Draft of a true happening. |
Every year we garrison an old fortress on one of
the Great Lakes. We are in uniform for the Civil War period. Being a staff officer, I need to be in a place where people can find me in the middle of the night in case something happens. In 14 years, nothing has every happened, luckily… except for visits from some not in my command. The location of my bunk is in the "prison" – designed to hold drunken soldiers or other petty offenses. The building is an old stone fortress, nicknamed the "French Castle." Built in 1657, it was in active use through the early part of the 20th century as a barracks, headquarters, or other such military functions. Today it is simply a living museum, open for tours, displays, or the occasional reenactment group such as ours. Every old fort has a ghost tale, and the French Castle is no exception. Theirs is of a headless soldier, searching for his head that he lost in a sword duel over a woman. His head was supposedly thrown down the interior well, which is located in the middle foyer of this castle. I’ve not been lucky enough to run into this creature, nor do I believe he exists. I believe there are other spirits. The prison, in which I stay is off this main foyer, down a hallway. Everything in this fort is stone, and it is all original. Our metal heel plates make distinctive sounds on the well-worn stone. The hallway, which the prison is off of, has two rooms – the prison and the powder room. The modern bathrooms have an entrance from this hallway as well; doors are locked most of the time. The doorway to the prison is heavy – probably two hundred pounds of solid wood and metal framework. It takes me a good effort to pull this door open. As you enter the room, you see one window at the far wall. On the left are bunks – two double bunks, set up so the sleepers sleep with their feet towards the opposite walls (the door and window walls), heads nearly touching, and two levels of this. On this particular night, it was July. I was in the first lower bunk, which I always am, and my commanding officer was in the second lower bunk. We were fast asleep, when I woke up and realized that the door had just swung open. A chill was travelling from my feet to my head as I focused on this door, trying to think if I left the door open. I lay there for a few minutes, wondering about this. It could have been an hour, maybe a minutes, who knows. I knew it wasn’t my roommate, as he was still there. After a bit, I decided it wasn’t important, so I closed my eyes to return to sleep, when the chill came back. This time it went from my head to my feet. This was a curious sensation to me, and as I pondered it, I saw the door smoothly close. A dream, I concluded, and I rolled over and fell back to sleep. The next morning, I woke up at the same time as my roommate. I sat up on the side of the bed and procrastinated getting up and facing the world. Before I could say a word, my C.O. spoke up: "So, did you hear our visitor last night?" "Visitor?" I asked. "Yep. I was awake for it all. The door opened, then a few seconds later I felt a chill go down my body. After a few seconds, the chill went the other way, and the door closed." I quickly filled in my part of the story, confirming that I had felt the same. "Yep. A ghost probably came in looked out the window, then left. Chills usually indicate the location where they are." Strangely, I wasn’t too scared about this. I’ve stayed in this room a handful of times since, and it never worried me. There h |