What are you doing here?
Ive just left the club I answered. Its all right. I was Hawley Hickss guest. Whose ghost are you?
What the deuce are you talking about? he asked, rather gruffly, much to my surprise and discomfort.
I tried to give you a civil answer to your question, I returned, indignantly.
I guess youre crazy or a thief, he rejoined.
See here, friend, I put in, rather impressively, just remember one thing. You are talking to a gentleman, and I dont take remarks of that sort from anybody, spook or otherwise. I dont care if you are the ghost of the Emperor Nero, if you give me any more of your impudence Ill dissipate you to the four quarters of the universe see?
Then he grabbed me and shouted for the police, and I was painfully surprised to find that instead of coping with a mysterious being from another world, I had two hundred and ten pounds of flesh and blood to handle. The populace began to gather. The million and a half of small boys of whom I have already spoken mostly street gamins, owing to the lateness of the hour sprang up from all about us. Hansom-cab drivers, attracted by the noise of our altercation, drew up to the sidewalk to watch developments, and then, after the usual fifteen or twenty minutes, the blue-coat emissary of justice appeared.
Phats dthis? he asked.
I have detected this man leaving my house in a suspicious manner, said my adversary. I have reason to suspect him of thieving.
Your house! I ejaculated, with fine scorn. Ive got you there; this is the house of the New York Branch of the Ghost Club. If you want it proved, I added, turning to the policeman, ring the bell, and ask.
Oi tink dthats a fair prophosition, observed the policeman. Is the motion siconded?
Oh, come now! cried my captor. Stop this nonsense, or Ill report you to the department. This is my house, and has been for twenty years. I want this man searched.
Oi hov no warrant permithin me to invistigate the contints ov dthe gintlemons clothes, returned the intelligent member of the force. But av yez ll take yer solemn alibi dthat yez hov rayson t belave the gintlemon has worked ony habeas corpush business on yure propherty, oill jug dthe blag-yard.
Your house! I ejaculated, with fine scorn. Ive got you there; this is the house of the New York Branch of the Ghost Club. If you want it proved, I added, turning to the policeman, ring the bell, and ask.
Oi tink dthats a fair prophosition, observed the policeman. Is the motion siconded?
Oh, come now! cried my captor. Stop this nonsense, or Ill report you to the department. This is my house, and has been for twenty years. I want this man searched.
Oi hov no warrant permithin me to invistigate the contints ov dthe gintlemons clothes, returned the intelligent member of the force. But av yez ll take yer solemn alibi dthat yez hov rayson t belave the gintlemon has worked ony habeas corpush business on yure propherty, oill jug dthe blag-yard.
Ill be responsible, said the alleged owner of the house. Take him to the station.
I refuse to move, I said.
Oill not carry yez, said the policeman, and oid advoise ye to furnish yure own locomotion. Av ye dont, oill use me club. Dthots th ounly waa yez ll git dthe ambulanch.
Oh, well, if you insist, I replied, of course Ill go. I have nothing to fear.
You see, added 5010 to me, in parenthesis, the thought suddenly flashed across my mind that if all was as my captor said, if the house was really his and not the Ghost Clubs, and if the whole thing was only my fancy, the spoons themselves would turn out to be entirely fanciful; so I was all right or at least I thought I was. So we trotted along to the police station. On the way I told the policeman the whole story, which impressed him so that he crossed himself a half-dozen times, and uttered numerous ejaculatory prayers Maa dthe shaints presharve us, and Hivin hov mershy, and others of a like import.
Waz dthe ghosht ov Dan OConnell dthere? he asked.
Yes, I replied. I shook hands with it.
Let me shaak dthot hand, he said, his voice trembling with emotion, and then he whispered in my ear: Oi belave yez to be innoshunt; but av yez aint, for the love of Dan, oill let yez eshcape.
Thanks, old fellow, I replied. But I am innocent of wrong-doing, as I can prove.
Alas! sighed the convict, it was not to be so. When I arrived at the station-house, I was dumfounded to learn that the spoons were all too real. I told my story to the sergeant, and pointed to the monogram, G.C., on the spoons as evidence that my story was correct; but even that told against me, for the alleged owners initials were G.C. his name I withhold and the monogram only served to substantiate his claim to the spoons. Worst of all, he claimed that he had been robbed on several occasions before this, and by midnight I found myself locked up in a dirty cell to await trial.
I got a lawyer, and, as I said before, even he declined to believe my story, and suggested the insanity dodge. Of course I wouldnt agree to that. I tried to get him to subpoena Ferdinand and Isabella and Euripides and Hawley Hicks in my behalf, and all hed do was to sit there and shake his head at me. Then I suggested going up to the Metropolitan Opera-house some fearful night as the clock struck twelve, and try to serve papers on Wagners spook all of which he treated as unworthy of a moments consideration. Then I was tried, convicted, and sentenced to live in this beastly hole; but I have one strong hope to buoy me up, and if that is realized, Ill be free to-morrow morning.
What is that? I asked.
Why, he answered, with a sigh, as the bell rang summoning him to his supper why, the whole horrid business has been so weird and uncanny that Im beginning to believe its all a dream. If it is, why, Ill wake up, and find myself at home in bed; thats all. Ive clung to that hope for nearly a year now, but its getting weaker every minute.
Yes, 5010, I answered, rising and shaking him by the hand in parting; thats a mighty forlorn hope, because Im pretty wide awake myself at this moment, and cant be a part of your dream. The great pity is you didnt try the insanity dodge.
Tut! he answered. That is the last resource of a weak mind.
Ambrose Bierce
Curried Cow
My Aunt Patience, who tilled a small farm in the state of Michigan, had a favorite cow. This creature was not a good cow, nor a profitable one, for instead of devoting a part of her leisure to secretion of milk and production of veal she concentrated all her faculties on the study of kicking. She would kick all day and get up in the middle of the night to kick. She would kick at anything hens, pigs, posts, loose stones, birds in the air and fish leaping out of the water; to this impartial and catholic-minded beef, all were equal all similarly undeserving. Like old Timotheus, who raised a mortal to the skies, was my Aunt Patiences cow; though, in the words of a later poet than Dryden, she did it more harder and more frequently. It was pleasing to see her open a passage for herself through a populous barnyard. She would flash out, right and left, first with one hind-leg and then with the other, and would sometimes, under favoring conditions, have a considerable number of domestic animals in the air at once.
Her kicks, too, were as admirable in quality as inexhaustible in quantity. They were incomparably superior to those of the untutored kine that had not made the art a life study mere amateurs that kicked by ear, as they say in music. I saw her once standing in the road, professedly fast asleep, and mechanically munching her cud with a sort of Sunday morning lassitude, as one munches ones cud in a dream. Snouting about at her side, blissfully unconscious of impending danger and wrapped up in thoughts of his sweetheart, was a gigantic black hog a hog of about the size and general appearance of a yearling rhinoceros. Suddenly, while I looked without a visible movement on the part of the cow with never a perceptible tremor of her frame, nor a lapse in the placid regularity of her chewing that hog had gone away from there had utterly taken his leave. But away toward the pale horizon a minute black speck was traversing the empyrean with the speed of a meteor, and in a moment had disappeared, without audible report, beyond the distant hills. It may have been that hog.
Currying cows is not, I think, a common practice, even in Michigan; but as this one had never needed milking, of course she had to be subjected to some equivalent form of persecution; and irritating her skin with a currycomb was thought as disagreeable an attention as a thoughtful affection could devise. At least she thought it so; though I suspect her mistress really meant it for the good creatures temporal advantage. Anyhow my aunt always made it a condition to the employment of a farm-servant that he should curry the cow every morning; but after just enough trials to convince himself that it was not a sudden spasm, nor a mere local disturbance, the man would always give notice of an intention to quit, by pounding the beast half-dead with some foreign body and then limping home to his couch. I dont know how many men the creature removed from my aunts employ in this way, but judging from the number of lame persons in that part of the country, I should say a good many; though some of the lameness may have been taken at second-hand from the original sufferers by their descendants, and some may have come by contagion.
I think my aunts was a faulty system of agriculture. It is true her farm labor cost her nothing, for the laborers all left her service before any salary had accrued; but as the cows fame spread abroad through the several States and Territories, it became increasingly difficult to obtain hands; and, after all, the favorite was imperfectly curried. It was currently remarked that the cow had kicked the farm to pieces a rude metaphor, implying that the land was not properly cultivated, nor the buildings and fences kept in adequate repair.
It was useless to remonstrate with my aunt: she would concede everything, amending nothing. Her late husband had attempted to reform the abuse in this manner, and had had the argument all his own way until he had remonstrated himself into an early grave; and the funeral was delayed all day, until a fresh undertaker could be procured, the one originally engaged having confidingly undertaken to curry the cow at the request of the widow.
Since that time my Aunt Patience had not been in the matrimonial market; the love of that cow had usurped in her heart the place of a more natural and profitable affection. But when she saw her seeds unsown, her harvests ungarnered, her fences overtopped with rank brambles and her meadows gorgeous with the towering Canada thistle she thought it best to take a partner.