To clarify, he was no hero because he chose when, and when not, to save those lives. Sometimes the decision between saving a life, and letting it slip away, depended on little more than his mood that day. As far as his profession went, this was no day job because it was, quite literally, the graveyard shift during which he worked at the Wilhelm Cemetery. 640Please respect copyright.PENANAQb2pE6D9JJ
It was the year of our Lord, seventeen hundred and ninety three, when the Yellow Fever landed at the docks of the Arch Street wharf in Philadelphia. Between August first, and September ninth, nearly five thousand souls had been claimed by this scourge upon the earth. Business, as Terrance Bellamy knew it, was good.640Please respect copyright.PENANAoqQMYFpXWr
A most unusual phenomena came about as this epidemic ravaged the nation. Patients suffering from the advanced stages of the disease often fell into a comatose state. As a result, many were pronounced dead and interred prematurely. That is to say, in the layman’s terms, they were buried alive. 640Please respect copyright.PENANACO3Yicljob
It soon became common practice to mount a bell upon the headstone, outfitted with a string, which ran down through a pipe, and into the coffin. When - and during the course of this epidemic it was more a matter of when, than if – some unfortunate sap came out of their coma, only to find themselves stuffed into a wooden box, Terrance would be stalking about the cemetery, listening for the ringing of a bell.640Please respect copyright.PENANA0f4cHJn2Pw
Sure, sometimes he wanted to do it, to assert that total control over someone else’s fate by choosing not to help them. Sometimes, however, it was not what he wanted. There was some sort of sinister presence at work within him. It forced him to ignore the desperate ringing of the bells and it seemed to salivate at thoughts of the agony he caused. 640Please respect copyright.PENANAvJHyucoNCh
What else would make him decide not to rescue a fellow human being – trapped, and already buried halfway to hell. It was because something evil inside him grew ravenous at the thought, satiated only by murder.640Please respect copyright.PENANALyfRLxsJzy
Terrance did also manage to turn a profit from this. It was poor, old Mr. Archibald, who helped him open his eyes to the opportunity. Although, one could not really say, poor Mr. Archibald, as he owned much of Arch street itself, he certainly was old, and sick.640Please respect copyright.PENANARCj9evTdb7
Daylight was fading as the sun sank behind the tall masts of ships docked along Arch street. Terrance yawned. His shift had only just begun.640Please respect copyright.PENANAMI7sRmj6DK
"Heaven save that soul, have it yet to truly depart from this earth.”640Please respect copyright.PENANArHlQF3XTWt
A solemn voice woke Terrance from his dozing with a start. He looked to see a man much older than himself, standing just beside him. Terrance knew the man to be Mr. Archibald, one of the most prominent figures in Philadelphia. Dressed in a black double-breasted suit and a top hat, he seemed not to mind the dots of mud speckled up his finely tailored trousers.640Please respect copyright.PENANAqO20x1pliP
“Excuse me, Mr. Archibald, I didn’t see you just there.” Terrance said as he stood and pulled off his cap.640Please respect copyright.PENANAMN5Bte71AC
“No sorry at all, good sir. I was curious, however, how many will you have buried today, by sundown?” Mr. Archibald asked. His voice had an aristocratic flow, refined and eloquent, yet, humble.640Please respect copyright.PENANAkRguX83OsK
“Three, sir, by last count.”640Please respect copyright.PENANAzzkoZcM9MV
“By last count…” Archibald repeated listlessly, deep in thought.640Please respect copyright.PENANAmdsTUgHSTP
“Sir.”640Please respect copyright.PENANAHf6IcxDghL
The two watched as members of the service began to break away, consoling each other as they left the cemetery. It was nearly time for Terrance to get to work.640Please respect copyright.PENANAo1yZowRHX7
“I will pay you handsomely, good sir, to guarantee my rescue if I am unfortunate enough to be buried in your lot, prematurely.” Archibald said.640Please respect copyright.PENANAVW7M3jxr2b
Terrance preferred being in his shack at the top of Wilhelm Cemetery, to anywhere else in the world. His actual home was only slightly larger than the shack, and it was nearer the fisherman’s docks than he cared to be. Worse yet, Tabitha, his wife, lived there. When she would bark orders at him, all he could ever do was hope another soul had succumbed to the illness, just so he would be needed to dig a new grave.640Please respect copyright.PENANAlxhtIeBEGy
Terrance was in no particular hurry lighting the wick of his lantern and venturing out into the graveyard. He listened for the bells as he walked the morbid obstacle course of granite stones. Terrance held the lantern at eye level, it’s rickety metal squeaking as it swayed, the flickering orange glow managing only to light the immediate area around him. 640Please respect copyright.PENANAczCGAmoeIZ
A husband and wife, thought to have passed away together several months before – that was, until Jimmy Gilman woke next to his dead wife. When Terrance heard the Gilman’s bell ringing, he thought back to when he discovered the man laying with Tabitha. Terrance was elated to learn that the man was alive. 640Please respect copyright.PENANAw7WZLcSlmi
Buried alive and within the same coffin as his dead wife – who would soon begin to decompose. Terrance had run up to the gravesite, not with a shovel, however, but a pair of scissors. Without a moments hesitation, he approached the grave and snipped the string in two.640Please respect copyright.PENANA96xUROoiBC
Just then, another bell jingled from somewhere off in the distant dark. 640Please respect copyright.PENANAZ9jMryU6wD
“Hold on to your horses, you have no place to be.” He retorted, the irony of his own words prompting an unexpected chuckle to belt forth from the man’s ample belly640Please respect copyright.PENANAp0fmWfm97g
Back in the shack, and several hours later, the rhythmic flickering of shadows cast by the light from within the black stove, put Terrance into a deep slumber. 640Please respect copyright.PENANArr6X4azQzv
Another muffled ring, like someone ringing a bell they clasped tight in their hand.640Please respect copyright.PENANAJ59gFZL9g8
He moved to the door and placed his ear against the wood, trying to listen for any sounds emanating from the hallowed grounds just outside. There were none. If not from outside, then where could this haunting jingle be coming from?640Please respect copyright.PENANAvuZm7xnZ4M
It rang again, and again, louder and louder. Terrance approached, ever so slowly. He reached out and slid one trembling hand into the pocket, retrieving the bell. It had gone silent and Terrance breathed a sigh of relief.640Please respect copyright.PENANAN8OrFQDhFh
Then, total darkness. 640Please respect copyright.PENANAjv1MpMmcA9
Then, his fingers came across something. They quested over the object until, to his horror, he identified it’s shape. It was a plastic shoe, similar in composition to the ones with which a man was dressed for burial in the Wilhelm Cemetery.640Please respect copyright.PENANACo8juOjOaK
Terrance was short of breath; the wind had been forced from his lungs when he fell. He had to get out of his shack, had to crawl out from the pile of shoes, which he understood, in some detached way, had been worn by the dead and the decaying. The ones whose fates he had sealed by not heeding their cries for help that came in the form of frantic ringing bells.640Please respect copyright.PENANAAn6zEgGlTS
Distant screams cried out from off to his left. Now, from his right – now behind! Terrance whipped his body around in circles as the screams came in at him from every conceivable direction. He caught sight of a cluster of silhouettes gathered near the glass lamp on the corner of Arch street. Terrance could not see the faces but he felt their malevolent presence.640Please respect copyright.PENANAhlWJkauXYQ
The ashen-skinned, hideously decomposed face of Jimmy Gilman was only inches from his. Milky, vacant eyes gazed right into Terrance with a searing intensity. They judged him with a maniacal prejudice for every life lost under his careless watch.640Please respect copyright.PENANAXQGHGXwyNi
The creature released a shriek unlike that of any man or beast on earth.640Please respect copyright.PENANArIhpENcxXN
The sight, alone, was enough to make Terrance void his bowels and cause his soul to recoil into the deepest recesses of existence.640Please respect copyright.PENANA31gPr5g9LL
Terrance, the gravedigger, stood motionless in the clearing just outside his shack. The man, just, stood there, as if asleep on his feet. He was soaked to the bone and it appeared as though he had been digging all through the night.
Evidence of the undertaking was quite apparent; he was caked in dirt and mud from head to boot, and there were several dozen open graves throughout the cemetery lot. At the bottom of each one, lay a casket with its lid thrown wide open. 640Please respect copyright.PENANAbtcpaILIy7
On the ground all around Terrance were dozens of pairs of black shoes. 640Please respect copyright.PENANA1rshWmaUyq
He had been frightened beyond comprehension or understanding. The night had been too much for the mind to accept, and when it snapped, it sent him into catatonic shock, leaving him in a conscious, comatose state.640Please respect copyright.PENANAT2cCtkK7ZM
Although Terrance showed no outward alertness to the world, inside, he was screaming for help. He was trying to wave at the people, trying to tell them what had occurred, but found he was unable to Terrance was trapped within his own body, as though it was his coffin. 640Please respect copyright.PENANA36FbsJF1Hk