A Wireless Message
In the summer of 1896 Mr. William Holt, a wealthy
manufacturer of Chicago, was living temporarily in a little town of
central New York, the name of which the writer’s memory has not
retained. Mr. Holt had had “trouble with his wife,” from whom he
had parted a year before. Whether the trouble was anything more
serious than “incompatibility of temper,” he is probably the only
living person that knows: he is not addicted to the vice of
confidences. Yet he has related the incident herein set down to at
least one person without exacting a pledge of secrecy. He is now
living in Europe.
One evening he had left the house of a brother whom
he was visiting, for a stroll in the country. It may be
assumed—whatever the value of the assumption in connection with
what is said to have occurred—that his mind was occupied with
reflections on his domestic infelicities and the distressing
changes that they had wrought in his life. Whatever may have been
his thoughts, they so possessed him that he observed neither the
lapse of time nor whither his feet were carrying him; he knew only
that he had passed far beyond the town limits and was traversing a
lonely region by a road that bore no resemblance to the one by
which he had left the village. In brief, he was “lost.”
Realizing his mischance, he smiled; central New
York is not a region of perils, nor does one long remain lost in
it. He turned about and went back the way that he had come. Before
he had gone far he observed that the landscape was growing more
distinct—was brightening. Everything was suffused with a soft, red
glow in which he saw his shadow projected in the road before him.
“The moon is rising,” he said to himself. Then he remembered that
it was about the time of the new moon, and if that tricksy orb was
in one of its stages of visibility it had set long before. He
stopped and faced about, seeking the source of the rapidly
broadening light. As he did so, his shadow turned and lay along the
road in front of him as before. The light still came from behind
him. That was surprising; he could not understand. Again he turned,
and again, facing successively to every point of the horizon.
Always the shadow was before—always the light behind, “a still and
awful red.”
Holt was astonished—“dumfounded” is the word that
he used in telling it—yet seems to have retained a certain
intelligent curiosity. To test the intensity of the light whose
nature and cause he could not determine, he took out his watch to
see if he could make out the figures on the dial. They were plainly
visible, and the hands indicated the hour of eleven o’clock and
twenty-five minutes. At that moment the mysterious illumination
suddenly flared to an intense, an almost blinding splendor,
flushing the entire sky, extinguishing the stars and throwing the
monstrous shadow of himself athwart the landscape. In that
unearthly illumination he saw near him, but apparently in the air
at a considerable elevation, the figure of his wife, clad in her
night-clothing and holding to her breast the figure of his child.
Her eyes were fixed upon his with an expression which he afterward
professed himself unable to name or describe, further than that it
was “not of this life.”
The flare was momentary, followed by black
darkness, in which, however, the apparition still showed white and
motionless; then by insensible degrees it faded and vanished, like
a bright image on the retina after the closing of the eyes. A
peculiarity of the apparition, hardly noted at the time, but
afterward recalled, was that it showed only the upper half of the
woman’s figure: nothing was seen below the waist.
The sudden darkness was comparative, not absolute,
for gradually all objects of his environment became again
visible.
In the dawn of the morning Holt found himself
entering the village at a point opposite to that at which he had
left it. He soon arrived at the house of his brother, who hardly
knew him. He was wild-eyed, haggard, and gray as a rat. Almost
incoherently, he related his night’s experience.
“Go to bed, my poor fellow,” said his brother,
“and—wait. We shall hear more of this.”
An hour later came the predestined telegram. Holt’s
dwelling in one of the suburbs of Chicago had been destroyed by
fire. Her escape cut off by the flames, his wife had appeared at an
upper window, her child in her arms. There she had stood,
motionless, apparently dazed. Just as the firemen had arrived with
a ladder, the floor had given way, and she was seen no more.
The moment of this culminating horror was eleven
o’clock and twenty-five minutes, standard time.