Fritz to the Front, or, the Ventriloquist Scamp-Hunter Part 5
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It was a large structure of many queer gables, wings and projections, and fronted upon a road which had been used to communicate with some thoroughfare further inland.
"Dot looks like ash uff it vas going to rain," Fritz muttered, gazing at an ominous bank of clouds that was gathering in the west. "I d.i.n.k maybe I petter sday in der old house till morning, uff I und der ghosts can agree. I don'd vas much affraid off ghosts, anyhow."
And he evidently was not, for he boldly entered the house by the creaking front-door and closed the door behind him.
When the clouds had overspread the sky in an inky ma.s.s, and darkness had set in around the gloomy edifice, two black-whiskered men came along and stopped at the mansion.
CHAPTER IV.
THE GHASTLY RELIC.
Meantime Fritz had been in the old rookery some time prior to the arrival of the bearded men.
No sooner had he entered the large hall, and closed the door behind him, than he felt a sort of dread of something, he knew not what.
There was a damp, musty, deathly smell about the place that he did not quite like.
"I don'd know vedder I vas afraid of ghosts or not," he soliloquized, pausing and gazing around him. "It looks ash uff dis might be a blace vere dey manufacture ghost shows; but somebody has liffed here vonce upon a time."
The carpet yet remained upon the floor of the long hall, and also upon the staircase which led to the upper floor. There was also a large picture hung upon the wall.
Pa.s.sing along the hall, Fritz tried each of the doors which opened off from it, but in each instance he found them locked, and was unable to effect an entrance.
"Vel, dot looks like ash uff nopody vas to home," he muttered. "I'll try der upstairs part, und if I don'd haff no better success, I vil stay out mit der hall."
He accordingly ascended the hall staircase, and proceeded to take a tour of the upper part of the rambling old structure.
Here the doors were all locked, with one exception, and this had evidently been left as locked, the bolt being turned, but the door not having been tightly closed, the bolt failed to enter the socket.
Opening this door, Fritz entered, and found himself in a large furnished apartment, there being a carpet, old and moth-eaten, upon the floor; several pieces of stuffed furniture, which had also been victims of moth and worm, and a large round oaken table in the center of the room.
And over this, suspended by a cord, which was fastened to the ceiling, was an object which caused Fritz to utter a grunt of startled alarm.
It was a man's head, cut from the body at the throat, and held in suspension by a cord fastened to the long hair.
The head had probably hung there for a year or so, for the flesh had dried down upon the bones. The eyes, however, retained their gla.s.sy stare, the teeth showed to ghastly advantage, and the heavy black mustache and goatee bristled ferociously.
Fritz gave a startled cry, and his hair fairly raised on end, as he beheld the strange spectacle, but the longer he stared at it, the less his alarm, and he finally advanced into the room.
"By s.h.i.+mminy--I vas skeardt like ash der duyfel at first, put now I don'd vas a bit afraid. Somepody hang dot up there yoost for a scare-crow. Uff der ghosts vas to see it, I'll bet a half-dollar dey vould run."
Just then there was a flash of lightning and a heavy roll of thunder, which caused Fritz to start, and give a nervous glance at the swinging head.
"I don'd quite vas like id here," he muttered, uneasily. "I'd makes a veller t'ink he's goin' der get smashed up effery minute. I vonder vot dey keep up there?" and his eyes rested upon an aperture in the ceiling, such as is often provided in houses as a means of reaching the roof. A stout rope hung down through this opening to the floor of the room, and had evidently been used to climb up into the attic.
Fritz was just contemplating it, when a sound of footsteps in the hall outside aroused him to quicker thoughts.
"I'll bet a half-dollar it's a ghost comin'," he gasped, the tendency of his hair being again decidedly upward. "But, it was a cold day ven dey scalb me mit der tommyhawk, ash long ash I can climb."
Accordingly, up the rope he went, hand-over-hand, with the agility of a monkey, and soon gained the attic immediately above the chamber.
It was a dark, ill-smelling place, and so far as Fritz could see, used for no particular purpose whatever.
Ensconcing himself directly beside the aperture through which he had come up, Fritz prepared to await developments.
He was not a little anxious to know who the new-comer was--whether a human or spiritual being, for if the latter, he had a curiosity to inspect it.
In a few moments the door opened and a strapping Irishman stalked into the chamber, a lank, lean specimen of humanity, with a Killkenny face, red hair, a fringe of reddish beard under his lower jaw, extending to his ears, and attired in brogans, short pantaloons, and a blue soldier coat, with a grimy clay pipe in his mouth, and battered plug hat on his head. Of the "rale old" race of Irishmen, he was certainly a good specimen.
"Arrah! sure it's divil one room but they have locked, an' a sorry place it is, too, for a dacent Irish gintlemon--an the son of a duke at that! Bad 'cess to sich a counthry, onny-how. It's wurruk like the divil for a bit of grub, and when a mon gits out ov wurruk sure stomick has to pay for it. If yez ax a mon will he be afther givin'
yez a nip off bread, he tell yez, 'Arrah! off wid ye, ye murdtherin'
tromp, or I'll sick tha purrup on yez!' bedad."
"I'll yoost pet half-dollar der Irishman vas pin stoppin' mit Samples!" Fritz muttered, with a grin, taking a peep at the son of Erin. "He vas hungry like as vot I vas. Vonder off he haff discovered der skelegon, yet avile."
The Hibernian had not, evidently, for he was perched composedly beneath the suspended head.
"Sorry a place this is for the son of a duke," he went on muttering.
"Sure, it looks as if the ould divil himself had been here. Guess this property would be sellin' moighty cheap, tha while. Ugh!" as a heavy clap of thunder caused the house to shake from stem to stern, "a sorry wild night it's a-goin' to be, an' it's meself that's wis.h.i.+n' I was back forninst the furdther side av the big puddle."
"Ha! ha!" laughed Fritz, throwing his voice to the farther side of the room.
"Yis, ha! ha! bad 'cess to the loikes av yez, whoever ye may be!" the Irishman cried, fiercely, gazing in vain around the apartment, in search of the author of the laugh.
"Ho! ho! itchy, dirdty Iris.h.!.+" Fritz caused a different voice to say, in a still opposite part of the room.
"No, I'm divil a wan av the likes!" the son of Erin cried, getting angry. "Bad luck to yez! ef I gits me hands on yez, it's a divil's own trouncin' you'll get, ontirely. I'll have yez know my name is Patrick Grogan, an' it's the dacent, gintlemonly son av a duke and a d.u.c.h.ess I am, bedad."
"A son off a gun, more likely. Look out, you b.l.o.o.d.y Irish, or I vil spit on you!" Fritz caused the suspended head to say, in a hoa.r.s.e, gurgling voice.
"Aha! it's spittin' on me yez'll be, eh?" the Hibernian cried, leaping from his seat, his walking-stick in hand--a formidable piece of real thorn. "Oh! you black-livered omadhaun, if I catch yez, _won't_ I tache yez to be dacent and civil to a gintlemon!"
Then, chancing to glance upward, he saw for the first the swinging head, and in utter horror dropped upon his knees and raised his hands upward in supplication.
"Oh, holy Virgin Mary, protect me!" he howled, his terrified gaze glued upon the unsightly object. "Oh, murdtherin Maria! och, bad luck!
fot have I done, Mr. Divil? shure it's nary a thing wrong I've did, nor sthalin' I've never been guilty of!"
"You vas von son-off-a-sea-cook!" came from the head.
"Yis--och, sure I'se anything yez wants, Mr. Divil! only don't be afther hurtin' the loikes av me!"
"Then arise, dirdty Irish, and climb into the attic, before the spirits come to wrap their icy clutches around you!"
"Sure, I'll be afther goin'," Pat cried, and he did go--not up the rope, but out of the room, as fast as he could go.
Nor did he pause until outside of the house, as Fritz could tell by the sound of his rapidly retreating footsteps.
Fritz to the Front, or, the Ventriloquist Scamp-Hunter Part 5
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Fritz to the Front, or, the Ventriloquist Scamp-Hunter Part 5 summary
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