Page:The Necromancer, or, The Tale of the Black Forest Vol. 2.djvu/167

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NECROMANCER.
161

bribed some of his servants to make a noise in the night, and to spread the rumour about, that the house was haunted, and that the late possessor of it appeared at midnight, frightening the guests in a terrible manner."

"This artifice succeeded to the utmost of our wishes, and when I left T——, a few months after, the Inn of my friend, which always had been empty, was crowded with travellers, while that of his neighbour was the lonely haunt of the disguised spectres."

"Having great reason to apprehend that our machination would be detected, sooner or later, I promised my friend, who dreaded the same, to return within a twelvemonth, and to procure him an opportunity of purchasing the haunted Inn, on reasonable terms. I was as good as my word, returned to T——, and what farther happened you know."

"At first I was rather uneasy that the foreign officer had taken lodgings at the haunt-ed