Then Yvonne remembered the reason why Thérèse de la Montaine had been asked, and she was eager for her guest to shine in the company; when the conversation flagged and the giggles were less spontaneous, she said, “Tell us about Madame Rochère and this house.”
“It’s a very old house,” put in Caroline. “There must be some stories about it. There are always stories about old houses. Does it have a ghost?”
“There is one ghost I know of,” said Thérèse. “It’s a lady who walks at night.”
We all looked around the room expectantly.
“Not here,” said Thérèse, “though I suppose quite a lot of the old ancestors are cross about the house being changed. Ghosts don’t like it when rooms are changed. Well, it would disturb them, wouldn’t it?”
“Fancy having your haunting place changed!” said Helga.
“And a lot of girls put in it,” Yvonne added.
“Having midnight feasts in it,” said Anna B.
“I wonder they don’t all come out and haunt
“It’s not our fault,” pointed out Caroline. “We didn’t make the change. We’re what you might call victims of circumstance. I think it is Madame Rochère who should look out.”
“She’d frighten any ghost away,” declared Lucia.
“How long is it since Madame Rochère made the change?” Yvonne prompted her guest.
“I think it was about thirty years ago. Old houses take a lot of money to keep up. The Rochères lost a lot of their property in the revolution…so then they came to this one, just over the border. They lived here as they had in their French château…and then of course Madame Rochère couldn’t afford to keep it up any longer. She’d married Monsieur Rochère, but hers was a great French family, too, and this house was very important to her. Monsieur Rochère died quite young and as she couldn’t keep up the house she decided to turn it into a school.”
“We all know that,” said Anna B. “What about the ghost?”
“Oh, that was long before…about two hundred years.”
“Time doesn’t count with ghosts,” said Anna B. “They can go on haunting for hundreds of years.”
“This was a lady….”
“It’s always ladies,” retorted Anna B. “They are better haunters than men.”
“It’s because more awful things happen to them,” said Caroline. “They have a reason to come back…for retribution.”
“Well, what about this ghost?” asked Yvonne.
“Well,” said Thérèse, “it’s a lady. She was young and beautiful.”
“They always are,” said Anna B.
“Do you want to hear about this ghost or not?” asked Lucia.
“Get on and tell us,” replied Anna B.
“Well, she was young and beautiful. She had married the heir of
“You get spots all over,” said Lucia. “And you are marked for life.”
“That’s right,” went on Thérèse. “She should have left him alone. It was very infectious. Everyone warned her, but she insisted on nursing him herself. She would not let anyone else do it. She was with him night and day and she did it all herself. They said she was risking her life, for people died of it, you know.”
“We did know,” said Anna B. “What happened to her? She died, I expect.”
“Not then. Her husband was cured. It was all due to her nursing. He was better and there were no marks on him at all. All the spots had gone and left no scars. He was more handsome than ever. But no sooner was he on the way to recovery than she found she was suffering from the pox, which she had caught.”
“From him!” said Lucia.
“Of course from him,” said Anna B, “who else?”
“Get on with the story,” cried Yvonne.
“Well, her beauty was gone. She was covered in spots.”
“And he nursed her back to health,” cut in Lucia.
“He certainly did not. She got better but her face was all pitted. She wore a veil over it, and he…well, he didn’t love her anymore because she had lost her beauty…in caring for him.”
“What a sad tale,” said Helga.
“There’s more to come. He neglected her. He had a
There was a long sigh from everyone present. The girls were all sitting up. The story had taken on a new dimension with the introduction of the mistress.
“You see, she had lost her looks from the pox, and then he did this to her. And what did she do?”
“Killed the mistress…or him?” suggested Anna B.
“No, she did not. She went up to the top of the tower…and jumped right down and killed herself.”
There was a shocked silence.
“And,” went on Thérèse, “she now walks. She is the ghost. She can’t rest. Every now and then she walks through the hall right up the spiral staircase…you know, the one that leads to the tower. You can hear her footsteps on the stone, they say.”
“I’ve never heard them,” said Helga.
“You have to be sensitive to hear them,” Thérèse told her.
“I’m sensitive,” said Caroline.
“So am I,” we all cried.
“Well, perhaps you’ll hear them one day.”
“Has anyone seen her?”
“One of the girls said she did. She had long, flowing hair and there was a veil over her face.”
“I’d like to see her,” said Anna B.
“Perhaps you will,” replied Yvonne.
“What do you say to a ghost?” asked Lucia.
“You don’t say anything, of course,” retorted Thérèse. “You’re too frightened.”