My wife Marilyn was born in Oklahoma but
spent much of her childhood in Gurdon, Arkansas. A railroad traverses the
outskirts of the tiny Arkansas town, and there are numerous accounts by people
who have seen strange lights at night on the track. Marilyn and her family lived in the house near the tracks, and an old black woman named Hattie
worked for Marilyn's family. One dark night, Hattie recounted the story of the
Gurdon Ghost to Marilyn and her sister Sharon. Is the story true? Sometimes, the
truth is stranger than fiction.
Gurdon Curse
When I was young, I lived in the country
just outside of Gurdon, Arkansas. Our house sat alone, back in the woods, about
a mile off the highway. Daddy was a logger. Mama took care of the house and all
six of us kids. Hattie was a black woman who helped Mama with everything. She
had her own home and family but often stayed after work and visited on the front porch.
The porch wrapped
around the house, and Daddy had screened it to keep out mosquitoes. We were all
sitting outside that night, enjoying the dampness a late autumn rain had
brought and a little chill that made it comfortable to cuddle up in one
of Grandma’s old Afghans.
Almost grown, Bobby
Jack was hardly ever around. He had a date that night with the new girl down
the road and soon slipped out the screen door without saying bye. Brother David
was at a basketball game. Mama frowned when my Daddy dropped the butt of his
cigarette on the porch, smashing the glowing stub with the toe of his boot.
Waving at us over his
shoulder, he said, “See you all tomorrow. Four o’clock comes early.”
Mama shook her head,
grabbed Nita and Carl Wayne, and followed Daddy through the front door. We had
no light on the porch, but the glow of an almost full moon cast Hattie and
Sharon Ann in a warm glow. She was eight; I was nine.
“Guess it’s time for me
to go home, too.”
“Please, Hattie, tell
us a story before you go,” I begged.
“I’m tired, and you two
girls have heard every story I know at least a dozen times.”
Hattie’s smile
disappeared when Sharon Ann said, “You never told us about the Gurdon Lights.”
“Maybe you know as much
as I do. What have you heard about the Lights?”
Sharon Ann gave me a
frowning glance, daring me with her eyes to blurt something out and take the
spotlight away from her.
“We heard it was the
ghost of a railroad man that had fallen off a train, and it cut off his head.
They say the lights are from the lantern he carries up and down the tracks,
looking for his lost head.”
As Hattie grinned, a
semi out on the highway blew its horn, and the dying moan mingled with the
chill breeze, whipping the limbs of the tall pines in our front yard.
“The Gurdon Lights are
real, but the true story ain’t nothing like anything you ever heard. I’ll tell you when you both get a little older.”
“No way,” I said,
grabbing her arm. “We’re both old enough. Tell us now.”
Sharon Ann grabbed her
other arm. “Is it spooky?”
Hattie let us direct
her to Mama’s rocker. “Spooky? It’s downright scary, and the story is kind of long. If I'm gonna tell it, I need a big glass of iced tea to wet my whistle.”
I didn’t have to be
told twice. Rushing into the house, I poured Hattie a large glass of tea from
the pitcher in the icebox. Before leaving the kitchen, I doctored the brew with
Daddy’s bottle of Weller he kept hidden behind the Mason jars in the pantry.
I didn’t bother
stirring the mixture before handing it to Hattie, and after her first sip, I
knew it didn’t matter. Sharon Ann and I sat on the porch in front of her,
huddling together in the warmth of the Afghan.
“This story might give
you a few nightmares. Your Mama wouldn’t like that.”
“We’re not scared,” I
said.
I always considered Hattie a big woman, maybe because of her husky voice. She wasn’t big at all.
I realized this many years later when returning to Gurdon for a visit. She did
have square shoulders, big arms for her size, and slightly bowed legs that we
girls used to tease her about, and her skin was as dark as if she had spent her
whole life in the sun.
Hattie took another
slug of the laced tea, and I knew she wasn’t going anyplace until she’d finished
every drop. After settling into Mama’s comfortable rocker, she began her story,
her words so low that Sharon Ann and I had to lean forward to hear them over
the gusting wind.
“Marilyn, you and
Sharon Ann are such pretty little white girls. I was not much older than you
are now when I first saw the Gurdon Lights. It was about this time of year,
maybe just a tad later. Sister Selma and I were sitting outside the house in
the swing. It was dark, and Mama had called us to come inside at least
twice.”
Hattie leaned her head
back and closed her eyes before slowly continuing.
“Our daddy was the
local preacher, man. Everybody knew him. We lived in a nicer house than most
black folks, not far from the railroad tracks. Selma and I were waiting for the
ten o’clock to thunder past. It wasn’t quite ten when I saw something else
instead.”
“Selma, you see that?”
I said, pointing down the tracks.
“It was a light moving
toward us. We couldn’t tell much else because the night was misty from
one of the low-hanging fogs. Sorta like tonight.”
“Where? I don’t see
anything,” she said.
“I didn’t have time to
answer because here came the ten o’clock, right on time. The train blew its
whistle and rattled right past our house. The flickering light I had first seen was gone when it finally disappeared into the darkness.
“I was the oldest girl
in the family, my room on the first floor, in the back of the house. That night, I
heard something tapping on my window. The sound woke me. I was half
asleep. It was dark, and my eyes were blurry when I looked at the window where the
noise came from.
“Someone or something
was tapping on the window. The sound echoed through my room. Tap, tap, tap,
it went. Tap, tap, tap."
“What was it?" Sharon
Ann demanded.
Hattie sat her tea on
the porch floor, closed her eyes, and hugged her arms together.
I took the empty glass
from the floor and scurried back inside to replenish it before she thought
better about finishing her story. Sharon Ann had Hattie’s arm, begging her not to
leave when I returned from the kitchen.
“What did you see in
the window?”
Hattie took a deep
breath and a slow sip before answering. “I couldn’t believe what I saw. It was a white ghostly head with long white hair.”
“You mean a ghost?” Sharon
Ann asked, sucking in her breath and holding it for Hattie’s answer.
“It was a ghost, staring at me through the window with eyes that didn’t have a drop of
color. Scared the scream right outa my throat. I swear to you, nothing came out.
I just pulled the covers over my head and shook.”
The wind whipped up,
causing a real commotion with Mama’s chimes hanging on some of the nearest
low-hanging limbs.
“Then what happened?” I
asked, reaching for Sharon Ann’s hand and squeezing it fiercely.
Hattie steeled herself
with a healthy sip from the tea glass and finally began again.
“I would probably still
be under the covers, but Selma couldn’t sleep, and she had walked down to my
room. When she shook the bedspread, I almost had a stroke. When I didn’t answer,
she yanked the covers off my head.”
“What are you doing
under there?” she asked.
“I glanced at the
window and then back at Selma. Whatever I had seen was gone.
Selma laughed at me when I told her, and before long, I’d convinced myself it
was just a dream. The following day, my brother found something that brought back my
fear.
“Somebody’s gonna get
in trouble when Mama finds out who broke off her favorite rose bush,” he said.
“Selma and I followed
him outside to Mama’s roses growing right outside my bedroom window. Petals
strewed the ground beside the broken bush. It looked like someone had fallen, mashing it nearly flat.”
“A ghost wouldn’t have
fallen,” Selma said. “Someone climbed up on the big rock and looked into your
bedroom.”
“I wasn’t convinced I hadn’t seen a ghost, though the thought of a peeping Tom in the neighborhood
did little to soothe my nerves.
“That night, the light
was back, only this time Selma saw it too. We weren’t the only ones. For the
next few months, people all over town began seeing it, usually late at night
and almost always close to the railroad tracks.”
Hattie took another
sip, and chilly as it was, wiped beads of perspiration from her forehead. The
wind outside had slowed, and it got quiet, except for a dog barking in the
distance. Fog hung close to the ground, in the hollows, and between the trees.
The screech of Mama’s cat outside the house startled Hattie. A grin spread over
her big face when she saw us staring intently at her.
“You girls aren’t letting me go home until I finish the story.”
Our faces were the only
answer she needed; we were a captive audience, and she knew it.
Hattie grinned again,
took another sip, and continued. “My Daddy, like I said, was the preacher man. I
knew I couldn’t tell him I’d seen a ghost or he’d made me listen to one of
his sermons after the other. I told my Grandma instead. I could always talk
straight to her, and she always gave me good advice.
“Grandma was a very old
woman, with skin as black as chimney soot and hair white as ash.
“You believe in ghosts,
Grandma?”
“Course I do. I was
your age when I saw my first ghosts. I was picking cotton with my Mama and
Daddy. It was hot, and we were tired. I cried, grabbed my Mama’s dress, and begged
her to let me quit.”
“Chile,” she said, “We
can’t go till we finish picking this cotton, but we got some help and will soon
be done.”
“She pointed behind me.
There were folks I had not noticed, and they were helping.”
"Who was helping?" I asked.
"Dead ancestors, looking as real as you and me and doing just as much
work, except you could see right through them.”
Hattie drew a deep
breath. “Granny said we all have spirits that guide and protect us.”
“Don’t ever be afraid,
little Hattie,” she said. “Always do the brave thing, and God will protect you.”
“I got my chance to
test her words not long after that. I was asleep in my room when the same tap,
tap, tap on my window woke me, just like before. My eyes were wide as saucers
when I peeked out from under the covers and looked at the window.”
Hattie covered her eyes
and shuddered. “Don’t stop,” I said. “Tell us what happened.”
“This time, I got a good
look at the ghost. He was huge and white as a sheet in the light of a full
moon. His eyes had no color, and he was tapping on my window with long
fingernails that curled up like fishhooks.
“I covered my head with
the bed covers and stayed that way, thinking he would bust through the window
any minute. It never happened, and I fell asleep from exhaustion sometime during the night, but my heart was still pounding when I woke up the following day.
“I ran outside in my
nightgown and found something under my window.”
“Tell us,” Sharon Ann
said, squeezing my hand to where the pink of the fingers gave way to white.
“An envelope, and
there was something in it. A letter.
“I waited until I was
in class before I opened and read it. It didn’t say much except 'Help me—Dorothea
James, the old house that sits alone down the railroad track. Please come.'
“I wanted to tell my
daddy, granny, or maybe even Selma. Something in the message made me keep it
to myself. I was working on a project for the English teacher, and it was after
five before I left school. Instead of going straight home, I headed up the
railroad tracks toward the old house in the woods.
“Everyone in Gurdon
knew about the house near the railroad track. It had been ramshackle as long as I
could remember, and we called it the haunted house. We had all heard tales
about hobos and tramps living there, and none of us kids had ever so much as
stuck our heads inside that old building.
“It was dark when I
reached it, and I was already kicking myself for being so far from home, but as
I stood on the tracks and stared down at the house, I saw the glow of a light
coming from inside. I almost turned and ran away. Granny’s
words stopped me. I started down the hill instead.
“The front porch
creaked like an old man’s bones, and I wished I had a lantern to keep from
stepping in a rotten spot and falling through. Somehow, I made it to the ruined
screen door hanging on one loose hinge. The old wooden door was only half shut.
“I pushed through into
the house. The inside smelled like mold. You could feel the dampness on your
skin. The wood was all rotted. I followed the hallway to the dim light that led
to a bedroom where someone was lying in bed.
“It was a woman, her
hair long and unkempt as wet hay. She was black, and her skin was ashen as
Granny’s hair. The sight of me set her into a coughing fit, her eyes bulging
when she tried to catch her breath.
“Oh, Chile, thank God
you came,’” she said, holding her hand and speaking in a wheezing voice.
“She wasn’t old but her
body was so ruined by disease that I barely understood her. Frail as she was,
her grip was strong when she grabbed my hand and touched it to her cheek.”
“I’m Dorothea, and I got
a problem,’” she said. “I’m gonna die soon, and I need to share a special secret
with someone I can trust.”
“What secret?”
“It’s about Jerome.
Jerome, my boy."
“She didn’t have to
tell me someone else had entered the room because the little hairs on my neck bristled up, and I felt a cold chill race down my back. I was afraid to
turn around, though more afraid not to. When I turned and saw who it was, I
almost fainted.
“Standing right there
was the Ghost of Gurdon. My legs got weak and rubbery. I almost pissed my
panties and would have, except my heart was beating so fast I had to grasp my
chest to keep it from busting out of my body. The woman still had hold of my
hand and yanked it.”
“It’s okay, Chile.
Jerome wants never hurt a soul."
“I was once in a
doughnut shop when the Grambling basketball team came in. I’ve never in my life
seen such tall, athletic young men. Jerome was just as tall and big, and he had
no color in his whole body, not his hair, eyes, or skin. He
was white as a ghost.
“Dorothea yanked me,
demanding I pay attention to her, not her giant, colorless son. She eased me
close enough to her face that I could smell her sour breath and see
the tears in her eyes.”
“What’s your name,
girl?’” she asked. When I told her, she said, “Jerome’s an albino. Having an
albino baby in these parts is a curse. It’s called mzungu, the product of a
black woman and a white man. Worse, most believe an albino is a living ghost.
When families have such a curse, they usually take care of it. I just couldn’t
do that to my baby."
“I brought him here and
raised him all by myself. We had a little truck patch out back, a cow, and a few
chickens. Jerome never had anyone but me, and when I took the sickness, I got to where I could not feed us anymore. Jerome’s been walking down the railroad
track at night with his lantern, stealing food and things we need. He’s deaf
and can’t speak, and I’ve been so scared somebody would kill him or hack off his arms and legs and leave him to die."
“There’s no monster
mean enough to do that,” I said.
“The woman pulled me
closer, right up to her face so that I was staring directly into her brown eyes, and I couldn’t help but see and feel her desperation.”
“You’re just a baby.
You don’t know yet what hatred some people have in their hearts. Jerome thought
you were older, and he had a good feeling about you, but . . ."
“Just tell me what to
do,” I said, squeezing her hand. “I’ll help if I can.”
“I can’t die and leave
Jerome like this. He’ll never make it without someone to care for him."
“Daddy’s a preacher.
He’s a good man and will help you, I promise.
“Dorothea loosened her
grip on my hand and looked me square. She didn’t say another word.
She smiled, nodded, and laid her head against the pillow.
“Dorothea was right.
Jerome wouldn’t have hurt a soul. He held my hand as we walked the tracks back
to my house. I kissed him on the cheek before sneaking into the house without anyone knowing I had been out. The next morning, I told my Daddy.”
Thinking about my dad, I asked, “Was he okay with it?”
Hattie nodded. “He let
me take him to the old house on the railroad track. He prayed for Dorothea and
promised her that he would care for Jerome and protect him from harm.
“And that’s what he
did. When Dorothea died, Daddy held a service for her and buried her body
behind the Baptist church. Jerome was there, wearing a black coat and a big hat
with a veil so people couldn’t see his face. Daddy knew a good couple in
Chicago, and he called and told them about Jerome. They adopted and finished raising
him.”
Sharon Ann and I were
captivated by the story. “I can’t believe Jerome wouldn’t have been welcome
here in Gurdon.”
Clouds had finally
parted, and a full moon lighted the path outside the screened porch. Hattie
finished the last sip of her tea and started out the door, turning when she had
one final thought.
“You pretty little
white girls just remember one thing. Old beliefs, black or white, die hard.
Some people would rather deal with a ghost than someone different than
them. Those people will keep looking for a ghost forever because their minds
can’t accept the truth.”
Sharon Ann and I
watched the little black woman disappear down the foggy road. Before closing
the door, I glanced up at the full moon and then back at the railroad track, wondering
if the distant incandescence disappearing into the fog was Jerome’s spirit,
still searching for a person with a good heart.
###
Born near Black Bayou in the little Louisiana town of Vivian, Eric Wilder grew up listening to his grandmother’s tales of politics, corruption, and ghosts that haunt the night. He now lives in Oklahoma, where he continues to pen mysteries and short stories with a southern accent. He authored the French Quarter Mystery Series set in New Orleans, the Paranormal Cowboy Series, and the Oyster Bay Mystery Series. Please check it out on his Amazon author page. You might also like checking out his Facebook page.
1 comment:
I'm sorry to say I'd never seen your books. I found this on FB & was somewhat able to concentrate enough to read it. I found it enjoyable. If I can get my chronic depression/ chronic anxiety under control, I'd like to read more. I live in S. E. Ok. B.
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