"A Dying WIsh" · Ghost stories · Halloween

ADW Part 9

I awoke the next morning to the most singular noise, which, while I was still half dozing, reminded me of a xylophone being played in a rainstorm. As I regained my senses, I recalled that rainstorms were unheard of this time of the year, and that I owned no instrument capable of producing the musical sounds I was hearing. Sitting up in my bed, I traced the sound to my shower-room. I arose and moved to the open door, through which I witnessed Prof. Glauben’s skeleton standing under a spray of hot water. He had lathered up his cranium, creating an image almost of hair, and he was scrubbing his spine with my shower-brush. As the water drops played upon his ribcage they produced the sound strikingly similar to that of a xylophone, but he seemed oblivious to this fact.

As he turned to rinse his back, the professor met my stare and bade me “Guten Morgen” in a sing-song voice. “I must look mein best for our guests tonight,” he explained as he pushed a washcloth into one ear hole, pulled the end of it from the opposite ear hole, and, clutching both ends, slid it back and forth, accompanied by a squeaking sound.

I occupied the rest of the morning preparing for the evening. I had dispatched letters to the prominent scientists and physiologists of the region the night before, and, despite the short notice, I was already receiving a substantial number of acceptances.

By mid-afternoon I had arranged my dining room into an acceptable setting for our presentation. The long mahogany table sat, as it always did, at the center of the room under a crystal chandelier. The table had been set to accommodate two-dozen persons in addition to myself. To the north of the dining table (whose end faced this direction, and where my place had been set) I had arranged a small occasional table, upon which I had placed a flask of our immortality potion and a folded napkin. Behind the guests sitting on the east side of the table loomed a large picture window that looked out onto the garden. I had closed the drapes over this so my guests’ attention would not be distracted from our presentation. Potted palms–to me a symbol of long life–were placed on either side of the doors on the west wall, and two more were similarly arranged at either side of the staircase to the south. Several armchairs were placed around the room, for space limitations required that my dining room double as a reception area.

I was reviewing the final arrangements when Prof. Glauben descended the stairs. “How does I look?” he asked, pivoting in a full rotation so that I might take in all angles of his appearance. How should I describe the spectacle? He had pulled a black tuxedo over his bones, the outlines of which showed very clearly through the fabric. The cummerbund was drawn about the waist which, being only the diameter of the lower spine, necessitated that the cummerbund be wrapped around several times. The coat hung from the emaciated frame, displaying a series of ridges formed by the ribcage. With no calves to hold them up, a pair of black socks had fallen limply around the ankles. The professor had even donned a black silk hat which, unlike the rest of his attire, fit surprisingly well. The overall effect was so outlandish that I was inclined to laugh. But I suppressed this urge and instead complimented Prof. Glauben on his dashing figure.

“Danke shoen, mein boy. Now, vhen vill our guests be here?” I informed him that they were to arrive at 7 pm–about an hour away–and that dinner would commence at 8:30. I would make my presentation at 9:30, cueing him to descend the stairs at 10 o’clock by calling his name. “Gut,” he replied. “I vill vait upstairs until zhen.”

PART 10 WILL APPEAR ON MONDAY

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ADW Part 8

The next morning I awoke with a most peculiar feeling, and I immediately resolved to share my latest thoughts on our immortality experiments and the public presentation thereof. These thoughts were so recent that they had not yet fully formed in my mind, but I nevertheless went to my study (which had become Prof. Glauben’s bedroom) with the full intention of announcing my new opinions as they revealed themselves to me.

When I entered the room, which was bathed in the soft sunlight of morning, I saw the earthly remains of Prof. Glauben occupying the armchair in the same position in which I had left him the previous night. I walked over to the skeleton, a pleasant smile on my face, and listened to myself speak.

“My dear Professor, upon careful consideration, I have chosen to accept your suggestion that we present our discovery–and yourself–to a suitable audience.” The skull inclined upward to me with, I imagined, a look of bewilderment. “Does you mean zhis, Venwick?” I searched for a reply, but I was not even certain of what I had just said. My mouth, however, replied immediately. “Of course I mean it,” I heard myself say, “and the presentation shall be tomorrow night.” Prof. Glauben’s skull displayed an expression of disbelief, then of hope, and finally of elation. He jumped up from the chair and embraced me with his cold, bony arms. “You have chosen vell, mein boy! Sank you! Ve vill be famous und revered scientists!”

I must admit that I was affected by the emotion of the moment. I was pleased that I had lifted my friend from his misery. To look back on the conditions under which the poor creature suffered touched my heartstrings, and it hurt me worse to remember that so much of it was brought about by me. He had spent time in prison, not I, though we were both equally guilty of our wretched volunteer’s death. He alone had to suffer the horrors of a premature burial. He had been forced, by me, from the solitude and peace of the grave, only so that he could hide as a recluse away from his fellow man. And to make his misery complete, I had tried to deny him some much-deserved recognition of his work. It was with relief, therefore, that I now assured his tormented bones that I would begin making immediate preparations for tomorrow’s presentation, with him as the guest of honor. I went to bed that evening much relieved, yet with a vague feeling of dark foreboding.

PART 9 WILL APPEAR ON FRIDAY

"A Dying WIsh" · Ghost stories · Halloween

ADW Part 7

Our work advanced steadily, and by the end of the summer Prof. Glauben felt that we had achieved our goal: a way to achieve immortality by arresting the aging process. The body would not decay. “But ve need ein volunteer on vhich to test ze formula.” He stared at me. “Und ve cannot afford another arrest.” I immediately understood his meaning, and offered to drink the potion myself. “It vill be dangerous,” he intoned in a way that suggested raised eyebrows, which, of course, his naked skull lacked. I assured him not only that I was willing to take the risk, especially in light of his own earlier sacrifice. “Schoen. You are ein gut scientist,” he said as he placed a bony arm around my shoulders.

Bolstered by the praise from my mentor, I took the flask into my hand, fearing that if I waited any longer my courage would evaporate. I raised the vessel but, just before the liquid touched my lips, Prof. Glauben grabbed my arm with a skeletal hand. “Nein! Halt!” With a sigh half of frustration and half of relief, I set the flask back on the table. “Venwick, do not you think zhat ve should make a presentation?” In response to my confused look he went on. “Great discoveries should be presented to ze scientific community formally. Ve should assemble ze scientific minds of the area at your Hause, und tell them of our experiments. Und then you should drink ze potion in front of zhem. There vill be no dramatic change for zhem to see, of course, but ze drama vill be gut nonetheless. Und then,” his eye sockets here widened, “Und then, I shall come before zhem as proof zhat ve can achieve immortality!”

Prof. Glauben had become quite excited, and a sweat had broken out on his skull. He spoke of national attention, of world recognition, of general notoriety. He talked about changing the course of history. He mentioned power, honoraria, and patents. It was with regret, therefore, that I felt compelled to interrupt him. 

“Professor, this is, undoubtedly, a great moment. Our discovery, if successful–nay, it will be successful; it is successful–our discovery, I say, should certainly be shared with mankind. But I believe a presentation such as you suggest, featuring a living skeleton, would be unwise. Let us sacrifice the theatrics and instead publish a monograph on our findings. Monographs command respect; monsters create a scene.”

This last comment, prompted by a vivid recollection of my dream, seemed to strike the calcium figure like a blow to the cranium. He shook; his chin dropped to his sternum; he fell with a slight rattle into the armchair behind him. Then he murmured something which I could not discern.

The room was excruciatingly quiet. I watched the professor’s bleached face, and immediately I regretted having spoken out as I had. I had called my teacher and my friend a monster. I had rejected his desire for public recognition of his work which was, to be sure, brilliant and revolutionary work.

There sat the pitious form with bowed head and slumped shoulders. Compassion and regret overcame me, and I offered my sincere apologies to the object of my earlier ridicule. “Nein, you are right, Venwick. I have achieved immortality, it is true, but vhat good is immortality if I cannot enjoy the companionship of other persons? I have not extended mein life; I have protracted mein death!”

I was dumbfounded. What could I possibly say to correct my error? I tried to console the miserable being, first by proclaiming my undying gratitude for his friendship, and then, seeing that it had no effect, by espousing the virtues of solitude, viz. Undivided attention to one’s work, peace of mind through meditation, and the pleasures of single-player card games. But my efforts were all in vain; the sad, sullen skeleton still sat silently. With a sigh I gently suggested that we should delay the experiment until a more appropriate time. I bade him goodnight and retired to my bedroom to consider my increasingly absurd predicament.

PART 8 WILL APPEAR ON WEDNESDAY

"A Dying WIsh" · Ghost stories · Halloween

ADW Part 6

That night I had the most disturbing dream. In it I was hosting a dinner party for the most distinguished doctors and physiologists in the country. Everybody was absolutely spellbound by my conversation, and not a small amount of wine was flowing. At the height of the evening, just as I was entering a pleasant conversation with one of the doctors’ enchanting daughters, a bleached assemblage of bones descended the staircase and made its way to the punchbowl. “How do you do?,” spoke the skeleton with an airy wave to the entire room. “I am ze famous Ludwig Glauben.” It held up a glass of punch and made a toast “to science.” 

As it raised the glass to its teeth the liquid spilled through the jaw and splashed against the ribs and onto the floor. Women fainted, men rushed to the doors, and plates and glasses broke upon the floor. My dinner party was a complete failure.

In a fit of pique, I grabbed the intruder by the bony neck with both my hands and insulted it with numerous epithets. When I awoke, however, I had succeeded only in strangling my bedpost.

The next morning I dressed hurriedly and rushed into the study. There, amid open books and strewn papers, were Prof. Glauben’s mortal remains. The head looked up at me as I entered the room. “Guten Morgen. You slept vell, I hope?” It was then that I realized fully that this really was Prof. Glauben. His form was admittedly altered, but his personality was the same. He was still a man of science. He still cared for me; we were still friends. The potion had indeed preserved his soul, and is it not the soul only that is the object of our mutual affections? “Yes,” I lied with an embarrassed smile, “I slept well.

“Gut! Ve have much work ahead of us!”

For several months we continued the experiments within the privacy of my apartments. Prof. Glauben’s laboratory and equipment had been seized by the government upon his arrest, though I had been able to spirit most of his papers out of the university before his possessions were auctioned to pay his legal fees.

One of our greatest difficulties was keeping Prof. Glauben from being observed. My valet was given strict instructions not to enter my laboratory or my study, and visitors were barred from those rooms as well. We kept the shades tightly drawn and were careful to cover Prof. Glauben with heavy clothes whenever it was necessary for him to leave my home. We experienced a number of close calls, but no one, to my knowledge, discovered our secret.

One day in the early spring Prof. Glauben called me to the table where he had been treating some muscle tissue with a greenish liquid. “Venwick, vhat does you think vould happen if somebody observed my appearance?” I was surprised at this sudden and unanticipated question, but told him, quite unabashedly, about the dream I’d had on the first night he came to stay with me. “Ja, das it vhat I thought,” he murmured dolefully. “Das is vhat I thought….”

PART 7 WILL APPEAR ON MONDAY

"A Dying WIsh" · Ghost stories · Halloween

ADW Part 5

Once I managed to pry off the coffin lid my heart sank. All that was left of the grave’s tenant was a skeleton; nothing else remained of the Professor.

I signed, leaned against my spade, and stared at the bones in the box. Something was peculiar about the moonlight-bathed figure. Yes, it was the position: Bodies are traditionally laid to rest with the arms at the sides, bent at the elbows, with the forearms crossed on the chest near the wrists. The palms rest face down on the chest.

This body was arranged differently, however. The arms were folded in a casual position with the forearms parallel over the chest, with each hand near the opposite elbow. The right index finger was touching the left bicep (or rather where the left bicep used to be). But wait: Did it move? Yes! The right index finger was tapping against the left arm! It was almost as if… as if…

“Mein Gott, Venwick, you are quite clumsy at your work! Vhy, it took you a full two hours to disinter mein coffin–und almost a quarter hour more just to get ze confounded lid off!” It was Prof. Glauben; there was no mistaking it. The voice, the way he mispronounced “Fenwick,” the ridiculous hand gestures…It was surely he.

“Vell, don’t just stand where–Help me out of here! I am most anxious to stretch mein legs again.” What could I do? I offered my hand, which he grabbed in a boney clutch, and I pulled him out of the rotting box. There I was, standing eye-to-socket with a skeleton. We stared at each other for some time in the stillness of the churchyard, and I imagined a smile spread across the skull.

A few minutes later we were walking along the deserted rural road back to my house. The skeleton put its arm around my shoulder as we walked and turned its head toward me. “You should be happy, mein boy! Ze formula vorked!” I stared at him, not knowing what to say. “Ze formula! Ze vun ve vere vorking on before I vas imprisoned!”

“But…but it killed the old bookkeeper,” I protested, wondering why I was arguing with this hideous form. “That’s why you’re–why you were–in prison!”

“Ah, zhis is true. But ze day before ze police took me away I did some research on zhat man. I just couldn’t believe ze formula had failed. As it turned out, he vas allergic to ze lactic complex ve used. If not for his allergy, he vould still be alive today–and a good many decades hence, I vould postulate.” 

“Then you drank the potion?” I asked.

“I drank ze position.”

“But you were buried,” I protested.

“Ach, an unfortunate complication. After drinking the potion I was taken to prison, where a sadistic guard beat me for what he considered to be my insolence. I knew that I was not long for this world, so I left you the message which you evidently were able to decode.”

“But the potion…” I spluttered.

“Ja, ze potion. It vorked–at least to ze degree it forced mein body to retain mein soul. You see, it can do nothing to prevent ze decaying of ze dead body. So I rotted though I remained very much alive spiritually, even mentally. My psyche remained mit mein body. On ze night zhat I died I was avare of men pulling ein sheet over mein head und carrying me to ze morgue. I had not yet grown sufficiently familiar vith mein new existence, however, und I could not make mein lips nor limbs operate. In fact it vas not until I had been in ze ground ein month zhat I vas able to shift mein position. Do you know what it is like to lay in ze same position for ein month?” I shook my head. “Vell, it is no bowl of roses I assure you.”

By now we had reached my apartments. I glanced at my pocket watch; it was half past two in the morning. I looked at Prof. Glauben’s skeleton, fumbled with my key, and opened the door. I searched for something to say.

“Vell, aren’t you going to invite me in?” demanded the specter.

“Invite you in?! What would my servant say?”

“Nothing. He is undoubtedly asleep at this hour. Besides, I vill need to catch up on your papers if I am to direct your further experiments. Ve must refine ze process to arrest decay.” A combination of fatigue, confusion, and obedience caused me to step aside. I gestured for him to enter, to which he obliged me with a bow as he entered my home.

I showed Prof. Glauben’s remains to my study, wished them a goodnight, and retired to my bedroom. Within half an hour I had fallen sound asleep, and within another hour I wished I hadn’t.

PART 6 WILL APPEAR ON FRIDAY