the darkness. They
had been aroused, no doubt, by the piercing scream
of Blythe.
“I’ll go down,”
said Roy; “you stay up here, don’t leave
him alone.”
At the foot of the ladder the leader
of the Silver Foxes waited for the members of the
troop. It was good to see them approach.
In the darkness he could just distinguish their hurriedly
donned and incomplete raiment. He saw their looks
of fear and inquiry, saw the almost panic agitation
in Pee-wee’s round face and sleepy eyes.
“It’s all right,”
Roy said, trying to control his jerky, nervous speech.
“Where’s Warde?”
“Shh, he’s all right Blythe Blythe
is up there he’s in a kind of fit he’s
crazy he’s the he’s
the one, all right he’s Darrell shh,
wait don’t go up. Do you
see this? It’s one of those banshees Harry
Donnelle told us about the kind the soldiers
used to put up in the windmills in Flanders.
That’s what’s been making the noise.
It sort of you know spoke to
him that’s what I think....”
If Roy had remembered some of the
sprightly tales which their friend Lieutenant Donnelle
had brought from France, he might have saved himself
and his companion much fearful perplexity on that dark
momentous night.
Or if they had ever been in Holland
or Flanders they might have known of those novel toys,
the handiwork of ingenious youngsters, that moan and
wail and even pour forth their uncanny laughter when
strategically placed on the tops of windmills.
American soldier boys, chafing under enforced idleness
in trenches and dugouts, would often beguile their
time making these miniature calliopes to catch the
wind. And it is not out of reason to surmise
that many a warrior in the war-torn regions was startled
and confounded by the aerial lamentations of these
harmless little boxes of wires and crude whistles.
A cigar box, a few strips of wire,
and some odds and ends of willow wood suffice for
the manufacture of the Flanders banshee. There
is now an American banshee with all modern improvements
(patent not applied for) invented and controlled by
Pee-wee Harris. But that is not a part of the
present story.