Evergreens on the mantelpiece, logs crackling in the hearth, frost on the window panes. And spooky stories.
How I love them. Especially those with a festive flavour.
As you may know, each year for the last few years, as Christmas approaches, I’ve posted one of my own seasonal chillers on this blog. And this year will be no exception. But first you’ll have to indulge me for half a minute or so as I wax lyrical about the history of this unusual custom.
In actual fact, I’ve recently re-educated myself on the matter. It’s long been my conjecture that the tradition of the Christmas ghost story predates Christmas itself, and descends to us from prehistoric times, when pagan man, particularly in the Northern Hemisphere, lived in mortal fear of the dark, dead days of midwinter, and sought to commune with his gods and the spirits of his ancestors for their intercession. It’s my belief that a version of this continued even into early Christian times, when winter – with the harvest collected and no further ploughing or sewing possible until the spring thaw – saw rural populations (which was basically everyone!), unable to do anything but sit around the long-house fire, trying to ignore the frozen darkness outside, and telling each other fantastical tales.
Of course, that’s all a long time ago now, and like many other village Yuletide practices, it was always my guess that this past-time faded with the social changes following the transformation of the Middle Ages into the Early Modern Age – only to be reawakened centuries later by Victorian traditionalists like Charles Dickens.
Well, not a bit of it. I’ve now uncovered evidence that when Dickens penned such festive ghostly classics as A CHRISTMAS CAROL (1843) and THE SIGNALMAN (1866), he was only adding to a canon that was still very much alive. For example, when Shakespeare wrote A WINTER’S TALE in 1610, he utters the throwaway line: “A sad tale’s best for winter. I have one. Of sprites and goblins.” Likewise, in 1589, in THE JEW OF MALTA, Christopher Marlowe says:
“Now I remember those old women’s words,
Who in my wealth would tell me winter’s tales,
And speak of spirits and ghosts that glide by night.”
And so there we go, (with many thanks to A GOTHIC CURIOSITY CABINET). History lesson over, self-justification given. Not that I think we need too much justification to post a new spooky story, do we? Either way, enough of my drivel. Hopefully, you’ll all enjoy …
THE UNREAL
Hetherington had been told to approach the building through its side-gate and knock on the fire-exit
door behind the row of dustbins. He did so, and waited, breath pluming in the
frozen evening air. No lights showed on this side, but that was probably
because there were no windows. The Ambridge Theatre towered above him, an
edifice of grimy, Victorian-age brick. But he’d been assured that if he was
here for seven pm, someone would eventually admit him. As the wait dragged on, Hetherington
shivering in the snow-filled yard, a muffled clamour of revelry drifted from
the direction of the town centre, the product of loutish gangs stumbling
drunkenly from one glitzy, Christmas-bedecked bar to the next.
There was a clunk
on the other side of the door and it cracked open, warm light spilling out. “Alan
Hetherington?” a voice with a soft northern accent enquired.
Hetherington
nodded.
The man standing
there was somewhere in his mid-sixties and rather paunchy. He wore a flowery
shirt and bow-tie, and a sheepskin coat. His thinning white hair was scraped
back and tied at his nape in a small ponytail. He offered a plump, pink hand.
“Ted Lampwick …
Theatre Secretary.”
Hetherington
shook it and entered, finding himself in the theatre’s lobby. It was opulent in
the traditional style, bright light from a large chandelier embossing gilt
paintwork and crimson brocade. On his immediate right, a staircase led up into
gloom. Beyond that, a pair of double-doors stood closed, though a brass plaque
above them illustrated the seating arrangements in the auditorium. On the other
side of that there was a service counter, its queuing area marked out by brass
poles and red velvet ropes. Overhead, swags of glistening evergreen hung in
loops along the curtain rails. In the farthest corner, a tall, frost-white
Christmas tree towered half way to the ceiling, dangling with gold and scarlet
baubles. Clusters of tinsel glimmered from behind the framed black-and-white
stills adorning the walls, each one depicting a past production. Ted Lampwick,
in varying stages of youth and middle-age, featured in several of them.
Lampwick closed
the fire-exit door, but only after glancing curiously around outside. “Alone,
are you?” he asked, sounding surprised.
“That’s how I
normally do it,” Hetherington replied.
“Seriously?”
Hetherington was
amused by his host’s startled tone.
“Pays dividends,
trust me. Surely you’ve watched some of these TV ghost-hunting shows … where
there’re umpteen people running around the building? The viewers are focused on
the main presenter, so they never know where any of the others are. They hear
knocks, bumps, the creaking of overhead floorboards, and are seriously asked to
believe it’s spirit activity when the reality is it could be anyone. None of
that for me and my internet audience. When I do these, I fly solo. I hold my
vigils alone in otherwise empty buildings. If I do hear something, I can investigate
in the full knowledge I’m the only living presence there.”
Lampwick didn’t
look any less unnerved by that. “Well … you’re braver than me.”
“It’s not about being
brave, Mr Lampwick, it’s about being rational. You’d be amazed at some of the simple
explanations I’ve found for so-called ghosts. Wind in faulty chimneys, joists
expanding through temperature change …”
“And you’re
happy to spend Christmas Eve doing that?”
Hetherington
smiled as he pulled his gloves off and tucked them inside his parka. “I’m an
atheist, Mr Lampwick. I don’t believe in God, therefore I don’t believe in
Christmas. Is that wrong of me?”
Lampwick
shrugged, leading him across the lobby to the double-doors. En route they
passed a poster-board bearing images of the theatre’s last production, which
apparently had been some kind of larger-than-life puppet show:
A Christmas Carol
Beneath the ornate heading, a piece of extravagant artwork depicted Scrooge cowering before
a meagre fire in a grate, while the huge, shadowy form of the Spirit of
Christmas Yet-To-Come, garbed all in black, with scythe in hand, lowered over
him. Beneath that there were stills from the actual production, life-size marionettes
interacting with real actors. Hetherington had heard about this beforehand; ingenious
no doubt, but it all sounded very art-house, and of course there was that
irritating Christmas aspect.
“It seems to me
that, doing this tonight of all nights, you’re depriving yourself a bit,”
Lampwick said, opening the double-doors. “Don’t you have a party to go to?”
“Why celebrate
something I don’t believe in?”
“You don’t have
a family?”
“I have a
family, but no-one in our house believes in God.”
Lampwick regarded
him coolly, perhaps wondering if this was a true description of life in the
Hetherington household or a stipulation for it.
Hetherington
returned the gaze blankly.
He was a tall
man, spare of physique, with a mop of copper-red hair and pale features seemingly
much younger than his forty-four years. It was a gawky, boyish look, which
Hetherington didn’t care for much, but he always made up for it with his direct
manner and forthright views. Not that he saw any point in antagonising people
needlessly. He didn’t bother adding that his feelings went much further than
he’d admitted to; it actually empowered him, not celebrating Christmas. To most
people the once-holy feast was nothing more now than a piss-up anyway, but they
still embraced it with ludicrous, ritualistic motions, not to mention indulging
in lavish spending they could ill afford.
None of that for
him. He wasn’t dancing to anyone’s tune, especially not some big, imaginary
sky-fairy.
Beyond the
double doors, Lampwick led him down the auditorium’s left-hand aisle. This room
might be the heart of the theatre, but it wasn’t enormous, with sufficient
seating perhaps for one hundred and fifty people and maybe eighty more on the
balcony upstairs. The closest Hetherington normally got to theatres was seeing
them on TV talent shows, so he’d been expecting something much more spacious,
perhaps with elaborate cornicing along the edges of its vast ceiling, and
another chandelier, a truly colossal thing, suspended in the middle. But in
fact, the “house lights”, as Lampwick referred to them, were shaded bulbs
located at regular intervals on the auditorium walls, while the stage was only
raised three feet from the floor and no more than thirty yards across from one
wing to the other. At present, the curtain was drawn back, and the stage was
bare except for a single solitary figure standing just to the right, head
drooped. Hetherington made a double-take before he realised that this was one
of the marionettes. By the looks of its threadbare dressing-gown and nightshirt,
and the lank white hair protruding from under its nightcap, this was Scrooge.
It was an ugly
thing, hanging there stiff and motionless, the barely-visible wires trailing up
to some dim, indefinable place high above the stage. But it was comical too –
in a juvenile kind of way. Why go to all this trouble, and it must have been a lot
of trouble, to have puppets interacting with real actors? Why not just use a
fully live cast? Hetherington supposed it wove a kind of magical festive aura
for the little ones, but for any adults unfortunate enough to get roped into
sitting here, it must have been a yawn.
A bit like the
entire money-spinning con that is Christmas itself …
Behind the
marionette, meanwhile, the stage’s rear wall was masked by painted scenery
representing a London skyline from long ago: rookeries, chimney pots and the unmistakable
dome of St. Paul’s cathedral.
“A Christmas
Carol,” Lampwick explained somewhat unnecessarily. They halted midway down the
aisle to appraise the stage. “A festive special, I suppose you’d call it. Not
part of our normal roster. A travelling roadshow put it on. We’ll be striking
this set on Boxing Day, and starting work on the Panto. That opens in
mid-January. We’re doing Rumplestiltskin. Should be fun … it’s our own version
of course, full of ghosts as well as the main goblin.”
“Spooks seem to
be a running theme in this place,” Hetherington said, unable to keep a hint of
disdain from his voice.
Lampwick glanced
sidelong at him. “Presumably they are for you too?”
“Disproving
their existence is my thing.”
“Even so, for
someone who definitely doesn’t believe in the afterlife … to spend all your
time holding ghost-watch vigils …?”
“There’s no
contradiction there,” Hetherington said. “My investigations are based entirely
on science.”
“Ah yes … wind
in chimneys and such.”
“If the unexpected
occurs and I do uncover something bearing further examination, I confidently
expect it to fall well within the laws of physics.”
Lampwick
pondered that, shrugged, and then crossed the front of the stage and took a stairway
down, providing further commentary as he did, explaining that he wanted to show
Hetherington the entire place before leaving him here alone.
They descended
the stair to a small ante-room with doors leading left, right and straight
ahead. Go right, according to Lampwick, and you entered the backstage area.
Straight ahead was the coffee bar, and left was the entrance to the main
theatre bar. Lampwick headed backstage first. This was a cramped rabbit warren
of twisting passages and tiny, damp-smelling rooms: changing rooms for the most
part, but also props and costume storage, and then the Green Room, which was a
much larger area lying directly beneath the stage.
The Green Room
was littered with the detritus of the recent production: top hats on tables, a
row of wall-pegs hung with shawls and double-caped greatcoats, bags of fluffy
white polystyrene balls that had been used as fake snow, a crutch without an
owner – and the Marley’s Ghost marionette. This latter was slumped on a bench
at the far end of the room, a smallish, grey-faced figure clad in once
dandified but now shabby Regency-era clothing. The left shoulder of its
frockcoat was noticeably frayed and torn, which may or may not have been
deliberate, but it added to the effect, as did the gleaming chain with which
its upper torso was wrapped, and the dirty bandage bound around its head as
though in support of its lower jaw. In the middle of its bald scalp and the
backs of its hands, there were tiny metal hooks through which the puppeteers’
wires would be threaded.
Just to satisfy
his curiosity, Hetherington approached the slouched figure, reached down and
rapped on the back of its head. It was made of wood and sounded hollow.
“Creepy things,
if you ask me,” Lampwick said.
Hetherington
stepped back and adjusted his pack, which was now getting heavy on his back,
its straps digging into his shoulders. “People often say that about dummies and
effigies. The answer lies in our subconscious. Some deep instinct says ‘these
things look like us, but they actually aren’t us … so it’s a kind of
camouflage, and that has to be bad’. You see, it’s all about understanding the
science.”
“If you say so.”
Lampwick continued with the tour, showing Hetherington up a shorter flight of
narrow steps to a single door. “This was once the rear stage-door,” he said.
“But we built an extension on the other side.” And indeed, beyond that there
was a more modern area, a black steel stairway leading up to what apparently
were new rehearsal rooms and, directly ahead, a straight corridor with a tiled
floor diminishing into complete darkness. “It looks menacing, but there’s
another fire-exit down there,” Lampwick added. “Takes you straight out onto the
road at the back.”
“Good,”
Hetherington replied. “I parked my Subaru out back. Will it be okay overnight?”
Lampwick looked
uncertain. “I suppose so … it’s cold, snowy. Can’t think there’ll be too many
bad ’uns about.”
Hetherington
wasn’t totally encouraged by that, but he had no choice in the matter. His
hotel was a good twenty-minute drive away, which would be a fifty-minute walk
carrying a heavy backpack, while taxis were prohibitively expensive on
Christmas Eve and notoriously unavailable. He followed Lampwick back through
the backstage area to the ante-room, and down into the theatre’s basement bar. This
was a large, open-plan chamber. It possessed a faint smell of sour beer, but
everything else was in good order; it was neatly carpeted, with leather seating
and polished pub tables and yet more theatrical photographs cladding the
tastefully papered walls. The bar-top had been polished until it shone, rows of
optics glinting in the shadows behind it.
“As we agreed
before, the bar itself will need to stay locked,” Lampwick said, as they walked
past it to a narrow passage on the left, where there was another fire-door and
a wall-to-ceiling cupboard fastened with a shiny padlock. “We’re not making
assumptions about your character, Mr Hetherington, but it would be more than
the Bar Manager’s job is worth to allow someone he didn’t know uncontrolled
access to that area.”
“I understand.” Hetherington
waited while Lampwick produced a key and unlocked the cupboard. An array of
junction boxes and electrical cables was revealed.
Lampwick glanced
around. He seemed less nervous than earlier, but in the dimness of the bar’s
low-key lighting, his eyes were limpid and grey. “I understand you requested
the power be turned off?”
“That’s
correct.”
“You’re absolutely
sure about that? It’ll turn the central heating off too.”
“I’m well
wrapped, so I’ll happily sacrifice the warmth to get rid of the light. I don’t
want any lights at all, not even the emergency lights.”
“Well …”
Lampwick indicated a row of breaker switches. “This is how you do it. It’ll be very
dark, though. The whole purpose of theatres is to insulate their audiences
against the world of the real.”
“I want complete
darkness,” Hetherington confirmed.
“You’ll get that
down here especially – almost no natural light penetrates to the basement area.
But …” Briefly, Lampwick looked amused. “Is it really necessary? I mean, do
ghosts need it to be dark in order to come out? And if there’s no such thing as
ghosts, why bother turning any lights off?”
“It doesn’t
matter to me personally whether it’s dark or light,” Hetherington replied,
mildly irked by the question. “But my internet show has a big audience, and
they have expectations.”
“Ah … yes, so
it’s about entertainment as well as science.”
“Something has
to pay the bills.”
“Yes, of course.
Well …” Lampwick sighed, as if he’d tried to warn the visitor against this
folly, “… turn this lot off, and you’ll have what you want. It will also
de-activate the alarm, which won’t matter so much while you’re in here of
course, but the security cameras will be turned off too.”
“That’s okay. I
have my own cameras.” Hetherington tapped his backpack. “Any footage I shoot
needs to be copyrighted to me anyway, so it’s best if no-one else films.”
That’s bollocks
of course, Lampwick, Hetherington thought to himself, but the truth is I don’t
want someone else making copies of this event, and then doctoring their own
videos to show things that never happened.
“As you like …”
Lampwick clapped his hands together. “Okay, I’ll leave you to it.”
Hetherington
followed him through a lower section of bar, and up a different stairway from
earlier, an even steeper, narrower one, which connected directly with the
theatre lobby. Here, the Secretary halted to pull on a pair of suede driving
gloves.
“I wonder,” he
said. “Was it worth it?”
“Worth what?” Hetherington
asked.
“I can see you’re
a principled man, Mr Hetherington. But are those principles worth what happened
to Roger Shelburn?”
Ahhh … here we
go.
“Roger Shelburn
took his own life,” Hetherington said.
Suddenly Lampwick
was being very meticulous about donning and adjusting his gloves. He pointedly
wouldn’t meet Hetherington’s gaze. “Surely that was because his career had been
ruined?”
“His career as a
fraud, you mean?”
“I’ve often
wondered … is it really fraud? You tell people their deceased loved ones are
happy in the afterlife, and those people go away reassured. Does it really
matter if you don’t have a clue whether the afterlife exists or not? You still
make people happy.”
“Once or twice
it’s probably no big deal. But Roger Shelburn made a career out of it. He had his
own TV show.”
“So?”
Hetherington had
to suppress a snort at such gullibility. “But if it’s all untrue ...?”
“Again, does it
matter … if it makes these bereaved people more content?”
“Shelburn was a
charlatan,” Hetherington declared. “That’s all I’ll say on the matter.”
And you, Mr Ted Lampwick,
can like it or lump it.
“Well, I don’t
have particular views on this, if I’m honest,” Lampwick said, almost as though
he’d read Hetherington’s mind. “I have to say, I’ve never really thought the Ambridge
haunted myself, and I’ve been a member over forty years. There are no specific
stories; it’s just an eerie old building I guess. If there’s any spirit here at
present …” he glanced at the lobby’s festive brocade, “… I’d say it was the
spirit of the season. Not that this is always a good thing.”
“It isn’t?” Hetherington
asked, puzzled by that.
“Well, they say
Christmas is what you make it … that you get the Christmas you deserve, and all
that.”
“Good job I
don’t do Christmas.”
Lampwick headed
to the fire-door, muttering something in response that sounded like “Let’s hope
it doesn’t do you.”
“I’m sorry?” Hetherington
asked. “Missed that.”
Lampwick opened
the door, and a waft of icy air blew in. “I said good luck to you.”
“Okay … thanks.”
“One last thing,”
Lampwick said. “When are you planning on leaving tomorrow?”
“First light …
half past eight, nine-ish.”
“If you throw
the breakers back on first, and whichever door you leave through, make sure you
close it after you. I’ll be popping in mid-morning on my way to my daughter’s
for Christmas lunch, to check everything’s okay. And I’ll put the alarms back
on.” Lampwick halted in the doorway. “You’re absolutely sure you want to do
this?”
Here we go
again.
“I’m sure. And
thanks for your concern, but I’ve done it many times before.”
“No, not here,”
Hetherington agreed. “But then you don’t believe this place is haunted either.”
“No, but then
I’ve never stayed here overnight, not on my own.”
In the dark,
when there’s nobody else here … eh, Mr Lampwick?
Lampwick smiled,
again as if he’d just read Hetherington’s inner thoughts. Then he departed into
the blackness and the snow, shutting the fire-exit door behind him.
“Cute,”
Hetherington said aloud, walking back across the lobby. “A last-ditch attempt
to unsettle me. Gotta give you credit, Lampwick. Once an actor, and all that …”
*
Excellent. Always
start at nine if you can.
He hit the row
of breaker switches, plunging himself into ultimate darkness.
Almost no
natural light penetrates to the basement area …
“Not a problem.”
Hetherington switched on his night-vision goggles, bringing everything into
fuzzy green relief, and activated his goggles-cam and mic. He made his formal
introduction to the subscription-paying audience who at some point soon –
preferably before New Year – would be tuning in to Fear Itself, his regular
internet show, and walked back upstairs to the auditorium and down its
left-hand aisle.
“So here we are,” he said, clambering up onto the stage while addressing his as-yet nonexistent viewers. “This is going to be a long, loney Christmas Eve, but hey ... these are the sacrifices I make for you guys.”
“So here we are,” he said, clambering up onto the stage while addressing his as-yet nonexistent viewers. “This is going to be a long, loney Christmas Eve, but hey ... these are the sacrifices I make for you guys.”
To stage-right,
access to the wings was gained by a curved brick archway, a huge chunk of
authentic Victoriana. This was an actual part of the theatre’s fabric, and no
doubt had been worked into the sets for many plays in the past. It would be
particularly useful for A Christmas Carol, he supposed. More useful to
Hetherington, though, was the chair he’d seen sitting in the back of it. He
brought the chair out, and positioned it in the very middle of the stage,
facing the auditorium. This was where he intended to keep his vigil, with
occasional patrols around the rest of the building to break the monotony (it
was a good thing his shows never went out live – they’d prove a big switch-off
if they did).
Before sitting
and making himself comfortable, Hetherington scrutinised the life-size Scrooge
puppet standing up close. Less detail was visible in the night-vision’s green
mist. With head drooped, its face was completely indistinguishable aside from
its long, tapering nose. In terms of shape, the figure was bone-thin – almost
emaciated; like a suspended corpse. The fact it would be hanging just behind
and to his left was added unpleasantness.
Determined to
push such nonsense from his mind, he shoved his chair backwards a few feet, so
that at least it hung in his eye-line. Then he settled down.
The chair, which
was hard and stiff-backed, was uncomfortable, but that was good – the last
thing he wanted was to drop off to sleep. Murmuring these thoughts to his
viewers, he appraised the auditorium as it stood empty in front of him. Night-vision
wasn’t perfect; but at least he could distinguish its basic dimensions; the
rows of seating, and the two downstairs aisles. It was only when he glanced up
to the balcony that he glimpsed what he thought was a person.
Hetherington blinked
once, twice – then stood up and walked to the front of the stage.
He had to be
mistaken. Perhaps the fogginess of his vision was playing tricks on him? But it
definitely looked as if someone was sitting in one of the seats up there. In
the extreme right-hand block, three rows up from the front barrier.
“Hello?” he
called hesitantly. “Mr Lampwick?”
But it surely
couldn’t be Lampwick. He’d left, and the whole place was locked up. And there
was nobody else here, or there wasn’t supposed to be. The shape on the balcony
didn’t respond, or even move, but the more Hetherington stared up at it, the
more it resembled a seated figure, possibly wearing a heavy overcoat.
“Hello!” he shouted
again, more belligerently, his voice echoing to the high ceiling.
Still the figure
sat motionless.
“Okay,”
Hetherington said under his breath, jumping down from the stage.
Every challenge
has to be met. That’s the way of it on Fear Itself.
He walked
briskly up the left-hand aisle, passed through the double-doors into the lobby,
and turned at the upward staircase. When he got to the top, he halted. There
was an open space on this first level, with comfortable armchairs and sofas,
probably for audience members to enjoy coffee during intervals in performances.
There were also two brass-handled single doors, one on the left and one on the
right. No doubt these corresponded with the two aisles leading down through the
balcony seating. From below the figure had been on the right, so it would now
be on the left. Hetherington went straight to that door, only to realise that
his brow was greased with sweat – which surprised him. He’d been in similar
situations before, but something about this one felt slightly different, and he
didn’t know why.
Odd how that
figure didn’t move at all. Not so much as an inch.
One thing was
sure, he couldn’t afford to falter. His goggles-cam always provided the best
footage. It enabled his audience to see exactly what he saw. They’d tolerate
some degree of editing of course, but if there was a break in the action now,
when they’d expect him to go bravely through this door and confront his fear,
it wouldn’t look good.
He swung the
door wide and tramped boldly down the stepped aisle, already able to see the
seated shape from behind: it had broad shoulders, and a mass of unruly hair, on
top of which an immense rather ridiculous looking hat was perched. It was only
when Hetherington got alongside it that he realised his mistake.
No hat, but a
holly wreath; no overcoat but a set of fur-trimmed winter robes.
Not the delicate,
vaguely camp Ted Lampwick, but the big, robust frame of the Ghost of Christmas
Present.
By its obvious
wig and fake beard, and its garish face-paint, not to mention its slack-angled
head and the flat wooden hand on the armrest next to it, in the middle of which
another tiny metal hook was visible, it was obviously one of the marionettes.
But just to be sure – because his audience would expect that – Hetherington
sidled along the row. Once in reach of the figure, he toed at it warily, and
pushed it. It was solid, but jointed and light, probably balsa wood under all
that festive regalia. It slumped sideways.
“Someone had
nothing better to do today, putting that thing up here,” Hetherington intoned,
edging back to the aisle. “Possibly our friend, Mr Lampwick, Theatre Secretary.
I suspect he thought he saw us coming.” Hetherington always referred to himself
in the plural during his show commentaries, as though whatever he did or said,
his viewers would unquestionably be on his side. Before leaving, he glanced
back down at the stage; he could make out his chair and the Scrooge figure.
Everything was as he’d left it, except …
He advanced down
the aisle to the railing.
Had the Scrooge
figure turned slightly?
It was difficult
to be sure from this distance, but it now seemed to be facing the chair rather
than standing side-on to it.
It was suspended
of course, so the air currents Hetherington had caused when leaving the stage
might have accounted for that. It barely felt worth bringing it to the attention
of his viewers, but Hetherington did so anyway as he re-ascended the aisle,
pushing out onto the first level and descending the stair to the lobby.
The next problem
came when reached the double-doors to the auditorium.
They were
closed, as he’d expected; apparently they were on swing-hinges to ensure they
couldn’t be left open during performances. But when he pulled them, they
wouldn’t budge. Thinking he was supposed to push, he tried that – but there
was no give.
“What the hell …?”
He pulled again, hard, yanking at the handles, putting his back into it. This
time the doors moved slightly, which indicated they hadn’t accidentally locked
themselves when he’d gone through them before. Instead, it felt as if – it
seemed ridiculous, but it felt as if someone was holding them on the other
side.
“This is beyond
a joke, okay!” he shouted through the gap. “I mean the puppet upstairs is one
thing, but this is infringing on the terms of the contract I signed with your Chairman.
I was supposed to have full access to all areas except the bar and the office.
I should also remind you I’ve got cameras everywhere. You and your mates will
look a bit foolish capering around in the dark like schoolkids.”
There was no
sound from the other side, not a hint of movement. Hetherington tugged at the two
handles again, to no avail.
“Sod this!” he
said under his breath.
He took the
downward stair connecting with the basement bar, crossing its lower area first,
seeing and hearing nothing untoward. But in the upper bar, he halted in his tracks.
In its furthest
recess, another figure was seated.
At one of the
bar tables.
Dressed all in
white.
Fresh sweat
prickled Hetherington’s brow.
After calling
out, and the figure remaining motionless, he ventured forward. It seemed a safe
bet that this was another of the marionettes. The Ghost of Christmas Past
perhaps.
When he got
close, it was decked in a white silk gown, a white silk cape with a peaked
hood, and an oval white mask, featureless except for symmetrical holes cut for
the eyes. Only when he pushed at it did it shift position, clacking as its
wooden parts jostled together. As he’d suspected, and hardly a problem – except
that it hadn’t been here when he’d come through earlier. Okay, Hetherington
couldn’t swear to that, but surely when all the lights had been switched on,
he’d have noticed it?
“I’m now even
more suspicious that someone is playing games here,” he said, backing away. “If
not, I apologise to the Ambridge Theatre membership. If they are, however …
well, we might play some games of our own before the end of tonight.”
So thinking, he
entered the ante-room, but instead of going back up to the auditorium, took the
door to the backstage area. He moved from one narrow section to the next, always
aware of the deep darkness filling the spaces behind him. He couldn’t help
admitting that if there was someone here, they were doing a damn good job of lying
low. In the Green Room, Marley’s Ghost was seated on the bench, as before, head bowed. Everything else appeared normal too.
Hetherington
re-ascended to the stage by its steep back-stair, sidled around the scenery and
slumped into his chair. As an afterthought, he glanced at the figure of
Scrooge. It was indeed turned in his direction, as he’d seen from the balcony.
In addition, it seemed a little closer than it had been previously. When he’d
first arrived here, he’d placed his chair about six or seven feet away from the
hanging shape. Now it looked more like four or five. But again, maybe this was
due to a disturbance in the air. He glanced overhead. Even with night-vision
goggles, nothing was visible up there, just an indistinguishable mass of wood,
metalwork and cables, a gantry no doubt for the puppeteers, plus runners,
wheels, pulleys. All movements of hanging puppets were explainable. But he
couldn’t help wondering if Lampwick might be lurking up there too. Well, let
him; the static cams would catch him at some point. There was one thing Hetherington
would take great pleasure in – in the morning he’d inform Lampwick exactly why
he’d come here; not because the Ambridge Theatre was a famous hotspot on the
paranormal investigation trail, not because it was famous for anything in fact,
at least nowhere outside this unimportant little post-industrial dump of a
Lancashire town. But because he’d been dared to.
He deactivated
the goggles-cam, before filching the phone from his pocket and running back
through his messages. He found the relevant one straight away, and cheerfully
played it back to himself.
“You know … Mr
Hetherington,” a harsh female voice said, quaking with anger. “All my Roger
ever did was offer people hope in a difficult world.”
She was another
one of course, he thought scornfully. Stella Shelburn, or Stella Mordrake to
use her professional name. Apparently she was a stage witch or magician, or
some such nonsense. Maybe her act was now in trouble as well; guilt by
association and all that. Hetherington hoped so.
“I’m not denying
that Roger made money out of his medium tours,” the enraged voice added. “Of
course he did … he was a showman. That was his career. But no-one forced those
people to attend, no-one tore the cash out of their pockets. You didn’t need to
run that big exposure on him on your website …”
It was a miracle
no one had exposed the conman before, Hetherington reflected. It hadn’t been
difficult to catch him. A few plants in the audience to make it look as if the
spirits really were telling him personal secrets – easy enough to identify
those goons. A not especially advanced hologram show to create the illusion that spirits
were trying to materialise …
“If you’re so
hot on disproving the existence of the other realm, you ought to take a real
plunge, Hetherington! Don’t be going to old castles that have now become visitor
centres, where you’ve got all the mod cons you need. Or stately homes where
there’s always an attendant in case you run into trouble. Try a real leap in
the dark, Mr Alan bloody Hetherington! Try the little-known Ambridge Theatre …”
Hetherington
snapped the phone off.
“And yadda
yadda,” he said. “Well, here we are, Ms Mordrake. Not only in the theatre, but
on the stage itself. You’d better hope this show, when it finally starts, is
worth my while … because if not, I’m going to give it and you a going-over
online that’ll make what I did to your husband look like a patta-cake session.
What do you say, Ebenezer?” He spun in his chair to face the marionette.
To find that it
was less than a foot away from him.
Hetherington
leapt to his feet, knocking the chair over in his haste. Involuntarily, he
backed away a couple of yards.
“Lampwick? … LAMPWICK!”
He glanced
overhead, still seeing nothing, and somehow knowing that this was because there
was nobody up there.
Yet when he
looked at Scrooge again, it was even closer. Still hanging limply on
semi-visible wires. But its head was now upright. Its soulless eyes, which were
little more than black dots on white greasepaint patches with beetling, bushy
brows pasted over the top, had fixed intently on him. For a hair-raising
second, that thing that happened with skillfully made and manipulated puppets –
that weird illusion that they were actually alive – overtook Hetherington. He
half-expected the effigy’s hinged jaw to start clacking up and down as a stream
of seasonal invective issued out: “Humbug! Humbug, I say! Every idiot who goes
about with ‘Merry Christmas’ on his lips should be boiled with own pudding, and
buried with a stake of holly through his heart!”
But of course
that didn’t happen.
It just hung
there, silent, watching him from close up.
Hetherington stared
again into the darkened recesses above, craning his neck backwards to try and
focus on something, anything, distinguishable. Seconds passed, but there was no
movement up there. Surely if someone was lurking on a gantry, he’d at least
hear them? A shuffling … a dull creak of metal?
“Well,” he said
aloud, belatedly remembering that he had an audience. “It is possible that we’re
being hoaxed here. It wouldn’t be the first time, as you folks are aware. But it’s
also worth considering that these marionettes are actually nothing to do with
Ted Lampwick and the Ambridge Theatre. They’re owned by an outside company. And
while it’s possible that Mr Lampwick may be hanging around in the vicinity,
I’ve seen no sign that anyone else is. And on reflection, I somehow can’t
picture old Ted – who must be sixty-five easily – climbing up into that
roof-space. So we may also have to consider that this could be a mechanical
fault. Perhaps … if the puppet’s on runners, if it’s all cogs and wheels up
there, and the rig hasn’t been disassembled yet, this weirdness could be
happening by accident. A stiff breeze through a fault in the roof? A gear that
keeps slipping?” He paused. “Either way, if I want to establish an explanation
I need to get up there myself.”
He stepped
around the Scrooge figure, giving it wider berth than perhaps was really necessary,
and headed to the wings at stage-right. As he went, he glanced backwards,
half-expecting the marionette to have turned again, its ghoulish painted eyes
still fixed on him. But it remained as it had been, facing the knocked-over
chair.
“Okay, here we
…” Hetherington sidled around the edge of an upright section of flat scenery
that was painted with a wintry Dickensian street scene.
Behind it, a
narrow path dwindled away between a black brick wall and the rear of several
additional flats. The greenish gloom cast by Hetherington’s goggles perhaps
rendered this thoroughfare spookier than it needed to be. But this wasn’t the
reason he hesitated – or so he told himself; he wanted to listen out again. But
aside from the faint, shrill moan of wind in the high rafters, there was no
other sound in the building. He imagined the snow fluttering relentlessly down outside,
blanketing the old industrial-era premises, blotting out the surrounding streets
and their rows of dingy terraced houses.
All very
Christmassy … if you believe in that claptrap.
For the first
time now, as he ventured behind the flats, he noticed his breath smoking. As
Lampwick had said, with the power turned off, the central heating would also be
deactivated – and it hadn’t taken long for the effect of that to make itself
known. Despite Hetherington’s earlier bravado when this was mentioned, it would
certainly make things uncomfortable. He was well padded, though, and he had a
flask of hot coffee in his pack. Even so, he pulled his gloves back on. They
were old-fashioned skiing gauntlets, and were nice and thick – which would be
all the better if this ladder, when he finally found it, proved to be rusty. Not
that there was any sign of it. There were lots of ropes back here, either
hanging down in front or him or tied off on steel hooks in the wall, but
nothing else. It was bare and basic behind the scenery, the air reeking of sawdust
and fresh paint. How often that magical theatrical fantasy was shattered when
you poked your nose round the back and saw how functional the reality was.
He progressed
along the passage until he reached the top of another back-stair, which
descended into murk. There was no point going under the stage again, but from
this position he was able to see past the rearmost gap in the flats and across
to the far wings. The ladder might be over there – but then a shadowy form
flitted past a space between two opposing bits of scenery
It was a brief
second. No more than flicker of movement, and then it was gone. But it was all
Hetherington needed.
“Ah … hah.” He
felt both irritated and elated. “Caught you.”
He held his
breath for several heartbeats. Nothing else happened, but it didn’t matter – he
knew what he’d seen. Sliding quickly out along the wall painted with the image
of Old London Town, he broke into a run as he crossed the stage, not just
adrenalized by the scent of a foe but by the prospect of what a chase and catch
would do to his viewing figures. The excited rasp of his breath and scuffing of
his feet could no doubt be heard throughout the theatre, but speed was all. He
was onto something big here. This one might even travel beyond the confines of
the internet. A TV slot, perhaps the local news …
Ghost hunter busts festive pranksters
… would be just
the shot in the arm that Fear Itself needed.
He reached
stage-left and slotted himself through the gap between the flats. Again, he was
in a cramped world of props, ropes and sawdust.
“I know you’re
here!” he said loudly, blundering towards the stage-front.
But now there
was no sign of anyone.
The Victorian
arch appeared on his left, while on his right there was a large pair of double
doors. They were painted black, which might explain why he hadn’t noticed them
when making his earlier round-trip with Lampwick. They were also heavy and
crude; they looked more like barn doors, though a notice on the left one read:
Workshop
Hetherington barged
at the doors with his shoulder. As expected, they held firm. Something else
he’d be taking up with his host in the morning. “All parts of the theatre
except the bar and the office!” he growled. “That was the deal!”
He glanced through
the arch onto the stage. Nothing out there had changed; the hanging figure of
Scrooge was exactly as he’d left it, although … was it possible it had pivoted
around again? From its previous angle it should have been shoulder-on, but as
always seemed to be the case now, it was facing him. However, this time he
wasn’t concerned, not now that he knew there was somebody else here.
With a slow,
dull creak, what sounded like a door opened behind him …
Briefly,
Hetherington froze. For the first time in his many years of ghost hunts and exposés,
the proverbial chill ran up his spine. Then he spun.
The ‘barn doors’
stood ajar.
“That’s
impossible,” he said under his breath, momentarily breaking one of his own cardinal
rules by lending credence to the illogical. “I tried those doors. They were
locked.” Despite the deepening chill, he mopped more sweat from his brow. “Unless,
of course,” he licked his lips, which conversely were bone-dry, “these doors
were locked from the other side … by someone who must still be in there.”
And yet now, for
some reason, has unlocked them again?
Though this was
an invitation he surely couldn’t refuse – in fact mustn’t, given what his
audience would think – he actually wondered if he should. Fleetingly, he
wondered what he was even doing in this cold, dark, tomb-like building when he
could have been at home in the warmth, kicking back on the sofa with Marsha.
“Because we’re
here to unravel what’s real from what’s unreal,” he said, forcefully answering
his own question. “We are here to undermine the phonies and the frauds, and
tonight perhaps we’re going to nab the biggest fish of all – the annual
fallacious farce that is Christmas.”
He reached out
and pushed at the workshop doors.
They swung in
onto a surprisingly cavernous interior, though it was also cluttered with
awkward-sharped objects: work-benches, trestle-tables, tools, bits of timber
and hardboard. On all sides there were more flats, decked with garish imagery,
either lying in stacks or leaning against the walls. And then there was
something else.
Right in the
middle of the room, on the floor, was his hi-tech Acorn Trail-Cam. A hundred
quid’s worth of motion-sensitive night vision. Now in several pieces.
Hetherington
strode forward and gazed down at it dumbly. In the green twilight, it was
difficult to tell whether it had been disassembled or smashed. But the mere fact
it had been removed from where he’d positioned it below-stairs, and brought up
here …
Another chill
crept through his bones. “I … I …”
The inside of
his mouth was as dry as his lips. He couldn’t give voice to what he felt.
People always
try to pull the wool over my eyes, but this is the first time anyone’s attacked
my stuff …
He turned
stiffly, almost indignantly scanning the room. Again, there was no sign that
anyone was in here. There wasn’t even a place where a person could hide.
Except for in the
farthest corner, maybe twenty yards away, where yet another stack of flats had
been propped against the north-facing wall, leaving a shadow-filled gap between
itself and the east-facing wall. It was only a narrow gap, the depth and
breadth of a coffin – but still sufficient to conceal someone.
He walked over
there with a slow, deliberate tread, accidentally kicking over a tin of paint,
which clattered as it rolled, splurging a green puddle across the bare
floorboards.
“Shit!” he
hissed, though it was hardly a disaster. As he’d already seen, it was a
utilitarian world back here. Besides, they owed him a camera.
The corner of
the flats stood right in front of him, the black recess behind them just out of
sight. “It’s your last chance to come clean,” he said. “Fail to do that, and
you’ll be outed … to the whole world.”
Still there was
no sound
“Despite what
you’ve done to my gear, there’s nothing personal in this. If we can make good
on the cost of that, there’ll be no hard feelings.”
Still no
response.
“I warn you,
exposing frauds is my trade. My reason to live.”
Still nothing.
Without further warning,
Hetherington stepped around the corner. “It’s my …”
The figure waiting
there startled him for all kinds of horrible reasons, not least its lugubrious
frown and lifeless, painted eyes. But mainly because the last time he’d seen
it, it had been downstairs. It was Marley’s Ghost. Not sitting now, but
standing upright against the rear wall, its head no longer drooping and the
bandage that had supported its jaw now absent.
“It’s my …”
Hetherington stammered again.
Was this the
same marionette? He noted the unstitched tear in the left shoulder of its frockcoat.
Had someone carried it up here? Along with his camera? Why in God’s name exert
all this effort just to perpetrate a hoax? Or was it a costume?
Can that be it?
Is this someone dressed up?
Dazedly, he
reached out to touch the thing.
“It’s my, my ...”
His fingers made
tentative contact with the figure’s bare, wooden cranium. It was hard, hollow.
“My business …”
Abruptly, its
jaw clacked downward, the vivid red gash of its mouth extending all the way to
its breastbone.
“BUSINESS!” a
distant voice shrieked in the back of his memory.
The next thing
Hetherington knew he was stumbling away across the workshop. Aside from the
jaw, he’d never seen the thing move. Not once, not at all. He told himself this
over and over. And yet now, even though he could hear sounds behind him – that paint-pot
clattering and rolling again, as if something had kicked it while coming after him – he refused to look back.
“There’ll be an
explanation,” he chuntered. “There always is. It’s a trick, a charade.”
The barn doors
swam into view, and beyond those the Victorian arch. But now another figure was
standing there, blocking it. It wore a nightcap and dressing gown, and its
luminous eyes peered at him from under bristly tufts of eyebrow.
Hetherington
screamed.
It was the first
time he’d made this sound in adulthood. He made it again a second later,
involuntarily, as he blundered towards the rear of the wings. There was another
door back there somewhere; he’d seen it earlier – but where? Dear God, the
sense of pursuit was intolerable. Then the door slammed into him with a
stunning blow, both body and face. Refusing to yield to dizziness, he yanked it
open and all but leapt down the back-stair beyond, fighting his way through the
maze of backstage passages, sending another of his stationary cameras crashing
to the floor but ignoring it, scrabbling madly this way and that until, more by
accident than design, he reached the basement bar.
“What the hell are
you running for?” he raved at himself as he dashed across it. “They’re puppets,
that’s all. Bloody puppets!”
Even so, he
didn’t risk a glance into the far corner where the puppet of the Ghost of Christmas
Past had been seated – despite a distinct impression gained through his
peripheral vision that a figure in white was no longer sitting over here, but standing.
He all but flew
the remaining distance to the fire-exit door next to the electrics cupboard,
only to open it and find himself blinded by swirling flakes, and when they
briefly cleared, gazing up a flight of snow-carpeted steps to a tall,
wrought-iron gate now bound closed with a length of heavy chain.
A chain?
That damn horror
in the workshop! I knew there was something missing!
It didn’t matter.
Ducking back inside, Hetherington crossed the lower section of bar to the foot
of the stair leading up to the lobby. But he’d only half ascended this when he
saw that yet another figure was waiting at the top, an immense shape in heavy
winter robes, with a wig and fake beard, and a holly wreath on its head.
Sweating and
whimpering, he tottered back the way he’d come. It would mean chancing the
upper bar again, which he did, at breakneck speed, again refusing to glance
into the far corner, though the white form he’d glimpsed over there was much
closer, before crashing shoulder-first through the ante-room and then back through
the backstage area, still declining to look left or right, turning corner after
corner, at any second expecting some horrific, limbering form to manifest from
the gloom and wrap its wooden arms around him, but instead colliding with more
of his own equipment, an ultra-expensive EMF monitor exploding as it was
hammered to the floor.
So bloody what?
At last reaching
the short upward stair, Hetherington staggered through the old stage-door and into
the tiled exit passage leading to the rear of the building.
He was still
wearing his night-vision goggles, but that opaque patch of blackness at the far
end of his escape route remained unchanged.
“It looks
menacing,” Lampwick said. Too bloody right it does!
But it was the
only way out, and anyway, a growing sense that something again was close behind
was the final spur. Yelling incoherently, the ghost hunter charged down the passage,
rushing headlong into the blackness at its farthest extremity.
Initially, he
assumed the fabric that swirled around him was a curtain or drape, perhaps a
draft-excluder at the outer door. But good God, there was so much of it, and it
was so black and heavy, and it smelled so foul. And holy Jesus, Mary and
Joseph, there was something else in here alongside him. Something hiding. Or
maybe not hiding, waiting.
As it been
waiting all along.
Inside this
colossal costume …
“Jesus God in Heaven!” Hetherington shrieked as an object shimmered into view in front of his face, a glinting crescent of steel; the cold, curved perfection of a razor-edged scythe.
“Jesus God in Heaven!” Hetherington shrieked as an object shimmered into view in front of his face, a glinting crescent of steel; the cold, curved perfection of a razor-edged scythe.
*
“Quite a bit of expensive kit in there,” said the lad in jumper and jeans, as he brought
another of the marionettes outside. “Some of it looks damaged, mind.”
“Damaged?” Lampwick
enquired, chugging on one of the fat King Edward cigars his granddaughter had
given him for Christmas. He presumed the lad was referring to all those cameras
and monitors and such. He hadn’t noticed that any of it was broken, though he
hadn’t looked too closely. It was certainly all over the place.
“Only a couple
of pieces,” the lad said. “Most of it’s alright. There’s even a pair of
night-vision goggles. Reckon they cost a bit.”
“The bloke who
left it behind left that too.” Lampwick nodded down the snowy street at the
rear of the theatre. At its far end, a day and two nights’ worth of soft white
flakes were heaped on the roof and bonnet of a parked Subaru Impreza. “He was
supposed to take it all away on Christmas morning, but when I got here, he’d
gone without it.”
The lad threw
the puppet into the back of the colourfully illustrated van. This was the one
dressed as Scrooge. Up close, in the bright white snow-light of a Boxing Day
morning, it was easier to see how plain it actually was: with its wires
removed, it was a jointed wooden mannequin, nothing more, and now that its
greasepaint and make-up had been smeared away, it was grey in colour, almost
featureless.
“Wouldn’t fancy
leaving a motor like that around here … no offence,” the lad said as he headed
back into the building.
“None taken.”
Lampwick puffed on his cigar. “This corner of town’s not quite what it was. But
you’re right; he was obviously a more casual sort than I thought. He didn’t
even put the power back on before he left. I’ve no idea where he is at present.”
“Probably
sleeping off a hangover, eh?” the lad said, reappearing with another marionette
under his arm. This one was clad as the Ghost of Christmas Past. Again, it
looked like nothing in broad daylight, Lampwick thought. It was amazing what
this Ms Mordrake and her Magic Puppet Theatre could do.
“I doubt that,
somehow,” he said. “Anyway, he’ll show up. So … Ms Mordrake didn’t fancy coming
to collect the stuff herself?”
“Nah. Pays an
oik like me to do that.” The lad headed back inside. “I don’t mind. I’m on
double-time today.”
Lampwick glanced
through the open doors at the back of the van, and saw four of the figures that
had entertained the local children so royally during December – Scrooge and the
three Spirits of the Season, nothing more now than a heap of disorderly wooden
parts, their costumes just messy rags. No doubt, once they got home they’d be
stripped down and cleaned, maybe dressed as pirates or angels or pantomime
characters, or who knew what at this time of year. At the far end of the
vehicle’s interior, a fifth dusty figure was propped against the wheel-arch.
Lampwick couldn’t see much of it, just an outline – but this one hadn’t even
been dressed in a costume. He extricated his cigar and leaned forward, gazing
into the dim interior. Surely there was something about it? But then the lad
asked him to mind out, and threw in the last of the marionettes, Marley’s Ghost.
It struck the figure by the wheel-arch with a clack, causing it to shift
lifelessly and its left arm to flop into the daylight.
It was nothing,
Lampwick realised. Wood, like all the others.
Not real.
(Many thanks to Chrissie Demant, who first created the above image for this same story on the awesome VAULT OF EVIL website this time last year, and to the BBC, from whom I cheekily borrowed the topmost image of the phantom figure who terrorised a lonely railway employee in the 1976 GHOST STORY FOR CHRISTMAS adaptation of the Charles Dickens classic, THE SIGNAL-MAN).
(Many thanks to Chrissie Demant, who first created the above image for this same story on the awesome VAULT OF EVIL website this time last year, and to the BBC, from whom I cheekily borrowed the topmost image of the phantom figure who terrorised a lonely railway employee in the 1976 GHOST STORY FOR CHRISTMAS adaptation of the Charles Dickens classic, THE SIGNAL-MAN).