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<h2> 9 </h2>
<p>“In the early settlement of this State, an Englishman by the name of Guir
pre-empted a large body of land, near the center of which he erected this
house. Although his intention in coming from the old country was to make
his permanent home in the colony, his reasons for doing so were quite
different from those which usually induce immigration. Guir was an artist,
and a man of some means; and his object in colonizing was not so much to
cultivate the soil, or to trade with the Indians, or engage in any
business enterprise, as to gratify a craving for nature and surround
himself with such scenery as he loved to paint. It would be folly to
pretend that Guir was a man of ordinary tastes and disposition; for had he
been such, he would never have undertaken a journey, with a family of
girls, into such a wilderness as Virginia was at that time. No; from the
very circumstances of his birth and education, he was unfitted to live
with his countrymen; hence his early adoption of the colony as a home for
himself, wife, and daughters. This happened a hundred and fifty years
ago.”</p>
<p>“He was an ancestor of yours, I presume,” said Paul, hoping to gain some
clew to the man's identity.</p>
<p>“No,” answered Ah Ben, “he was not.”</p>
<p>“Pardon the interruption,” added Paul, fearing he had annoyed the speaker.</p>
<p>“Naturally, in a country without roads, or even wagon trails,” continued
the old man, without noticing the apology, “it was years before a house of
this size could be completed, as every brick and nearly every stick of
timber was brought from England. These, of course, were conveyed by water
as far as the rivers permitted, the rest of the journey being performed
upon sleds drawn by oxen. But it was Guir's hobby, and in the course of a
dozen or fifteen years the job was completed, and the house stood as you
see it now. Then the owner set himself to work with brush, canvas, and
chisel to decorate his home, and make it, according to his ideas, as
beautiful and suggestive of his early youth as imaginable. With his own
hands, Mr. Henley, he painted most of these pictures, although his three
daughters, inheriting his tastes, assisted him. And thus, as the years
rolled by, Guir House became more and more a museum of artistic efforts,
embracing many unusual subjects, and in every degree of perfection. The
broad acres of the estate produced much that was necessary toward the
maintenance of life, and what they lacked was supplied once a year from a
distant settlement near the coast. As you can readily understand, there
were no neighbors, and but occasional visits from the red man, who looked
distrustfully upon the pale-face. This feeling became mutual, and trifling
acts of hostility on the part of the natives grew both in frequency and
magnitude. Depredations upon Guir's fields and cattle were at first
ignored, in the effort to maintain peace, but in time it became necessary
to resist them. Upon one occasion, a raid upon a distant field was
successfully repulsed, with the aid of his wife and three daughters,
attired in men's clothing and mounted upon fast horses. The Indians were
so completely surprised by the ruse, being apparently attacked by five
men, where they had believed there was only one, that they fled,
completely routed, nor did they return for several years. Meanwhile,
fearing another and closer attack, Guir converted one of the lower rooms
of his house into an impenetrable and unassailable place of refuge. The
windows were walled up, to correspond with the stonework of the house,
leaving no suspicion of there having been once an opening. Likewise the
doors were treated, and then carefully plastered both within and without,
with the exception of one, which he made anew, to communicate with a
private stairway leading from one of the upper bedrooms. This was the only
entrance to the dark retreat, and a heavy bolt was placed upon the inside,
to be used by the family in case of attack. There was no reason to suppose
that a marauding party would ever find the way to this secret chamber, as
the entrance was carefully covered by a scuttle in the floor of a dark
closet; and the place being thoroughly fire-proof, the family felt
unusually secure in the possession of their new retreat.”</p>
<p>“I think I have seen the stairway you speak of,” said Paul.</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered the old man, “it communicates with the closet of your
room.</p>
<p>“One day Guir had left his home. He had ridden alone into the distant
hills to dispute the range for some cattle with his natural enemy, the red
man. The pow-wow had been long and trying, and it was only with the
setting sun that he had come to a proper understanding, as he supposed,
with the ugly chief who dominated the region about.</p>
<p>“It was midnight when he reached his home. He pounded sharply on the door;
but his good wife, who never retired without him, failed to answer the
summons. So, after repeated knocks, Guir forced the door and entered. All
was dark. An unearthly stillness pervaded the air, and a horrid suspicion
forced itself upon him while groping his way forward to secure a light.
Finding the chimney, he raked together a few coals, which he blew into a
flame, and then, with trembling hands, lighted the candle upon the shelf
above. Looking about him, Guir's heart sank. His house had been wrecked.
His pictures, the work of years, were scattered in fragments about the
floor. The windows were smashed, and the hall starred with broken glass.
Not an ornament, not a treasure remained intact. But this he knew was as
nothing to the horrible sight which he expected momentarily to greet his
eyes. He called aloud to each member of his family, in the failing hope
that some one would answer; but no sound broke the awful stillness.
Suddenly he bethought him of the secret chamber, and with a wild prayer
that his loved ones had been able to reach it in safety, and were still in
hiding there, he started down the narrow stairs in search. Reaching the
bottom, he found that the door had been wrenched from its hinges and
thrown to the ground; and then Guir's heart sank, never to rise again.
Stepping across the threshold of the room, candle in hand, a vision of
blood swam before his eyes, and the dimly-burning light revealed the
horror-stricken faces of his murdered family. Not one was left to tell the
tale, but the story pictured before him was unmistakable in every detail.
The treacherous natives had first tortured and then butchered them. For a
time he stood transfixed with horror, unable to remove his eyes from the
awful scene, or his feet from the spot where he had first beheld it; then,
with the cry of sudden madness, he threw himself beside the bleeding
corpses and lost all consciousness. How long he remained there was
problematical, but on awaking Guir was still in the dark, and where he had
fallen. At that moment a strange and overpowering desire seized him. He
must paint the portraits of his murdered family before it became too late.
Had he been sane, such a ghastly thought would never have possessed him;
but Guir was crazed, and for days and nights following he worked in that
dismal vault, by the light of a smoking lamp, at the task he had set
himself, his fired imagination even intensifying the horrors of the
grewsome tableau.</p>
<p>“Upon each canvas he depicted the awful countenance which fact and fancy
had imprinted upon his brain. Guir painted not only what he saw, but what
he imagined he saw—dreadful faces, loaded with torture and despair.
When completed, he hung them upon the walls of the room, and then with his
own hands bricked up the entrance from within, having first carefully
replaced and bolted the door. When Guir had thus entombed himself, he lay
down again upon the floor, and then, still a madman, opened a vein in his
wrist. The letting of blood may have sobered him or restored his mental
equilibrium; for suddenly, with a wild change in his feelings, he bounded
to his feet and repented. Again he was in darkness, and could not guess
how much time had elapsed since his fatal act. Staggering to the closed
doorway, he endeavored to tear away the bricks he had so recently placed
there, but the mortar was hardening fast, and he was unable to find his
trowel. Groping frantically along the floor, he searched in vain for some
tool to open the vault in which he was buried, and then, with the anguish
of despair, dropped again upon the ground to await his fate. Thus Guir
died, in an agony of remorse, and with the intensest desire to live.”</p>
<p>Ah Ben stopped suddenly, and fixed his eyes upon Henley, as if trying to
read his thoughts.</p>
<p>“There is one thing in that story that strikes me as very peculiar,”
observed Paul, returning his host's look with interest.</p>
<p>“And what is that?” answered the old man, his eyes still fixed on Henley's
face.</p>
<p>“The fact that you are able to repeat with such circumstantial detail the
feelings and actions of a man who died under such peculiar conditions, and
quite alone.”</p>
<p>“It might indeed appear strange to you, Mr. Henley, but my familiarity
with the case enables me to speak with knowledge and accuracy.”</p>
<p>“And would you mind telling me how that is possible?” inquired Paul.</p>
<p>“<i>Because I am the man Guir himself; and I have lived on through such
ages of agony that I have no longer the will or desire to appear other
than as the ancient wreck before you</i>.”</p>
<p>Paul started.</p>
<p>“Do you mean to tell me then that I am talking to a ghost?” he cried in
dismay.</p>
<p>“As you please, Mr. Henley; but ghosts are not so different from ordinary
people—that is, when they have become materialized. I have just now
shown you the real condition of this old house, or rather the way in which
the majority of men see it. I do not hesitate, therefore, to show you the
ghost that haunts it; nor do I object to explaining the dreadful cause of
the haunting, or a little of the philosophy of hauntings in general.”</p>
<p>Paul looked aghast. Easy enough was it now to comprehend how the man had
talked so familiarly of death and the next life after having actually
crossed the threshold and passed into the realm of experience. But there
was something too real, too natural about this personality to accept the
remark as literal. Familiarity with Ah Ben had shown him to be a man. Paul
felt sure of it. And yet here were revealed mysteries never dreamed of;
one of which was even now producing an occult spell. Henley drew a deep
breath in agony of spirit.</p>
<p>After a moment's pause, the old man continued:</p>
<p>“Ghosts, Mr. Henley, are as real as you; and when a spirit returns to
earth in visible form, it is the result of some disquieting influence
immediately before the death of the body, or, as I might say, previous to
the new life. At the hour of physical birth, such influences cause idiocy
or such imperfection of the bodily functions that death ensues, and the
spirit returns to seek another entrance into the world of matter. When a
man dies dominated by some intense earthly desire, his mind is barred
against the higher powers and greater possibilities of spirit; his whole
nature is closed against their reception, so that he perceives and hopes
for nothing save the continuance of that life which has so completely
filled his nature. His old environment overpowers the new by the very
force of his will; and if this continues, he becomes not only a haunting
spirit, but a materialized one, visible to certain people under certain
conditions, and compelled to live out his life amid the scenes which had
so attracted him. This, Mr. Henley, has been my case. I shall live upon
earth, and be visible to the spiritually susceptible, until the strong
impression made at the hour of death shall have worn away.”</p>
<p>“And the young lady, is she your daughter?” inquired Paul.</p>
<p>“She is my daughter,” answered the old man solemnly.</p>
<p>“How comes it, then, that she addresses you by so singular a name?”</p>
<p>“It is the one she first learned to use in infancy. As I partially
explained to you, my mother was a Hindoo, while my father was English. The
name Ah Ben belongs to the maternal side of my family.”</p>
<p>“Another question—more vital than any I have yet asked, because it
concerns my own well-being and happiness,” continued Paul; “how is it
possible that Dorothy can live in a place like this with a being who is
only semi-material?</p>
<p>“Because her nature is double, as is mine,” answered the old man.
“Dorothy, like her sisters and mother, passed out of this life more than a
hundred and fifty years ago.”</p>
<p>“And did the same causes operate to bring her back to earth?”</p>
<p>Ah Ben became more serious than ever as he answered: “You have touched
upon the sorest point of all, and one which requires further elucidation.
Sudden and unnatural death has a retarding tendency upon the spirit's
progress; but where one has caused his own destruction, the evil resulting
is incalculable. I was a suicide; and ten thousand times over had I better
have borne all the ills that earth could heap upon me, than have stooped
to such folly. For in what has it resulted? A prolonged mental agony, such
as you can never conceive; for I have no home in heaven nor earth, but am
forced to wander amid the shadows of each world, unrecognized by those
either above or below me. Here I am shunned upon every hand, and, as you
saw for yourself, I was equally avoided in Levachan. But that is not all;
in the ignorance and selfishness of my grief, I yearned for my lost ones
with a solicitude, a consuming fierceness and power of will which insanity
only can equal. By nature I was intense; and even had I not committed the
fatal act, my vitality would have burned itself away with the awful
concentration of feeling. But it must be remembered that I was not the
only sufferer from this pitiful lack of self-control. The stronger desires
and emotions of the living influence the dead—I use the words in
their common acceptation for the sake of convenience—and here is
where I caused such incalculable injury to my own child; for Dorothy,
having entered the spirit world with inferior powers of resistance, fell
under the spell I had wrought, and joined me in the haunting of this old
house. Here, Mr. Henley, am I, a suicide, justly deserving the punishment
I receive; but there is my child, as innocent as the air of heaven, forced
to suffer with me, and it is no small part of my chastisement to realize
this fact. People fly from us as they would from pestilence, both in this
world and the other, although many of the dwellers in the higher state,
from their greater knowledge and loftier development, simply avoid us. And
we can not criticise their action in either world, for we are not adapted
to either state. We are outcasts.”</p>
<p>Ah Ben paused for a moment, and then became deeply impressive, as he
added:</p>
<p>“Mr. Henley, let the experience of one who has suffered, and who will
continue to suffer more than you can possibly understand—let his
experience, I say, warn you against the unreasonable yearning for the
return of those who have passed on to their spiritual state! Here our eyes
are blinded to the blessedness to come, and it is well it is so; for, were
it otherwise, the discipline of earth life would be lost, as too monstrous
to be endured. No man could submit to the restraints of matter, with the
power and freedom of spirit in sight. If once I could have realized the
dreadful results entailed upon what I had lost, by my effort to recover
it, I would have known that the blackest curse would have been trifling by
contrast. Let the dead rest! and let one who knows persuade you that their
entrance into spirit life is a time rather for rejoicing than regret!”</p>
<p>“And is Dorothy to suffer as you have suffered, for what was no fault of
hers?” demanded Paul.</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Ah Ben; “the law of Karma is the law of nature and the law of
God; and while ordinarily she would have passed safely on in the
possession of her new-born powers, the pitfall which I blindly laid beset
her unwary feet, and she fell. There is but one course open; but one way
in which Dorothy can reach either heaven or earth, by a shorter road than
that which I am compelled to travel. It is simple, and yet one which,
under the circumstances, is almost impossible to achieve; and this from
the fact that it requires the cooperation of a human being.”</p>
<p>“I should imagine that any one with the ordinary feelings of humanity
would gladly do what he could to assist such an unhappy fellow-creature!”
exclaimed Paul.</p>
<p>“But she is not a fellow-creature,” urged the old man.</p>
<p>“True, but I understood you to say that she might become one with the
cooperation of a human being.”</p>
<p>“I did,” Ah Ben replied; “but where is that to be found?”</p>
<p>“Not knowing the nature of the task, it would be difficult to say,”
answered Paul, “but I will adhere to my first proposition, that one with
the ordinary feelings of humanity would gladly do what he could.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Henley, have you the ordinary feelings of humanity?”</p>
<p>“I hope so,” answered Paul.</p>
<p>“Would you be willing to marry a ghost, and be haunted for the rest of
your life; for the ghost would be sure to outlive you?”</p>
<p>Paul started.</p>
<p>“I have put the case too strongly,” continued Ah Ben; “Dorothy is not a
ghost in the ordinary sense. She is a materialized spirit, and that, my
dear friend, is exactly what you are, with this difference: you have
practically no control over your body; while she, having returned from the
summer land abnormally, can, like myself, become invisible at will; but,
upon the other hand, she is not always visible, even to those whom she
would like to have see her. In short, as I have told you before, we belong
to neither one world nor the other. But through union with a human
creature, Dorothy can once more assume the functions of mortality, and
after another period of earth life, become fitted again for the land of
spirits.”</p>
<p>“I understand you entirely,” answered Paul, “and can say, without
hesitation or reservation, that I love your daughter, and, be she whom or
what she may, will gladly marry her, if she can say as much for me.”</p>
<p>“I thought I could not be mistaken in my man,” answered Ah Ben. “I have
believed in your frankness, honor, and courage from the beginning; and
although you came to this house with the intention of deceit, I feel sure
that in the more serious situations of life you are to be relied upon. You
have spoken to Dorothy, Mr. Henley, and I am confident she shares my trust
in you.”</p>
<p>“I hope so,” answered Paul.</p>
<p>“I know it,” the old man replied; “and let me tell you further that this
match is not one subservient to the ends of utility or profit; for, were
such the motive, the very end would be defeated. Dorothy must love the man
she marries, with all her heart and soul; and you can readily understand,
ostracized as we are, how difficult it has been to find such a one. For
more than a century we have sought in vain, and I have pressed every
opportunity and strained every power to bring about such a meeting and
such a result as I trust will shortly follow; but the world has given us
no chance, and those few who have been able to see us have only fled in
terror!”</p>
<p>“Am I at liberty, then, to prove my devotion to your daughter by asking
her to marry me?”</p>
<p>“You have already done so,” replied Ah Ben, “and I have already given my
consent; but I warn you, Mr. Henley, that in your intercourse with my
daughter you should remember that you are dealing with a nature far more
intense, and with far greater capacity to love, than any you have ever
known. While the most fervid desire of Dorothy's life has doubtless been
to meet some creature with whom she might affiliate, I believe she would
forego even that happiness if convinced that it would prove disastrous to
the object of her affection.”</p>
<p>Paul extended his hands to Ah Ben, who took them with fervor. “Dear old
man!” he said, “although I am speaking to a ghost, I am not afraid of you;
and knowing how much you have suffered, it shall be my aim to help and
comfort you; for have you not shown me how close is the other world, and
so in a measure removed the dread of death? How truly do I feel that those
who have left us may be close around us, although we can not see them.”</p>
<p>And then, with a new light on all that surrounded him, Paul bade Ah Ben
good-night, and went to his room.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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