“If a man harbors any sort of fear, it makes him landlord to a ghost.” --Lloyd Douglas
It used to be said of my great uncle that he believed in ghosts, but it was also said that those ghosts lived mostly in his head.
Family legend has it that my uncle was terrified of ghostly apparitions and took elaborate precautions to keep the ghouls at bay.
My Uncle Sam Marriner’s best protection against ghostly spirits, he believed, was his name, Uncle Sam. He thought it a strong name, and he didn’t care if he was your uncle or not. He wanted you to call him Uncle Sam because he believed that name would surely keep phantoms, zombies and all manner of poltergeist away.
To be absolutely safe, he believed that he needed the added protection of a “lucky” middle name, one such as “Prosperous.” Soon he began instructing everyone to call him Uncle Sam Prosperous Marriner.
Sam’s sister-in-law, my Great-Aunt Lizzie, enjoyed telling people that Sam was the biggest, silliest, foolishly afraid full-grown man in town. Yet, she loved to tell her nieces how Sam finally met his very own ghost. They passed the story down to my cousins and me.
However, not one of us believed Sam’s tall tale, mostly because Aunt Lizzie’s version was not at all similar to Sam’s.
Aunt Lizzie told Sam’s version first before she got to hers. She related how he “bumped” into his ghost while walking at midnight down the middle of Silk Stocking Street in their quiet little town of Forest City.
The town had no streetlights then, she said. Additionally in the early 1900s, most little towns had dirt streets; thus, on a rainy day, the driest place to walk was in the middle.
The story goes that on a particularly frightful October night around midnight with no moonlight to guide him, Sam walked home making sure to stay away from the edges of the street. He was not worried about the mud; he worried about zombies that might be lurking behind trees and bushes. Yes indeed, Sam believed the center of the street was the safest place when one was avoiding scary creatures.
As he walked, his senses signaled full alert.
Uncle Sam Prosperous Marriner heard the muffled sound of footsteps coming from behind him and noticed a putrid smell, much like wet hair and manure. He panicked, wondering what soulless dead body was following him.