
Ghosts: Black Jack Ketchum, Mr. Bond, Carrie Tingley Children's Hospital ghost, Church Street Cafe, the Death Waltz, Eagle's Nest, Grant Corner Inn ghost, Josefita Otero, Mrs. Julia Staab, Kimo Theater ghost, La Fonda Hotel ghosts, La Llorona, La Residencia ghost, Maria Teresa Restaurant ghosts Mrs. M, Rancho de Corrales lovers, St. James Hotel Hotel Ghosts, Wool Warehouse Theater Restaurant
The Death Waltz
Years ago, when all beyond the Missouri was a waste, the military post
at Fort Union was the only spot for miles around where any
of the graces of social life could be discovered. Among the ladies at
the post was a certain gay young woman, the sister-in-law of a captain,
who enjoyed the variety and spice of adventure to be found there, and
enjoyed, too, the homage that the young officers paid to her, for women
who could be loved or liked were not many in that wild country. A young
lieutenant proved especially susceptible to her charms, and devoted himself
to her in the hope that he should ultimately win her hand. His experience
with the world was not large enough to enable him to distinguish between
the womanly woman and the coquette.
One day messengers came dashing into the fort with news of an Apache attack, and a detachment was ordered out to chase and punish the marauding Indians. The lieutenant was put in command of the expedition, but before starting he confided his love to the young woman, who not only acknowledged that she returned his affection, but promised that if the fortune of war deprived him of life she would never marry another. As he bade her good-by he was heard to say, "That is well. Nobody else shall have you. I will come back and make my claim."
In a few days the detachment came back, but the lieutenant was missing. It was noticed that the bride-elect grieved but little for him, and nobody was surprised when she announced her intention of marrying a young man from the East. The wedding day arrived. All was gayety at the post, and in the evening the mess room was decorated for a ball. As the dance was in full swing, a door flew open with a bang, letting in a draught of air that made the candles burn dim, and a strange cry, unlike that of any human creature, sounded through the room.
All eyes turned to the door. In it stood the swollen body of a dead man dressed in the stained uniform of an officer. The temple was marked by a hatchet-gash, the scalp was gone, the eyes were wide open and, burned with a terrible light.
Walking to the bride, the body drew her from the arms of her husband,
who, like the rest of the company, stood in a trance, without the
power of motion. The lieutenant drew her to his bosom and began a waltz. The musicians,
who afterward declared that they did not know what they were doing, struck
up a demoniac dance, and the couple spun around and around, the woman
growing paler and paler, until at last she died. The dead man allowed her to
sink to the floor, stood over her for a moment, wrung his hands as he
sounded his fearful cry again, then vanished through the door. A few
days after, a troop of soldiers who had been to the scene of the Apache
encounter returned with the body of the lieutenant.
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