The Ghost of the Ship 
by [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
My family is prone to "paranormal" stuff, and I seem to be no  exception. I 
have quite a few experiences to relate, both personal and  heard second-hand 
through my family. This is usually the first one I tell  people:  
I served as an officer in the navy onboard a cruiser. One night,  while we 
were in port, I was awoken from my sleep by a "feeling." What I  saw hovering 
before me was a semi-distinguishable face, but better  described a nebulous 
form. What I remember most was the sound which filled  my ears: not loud, not 
soft, very present, but nothing specific. The only  way I've been able to 
describe 
it is that sound the transporters made in  the old Star Trek, but at a 
constant pitch and kind of muffled. I could  feel myself trying to speak, yet 
could 
not hear words out of my mouth. I  could feel myself trying to move, but 
again, nothing was happening. The  apparition floated above me for what must 
have 
been 10 to 15 seconds, then  suddenly disappeared. The sound was gone, I could 
move, I could hear  myself speak, and the rest of my stateroom came back into 
focus. The first  thing I did was reach up and touch the pipes which ran 
through the  overhead (my rack was the top rack, or bunk-bed, for ye lubbers) 
to 
make  sure I wasn't dreaming, for it felt like a dream-state. I had two 
choices: 
 believe it was a dream, or believe it was something else. I didn't make  the 
conclusion right away. Later that night, I had the mid-watch (from  midnight 
to 4 am) on the quarterdeck. Once the drunks are on-board, this  can be a very 
boring watch. Two other people are up there with you: the  Petty Officer of 
the Watch, and the Messenger. Discussion always varies,  and that night, it 
turned to ghost stories. We swapped a couple, and my  mind thought back to the 
incident earlier in my stateroom. I shared it  with them, with no real 
conclusion, because I had not made one yet. That's  when I noticed the pale 
look on the 
Petty Officer of the Watch's face.   
A year or so ago, on the deployment before my arrival, a young petty  officer 
was doing maintenance on a radar system. He had defeated the  safety 
interlock (a big no-no) on the radar's cabinet, exposing a fully  energized 
klystron 
(something with lots of power going through it). He was  wearing a 
sound-powered phone set, which is comprised of a head-set, and a  mouth-piece 
which rests 
on a metal plate which rests on your chest,  suspended by a a cord, and rests 
on your chest. This young man (could not  have been over 21) got too close to 
the klystron, an high-voltage arc of  electricity leapt from the klystron and 
landed on the metal plate, killing  him instantly. The spot where he died was 
two decks above my stateroom,  almost directly above where my rack (bed) is.  
The petty officer of the watch had the messenger retrieve a cruise  book from 
that deployment (like a yearbook). The first page was a memorial  to the 
petty officer who died, complete with his picture. It was his face  I could 
barely 
make-out in my stateroom. We all just stood there. I didn't  say a thing 
(outside of what I had to say for duties) for the rest of the  watch, I just 
stared out into the night.  
Given my belief in these matters, I figgured he (the "ghost") was  trying to 
tell me something. Typically, they all are. He woke me up only  one other time 
after the first time. I tried to speak to him, but the same  thing that 
happened to me physically during the first encounter impaired  any 
communication. 
The ship has since been de-commissioned. I only hope he  had the opportunity to 
tell whatever it is he wanted to say to someone  else. 





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