AM Burrage

Smee & Other Stories

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Alfred McLelland Burrage was born in 1889. His father and uncle were both writers, primarily of boy’s fiction, and by age 16 AM Burrage had joined them and quickly became a master of the market publishing his stories regularly across a number of publications. By the start of the Great War Burrage was well established but in 1916 he was conscripted to fight on the Western Front, his experiences becoming the classic book War is War by Ex-Private X. For the remainder of his life Burrage was rarely printed in book form but continued to write and be published on a prodigious scale in magazines and newspapers. His supernatural stories are, by common consent, some of the best ever written. Succinct yet full of character each reveals a twist and a flavour that is unsettling…..sometimes menacing….always disturbing. In this volume we bring you – Smee, The Last of the Kerstons, Someone in the Room, The Shadowy Escort, The Garden in Glenister Square, The Affair at Paddock Cross, Auntie Kate, The Lady of The Elms, The Supernatural in Fiction & Un-Paying Guests
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173 printed pages
Publication year
2013
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Quotes

  • Жанета Жековаhas quoted7 years ago
    Smee

    ‘No,’ said Jackson, with a deprecatory smile, ‘I’m sorry. I don’t want to upset your game. I shan’t be doing that because you’ll have plenty without me. But I’m not playing any games of hide-and-seek.’

    It was Christmas Eve, and we were a party of fourteen with just the proper leavening of youth. We had dined well; it was the season for childish games; and we were all in the mood for playing them—all, that is, except Jackson. When somebody suggested hide-and-seek there was rapturous and almost unanimous approval. His was the one dissentient voice.

    It was not like Jackson to spoil sport or refuse to do as others wanted. Somebody asked him if he were feeling seedy.

    ‘No,’ he answered, ‘I feel perfectly fit, thanks. But,’ he added with a smile which softened without retracting the flat refusal, ‘I’m not playing hide-and-seek.’

    One of us asked him why not. He hesitated for some seconds before replying.

    ‘I sometimes go and stay at a house where a girl was killed through playing hide-and-seek in the dark. She didn’t know the house very well. There was a servants’ staircase with a door to it. When she was pursued she opened the door and jumped into what she must have thought was one of the bedrooms—and she broke her neck at the bottom of the stairs.’

    We all looked concerned, and Mrs Femley said:
  • Жанета Жековаhas quoted7 years ago
    ‘Brenda Ford—she told me her name was.’

    Sangston put down his glass and laid a hand on my shoulder.

    ‘Look here, old man,’ he said, ‘I don’t mind a joke, but don't let it go too far. We don’t want all the women in the house getting hysterical. Brenda Ford is the name of the girl who broke her neck on the stairs playing hide-and-seek here ten years ago.’
  • Жанета Жековаhas quoted7 years ago
    ‘There was somebody there,’ I maintained, ‘because I touched her.’

    ‘So did I,’ said Mrs Gorman in a voice which had lost its steadiness.

    ‘And I don’t see how she could have got up and gone without our knowing it.’

    Reggie uttered a queer, shaken laugh. He, too, had had an unpleasant experience that evening.

    ‘Somebody’s been playing the goat,’ he remarked. ‘Coming down?’

    We were not very popular when we arrived in the drawing-room. Reggie rather tactlessly gave it out that he had found us sitting on a window-seat behind a curtain. I taxed the tall, dark girl with having pretended to be ‘Smee’ and afterwards slipping away. She denied it. After which we settled down and played other games. ‘Smee’ was done with for the evening, and I for one was glad of it.

    Some long while later, during an interval Sangston told me, if I wanted a drink, to go into the smoke-room and help myself. I went, and he presently followed me. I could see that he was rather peeved with me, and the reason came out during the following minute or two. It seemed that in his opinion, if I must sit out and flirt with Mrs Gorman—in circumstances which would have been considered highly compromising in his young days—I needn’t do
    it during a round game and keep everybody else waiting for us.

    ‘But there was somebody else there,’ I protested, ‘somebody pretending to be “Smee”. I believe it was that tall, dark girl, Miss Ford, although she denied it. She even whispered her name to me.’

    Sangston stared at me and nearly dropped his glass.

    ‘Miss Who?’ he shouted.
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