“I can’t believe you made me do a tour of a catacomb. It’s morbid. No, it’s sick, that’s what it is.” Celia stepped over a small puddle on the cobbled floor. Her foot skidded on the thin layer of moss spreading across the stones.
“Shut up, it’s interesting,” replied Kaye. She hurried to catch up with the small group further down the corridor.
Four thick shelves ran the length of both walls; each held a row of coffins in various states of disrepair. Iron grates or concrete slabs covered some of the loculi. Celia shuddered to think what lay inside the makeshift tombs.
The guide stopped beside an iron grate on the second shelf down. Beyond it lay a narrow coffin. Rot had chewed through the outer oak shell, leaving the lead lining exposed at the end nearest the bars. An illegible plaque hung above the lock.
“This here is the final resting place of Lord Theodore Mountrose. He was a right nasty bugger, according to the gossip of the day.” The guide rapped on the rusty iron grate.
“Really? What did he do?” asked the woman nearest the guide.
“What didn’t he do! He came from a very wealthy family, and was the youngest of four. Some say he was spoiled by his mother, who refused to acknowledge anything he did,” replied the guide. “He fathered his first bastard aged fourteen, with one of the house’s scullery maids. Six months later, she and the child were found dead, drowned in the lake behind Mountrose Hall.”
“Did he kill them?” asked Kaye. Celia elbowed her; it was bad enough she’d had to come on this tour, she didn’t want Kaye drawing attention to them.
“The locals certainly believe he did. By the time the maid died, two more of his father’s maids were in the family way. Both of them died before they could even give birth.”
“What happened to them?” asked a tall bald man. He clutched a dog-eared map of the cemetery.
“One of them jumped off the roof of the house, the other one mysteriously tripped and fell onto a pitchfork. After those scandals, he just got worse. He went from school to school, causing trouble wherever he went. He tried to force his older sister into an incestuous relationship, and she ended up poisoning herself. And-”
A loud knocking interrupted the guide. Soft at first, the gentle rap became an impatient thump. The group looked around the corridor, trying to locate the source of the noise. The guide started back towards the central tunnel. She called to the catacomb warden. Only Celia stared at the coffin behind the grate, her mouth agape.
“Excuse me, you out there! Excuse me! I really do beg to differ!”
The lead lining muffled the voice, but there was no escaping the fact that Lord Mountrose wanted to set the record straight.
The Dead Do Listen was based on a weird thought I had while touring the catacombs under Kensal Rise Cemetery. It appears in my short story collection, Checkmate: Tales of Speculative Fiction. You can find it for free at Amazon!
Chris Hewson says
Haha! Great little story!
Helen says
Ha! Nice story.
Sulci Collective says
even though I am terrified of death, I found the early Christian catacombs in Rome utterly spellbinding. All those spaces for dead humans from 2000 years ago. The scale of humanity through history writ large
marc nash
Katherine Hajer says
Wow, psychopaths just stay in denial about the consequences of their actions forever…
I liked the tone in this one — less creepy than just, er, “death-y”.
ganymeder says
Ha! Now I want to read a sequel! What did he say?
Larry Kollar says
This was one of my favorites in “Checkmate,” and it hasn’t lost anything since!
Icy Sedgwick says
Chris & Helen – Thanks!
Mar – I don’t like being underground but catacombs fascinate me.
Katherine – Maybe he’s not in denial, maybe he’s an innocent man, victim of a cruel propoganda campaign?
Cathy – Ah well now…
Larry – I enjoyed writing 🙂
Tim VanSant Writes says
I don’t mind the dead listening in, but when they want to join the conversation it gets a bit creepy. 😉
John Wiswell says
Insistence on the proper record from beyond the grave! Enjoyed how stiff it was.
storytreasury says
LOL Lovely! I want a second part, with the ghost explaining!
Dawn Huddlestone says
Not how I expected this to end, Icy. His polite objection caught me off-guard. Well done!
Steve Green says
Hahaha!!
Oh Icy, I actually laughed out loud when I got to the ending. Thanks for the chuckles. 🙂
Icy Sedgwick says
Tim – You have to wonder what else he’s overheard…
John – Thanks!
Sonia – Maybe I’ll do one…
Dawn – I do like my twist endings!
Steve – No problem!
jackkholt says
Ha! I really want to hear his retort!
Stephen says
Hi there Icy — I did enjoy that perfectly polite complaint of Lord Montrose. Loculi is a wonderful word, and ‘tripped and fell on a pitchfork’ sounds *entirely* innocent. Lol. St.
Cindy Vaskova says
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