One blazing hot day in July 1815, a sailing ship named
Lothair arrived at Liverpool Docks from North America. Among the gaggle of
passengers who disembarked from the trans-Atlantic vessel were a rich Scottish
merchant named John Allan, his wife Frances, her younger sister Nancy, and the
couple’s sickly-looking six-year-old foster-son Edgar. At Liverpool, the Allans
met Thomas MacKenzie, a cousin of William Mackenzie, the Scottish railway
engineer entombed in the famous pyramidal tomb on Rodney Street. Thomas
MacKenzie found two trustworthy and hardworking Liverpool maidservants, Isabel
Cook and Joan Slaidburn , to accompany the Allan family to Irvine in Scotland.
Isabel’s seven-year-old sister Mary went to Scotland as well, and became a
playmate for little Edgar, the Allans’ adopted son.
Just a week before Christmas, little Mary decided she would
go out in the nearby woods one snowy afternoon to collect holly and ivy to
decorate the Allans’ home. Young Edgar accompanied the Liverpool girl, and
somehow managed to slip out of the cottage unnoticed. The two children
collected holly, ivy and pinecones, and placed them in Mary’s basket, but
during their stroll in the Scottish countryside, a strange incident occurred. A
trail of arrows was mysteriously drawn in the snow on the ground, before the
children’s astonished eyes.
Mary and Edgar followed the etched arrows, and at one point,
Mary wrote ‘Who are you?’ in the snow with the tip of her umbrella, and the
invisible doodler crossed out the question with three lines.
The arrows continued to appear, one after the other, and so
the children followed them out of curiosity, until Edgar realised he and Mary
had been lured onto the thin ice of a frozen lake. As the ice creaked, ready to
give away, Edgar seized Mary by the arm and dragged her to safety. The children
then heard the voice of an old woman cursing them, but they could see no one,
so they ran home and told the adults what had happened. When Mary’s
seventeen-year-old sister Isabel went to investigate the arrows, she saw that
they really did exist, and when she tracked them to the lake, she recoiled in
horror. Barely visible under the thin icy layer of the lake, was the face of a
child, and the sight of it sent the servant running for help.
Police later discovered that the unfortunate child under the
ice was six-year-old Carol McClean, a farmer’s daughter who had gone missing
days before. John Allan opined that the arrows had been drawn in the snow by
the evil spirit of a witch known as Old Nelly, who had been drowned in the lake
by the local villagers a hundred years ago. A total of nine children had
drowned in the lake since, most probably lured to their deaths by Old Nelly’s
evil sorcery. Mary Cook and Edgar Allan were therefore warned to stay well away
from that lake. Incidentally, Edgar Allan later grew up to become Edgar Allan
Poe, the most famous horror story writer of all time.
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