<h2> <SPAN name="article34"></SPAN> A Haunted House </h2>
<p>We have been trying to hide it from each other, but the truth
must now come out. Our house is haunted.</p>
<p>Well, of course, anybody’s house might be haunted.
Anybody might have a headless ghost walking about the
battlements or the bath-room at midnight, and if it were no
more than that, I should not trouble you with the details.
But our house is haunted in a peculiar way. No house that I
have heard of has ever been affected in quite this way
before.</p>
<p>I must begin by explaining that it is a new house, built just
before the war. (Before the war, not after; this is a true
story.) Its first and only tenant was a Mrs. Watson-Watson,
who lived here with her daughter. Add her three servants, and
you have filled the house. No doubt she could have stowed
people away in the cellar, but I have never heard that she
did; she preferred to keep it for such coal and wood as came
her way. When Mrs. Watson-Watson decided six months ago to
retire to the country, we took the house, and have lived here
since. And very comfortably, except for this haunting
business.</p>
<p>As was to be expected, we were busy for the first few weeks
in sending on Mrs. Watson-Watson’s letters. Gradually,
as the news of her removal got round to her less intimate
friends, the flow of them grew less, and at last--to our
great relief, for we were always mislaying her address--it
ceased altogether. It was not until then that we felt
ourselves to be really in possession of our house.</p>
<p>We were not in possession for long. A month later a letter
arrived for Lady Elizabeth Mullins. Supposing this to be a
<i>nom-de-guerre</i> of Mrs. Watson-Watson’s, we
searched for, and with great difficulty found, the missing
address, and sent the letter on. Next day there were two more
letters for Lady Elizabeth; by the end of the week there were
half a dozen; and for the rest of that month they came
trickling in at the rate of one a day. Mrs.
Watson-Watson’s address was now definitely lost, so we
tied Lady-Elizabeth’s letters up in a packet and sent
them to the ground-landlord’s solicitors. Solicitors
like letters.</p>
<p>It was annoying at this time, when one was expecting,
perhaps, a very important cheque or communication from the
Prime Minister, to go downstairs eagerly at the
postman’s knock and find a couple of letters for Lady
Elizabeth and a belated copy of the <i>Church Times</i> for
Mrs. Watson-Watson. It was still more annoying, that, just
when we were getting rid of Lady Elizabeth, Mr. J. Garcia
should have arrived to take her place.</p>
<p>Mr. Garcia seems to be a Spaniard. At any rate, most of his
letters came from Spain. This makes it difficult to know what
to do with them. There was something clever in Spanish on the
back of the last one, which may be the address to which we
ought to return it, but on the other hand, may be just the
Spanish for “Always faithful” or
“Perseverance” or “Down with the
bourgeoisie.” He seems to be a busier person than Lady
Elizabeth. Ten people wrote to him the other week, whereas
there were never more than seven letters in a week for her
ladyship.</p>
<p>Until lately, I have always been annoyed by the fact that
there is no Sunday post in London. To come down to breakfast
knowing that on this morning anyhow there is no chance of an
O.B.E. takes the edge off one’s appetite. But lately, I
have been glad of the weekly respite. For one day in seven I
can do without the excitement of wondering whether there will
be three letters for Mr. Garcia this morning, or two for Lady
Elizabeth, or three for Lady Elizabeth, or one for Mrs.
Watson-Watson. I will gladly let my own correspondence go in
order to be saved from theirs. But on Sunday last, about
tea-time, there came a knock at the front-door and the
unmistakable scuttle of a letter being pushed through the
slit and dropping into the hall, My senses are now so acute
in this matter, that I can almost distinguish the scuffle of
a genuine Garcia from that of a Mullins or even a
Watson-Watson. There was a novelty about this arrival which
was interesting. I went into the hall, and saw a letter on
the floor, unstamped and evidently delivered by hand. It was
inscribed to Sir John Poling.</p>
<p>Will somebody offer an explanation? I have given you our
story--leaving out as accidental, and not of sufficient
historic interest, the postcard to the Countess of Westbury
and the obvious income-tax form to Colonel Todgers, C.B.--and
I feel that it is up to you or the Psychical Research Society
or somebody to tell us what it all means. My own explanation
is this. I think that our house is haunted by ghosts, but by
the ghosts of living persons only, and that these ghosts are
visible to outsiders, but invisible to the inmates Thus Mr.
Lopez, while passing down our street, suddenly sees J. Garcia
looking at him from our drawing-room window.
“Caramba!” he says, “I thought he was in
Barcelona.” He makes a note of the address, and when he
gets back to Spain writes long letters to Garcia begging him
to come back to his Barcelonian wife and family. At another
time somebody else sees Sir John Poling letting himself in at
the front door with a latch-key. “So that’s where
he lives now,” she says to herself, and spreads the
news among their mutual friends. Of course, this is very
annoying for us, and one cannot help wishing that these
ghosts would confine themselves to one of the back bedrooms.
Failing this, they might leave some kind of address in
indelible letters on the bath-mat.</p>
<p>Another explanation is that our address has become in some
way a sort of typical address, just as “Thomas
Atkins” became the typical soldier for the purpose of
filling up forms, and “John Doe” the typical
litigant. When a busy woman puts our address on an envelope
beneath the name of Lady Elizabeth Mullins, all she means is
that Lady Elizabeth lives somewhere, and that the secretary
had better look up the proper address and write it in before
posting the letter. Every now and then the secretary forgets
to do this, and the letter comes here. This may be a
compliment to the desirability of our house, but it is a
compliment of which we are getting tired. I must ask that it
should now cease.</p>
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