Ghostbusters of Mombasa

It was midnight and clouds were scudding across the moon.  By its fitful light we crept nervously up the ruined staircase to the turret, avoiding the jagged-edged holes where boards had rotted or been ripped away.  Everything was deathly quiet; the only sounds we could hear were our own breathing and a skitter of small, clawed feet somewhere in the darkness beyond.  Silently we sat on the littered floor, backs against the walls, hands touching for reassurance.  “Oh God,” I heard someone whisper, “What are we doing here? “ and I knew I was not alone in my fear.  Down through the window it was just possible to make out the shapes of trees and bushes in the weed-wild garden which suddenly seemed full of threat, barring all possibility of escape.  The moon came out from behind a cloud and lit full upon the black mouth of the old well…

From memory there were about eight of us.  I know” Kuku” Henn was there, and Ruth Brereton (as she was then) and Bryan Beardmore, and Mary Molloy.  Today, more than sixty years later, I can no longer remember who else – probably Bill Hurst and possibly Chris Selby-Lownes.  We were all rather into ghosts back then, and always trying to find something to do on a Saturday night besides going to the flicks and then on to Nyali Beach Hotel to dance, or crashing somebody’s party. So when it was suggested that we sneak into the empty Phantom Inn and look for the ghost, it seemed like a fun thing to do.

The Phantom Inn had previously been called The Golden Key (for some reason nicknamed by many The Golden Bollock) and in my memory of the 1950s and early 60s in Mombasa, it had never been much of a place before falling into disuse and dereliction.  My mother, however, told me that before World War II and possibly during, the small hotel on the northern side of Nyali Bridge had been quite a popular spot for drinking and dancing; a sort of night club.  It stood alone on the cliff just as you came off the bridge on to the mainland, overlooking Tudor Creek.  And by 1963, when this story takes place, the only interesting thing about it was The Legend – of a young Arab woman who had been thrown down the well by her husband as a punishment for some unspecified offense.  She was said to rise from the well at midnight when the moon was full, and wander around the hotel.  Certainly Africans avoided the place after dark and many white Mombasa-ites, too, claimed to believe the story.

Picture of the old Nyali Bridge that connected the island with the north shore, back in the time of this story. The Golden Key aka Phantom Inn aka The Golden Bollock is the two storey building at far left of the bridge. (Photo courtesy of Rajni Kant Shah).

So, late one night when the moon was suitably full, our gang of ghostbusters parked our cars on the island side of the bridge and crept across, eager to be in place by midnight.  Giggling and shushing each other we clambered through a window, pulling back the rotting shutter, and picked our way gingerly through the debris on the ground floor.  A dilapidated staircase led up to the next storey, where there was a sort of turret room.  Here we ensconced ourselves, sitting on the floor with our backs to the wall, where most of the inner lining had rotted away.  The whole place stank of rodents and bats and, I think, human piss.  It was quite horrible and I remembered wishing I’d stayed home!  When our watches showed midnight we all became breathless and silent.  I don’t think any of us REALLY expected to see a ghost, especially the older men who were less credulous than my 18 year old self (I was the youngest in the group by about four years).

But then…oh the horror!… all of a sudden we saw a wavering light creeping towards us.  We couldn’t see exactly where it was coming from, it just seemed to wander all about without purpose or direction.  At least for a while.   A pale, mysterious light with no sound to humanise it. “It’s the ghost…there really IS a ghost!” whispered Ruth, sounding slightly hysterical.  Mary Molloy, I remember, crossed herself and asked for some heavenly protection – I’d never known her be particularly religious before.  The men – Kuku, Bryan and the others – had been scoffingly sceptical about the whole adventure until then, just going along for the hell of it, but now they, too, had gone ominously quiet and that worried me most of all.

We sat there, group hysteria taking over, terrified and not quite sure what to do.  I can’t say we were frozen with fright because this was, after all, Mombasa on a hot Saturday night.  But we were certainly immobilised by it. What else, after all, could this mysterious light that seemed to hover a few feet off the ground be BUT an apparition of some kind?  The light came closer, we could see it diffused and indistinct but certainly THERE through the cracks in the floorboards.  And then – it began to ascend the stairs!  It now seemed to be accompanied by a sort of shushing noise which to me sounded JUST like the noise an ambulatory ghost might make, especially if she was wearing her buibui

“Omigawd!”, muttered Ruth.  “What will we DO?”  One of the men – can’t remember who it was, now, probably Bill, told us to stay calm and very quiet.  No screaming.  And so the light came nearer…and nearer…and the moonlight, quite ghostly in itself, shone through the window and cast shadows that made the whole thing seem more sinister.  And then a voice…a trembling voice that wavered fearfully behind the wavering light…said: “Nani huko?”

 It was the night watchman! 

We hadn’t thought of that!  Hadn’t realised there would be anyone watching over this derelict building but of course local watu might have found a use for the old timber and stuff.  So a night watchman had been employed, and a wizened, ancient and very frightened and indignant mzee he was too, carrying a kerosene lantern and wearing huge unwieldy thongs made of recycled tyre rubber, hence the “shushing” sound.  He was not at all amused by this bunch of young wazungu with nothing better to do with their time than disturb his peace of mind.  And, of course, we WERE trespassing.  So to soothe him down and shut him up (calling the policewas mentioned) we paid him a few shillingi and made our merry way back across the bridge.

This ultimately dispiriting experience didn’t in the least dim our enthusiasm for things supernatural and paranormal – far from it.  Our next ghostbusting adventure after that was spending a night in the Mombasa Cemetery – but that’s another story!