Philip Eckert lived for many years
in an old, weather-stained wooden house about three
miles from the little town of Marion, in Vermont.
There must be quite a number of persons living who
remember him, not unkindly, I trust, and know something
of the story that I am about to tell.
“Old Man Eckert,” as he
was always called, was not of a sociable disposition
and lived alone. As he was never known to speak
of his own affairs nobody thereabout knew anything
of his past, nor of his relatives if he had any.
Without being particularly ungracious or repellent
in manner or speech, he managed somehow to be immune
to impertinent curiosity, yet exempt from the evil
repute with which it commonly revenges itself when
baffled; so far as I know, Mr. Eckert’s renown
as a reformed assassin or a retired pirate of the
Spanish Main had not reached any ear in Marion.
He got his living cultivating a small and not very
fertile farm.
One day he disappeared and a prolonged
search by his neighbors failed to turn him up or throw
any light upon his whereabouts or whyabouts.
Nothing indicated preparation to leave: all
was as he might have left it to go to the spring for
a bucket of water. For a few weeks little else
was talked of in that region; then “old man
Eckert” became a village tale for the ear of
the stranger. I do not know what was done regarding
his property—the correct legal thing, doubtless.
The house was standing, still vacant and conspicuously
unfit, when I last heard of it, some twenty years afterward.
Of course it came to be considered
“haunted,” and the customary tales were
told of moving lights, dolorous sounds and startling
apparitions. At one time, about five years after
the disappearance, these stories of the supernatural
became so rife, or through some attesting circumstances
seemed so important, that some of Marion’s most
serious citizens deemed it well to investigate, and
to that end arranged for a night session on the premises.
The parties to this undertaking were John Holcomb,
an apothecary; Wilson Merle, a lawyer, and Andrus
C. Palmer, the teacher of the public school, all men
of consequence and repute. They were to meet
at Holcomb’s house at eight o’clock in
the evening of the appointed day and go together to
the scene of their vigil, where certain arrangements
for their comfort, a provision of fuel and the like,
for the season was winter, had been already made.
Palmer did not keep the engagement,
and after waiting a half-hour for him the others went
to the Eckert house without him. They established
themselves in the principal room, before a glowing
fire, and without other light than it gave, awaited
events. It had been agreed to speak as little
as possible: they did not even renew the exchange
of views regarding the defection of Palmer, which had
occupied their minds on the way.
Probably an hour had passed without
incident when they heard (not without emotion, doubtless)
the sound of an opening door in the rear of the house,
followed by footfalls in the room adjoining that in
which they sat. The watchers rose to their feet,
but stood firm, prepared for whatever might ensue.
A long silence followed—how long neither
would afterward undertake to say. Then the door
between the two rooms opened and a man entered.
It was Palmer. He was pale,
as if from excitement—as pale as the others
felt themselves to be. His manner, too, was singularly
distrait: he neither responded to their salutations
nor so much as looked at them, but walked slowly across
the room in the light of the failing fire and opening
the front door passed out into the darkness.
It seems to have been the first thought
of both men that Palmer was suffering from fright—that
something seen, heard or imagined in the back room
had deprived him of his senses. Acting on the
same friendly impulse both ran after him through the
open door. But neither they nor anyone ever
again saw or heard of Andrus Palmer!
This much was ascertained the next
morning. During the session of Messrs. Holcomb
and Merle at the “haunted house” a new
snow had fallen to a depth of several inches upon
the old. In this snow Palmer’s trail from
his lodging in the village to the back door of the
Eckert house was conspicuous. But there it ended:
from the front door nothing led away but the tracks
of the two men who swore that he preceded them.
Palmer’s disappearance was as complete as that
of “old man Eckert” himself—whom,
indeed, the editor of the local paper somewhat graphically
accused of having “reached out and pulled him
in.”