
Three Supernatural Stories
Three supernatural tales from 1896 where the dead refuse to stay buried. In 'The Bruges Ghost,' a terrifying specter materializes in the ancient streets of Belgium, forcing witnesses to confront what should be impossible. A convalescent young officer in 'A Mysterious Visitor' receives a startling revelation from a complete stranger, one who knows things no outsider could know. And in 'The Tyburn Ghost,' London's bloody history of public executions rises to haunt modern visitors to the city. FitzClarence writes in the grand tradition of Victorian supernatural fiction, where atmosphere and suggestion do the work of explicit horror. The ghosts here are not mere specters but manifestations of guilt, memory, and the persistent weight of what the living cannot leave behind. These are elegant, restrained tales that build dread through accumulation, leaving readers uneasy long after the final page.








