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5:57pm Monday 6th February 2012
Last Halloween my husband and I went on a tour of the ‘Haunted’ Preston Manor, billed as a Ghost Tour we thought we’d certainly get to see or sense something spooky. But despite being conducted in the dark on the night of the year the veil between the living and the dead is supposedly at its thinnest the only scary thing that happened was the fact the pubs were already shut by the time it was over.
The one exciting encounter was a flickering lightbulb in a bedroom, but on talking to a friend who had gone on the same walk an hour earlier than us we discovered that exactly the same thing had happened to her group too. Still, it is thrilling, fun and the tour guides are incredibly enthusiastic, and I am sure that the many others have had real experiences here (I know that the Most Haunted crew had a very successful visit!), but I am not sure that I really believe in ghosts.
However, I will tell you a little story, every word of which is completely true… Twenty years ago now. On moving into our first student home, my fellow housemates and I eagerly ran about our new abode checking out every room and piece of furniture. It wasn’t a large and lovely house by any means, it was damp and stuffed full of obviously old and second hand items, but we didn’t mind. We knew we would love it and have a ball.
Our first discovery however, seemed to put a bit of a dampener on the initial excitement and could have coloured the rest of our time in the house… it was a toe-tag. Yes the tag that goes around someone’s dead toe in the mortuary. It was found in the bottom of a very old bed, and it had a name written on it followed by the word 'DECEASED'. I won’t say the full name here, even though I do remember it fully, let’s just say it belonged to ‘Muriel’.
We were surprised but we weren’t perturbed and carried on setting up home. My friend (in whose bed Muriel’s tag was found) tried to move into her room. Her wardrobe door was locked, it wouldn’t budge and there was no key. It was an old piece of heavy wood furniture and we had no chance against it ourselves. Maybe the estate agents knew more, we waited until we could ask them.
But when my friend woke up the next day the old wardrobe door had swung open by itself, and it wasn’t empty. It had some old sepia tinted photos in it. We shuffled through them staring at the old families and children in the prints. Did these belong to Muriel? Was Muriel in one of them?
We settled into our new home and set about going to college and getting drunk like all students did. But it seemed that something or someone wanted to join in the fun. We seemed to be plagued with lots of little upsetting experiences. Things definitely went missing only to reappear, doors would suddenly lock then unlock later, taps, radios and lights went on and off when no one was near them… Yes of course all things that could be explained by someone being mischievous. But soon forks started flying around the kitchen unaided, coins would lift themselves off the arms of chairs and a grill pan kept shooting out of the cooker. It seemed the more girls we had in one room the more ‘activity’ there was, in fact nothing happened when anyone was alone which meant there was little room for over-exaggerating or pretence. And it certainly didn’t just happen after a big night out or even the morning after.
One particularly memorable evening a friend was sleeping on my bedroom floor, we both woke up at the same time to find one of the drawers out of a chest was on the floor. Upside down. But with its contents all placed carefully up the right way underneath it. We were slightly concerned and slept with the light on after that.
We soon started affectionately saying ‘oh come on now Muriel, leave us alone’ or to visitors ‘don’t worry that’s just Muriel’ as the lights started flickering on and off. For some reason we never felt scared, as I say we weren’t bothered by Muriel when alone so there was no scary ‘Haunted House Film’ type persecution of loners.
Eventually we moved out (not because of Muriel but because the bathroom had fallen through to the lounge) and eventually other things like dissertations and exams started to occupy us, but we never forgot her. I still see a lot of the friends that I lived with in that house with or those who came to visit, we still talk about Muriel and what happened during that student year. A frequent visitor to the house said to me recently ‘So has anyone ever owned up to being Muriel then?’ And no, to date, no one ever has…
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Comments(6)
ReluctantHousewife
says...
1:29pm Wed 15 Feb 12
Twittern Wanderer
says...
3:05pm Tue 21 Feb 12
anubis
says...
11:09pm Wed 22 Feb 12
ReluctantHousewife
says...
3:21pm Mon 27 Feb 12
Helmut Polisher
says...
7:08pm Thu 1 Mar 12
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anubis says...
7:09pm Tue 7 Feb 12
Your latest ‘ghost story’, though necessarily very brief, demonstrated that if there comes a time when you feel you must ‘do something different’ with your life – then fiction- writing is where you’d probably be a ‘smash hit’.
Your little tale will have entertained many. I haven’t read writings set ‘beyond the grave’ since my teens (many years ago) … but your piece strikingly reminds one of Edith Nesbit, who, in addition to penning ‘The Railway Children’ (for which she is largely remembered today), scripted (and published) numerous supernatural tales – almost always, like you, making clear her NOT endorsing the authenticity of any earthly ‘spirit activities’, yet, at the same time, appealing to the irrational subconscious embedded in all of us.
(It’s a tragedy Edith’s work has largely disappeared … she began publishing poetry in her teenage years and wrote lots of stuff for kids …. also numerous horror tales. A foundation member of the Fabian Society, she intimately associated with Bernard Shaw, H G Wells, the two Webbs and ex-Brightonian, Eleanor Marx. Married to Hubert Bland, who insisted on having sex with every available female in sight; he soon impregnated the Fabian Society’s secretary (named Alice !!!) who moved into the family home as Edith’s accepted the situation … bringing up, as her own, the bastards Bland provided! I guess I’m abusing your hospitality by including all this stuff here?!)
As I read your piece I couldn’t help but imagine how Edith would have handled the plot. I’m sure she’d have excused your ‘false’ recollection about the toe tag … it just doesn’t make sense to say it would have indicated Muriel was ‘deceased’ (but may have indicated the ‘cause’ of her death). Maybe Edith would have weaved a storyline of Muriel arriving at the ‘Pearly Gates’, refused admission as she lacked the required ‘passport’ … and returned to her old home, searching for the missing ‘toe tag’ …. hence all the opening and shutting doors, emptying a drawer but while maintaining everything ‘in order’ !!??
If you and your (one-time) undergraduate colleagues really wanted to dig deeper, I’m sure death records are readily available locally. The decease being so long ago, it is difficult to imagine your enquiries causing upset …. but, of course, I’m really wandering between levels of discussion. All I really needed to say (about your possible future ‘profession’) would have required no more than two sentences --- difficult to imagine that at this late stage you REALLY want to learn more about the late Muriel --- but, if you were unfamiliar with the old Fabian girl, DO keep your eyes open for Edith Nesbit -- and her supernatural tales!