“I am not so superstitious as
some of your physicians—men of science,
as you are pleased to be called,” said Hawver,
replying to an accusation that had not been made.
“Some of you—only a few, I confess—believe
in the immortality of the soul, and in apparitions
which you have not the honesty to call ghosts.
I go no further than a conviction that the living
are sometimes seen where they are not, but have been—where
they have lived so long, perhaps so intensely, as
to have left their impress on everything about them.
I know, indeed, that one’s environment may
be so affected by one’s personality as to yield,
long afterward, an image of one’s self to the
eyes of another. Doubtless the impressing personality
has to be the right kind of personality as the perceiving
eyes have to be the right kind of eyes—mine,
for example.”
“Yes, the right kind of eyes,
conveying sensations to the wrong kind of brain,”
said Dr. Frayley, smiling.
“Thank you; one likes to have
an expectation gratified; that is about the reply
that I supposed you would have the civility to make.”
“Pardon me. But you say
that you know. That is a good deal to say, don’t
you think? Perhaps you will not mind the trouble
of saying how you learned.”
“You will call it an hallucination,”
Hawver said, “but that does not matter.”
And he told the story.
“Last summer I went, as you
know, to pass the hot weather term in the town of
Meridian. The relative at whose house I had intended
to stay was ill, so I sought other quarters.
After some difficulty I succeeded in renting a vacant
dwelling that had been occupied by an eccentric doctor
of the name of Mannering, who had gone away years
before, no one knew where, not even his agent.
He had built the house himself and had lived in it
with an old servant for about ten years. His
practice, never very extensive, had after a few years
been given up entirely. Not only so, but he had
withdrawn himself almost altogether from social life
and become a recluse. I was told by the village
doctor, about the only person with whom he held any
relations, that during his retirement he had devoted
himself to a single line of study, the result of which
he had expounded in a book that did not commend itself
to the approval of his professional brethren, who,
indeed, considered him not entirely sane. I have
not seen the book and cannot now recall the title
of it, but I am told that it expounded a rather startling
theory. He held that it was possible in the
case of many a person in good health to forecast his
death with precision, several months in advance of
the event. The limit, I think, was eighteen
months. There were local tales of his having
exerted his powers of prognosis, or perhaps you would
say diagnosis; and it was said that in every instance
the person whose friends he had warned had died suddenly
at the appointed time, and from no assignable cause.
All this, however, has nothing to do with what I
have to tell; I thought it might amuse a physician.
“The house was furnished, just
as he had lived in it. It was a rather gloomy
dwelling for one who was neither a recluse nor a student,
and I think it gave something of its character to me—
perhaps some of its former occupant’s character;
for always I felt in it a certain melancholy that
was not in my natural disposition, nor, I think, due
to loneliness. I had no servants that slept in
the house, but I have always been, as you know, rather
fond of my own society, being much addicted to reading,
though little to study. Whatever was the cause,
the effect was dejection and a sense of impending
evil; this was especially so in Dr. Mannering’s
study, although that room was the lightest and most
airy in the house. The doctor’s life-size
portrait in oil hung in that room, and seemed completely
to dominate it. There was nothing unusual in
the picture; the man was evidently rather good looking,
about fifty years old, with iron-gray hair, a smooth-shaven
face and dark, serious eyes. Something in the
picture always drew and held my attention. The
man’s appearance became familiar to me, and rather
‘haunted’ me.
“One evening I was passing through
this room to my bedroom, with a lamp—there
is no gas in Meridian. I stopped as usual before
the portrait, which seemed in the lamplight to have
a new expression, not easily named, but distinctly
uncanny. It interested but did not disturb me.
I moved the lamp from one side to the other and observed
the effects of the altered light. While so engaged
I felt an impulse to turn round. As I did so
I saw a man moving across the room directly toward
me! As soon as he came near enough for the lamplight
to illuminate the face I saw that it was Dr. Mannering
himself; it was as if the portrait were walking!
“‘I beg your pardon,’
I said, somewhat coldly, ’but if you knocked
I did not hear.’
“He passed me, within an arm’s
length, lifted his right forefinger, as in warning,
and without a word went on out of the room, though
I observed his exit no more than I had observed his
entrance.
“Of course, I need not tell
you that this was what you will call an hallucination
and I call an apparition. That room had only
two doors, of which one was locked; the other led
into a bedroom, from which there was no exit.
My feeling on realizing this is not an important
part of the incident.
“Doubtless this seems to you
a very commonplace ’ghost story’—one
constructed on the regular lines laid down by the old
masters of the art. If that were so I should
not have related it, even if it were true. The
man was not dead; I met him to-day in Union street.
He passed me in a crowd.”
Hawver had finished his story and
both men were silent. Dr. Frayley absently drummed
on the table with his fingers.
“Did he say anything to-day?”
he asked—“anything from which you
inferred that he was not dead?”
Hawver stared and did not reply.
“Perhaps,” continued Frayley,
“he made a sign, a gesture—lifted
a finger, as in warning. It’s a trick
he had—a habit when saying something serious—announcing
the result of a diagnosis, for example.”
“Yes, he did—just
as his apparition had done. But, good God! did
you ever know him?”
Hawver was apparently growing nervous.
“I knew him. I have read
his book, as will every physician some day. It
is one of the most striking and important of the century’s
contributions to medical science. Yes, I knew
him; I attended him in an illness three years ago.
He died.”
Hawver sprang from his chair, manifestly
disturbed. He strode forward and back across
the room; then approached his friend, and in a voice
not altogether steady, said: “Doctor, have
you anything to say to me—as a physician?”
“No, Hawver; you are the healthiest
man I ever knew. As a friend I advise you to
go to your room. You play the violin like an
angel. Play it; play something light and lively.
Get this cursed bad business off your mind.”
The next day Hawver was found dead
in his room, the violin at his neck, the bow upon
the strings, his music open before him at Chopin’s
funeral march.