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Miriam’s Lover
by [?]

I had been reading a ghost story to Mrs. Sefton, and I laid it down at the end with a little shrug of contempt.

“What utter nonsense!” I said.

Mrs. Sefton nodded abstractedly above her fancywork.

“That is. It is a very commonplace story indeed. I don’t believe the spirits of the departed trouble themselves to revisit the glimpses of the moon for the purpose of frightening honest mortals–or even for the sake of hanging around the favourite haunts of their existence in the flesh. If they ever appear, it must be for a better reason than that.”

“You don’t surely think that they ever do appear?” I said incredulously.

“We have no proof that they do not, my dear.”

“Surely, Mary,” I exclaimed, “you don’t mean to say that you believe people ever do or can see spirits–ghosts, as the word goes?”

“I didn’t say I believed it. I never saw anything of the sort. I neither believe nor disbelieve. But you know queer things do happen at times–things you can’t account for. At least, people who you know wouldn’t lie say so. Of course, they may be mistaken. And I don’t think that everybody can see spirits either, provided they are to be seen. It requires people of a certain organization–with a spiritual eye, as it were. We haven’t all got that–in fact, I think very few of us have. I dare say you think I’m talking nonsense.”

“Well, yes, I think you are. You really surprise me, Mary. I always thought you the least likely person in the world to take up with such ideas. Something must have come under your observation to develop such theories in your practical head. Tell me what it was.”

“To what purpose? You would remain as sceptical as ever.”

“Possibly not. Try me; I may be convinced.”

“No,” returned Mrs. Sefton calmly. “Nobody ever is convinced by hearsay. When a person has once seen a spirit–or thinks he has–he thenceforth believes it. And when somebody else is intimately associated with that person and knows all the circumstances–well, he admits the possibility, at least. That is my position. But by the time it gets to the third person–the outsider–it loses power. Besides, in this particular instance the story isn’t very exciting. But then–it’s true.”

“You have excited my curiosity. You must tell me the story.”

“Well, first tell me what you think of this. Suppose two people, both sensitively organized individuals, loved each other with a love stronger than life. If they were apart, do you think it might be possible for their souls to communicate with each other in some inexplicable way? And if anything happened to one, don’t you think that that one could and would let the spirit of the other know?”

“You’re getting into too deep waters for me, Mary,” I said, shaking my head. “I’m not an authority on telepathy, or whatever you call it. But I’ve no belief in such theories. In fact, I think they are all nonsense. I’m sure you must think so too in your rational moments.”

“I dare say it is all nonsense,” said Mrs. Sefton slowly, “but if you had lived a whole year in the same house with Miriam Gordon, you would have been tainted too. Not that she had ‘theories’–at least, she never aired them if she had. But there was simply something about the girl herself that gave a person strange impressions. When I first met her I had the most uncanny feeling that she was all spirit–soul–what you will! no flesh, anyhow. That feeling wore off after a while, but she never seemed like other people to me.

“She was Mr. Sefton’s niece. Her father had died when she was a child. When Miriam was twenty her mother had married a second time and went to Europe with her husband. Miriam came to live with us while they were away. Upon their return she was herself to be married.