Care For Some Ghosts
With Those Scones?
Walking into the stunning lobby of the Fairmont Empress in
Victoria, BC, Canada, with its amazing multi-faceted crystal chandelier, you'd
never know that, among the thousands of tourists, walk several ghosts.
Its designer, Francis Rattenbury, who died a very lonely
death in England after being bludgeoned to death by the very young lover of his
second wife is reported to be one. As a bold young architect he moved to Canada
and won his first blind entry into designing the BC parliament buildings by
signing it, local Canadian architect. Then built the five star hotel that
everyone views as they come into Victoria, The Fairmont Empress.
Another is Margaret from Calgary, an elegantly dressed older
woman, taking afternoon tea, always searching for her would-be beau. On the
outlook for the man that admired her large-brimmed hats. She passed away in her
room, having lived there for months on end in the winter. The room later became
the un-rentable room as lights would flicker and TV channels would change.
Working on the redesign of the hotel when the Fairmont chain
bought it two construction workers quit when they spotted a man hanging from
the rafters. In fact, a man did hang himself in that room decades earlier in
the fifties.
There are reports of maids being spotted long after their
deaths, still servicing the rooms. A woman who knocks on the suites' doors
trying to find her room. Guests who try to help her are surprized when she
leads them to the elevators and vanishes.
Bastion Square, in central Victoria. The site of the original
cemetery, was covered over and built on. None of the nearly thirteen hundred
bodies moved only the headstones, some of which were found in an old storehouse.
"You left the bodies and you only moved the headstones". Okay, I
pinched that from a very famous movie (PS. I’ve talked to some of the store
owners and yes they have crazy stories of things that have happened). Wonder if
things fly about in nearby buildings! Perhaps that, and the fact that ley lines
are reported to cross the area, is the reason that Victoria is the most haunted
city in North America.
The weirdest true story is courtesy of the doorman of the Empress.
While waiting for the valet to return my vehicle, I struck up a conversation
(as I usually do) and asked if he'd any ghost stories to help me with my novel.
Apparently one couple, looking very ashen, told him that they returned to their
locked room only to discover the wife's luggage had been taken out of her
suitcase and "ghost clothing" put in. "Ghost clothing?" I
asked. "Very old clothes," he said.
As a writer, the question I always ask myself is; what if? What
if there's a ghost walking about on his tourist travels, dressed like us. I
think after that sobering thought something stronger than the great tea they
serve there is required.
I myself have never seen a ghost. But would love to hear
from people that have, I went to a Writers Convention in Calgary, When Words Collide https://www.whenwordscollide.org/
and my talk was the last of the night,
nearly at midnight, and after asked if anyone had ghost stories and several
told me of theirs, this I’ll put in another blog, some for the first time
sharing. Glad they felt free to open up.
So if anyone want to share their ghostly experiences with me
I might add to the next blog or safe it for a novel idea as well.
PS. I did put the Fairmont Empress doorman’s ghost story
into my novel, The Mystery of Ms. Teak and yes he was walking around in modern
day clothing, you’ll have to buy the book to find out who, but all I’ll say is
he signs his dinner bills with Local Canadian Ghost.
Bio
A natural storyteller, whose compelling
thoughts are freed from the depths of the heart and the subconscious before
being poured onto the page.
Literature written beyond the realms of
genre he is known to grab readers; kicking, screaming, laughing or crying and
drag them into his novels.
Or as he has often said: Write like your soul is on fire and the pencil
is your voice screaming.
You don’t have to be mad to be a writer,
but it sure helps.
To date he has over fifty articles/short
stories, sixty blog posts and fifteen novels written or published. One, The
Joining, top three finalist in the Canadian Book Club Awards in 2020, out of
nearly two hundred entries. Another, The Lure, finished a quarter finalist in
2018 Screen Craft Cinematic Book Competition. Made top 35% of 106,000 Projects
and top 24% of manuscripts entered. In 2000 my novel, Raven's Lament, formerly Haida Windsongs, it
made it to the Chapters Novel Contest semi-finals with 48/50 points. It also
went to the last round of acceptance and lost out to the non-fiction version of
the true story entitled, The Golden Spruce by John Valliant, by Harper press in
2004. One of my short stories, A Sun-catchers Tears was voted #1 by the
readers in an anthology of three hundred entries.
Sincerely
Frank Talaber
Canada's Foremost Off beat Author
Hope we will see you next month!!
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