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Death, the Knight, and the Lady: A Ghost Story

Chapter 24: CHAPTER XXI "AND THEY LAID HIM TO HIS REST"
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About This Book

A narrator answers an urgent summons from his friend James Wilder, who appears prematurely aged and requests that the narrator travel to his Yorkshire estate to oversee an odd burial. Wilder supplies exact directions for a coffin, ceremonial dress, and a memorial inscription in lieu of attending himself. As the narrator carries out these instructions he encounters uncanny happenings, ambiguous identities, and traces of opium-addled memory, all set against an atmosphere of grief and ritual. The work moves through framed chapters and occasional ballads, blending mystery, mourning rites, and subtle supernatural suggestion.

CHAPTER XXI
"AND THEY LAID HIM TO HIS REST"

I remember next being in my own bedroom. I was taking off the cavalier's dress, and I felt like a traveller who had returned from some far and beautiful land. I never wept, nor even sighed. And I remember the rest of that strange and ghostly day, the silence of the house, and the room beyond the pretty corridor that held a thing stranger than anything on earth or in the sea. It rained slightly towards dusk. I was looking out of a window on to the garden, later—it may have been midnight for aught I know, I came down the painted corridor, and entered the bedroom. A lamp was burning, and on the bed lay something small and straight, covered with a sheet. I drew away the sheet, and saw the face I had known so well; just the same it looked, only smaller and more helpless, and the smile had faded away into a vague, beseeching look.

Then I remember days that passed, and one day when Wilder said to me, "You will not come?" "Where?" I asked. "To the graveyard."

I was in the library when he spoke. I shook my head.

He left the room; and a little later I heard heavy footsteps, and the tolling of a bell in the distance. I counted, one, two, three—sixteen, then the bell ceased.