Thursday, December 31, 2020

the ghost of Marty Cubitt

 what better for New Year's eve than a good ghost story; I set this one in my own neck of the woods on the Blythe Estuary which you may drive past on the A12 and visit the notorious smugglers' pub and see the great church on the hill. Cubitt is a south Suffolk name rather than north, but Marty insisted he was Marty Cubitt, and I wasn't going to argue. Noyes is found between Blytheborough and Beccles and Michael Lamming is an incomer from Ipswich.

The Ghost of Marty Cubitt

 

Everyone knew the cottage was haunted. The cottage had been haunted for a long time ... well, ever since it had been used by smugglers, anyway.  It was spoken of in a matter-of-fact way since Michael Lamming had arrived, a year ago, in 1812.

Old Gaffer Noyes had tales by the dozen.

“And o’ course, there’s the ghost o’ Marty Cubitt,” he said, lowering his voice as the preventative officer came into the White Hart at Blytheborough.  “An informant he was, traitor to his own brother, they say, laying information. O’ course I don’t tell you what to think, thass beyond me, bor, t’maerke judgement, but they do say that onct Marty had laid information agin pore ow’ Matty Cubitt, wass his own twin, then them ow ghosteses hounded him to death, and Marty Cubitt walks, wringin’ his pore dead hands account o’ wass he’s done, doin’ his own brother to death like that.”

“Matthew Cubitt was never caught,” said Michael Lamming, the preventative. “Saying he was done to death is a lie, and it wasn’t ghosts who tied an anchor onto Martin Cubitt and left him at low tide mark in the estuary.”

“Ar, bor, yew du be a furriner from Ibsidge way,” said Gaffer Noyes, comfortably. “Caarn’t expect yew tu appreciate our stories. But yew’d do well to heed the warnin’s.”

“It’s notable that Matty Cubitt walks on the nights when it’s rumoured a consignment has been ‘run’,” said Michael.

“Ar! O’course he du, tryin’ for ter reach his brother, and beg his forgiveness,” said Noyes. “But then, pore Matty, he come to a bad end for his smugglin’, as a good preventative might expect, and wuz drug to Hell by Black Shuck. But pore Marty, he’s still a-tryin’ tu find Matty.”

“If only,” said Michael.

Much of the ‘trade’ was landed at high tide, directly into the cellars of the White Hart, whence it promptly disappeared up the hidden passageway to be stored, if rumour was correct, in the crypt of the great church on the hill. And let one good hint of a passage be found, and the church might be searched, but for now, the church was inviolate.

When goods came in on a half-tide, they went to the Cubitt cottage, a mile downstream, and had to then be brought overland.

“Yew wouldn’t wish the devil-dog to taerke no-one, would ye, squire?” asked Samuel Balls, suspected of being Matty Cubitt’s right hand man.

“I’ve as much faith in a devil-dog as I do in ghosts,” said Michael.  There were, to be sure, three burned scores on the church door, like the scratches of great, incandescent nails; and local myth said that the devil-hound of East Anglia had once invaded the service. But Michael was an educated young man, who had no belief in the supernatural. What he did have belief in was the love of Frances, or Fancy, Plumstead, daughter of a former rector of Holy Trinity.  The unfortunate rector had  died at the young age of fifty-four, supposedly of a heart-attack, after refusing to let the smugglers use the church. Michael had been the one to find him in the church, had sought for any signs of life, and had needed to be the one to take the disagreeable news to Fancy, a dark-haired maiden with blue eyes who looked fragile but who was stronger than she looked.

Fancy lived in a cottage at the back of the church, well above the marsh, which she had bought with what her father had left her. She taught basic literacy as a living, and read and wrote letters for the illiterate. Michael hated seeing her careworn, and did such chores around the house as would not give anyone cause to gossip.  There would soon be ill-natured gossip about an incomer who was unwelcome; and Fancy was unfortunate enough to have attracted the attention of Matty Cubitt before his disappearance.

Fancy did not believe in ghosts either, and was a more stalwart companion than the dozen preventatives Michael had at his disposal.

“If anyone is clever enough to catch them at it, it is you, Lieutenant Lamming,” said Fancy.

“I may hope so, Miss Plumstead,” said Michael. She had permitted him to hold her hand, seeing her home from church, for some weeks. “And if I do ... would you do me the honour of being my wife? I scarce like to ask it of you, on the pay of a humble preventative officer ...”

“I’m a good manager,” said Fancy. “Thank you; I would be honoured to accept.”

Daringly, Michael kissed her, and was kissed back. It had to be quick before one of the locals set sheep or goose on them for a laugh. Preventatives were not popular; the poverty of the locals was such that they saw ‘bottle fishing’ merely as sport, and some profit on the side, failing to recognise how dangerous the spies who often came in with the ‘run’ cargo.

However, much as he enjoyed dalliance with Fancy, Michael had his job to do, and a thankless task it was, hoping to catch smugglers at it. Fancy did her bit, overhearing such gossip as she might get to pass along.

 

“Word is they are at the  Cubitt cottage,” said Fancy, to Michael one evening, when he climbed the hill to see her.  “And if you ask me, it’s an exercise in trying to scare you, but perhaps you can arrest Matty.”

“I would ask you to come, for you’re a better man than any of my cowards, but of course it would be indefensible of me ...”

“I’ll come.  I will feel safer with you than worrying if it is a diversion of Matty’s to get you out of the way so he can sneak into my cottage,” said Fancy, tucking her hand into his. They went back down the hill, and Michael called out his men, a dozen villainous looking men who had taken service as preventatives more to avoid being press-ganged into the Navy than for any love of law and order. Michael had given up getting them to march or parade, so long as they took care of their muskets and practised their musketry.

 

They walked across the bleak salt marsh, Michael familiar with every bad place and inlet. The Cubitt cottage sat out on a partly constructed island, with a causeway of alderwood running out to it. There were some ghastly moans.

“Silver-paper folded over a bone comb,” said Michael. “I’ve done it myself, at school. Silver-paper being such fine paper as it is.”

A white, spectral figure rose in front of them. It did bear a resemblance to Marty Cubitt.  Which meant that it also bore a resemblance to Matty Cubitt.

“Halt; you’re under arrest!” cried Michael.

Half the men with him had fled.

The rest joined them as a hound, wreathed in blue flames, burst out of the bushes.

Michael stripped off his boat-cloak as the ghastly apparition streaked, baying, towards him; Fancy gave a little cry, but Michael threw the cloak over the dog, and tackled it to the ground.

“Poor old fellow ... there, old boy ... soon have you safe,” he was murmuring.

“Michael?” said Fancy.

“Never poured brandy on a Christmas pudding and seen it burn without burning?” said Michael.  “Poor old boy might be burned but we can treat his burns, and it shouldn’t be too bad. Those bastards, torturing a dog!”

The dog whimpered and licked his hand when he unwrapped his cloak. It had smothered the flames, but the dog still stank of best brandy.  

“It’s Marty’s dog,” said Fancy.

The spectral Marty appeared again,  and a mist crept in from the estuary.  The dog started barking again, and wagging its tail; and in the mist, a second spectral Marty appeared, with a burning black dog beside him. He looked at the dog which Michael still petted, and pointed a finger at the first spectre.

“Marty! No! No!” shrieked the first ghost, pulling off the fine muslin which had blurred the outlines of Matty Cubitt. “For the love of God ...”

“I fancy, more for the love of dog on Marty’s part,” muttered Michael, shocked.

The mist-figure seemed to pass through the screaming Matty, who fell down, and was still. The burning dog ran into the bushes, and a host of men with weapons ran out, screaming. The dog hounded them until suddenly the marsh edge gave way where most of them had run. The water surged up like white horses, plunging  down on them, and the dog ... vanished.

Michael made his way over to Matty.

On that chill, but not cold night, Matty had frozen to death and icicles hung on his tear-streaked face.

 

The other smugglers were not to be seen. There was no creek where Michael had seen the others engulfed.

“Sometimes, Black Shuck is said to aid lovers,” said Fancy. “And you have been kind to Captain here.”

 

Michael nursed Captain back to health. Then he married Fancy. The dog carried roses for the ceremony, in a basket; and he stopped and bowed his head at the three score-marks on the church door before trotting up the aisle with the happy couple.

 

The smugglers never were seen again in that district, or any other of a temperate clime.

 

       

6 comments:

  1. I really enjoyed that and the flaming dog was an inspired idea. Thanks very much for this and for all your other stories all year.

    Happy New Year! (2021 must be better .... surely?)

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    1. thank you! poor Captain ... but the tales there are still told, and the gouges on the church door are impressive.
      The theory is it was some kind of ball lightning.

      Thanks for staying with me, you and everyone. I've a few more shorts then we'll hope to be back in business. I'm doing the penultimate round of editing on the Wannabe Regency Miss's guide. It's not something I can really post per se here.

      I don't want to put the kybosh on it by saying it can't be worse ...

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  2. Abominably late, sorry.

    Wow, Marty and Matty must have got along like a house on fire - causing people to scream and run away (pretty sure I stole it from somewhere, but I can't remember where...).
    Thou shalt not mess with a man's dog indeed... very creepy and appropriate!

    I liked Michael and Fancy! Though Captain stole the show a little bit.

    Great story, loved all the bits of local folklore.

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    1. yes, it's a bit of a rehash of the good brother and the bad brother meme, but with my own twist ...

      heh, the tale of Black Shuck or Chuck runs all the way up the east coast, with some variations, but I've seen the scores on Blytheborough's church door, though I find it hard to accept that the devil should pick a community no more nor less wicked than any other. And the church *is* on a hill and higher than anything around for many miles so lightning is a credible explanation - ball lightning used to be more common than it is today. and there's a lot of metal strapwork on the doors.

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    2. ...I sort of assumed Marty squealed out of personal revenge than because of high moral scruples. Apologies to the late Martin Cubitt, may he please not pay me a visit.

      Very interesting, thank you for sharing!
      Well, each community will want to be interesting, though.

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    3. I hadn't thought of it being read that way, but I will leave it open. I had written it in my head as the good boy and the one who was tempted and fell. I'm sure he'd understand!

      ... and a demonic black dog is probably better to get people coming to see than ball lightning and paying their collect whilst doing so ... good point. I don't rule out the people believing it was a visitation of the Devil because mass hysteia can do that and a dirty great ball of fire is enough to give anyone the heeby jeebies. I also don't rule out it forming round a dog which was inclined to static electricity. We don't understand the phenomenon at all, sometimes it burns, sometimes it doesn't. Or a form of St Elmo's fire.

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