
MYSTERIOUS VISITOR
I never used to believe in ghosts. What I did
believe in was over-active imaginations. I know
all about them because I have one! What happened
to me on a dark Scottish winter’s night changed
my opinions.
I work in a croft on Harris, a small island that
lies just off the West Coast of Scotland. In
summer the island attracts a fair amount of
tourists, but come the winter it can be a very
lonely place. We do not have a TV or a phone in
the croft as it is too isolated to make
connection viable.
Most nights at home are spent
playing cards or reading before turning in early.
The owner of the croft - my only housemate - had
gone down to Glasgow to visit relatives, so, on
this night I had locked up and gone to bed around
9.30.
I lay alone in my bunk with only the sound
of the wind whistling outside and the rain
bettering against the window as my companions.
It was, what us Scots would call, a dreek night.
The storm outside seemed to be growing more
forceful by the moment. A faint but persistent
knocking at the door therefore came as a surprise.
As I pulled on a pair of jeans and rushed out of
the bedroom, through the main room and to the
front door, my mind was racing. Who would call
at this hour? Who would be crazy enough to be
out on a night like this? I unlocked the door
and pulled it open. A cold gust of wind blasted
my face with ice cold rain, but nobody stood
beyond the door. I leaned forward into the cold
night, but still could not see anyone. Supposing
that the wind, or my imagination, had been the
cause of the banging, I began to pull the door
closed. Only then did I see, from the corner of
my eye, a figure slumped against the wall,
several metres from the door. I rushed to the
figure. On closer inspection I realised that it
was a man in his mid-twenties. He was,
inappropriately, dressed in jeans, trainers and a
T-shirt. His face was a paler white than you can
imagine and he was as cold as death itself.
Propping the man up on one of the wooden chairs
in the main room, I tried to force hot, sugary,
tea down his throat. After dragging him in from
the cold I had tried to get some sense from him,
but he was either unwilling or unable to talk.
Assuming he had somehow, perhaps drunkenly,
wandered lost from the nearest town, I decided
that the best option was to let him stay
overnight. I would try to get help in the
morning.
I propped the stranger up and went into
the kitchen to fetch a bowl of soup and some
bread for him, before preparing a bed. I
returned to the main room several minutes later
with the soup and bread on a tray, but the room
was empty. I put down the tray and began to
search the croft. Perhaps he had regained
consciousness and went to the toilet. As the
search proved futile my concern grew. Had he
wandered back outside?
I pulled on some boots and a heavy jacket before
heading out into the night. The storm had grown
worse and the pitch black made searching
difficult. I looked round the immediate area
before stumbling down to the road. Looking up
the hill I was surprised to see lights flashing
about a mile further on. I made my way towards
the light.
As I approached I could see that the lights
belonged to the island police van, which doubled
as an ambulance, also there was the local
policeman’s car. As I drew closer, the van began
to move off in the direction of town. The local
policeman was left alone, peering over the ditch
at the side of the road. I called out as I
walked towards him. “Hello there”! He greeted me
before going on to explain that there had been an
accident about 45 minutes previously. A man had
driven his car off the road and had been killed
on impact. I told the policeman about my
mysterious guest and he said he would have a look
around before he left, but not to worry. He
thought the fellow would have regained
consciousness and fled in embarrassment.
I
returned to the croft and went back to bed, glad
to be warm and out of the cold and rain.
Several days later I was awoken early by a knock
on the door. The local weekly paper had been
delivered. As I flicked to the second page I
froze in fear. There was a small picture of my
mysterious visitor underneath a headline that
read “Man killed in road tragedy”.
The man, from Edinburgh, had been staying with
his long-term girlfriend on the island. She had
chosen that stormy night to end their
relationship. Broken hearted, he fled her house
and jumped in his car at around 8.30 p.m.
Travelling towards the main town on the island,
his car had, inexplicably, left the road. The
man had almost certainly been killed instantly
and police put the time of the accident at around
9.00 p.m., at least half an hour before my
visitor had arrived!
Submitted from:Paul Anderson, Scotland, UK
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