Indian Ghost Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 135 pages of information about Indian Ghost Stories.

Indian Ghost Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 135 pages of information about Indian Ghost Stories.

At tea I reported the matter to the old couple and I then noticed with curiosity their embarrassed look of the day before.  I therefore suggested that the servants intentionally left the door open, and one morning they would find the door-frames, stored in the room, gone.

At this the old man smiled.  He said that the door of this particular room had remained open for the last 15 years and the contents had never been disturbed.  On our pressing him why the door remained open he admitted with great reluctance that since the death of a certain servant of the house-hold in that particular room fifteen years ago the outer door had never remained closed.  “You may close it yourself and see” suggested the old gentleman.

We required no further invitation.  Immediately we all went to that room to investigate and find out the ghost if he remained indoors during the day.  But Mr. Ghost was not there.  “He has gone out for his morning constitutional,” I suggested, “and this time we shall keep him out.”  Now this particular room had two doors and one window.  The window and one door were on the court-yard side of the room and communicated with the court-yard.  The other door led to the grounds outside and this last was the haunted door.  We opened both the doors and the window and examined the room.  There was nothing extraordinary about it.  Then we tried to close the haunted door.  It had warped probably by being kept open for 15 years.  It had two very strong bolts on the inside but the lower bolt would not go within 3 inches of its socket.  The upper one was very loose and a little continuous thumping would bring the bolt down.  We thought we had solved the mystery thus:—­The servants only closed the door by pushing up the upper bolt, at night the wind would shake the door and the bolt would come down.  So this time we took good care to use the lower bolt.  Three of us pushed the door with all our might and one man thrust the lower bolt into its socket.  It hardly went in a quarter of an inch, but still the door was secure.  We then hammered the bolt in with bricks.  In doing this we broke about half a dozen of them.  This will explain to the reader how much strength it required to drive the bolt in about an inch and a half.

Then we satisfied ourselves that the bolt could not be moved without the aid of a hammer and a lever.  Afterwards we closed the window and the other door and securely locked the last.  Thus no human being could open the haunted door.

Before retiring to bed after dinner we further examined both the doors once more.  They were all right.

The next morning we did not go out for fishing; so when we got up at about five in the morning the first thing we did was to go and examine the haunted door.  It flew in at the touch.  We then went inside and examined the other door and the window which communicated with the court-yard.  The window was as secure as we had left it and the door was chained from outside.  We went round into the court-yard and examined the lock.  It did not appear to have been tampered with.

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Project Gutenberg
Indian Ghost Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.