Authors: Donald Allen Kirch
Tags: #Paranormal, #Fantasy, #Mystery, #Horror
For Patrick McGoohan
Who made me fear scarecrows
Professor Jonathon Holzer held up the rusted knife for all to see. There wasn’t anything special about it from its appearance. The only clue that the antique had any kind of significance was in the fact that there were two armed security guards in the room, watching Holzer like a hawk. He was allowed to use the knife in his presentation, but for insurance purposes the guards had to stay.
“According to the theory of psychometry, objects absorb the emotions of their owners and those around them and remain a repository of those emotions indefinitely.” Holzer paused. “For example, this knife here. A historical icon, if you like.”
All eyes focused on the knife.
The knife was surgical in nature-a nineteenth-century post-mortem knife: long-bladed, slim, with a sleek wooden handle meant to be used lightly in the palm of the hand. Located at the base of the blade near the handle, was a thumb rest for sudden upward cuts. This feature alone made the medical instrument ideal for cutting open bodies.
“If we are to take the definition of psychometry at its word, this little fellow that I’m holding should tell us quite a story. You see, I’m holding in my hands the knife reported to have been used by none other than Jack the Ripper himself.”
A hush filled the room.
Jonathon Holzer planned his college courses with the same level of preparedness which a general would use in detailing his soldiers for battle. Indeed, he looked at what he did as a kind of war-the most important kind. Holzer taught the science of parapsychology, and to make one believe in the unexplainable in these cynical times was a battle all its own. Passion was at the heart of everything Holzer presented to his “kids”, as he liked to call them. Nothing was more rewarding than to make a logical mind stop and consider the possibility that two plus two could, if given the right circumstances, equate to three. The possibility of the absurd-the means and willingness to accept that there was more to this world than science had to provide, the opening up of one’s mind; that was more important than anything Holzer could think of. That was why he became a teacher.
“I have brought to this class a psychic who will help us test this theory. His subject will be this knife.” Holzer held back a smile. “So, class, are we ready to see if Jack the Ripper has a name?”
The college amphitheater filled with a controlled hum. Students from almost every tax bracket, age, and intelligence level filled the seats. Most professors would never be given the permission to stage such a class, but Holzer kept the seats in his classes filled. People would sign up years in advance to take his courses. Most paid full price in advance in order to guarantee them a seat.
In truth, the psychic was just there to get their attention. And, as far as Holzer was concerned, so was the knife.
“I would like you all to put your hands together and help me welcome Hans Peters to our class.”
Applause filled the room.
Hans Peters entered. He was an ineffective little man. Quite ordinary. Holzer had come across this individual while on vacation in Germany. The psychic had the ability to zone in on answers that would cause an FBI agent to gloat with jealousy.
“Mr. Peters,” Holzer said, motioning the man to take his seat. A simple stage had been set up in advance, consisting of a chair, table, and one lone glass of water in case it was needed. “Please, take your seat. Explain to my students if you will that you have no idea of what I’m trying to accomplish here today. And, most important, that you are not being paid for this action, sir.”
At the last, Hans Peters gave Holzer a stern look. “Sir! I would never use my powers for the gaining of money. I am a servant of God.” The psychic’s face exploded in a spastic look of utter disgust at the idea of being such a mercenary. “If you wish to know your fortune, I can recommend a phone psychic.”
Holzer held up a hand with the greatest academic respect. “Sir, I do not mean to judge,” Holzer finally stated, again offering the psychic a seat.
“I hope so, sir,” Peters said. “My powers are a manifestation of God in man. I’m here to show that to you all.”
“And we are here to witness.” Holzer reached for the knife, showing it to Peters. “Now, if you please.”
The amphitheater fell silent. All eyes became fixed on Holzer, the psychic, and the knife.
Peters took three huge breaths, challenging his body to exhale more than the ordinary man. In trying to accomplish this exercise, Peters seemed to be pushing his body into a trance. Convulsively, he reached out for the knife. His eyes rolling, he started to force up words.
“I am ready,” he stated.
Awkwardly, Holzer placed the valuable knife into Peters’ hands. The college professor was mildly amused when, out of the corner of his eye, he saw one of the security guards move forward, as if to size up the change in situation. Do not fear, man. If that knife gets damaged, my reputation goes with it. I wouldn’t even be able to check out a library book after such an event.
“I sense hate,” Peters barked, his eyes rolling white. His hands explored the knife. “A hatred of women. Of being forced to love an older woman. Of motherly love gone terribly bad. I see&”
Peters froze. His pallor took on that of a corpse. All color left his face and it seemed as if he couldn’t wake himself up. He shook, appearing to be in some unknown danger.
“Mr. Peters?” Holzer inquired.
There was no response.
“Mr. Peters?” Holzer repeated. “Are you well?”
The psychic forced himself out of trance, blinking his eyes open. On his face was the look of terror which Holzer had only seen once before in his life: veterans from the Vietnam War who had volunteered to be subjects in a dream test he had conducted over twenty years ago. The horror in their eyes when they awoke, the terrifying results of that case still gave him the shivers. Peters’ eyes matched the rage, surprise, disgust, and utter fear of those poor subjects. For one second of doubt, Holzer believed he had gone too far to prove a point.
“No!” Peters shouted, casting the knife aside.
The long knife bounced to the floor, making a hollow metallic sound. All eyes stayed glued to the weapon. No one said a word. It was as if time had stopped, respecting the importance of the knife.
“I will read no more, Professor,” Peters cried, obviously shaken. The psychic wiped a layer of sweat off his forehead. “I am sorry, but I must leave now. I thank you all.” With that, Peters left.
Holzer cleared his throat, picking up the knife. He noticed the concerned looks he was getting from his students and thought it time to explain. After all, this was the effect he had wanted. This was the state of mind he wished to place his students in.
“Mr. Peters will not be back, ladies and gentlemen.” Holzer reached for a remote control, turning on a large projection screen behind him and in full view of all of his students. “Still, what he provided will be reviewed by us all at a later date. Thanks should be given to him and Scotland Yard for the prologue leading up to our current lessons.”
Holzer started a slide show, which seemed to flash calculated pictures of an old Victorian house of some kind. The projection screen showed all the students several quick and beautiful pictures of the house-a mansion. The students could see that it was an old house, quite distinguished, having within it a certain negative feeling which the shots of the house seemed to magnify. This was not a house to be taken lightly.
“Fear,” Holzer said, “is the most valuable motivation that mankind has at its disposal. It is the most primal force at an instinctive level. Man can move mountains with fear.”
Holzer paused for effect.
“Things that go bump in the night,” he stated, holding back a smile, noticing the hard looks he was getting from the security guards, packing up the knife. “A cold chill that catches your attention at three in the morning. The feeling of being watched. Or the need to leave a room for reasons you cannot explain, with the feeling of supreme terror. These are the things that make up a haunting.”
The students’ voices started to rise amongst themselves. Professor Holzer was going to talk about hauntings! A subject that he had been forbidden to discuss ever since the Sallie Hauntings, which cost him the souls of half his team five years before. Holzer himself was amazed that the Dean allowed such a venture. In truth, enrollment was low and the campus was in need of funds.
Those, Holzer could raise.
“Let us take as a prime example the knife we have just examined,” Holzer continued. “Totally against science but always beckoning for us to prove them wrong, ghosts, demons, and inanimate objects have defied us from time immemorial. That is why you are here, and that is why I teach.”
Holzer studied the faces of his students. He saw that they ranged in ages from teenaged to elderly. All were listening to him with bated breath. Some, as with all classes, were writing notes, and others were simply lost in thought. Holzer did, however, get the impression that most were delighted to be there with him and not at all wasting their time. That was good. That was what mattered.
“Haunted houses&” Holzer allowed the words to echo throughout the room and rattle in the mind of each student. “Those two words have held the human imagination captive since mankind started to think. Leap Castle in Ireland. The Tower of London. Even the White House has had its episodes of the unknown.”
Holzer noticed a young girl, no older than twenty, glancing up at him with a curiosity best aimed at a twenty-year-old boy. Dear God! There was one in every class.
Holzer was in his late forties, intelligent but not cocky. He wore a pair of wire-rimmed glasses which gave him a fatherly image of a man who seemed to know all about the subjects he taught. Not fat but a bit on the heavy side, he walked with a rhythm that allowed him to associate with the young. He was a man who never really lost his youth.