Governor Gardelin returned to Denmark very soon after the Slave War of 1883, where, so far as one may know from perusal of the old records, he died in his bed full of years and honors.
As I have mentioned, my cousins, Marie and Suzanne, returned to the continental United States. They left about the tenth of February, and Stephen and I, regretting their departure, settled down for the rest of that winter, planning to return the middle of May.
One morning, a few weeks after their departure, Reynolds, the proprietor, asked me a question.
‘Did you hear the uproar last night, or, rather, early this morning?’
‘No,’ said I. ‘What was “the uproar?” If it was out in the streets I might have heard it, but if it happened inside the hotel, my house is so detached that I should probably have heard nothing of it and gone right on sleeping.’
‘It was inside,’ said Reynolds, ‘so you probably wouldn’t have noticed it. The servants are all chattering about it this morning, though. They believe it is another manifestation of the Jumbee in Number 4. By the way, Mr Canevin, your cousins were in that room. Did they ever mention any disturbance to you?’
‘Why, yes, now that you speak of it. My cousin Suzanne spoke of somebody knocking on their door; about four in the morning I believe it happened. I think it happened more than once. They imagined it was somebody being “called” very early, and the servant knocking on the wrong door or something of that kind. They didn’t say much about it to me. What is “the Jumbee in Number 4”? That intrigues me. I never happened to hear that one!’
Now a ‘Jumbee’ is, of course, a West Indian ghost. In the French islands the word is ‘Zombi’. Jumbees have various characteristics, which I will not pause to enumerate, but one of these is that a Jumbee is always black. White persons, apparently, do not ‘walk’ after death, although I have personally known three white gentlemen planters who were believed to be werewolves! Among the West Indian black population occurs every belief, every imaginable practise of the occult, which is interwoven closely into their lives and thoughts; everything from mere ‘charms’ to active necromancy; from the use of the deadly Vaudoux to the ‘toof from a dead’, which last renders a gambler lucky! Jumbee is a generic word. It means virtually any kind of a ghost, apparition, or revenant. I was not in the least surprised to learn that Number 4, Grand Hotel, had its other-worldly attendant. My sole ground for wonder was that I had not heard of it before now! Now that I recalled the matter, something had disturbed Marie and Suzanne in that room.
‘Tell me about it, please, Mr Reynolds,’ I requested.
Mr Reynolds smiled. He is a man of education and he, too, knows his West Indies.
‘In this case it is only a general belief,’ he answered. The only specific information about “the Jumbee in Number 4” is that it wakes occupants up early in the morning. There has, it seems, “always been a Jumbee” connected with that room. I dare say the very frying-pans in the kitchen have their particular Jumbees, if they happen to be old enough! That rumpus this morning was only that we had a tourist, a Mr Ledwith, staying overnight – came over from Porto Rico in the Catherine and left this morning for “down the islands” on the Dominica. He came in pretty late last night from a party with friends in the town. He explained later that he couldn’t sleep because of somebody knocking on his door. He called out several times, got no answer; the knocking went on, and then he lost his temper. He reached out of bed and picked up the earthenware water-jug. His aim was excellent, even though he may have had a drop too much at his party. He hit the door-handle, smashed the jug into fragments, and then, really aroused, got up, flung open the door, found nobody there, and took it into his head that somebody was having a joke on him. Absurd! The man was a total stranger to everybody in the hotel.
‘He raged around the ballroom and woke up the Gilbertsons and Mrs Peck – you know they have rooms on that side – and at last he awakened me and I got up and persuaded him to go back to bed. He said there were no more knocks after that. I was afraid it might have disturbed you and Stephen. I’m glad it didn’t. Of course such a rumpus is very unusual in the hotel at any time.’
‘Hm,’ said I, ‘well, well!’ I had been thinking while Mr Reynolds made this long speech about the nocturnal activities of the unknown Mr Ledwith. I could not talk with him. He had already sailed that morning.
I was really intrigued by now – that occurence coupled with the experience of my cousins! Of course I knew very little about that, for they had said almost nothing. But it was enough to arouse my interest in ‘the Jumbee in Number 4’.
That was the only time Mr Reynolds and I spoke of the matter, and for some time, although I kept my ears open, I heard nothing further about Number 4. When the ‘trouble’ did start up again, I was in Number 4 myself. That came about in this manner.
An American family named Barnes, permanent residents of St Thomas – I believe Barnes was a minor official of the public works or the agricultural departmant of the Virgin Island government – let their house-lease expire and decided to move into the hotel at family-rates-by-the-month for the convenience. Mrs Barnes had two young children, and was tired of household cares. She had employed, I think, some rather inferior servants, which always mean a heavy burden in the West Indies. One of the two hotel houses would suit them exactly. The other was occupied, by the year, by the director of education and his family, delightful Americans.
It was the first of May, and as Stephen and I were booked to sail on the twelfth for New York, I proposed to Mr Reynolds that we give up our house to Mr and Mrs Barnes, and he could put us into one of the huge double rooms for the remainder of our stay. Mr Reynolds put us into Number 4, probably the best of all the rooms, and which was, fortunately, vacant at the moment.
It happened that on our first night in our new quarters, I was out very late. I had gone, with the colonel in command of the naval station marines and his wife, to meet an incoming ship on which a certain Major Upton was returning to St Thomas from a month’s leave. Two days before the arrival of the ship, a cable had informed the colonel of Mrs Upton’s sudden death in Virginia. We did not know whether or not Upton had learned of his unexpected bereavement by wireless aboard ship, and we rather thought he had not. The ship was reported due at one a.m. She came in a little after two, and after meeting Upton – who had, fortunately, received a wireless – and making his arrival as pleasant as we could for him under the circumstances, I got back to the hotel about three-thirty in the morning.
I came in at the side door, which is always open, walked softly along the great length of the ballroom, and very quietly opened the door of Number 4. By the streaming moonlight which was pouring in through the open jalousies of the great room, I could see Stephen’s outlines, dimly, through the cloud of mosquito-netting which covered his enormous four-poster. I undressed silently, so that I should not disturb my young cousin. I was just ready to turn in, my soiled drill clothes in the washbag, my white buckskin shoes neatly treed, my other things laid away where they belonged – for I am a rather fussy fellow about such matters – and it was within a minute or two to four o’clock in the morning; I know I was beastly tired; when, just beside me, on the door leading in from the ballroom, came an abrupt, unmistakable rap-rap-rap! There could be no possible doubt about it. I was standing within three feet of the door at the moment the raps were delivered. I, Gerald Canevin, am a teller of the truth. I admit that I felt the cold chills which are characteristic of sudden, almost uncontrollable, paralyzing fear, run swiftly up and down my spine; that acute prickling at the hair roots which is called one’s hair standing on end.
But, if Gerald Canevin is a trifle old maidish about the arrangement of his personal belongings, and, even damagingly, truthful, he may boast, and justly, that no man living can call him a poltroon.
I took one firm step to that door and flung it open, and – so help me God! – as I turned the small, old-fashioned brass knob, the last of the raps – for the summons was repeated, just
as the convivial Ledwith had alleged – sounded within three inches of my hand, on the other side of the door.
The great-ghostly still ballroom stood silent and empty. Not a sound, not a movement disturbed its early-morning, dead, serene emptiness. I raked the room with my scrutiny. Everything was visible because the vivid moonlight – the moon had been full two nights before – came flooding in from the gallery with its nine Moorish arches, overlooking the harbor.
There was nothing – absolutely, literally, nothing – to be seen or heard. I glanced back over my shoulder along the wall through which the door of Number 4 opens. What was that? I could feel my heart skip a beat, then start pounding. A dim something, the merest shadowy outline, it seemed, in the form of a gigantic Negro was moving along the wall toward the passageway, curtained from the ballroom, which leads to the main entrance of the hotel below.
Even as I looked, the strange form seemed to melt and vanish, and there came a hard, dull thud from the direction where I imagined I had seen it slipping furtively along the wall.
I looked narrowly, my heart still pounding, and there, on the floor moving rapidly from me in the same direction I had imagined that sinister figure following, and with a queer, awkward movement suggestive of a crab’s sidelong gait, but moving in utter silence, there ran along the bare floor something about the size of a baseball.
I was barefooted and in thin, China-silk pajamas, but I started, weaponless, after the thing. It was, I surmised, the biggest tarantula I had ever seen in or out of the West Indies. Certainly it was no crab, although its size and even its gait would suggest one of our boxlike, compact land-crabs. But a crab, running away like that, would make a distinctive, identifying, hard rattle with its shell-covered feet on that hard, wooden floor, and this thing ran silently, like velvet.
What I should do with, or to, the tarantula if I caught it, I did not stop to consider. I suppose it was a kind of instinct that sent me in pursuit. I gained on it, but it slipped past the curtains ahead of me and was lost to sight in the broad passageway on the other side of the stairs’ head. As soon as I had passed the curtain I saw that any attempt to catch the thing would be an impossibility. There would be innumerable hiding-places; the main entrance doors were closed tight down below there, and the stair-well was as dark as the inside of Jonah’s whale.
I turned back, perforce, and re-entered Number 4, shut the door quietly behind me, and turned in upon my own gigantic four-poster and tucked the mosquito-netting under the edge of the mattress. I slept at once and did not awaken until five and one-half hours later, at nine-thirty in the morning. The excellent Stephen, realizing the situation, had repaid my pussyfooting in his interest of the earlier morning by getting dressed in silence and ordering my breakfast sent in at this hour.
That was Saturday morning, and there were no lessons for Stephen. I took advantage of that fact to put in a very much occupied day at my typewriter, and I got such a start on what I was then engaged in writing that I determined, if possible, to finish it the next day in time for the New York mail which goes out through Porto Rico every week. A brief, unaccustomed siesta Saturday afternoon helped make up for some lack of sleep. I decided to get up and go to that horribly ‘early’ service at five on Sunday morning. That would give me a reason for early rising – which I have always secretly abominated! – and a good day’s start. Stephen and I retired that evening as soon as he returned from his movingpictures at the naval station; that was about nine-thirty.
I must have grown wearier than I had realized, sitting up for Major Upton’s ship, and accompanying him to the colonel’s quarters afterward; for I slept like the dead, and had my usual fight with myself to get up and shut off an insistent alarm-clock at four-fifteen. I got to church in time, and was back again a few minutes before six. It was barely dawn when I came in at the side entrance and up the stairs.
As I walked along the still dim ballroom toward Number 4, the tarantula, or land-crab, or whatever the thing might prove to be, came sidling in that same awkward fashion which I had noted along the edge of the sidewall, toward me this time. It was as though the creature were returning from the hiding-place whither I had chased him Saturday morning.
I was carrying a tough, resilient walking-stick, of native black wattle, cut by myself on Estate Ham’s Bay, over on Santa Cruz, two years before. I stepped faster toward the oncoming thing, with this stick poised in my hand. I saw now in the rapidly brightening dawn what was wrong with the spider – it was obvious now that it was no land-crab. The thing was maimed. It had, apparently, lost several of its legs, and so proceeded in the odd, crablike fashion which I had noted before. A spider should have eight legs, as most people know. This one came hunching and sidling along on five or six.
The thing, moving rapidly despite its paucity of legs, was almost at the door to Number 4. I ran toward it, for the door stood slightly open, and I did not want that horrible creature to go into my room on account of Stephen. I struck at it, viciously, but it eluded my black wattle and slipped in under the conch-shell which served as a door-chock.
Conches have many uses in the West Indies. In the Bahamas their contents serve as a food-staple. They occasionally yield ‘pearls’, which have some value to jewelers. One sees the shells everywhere – bordering garden paths, outlining cemetery plots, built, with cement, into ornamental courses like shining pink bricks. In the Grand Hotel every door has a conch for a chock. The one at my door was a very old one, painted, in a dark brown color, to preserve it from disintegration due to the strong, salt air.
I approached the shell, now covering the huge tarantula, with some caution. The bite of our native tarantulas in St Thomas is rarely or never fatal, but it can put the human victim into the hospital for several days, and this fellow, as I have said, was the largest I had ever seen, in or out of St Thomas. I poked the end of my stick under the lip-edge of the shell, and turned it suddenly over. The spider had disappeared. Obviously it had crawled inside the shell. There is a lot of room inside a good-sized conch. I decided to take a chance. I did not want that thing about the place, certainly.
Keeping my eye on the upturned shell, I stepped over to the center of the ballroom and picked up a week-old Sunday supplement rotogravure section of one of the New York newspapers, crumpled it, folded it into a kind of wad, and with this, very gingerly – for the tarantula is a fighter and no timid beast – effectually stopped up the long triangular entrance to the shell’s inside. Then, picking it up, I carried it outside onto the stone-flagged gallery.
Here things were appreciably lighter. The dawn was brightening into the tropic day every instant, and I could now see everything clearly.
I raised the conch-shell and brought it down crashing on the tessellated floor.
As I had expected, the old shell smashed into many fragments, and I stood by, my black wattle raised and ready to strike at the tarantula as it attempted to run away. I had figured, not unnaturally, that the experience of having its rocklike refuge suddenly picked up, carried away, and then crashing to pieces about itself, would, from the tarantula’s viewpoint, prove at least momentarily disconcerting, and I should have a chance to slay the loathsome thing at my leisure. But, to my surprise, nothing ran out of the shattered shell.
I bent and looked closer. The fragments were relatively both large and small, from powdery dust all the way to a few chunks as big as my two fists. I poked at one of these, of an extraordinary and arresting shape, a strangely suggestive shape, though colored a dirty pink like the rest of the conch’s lining. I turned it over with the end of my stick.
It was the hand of a Negro, which, lying palm upward, had at first seemed pink. The palm of the hand of the blackest of black Africans is pink. So is the sole of the foot. But there was no mistaking the back of that sooty, claw-like thing. It was a severed hand, and it had originally grown upon an owner who had no admixture of any blood other than that of Africa. The name ‘Tancrède’ leapt to my mind. Had he not, even among his fellow slaves, been
called ‘Black Tancrède’? He had, and my knowledge of that ancient tale and the sooty duskiness of this ancient relic conspired forthwith to cause me to leap to that outrageous, that incredible conclusion. The hand of Black Tancrède – this was a right hand, and so, said tradition, was the one which had first been severed and then disappeared – or, at least, the veritable hand of some intensely dark Negro, lay there before me on the gallery floor, among the debris of an ancient conch-shell.
I drew a deep breath, for it was an unsettling experience, stooped, and picked the thing up. It was as dry and hard as so much conch-shell, and surprisingly heavy. I looked at it carefully, turning it about and examining it thoroughly; for I was alone on the gallery. Nobody was stirring in the hotel; even the kitchen was silent.
I slipped the hand into the pocket of my drill jacket, and returned to Number 4. I laid the hand down on the marble-topped table which stands in the room’s center, and looked at it. Stephen, I had noted at once, was absent. He had got up, and was now, doubtless, in his shower-bath.
Voodoo Tales: The Ghost Stories of Henry S Whitehead (Tales of Mystery & The Supernatural) Page 49