
THE ANGRY GHOST ON THE STAIRS
I live in Salem, Massachusetts, where haunted
houses are so common that many people assume the phrase "creepy house"
means "haunted".
Creepy houses usually don't feel creepy to me, so
hearing the
warning that I'm about to enter a creepy house
usually doesn't
register on me. This story concerns one of the
more famous haunted houses,
though I didn't know it until a few minutes after
I experienced it first-hand.
The Joshua Ward House was built, I believe, around
1750, on the site of the home of the High Sheriff who had
imprisoned and hanged the accused witches in the 1690's. At the time of
his death, he was so reviled that his family buried him in the cellar
to prevent public desecration of the corpse. He remained buried
there right up until the late 1700's, when he was finally given a
proper burial.
As if having the High Sheriff in the cellar
wasn't bad enough for
the Joshua Ward House, the ghost of Giles Corey,
the one who
was pressed to death with stones, was also
rumoured to have remained
near the Sheriff and his family. Its a stately
old building, pinched
into a tiny parcel in the middle of the business
district, but perched
up on its own hill, which makes it seem far
removed from the traffic
and city sounds.
It was not unpleasant when my fiance, a real
estate agent, found that her company had bought the famous
house to use as its HQ. She was very unhappy, though, to discover that she
was going to have to be the last person in the building one night working the front desk
for two hours all by herself, and would have to shut
out the lights and lock it up. To make matters
worse, it was Halloween
week, meaning that night fell early, as the
clocks had just moved back to
standard time, and every Salem street corner was
crowded with witches,
vampires, and werewolves ... some of them a
little to serious about
it all. For that reason, she asked me to keep
her company. Without
thinking, I agreed, and even brought my 5 year
old son along.
Night was falling as I climbed the stone stairs
to the front door, and
I knew something was wrong before the massive
door even opened. As I stepped
into the bright light foyer with its massive
staircase, my hands were
clammy, my stomach knotted -- the same feeling
you get on entering
a funeral home.
Inside, the disoriented feeling didn't go away.
As the door closed behind me,
I had the impression of a glaring light on the
front steps, and found
myself squinting in response. The light seemed
to resolve into a bee-
swarm of tiny pinpoints of light. But it was
moving too.
The mass seemed to come down the stairs to
approach me, but then
it backed away and went up, lingering. I had
the distinct and crazy impression that there was
an old woman on
the stairs. An angry old woman. Angry at me.
She did not want me
to come near. She was menacing me, ordering me
to keep away. I'm stating this as fact because that is how it
felt. What made this even scarier was that it was just an empty staircase,
and here I was seeing things that were not there!
My five year old son sensed something in the hall
too, saying "I feel like there's a ghost in here." (I always
pretended not to believe in ghosts to my son, to spare him bad dreams and
irrational fears. And yet here I was in a state of fear, telling him to go
into the next room (the old conservatory, I suppose), and play with
a puzzle.
I was so rattled and alarmed by the strange
combination of feelings and events, and I had no
intention of turning my back on "the thing on the
stairs." So I sat there for almost two
hours, in a chair a few feet from the stair
case. "She" continued to
look at me, sometimes going upstairs a bit, then
coming back. It was as if
she were afraid to turn her back on me. At
times, it felt she would try to
turn and go, but then would whip around and lash
out some inaudible words
at me.
There was one brief moment of shock -- like
having a bucket of water thrown
in my face -- when "she" was looking at me. For
just a second, I felt that
she was actually looking at me, and I at her.
She knew that I was there,
and knew that I knew she was there. The sudden
realization that I was
making eye contact with a ghost made me stop
breathing, as if waiting for
an explosion.
It was fortunate for me that the real estate
agency had installed motion
detectors on the staircases. They were already
turned on when we arrived, so
there was no question of my going up the stairs.
Good thing -- because my
initial fear was turning into a weird
fascination. I find it hard to believe
that I would have approached the thing on the
stairs, but the mixture of
fear and fascination had some unpredictable
effects. I was the last one out the door that
night, and I backed out, unable to turn my back
on the stairs until the door clicked behind me.
To this day, I want to avoid ghosts. For me at
least, the sensation is just
a little bit like going crazy.
There's a brief postscript about the house --
which I intend never to enter
again. When we drove home shortly after these
events, we found a local
newspaper called North Shore Sunday on our
porch. Its cover story was a
Halloween feature piece written by a famous
ghostbuster, in which he
visited the most haunted places in Salem.
The first site in the article was the Joshua Ward
House. The ghost buster
noted the presence of a ghost on the front
stairs. He attempted and failed
to photograph the stairs. All the pictures came
out with a nest of pinpoints
of light.
Happy Halloween!
Submitted from:Massachusetts, USA
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