The Guardians of Christmas Eve

Groff Media 2024© Truth Endures IMDbPro

Presented by benandsteve.com By: Benjamin Groff II©

3–4 minutes

In the heart of the bustling city, the frigid December air carried the soft hum of holiday cheer. Festive lights adorned streetlamps, casting warm glows onto the snow-dusted streets. For the officers of the 8th Precinct, Christmas Eve was far from quiet. Calls came in relentlessly: domestic disputes, stranded travelers, and even a wayward reindeer reported near the city park. These dedicated officers were on duty, ready to serve and protect.

What the officers didn’t know was that they had three spectral protectors watching over them—The Guardians of Christmas Eve.

Each of these ghostly policemen had once served the city. They were bound by duty. A deep sense of loyalty held their spirits. They lingered to make sure that no harm would come to those who now walked the beat.


Inspector Miles Hanley

Miles Hanley was a tall and imposing figure. He had been the precinct’s first chief when the station was founded in the late 1800s. Known for his wisdom, he fiercely protected his officers. He carried his ghostly silver pocket watch. He used it to guide the others through the city. On this night, Hanley floated above a lone patrol car. It was parked at the edge of a dark alley. His translucent form shimmered in the moonlight.

“Johnson’s heading into a bad spot,”

Hanley muttered, watching the young officer approach a shadowy figure rummaging through garbage bins. With a flick of his watch, he whispered through the veil of time, nudging Johnson’s instincts. The officer hesitated, then called for backup—averting a potential ambush. Hanley grinned.

“Still got it.”


Officer Rosie McKinney

Rosie, affectionately called “Mama Mac” by her peers, had patrolled the city during the 1940s. She had an uncanny knack for reading people, even in death. Tonight, she hovered near a busy intersection where Officer Emily Torres was directing traffic midst a chaotic pile-up.

“Stay sharp, Emily,”

Rosie murmured, spotting a distracted driver barreling toward the scene. With a wave of her ethereal baton, she sent a gust of icy wind straight into the driver’s face. The man slammed on his brakes just in time, his car skidding to a halt inches from the officer. Rosie chuckled, tipping her ghostly hat. “That’s one less hospital visit tonight.”


Detective Lou Vargas

Lou had been a beloved detective in the 1970s, known for his quick wit and unshakable resolve. He now roamed the precinct’s cold case archives, whispering clues to frustrated officers. But tonight, Lou focused on Officer Brandon Lee. Officer Lee had just been called to investigate a suspicious package left near a crowded shopping district.

As Brandon approached the package, Lou materialized briefly behind him, a shadowy whisper in the winter night. “Check the wires, kid. Look left before you kneel.” Obeying the faint warning in his gut, Brandon discovered the package was harmless—a forgotten Christmas gift. Still, he felt the hairs on his neck stand like someone had been there with him.


A Christmas Morning Promise

As dawn broke over the city, the officers returned to the precinct, exhausted but safe. Unseen by human eyes, Miles, Rosie, and Lou gathered on the station’s rooftop, gazing at the snow-covered streets below.

“We did good,”

Lou said, leaning on his ghostly cane.

“Not a single officer lost,” Rosie added softly.

Miles held up his pocket watch, the spectral clock hands freezing as the sun rose. “Until next year,” he said, and the three faded into the morning mist.

Below, Officer Torres rubbed her arms against the chill. “Did you feel that?” she asked Officer Lee.

“Yeah,” he replied, staring at the horizon. “Like someone was watching over us.”

And so they were.

🩸 The Making of a Nightmare

When Progress Buried the Past Beneath Big Canyon Lake

By Benjamin Groff II | The Story Teller – benandsteve.com.

3–5 minutes

As The Story Goes –––

No one had seriously thought it would be real. They all thought what they were doing would be forgotten in only a few weeks. But what followed would go on, and on, and on. And not even those with the worst of intentions have predicted the outcome.

It was the summer of 1941, and spring had brought heavy rains to the Big Canyon, flooding the valley below. The farmers had not yet seen the completion of the WPA projects. These projects began in the late 1930s across most of the country. With those projects came new schools, highways, bridges, and community centers. The last of the projects here was the shoring up of valleys. This involved building dams to control runoff waters from creeks, rivers, and streams. When the heavy rains came, the floods were tamed through a spillway cut deep into the earth.

Now that summer was upon them, workers from the CCC and WPA joined forces. They were building what would be known as the Big Canyon Watershed Project. They used mules and draft horses. With these animals, they pulled wedges and plows. The team cleared the valley floor that would soon disappear beneath the rising water. Every blow of an axe and every groan of timber was heard in the thick air. These sounds seemed to signify progress—or so they thought.

The men bunked in rough-hewn cabins and ate in a mess hall that smelled of kerosene and sweat. They joked about ghosts that will one day swim through the drowned cottonwoods or the abandoned family homesteads. But there was one homestead no one wanted to talk about—the Miller place.


The Miller Mystery

The Millers had lived at the base of the canyon for as long as anyone remember. Their house sat crooked beside a spring-fed creek that never dried, even in the harshest drought. Locals said the spring was sacred to the Washita people long before white settlers arrived. When the government bought out the land for the dam, every family took the offered payment—except the Millers.

Old Henry Miller refused to leave. “This land don’t belong to the government,” he told the surveyors. “It don’t even belong to me. It belongs to the water, and she’ll take it back when she’s good and ready.”

They said he vanished one night in late October, just before the final clearing began. The official report listed him as relocated. But the men who worked the next week swore. They heard hammering at night. They saw a lantern flickering deep in the canyon where the Miller house had stood.

When the first rains came that winter, the spillway gates were opened. The lake began to rise. Within days, the Miller place—and whatever was left of it—was gone.


The Haunting of Big Canyon Lake

By the next summer, Big Canyon Lake became a local attraction. Families came from nearby towns to picnic along the shore and marvel at the engineering wonder. Fishermen swore the lake was bottomless. Divers who dared to explore near the old creek bed spoke of hearing faint knocking under the water. It sounded as if someone were still hammering boards together.

A maintenance crew was at the spillway in 1947. They were inspecting it by draining part of the spillway. During the inspection, they found something jammed in one of the lower gates. It was a section of cabin timber—weathered, darkened, with three hand-carved letters burned into it: H. M.

The lake was drained once more in the drought of 1954. When it receded far enough, the foundation of the old Miller place appeared, blackened but intact. And at its center, where the spring once bubbled up, was a hole—dark, deep, and breathing.

No one went near it. The Army Corps sealed the area, and within weeks, the water rose again.


The Nightmare Endures

Locals say Big Canyon Lake is cursed. On calm nights, when the moon hangs over the still water, you can see a lantern light. It flickers beneath the surface. Fishermen have reported hearing someone tapping on their boats, like a muffled warning.

The government calls it folklore.
The people who live nearby call it memory.

As for the Miller land, they say the water finally took it back. It also took the man who tried to keep it.


© Benjamin H. Groff II — Truth Endures / benandsteve.com

When Ghosts Were Celebrated in Homes

By Benjamin H. Groff II

2–3 minutes

There was a time when ghosts were not feared, but welcomed. Long before the plastic skeletons and fog machines, the presence of the departed inside a home was seen as sacred. It was viewed as even comforting. Hollywood later turned spirits into screams.

In old America, the line between the living and the dead was not sharply drawn. Much earlier in Europe, this line was also blurred. Families left chairs empty at the table for those who had passed. Candles flickered in windows not to frighten away spirits, but to guide them home. A draft whispered through the house. The hallway creaked, or the boards settled. These sounds were spoken of with gentle reverence: “It’s only Mother checking on us.”

Autumn, of course, was the favored season for such visitations. The harvest was done. The air turned cool and thin. This is a time believed to make the veil between worlds soft as gauze. Many homes, especially in rural places, held small gatherings to honor those who came before. Food was left out overnight. The family Bible was opened to the names of the dead. In some corners, the very hearth hosted a spirit or two. They lingered close to the warmth that once gave them life.

Ghosts were part of the household, not intruders. They were reminders — that life continues, even in unseen ways. The wind brushing the curtains or the rocker swaying gently on its own didn’t make people scream. They didn’t call for help. They smiled. They believed their ancestors had found their way home.

It wasn’t until the age of electricity and industrial noise that ghosts were driven out — or at least, ignored. Modern light replaced candlelight, and superstition was traded for science. Yet, as every October rolls around, the scent of woodsmoke returns to the air. We still sense something ancient moving among us. Maybe that’s why we decorate with skeletons and glowing pumpkins — a way, even now, to say: we remember you.

So the old ways weren’t so strange after all. Maybe ghosts were never meant to be feared. Maybe they were simply waiting to be invited back in.


© Benjamin H. Groff II — Truth Endures / benandsteve.com

🐕‍🕯️ The Legend of the Kyrkogrim — Sweden’s Black Guardian of the Church

By Benjamin H. Groff II | Truth Endures | The Story Teller

2–3 minutes

Tales are whispered across the cold stones of Scandinavia. They speak of an “evil dog” that once haunted the churches of Sweden. But those who truly know the legend say the creature was never evil at all. It was the kyrkogrim — a guardian spirit born not of sin, but of sacrifice.

A Dog Buried Beneath Holy Ground

In the centuries when churches first rose across the Nordic lands, builders followed a chilling custom. To guarantee their new sanctuaries would stand against evil, they buried a living creature beneath the cornerstone. This creature was often a black dog. Its final, terrified breath was thought to bind its soul to the ground, forming a spiritual sentinel.

That spirit became the kyrkogrim: the Church Grim. It was always black as midnight. It was condemned to patrol the churchyard. Its duty was to watch over the graves and keep the devil himself from defiling holy ground.

The Protector and the Omen

By day, the kyrkogrim was invisible. But when night fell and candles flickered low, villagers spoke of seeing the great black hound. It was pacing near the church doors. Its eyes glowed like coals in the dark. It was said to snarl at grave robbers and frighten off witches. Yet, for all its protection, it carried a darker burden.

To see the kyrkogrim was to get a warning. The watcher’s death, it was said, would soon follow. The same spirit shielded the church from evil. It also bore the scent of the grave. This grim paradox kept villagers both thankful and fearful of its presence.

The First Soul of the Graveyard

Long before Christianity spread through Scandinavia, ancient peoples offered animal sacrifices to bless new structures and sacred sites. Early Christian builders, inheriting these customs, altered them to fit their faith. The dog buried beneath the first church became “the first soul” in the graveyard. This ensured that no human would have to linger eternally as the church’s guardian.

Thus, the kyrkogrim was not a monster. Instead, it was a martyr. It symbolized the uneasy blend of pagan ritual and Christian devotion. It was the bridge between two worlds: the old gods of the land and the new God of the heavens.

Echoes Through Time

Even today, stories of the kyrkogrim persist in Swedish folklore. Some say the black dog still walks among the headstones on stormy nights, especially near churches centuries old. Others claim that every church has its own silent watcher — unseen, but always there.

What began as a superstition has evolved into something deeper. It reflects the human need to guard what we hold sacred. The kyrkogrim, once buried in darkness, lives on in story — a faithful spirit that never abandoned its post.


By Benjamin GroffMedia© | benandsteve.com | ©2025 

“Don’t Go Where You Don’t Know Where You’re At” — A Lesson from My Father

2–3 minutes

A Memory That Ignites Each Year

Every year when All Hallows’ Eve rolls around, I think about a specific night. I remember it vividly. It was when I was sixteen. I was getting ready to go out with friends—excited, dressed up, and ready for a night of harmless fun. As I reached for the door, my father stopped me with a hand on my arm.

He’d never done that before. I was the youngest of six children. By the time I reached my teens, my parents had weathered every imaginable crisis. Their only standing rule was simple: “Be safe and be home before daylight.” But that night was different. Dad’s grip was firm, his eyes serious.

He said quietly, “Look—your Uncle Bennie came upon a man whose head had been cut off and left on a dirt road near our house when I was about your age. They never found who did it.”

I froze. Uncle Bennie had passed away before I was born, so I never had the chance to ask him about it. Dad didn’t offer more details. He only mentioned that Bennie had called the deputies. Bennie told them everything he knew. Then he lived with that memory for the rest of his life.

My father’s next words have stayed with me for decades: “I just want you to be safe. Don’t go where you don’t know where you’re at.”

Those words became a rule for me, a compass I’ve carried ever since. If my gut or my soul told me something wasn’t safe, I backed away. That simple warning guided me through my teenage years. It also helped me during my law enforcement career. Instincts and situational awareness can mean the difference between life and death in that field.

Even today, I don’t know much more than that chilling story about the headless man. But my father’s advice has saved me countless times. It’s taught me that safety isn’t just about the rules of the road. Safety is not limited to the places on a map. It’s about trusting the quiet warnings within yourself.

I share this story with you because maybe it can help someone else, just as it helped me. We live in a world full of distractions, routes we don’t know, and situations that feel uncertain. If you find yourself heading into something that doesn’t feel right, listen to that inner voice. Step back. Choose another path.

Because sometimes, the oldest lessons are the truest: Don’t go where you don’t know where you’re at. Your instincts know the terrain long before your eyes do. And that wisdom—passed from a father to a son—can save your life, too.


By Benjamin GroffMedia© | benandsteve.com | ©2025 

The Revolving House Of Mystery

By Benjamin GroffMedia© | benandsteve.com | 2025 Truth Endures©

10–15 minutes

Far from the edges of the town, set an old two-story house. No one ever saw anyone going in or out of the house. The townspeople referred to the old house as the Sims’ place. As far as everyone knew, the last member of the Sims’ family had died years ago. They didn’t know who inherited the ownership of the house. Still, without being seen, the lawn remained manicured and the house was painted and kept up. It looked like the model home for anyone wanting to buy a house. The problem was it wasn’t for sale. As far as anyone knew, they never met anyone who lived there. If anyone lived there at all, nobody knew.

That didn’t stop the stories from spreading.

Children dared each other to run up the front walk and touch the heavy oak door. Teenagers boasted of throwing pebbles at the upstairs windows—until one swore he saw a pale face staring back. No one ever stayed long. The Sims’ place pressed against your skin. It was like a cold hand resting on the back of your neck.

The mail never piled up, though no one ever saw it being collected. No lights came on at night. The porch lantern flickered gently with each dusk. It was like it was welcoming someone home.

One autumn morning, a moving truck pulled into the narrow drive. This was just after the first frost turned the fields silver.

People watched from porches and behind curtains, half-certain the truck would vanish like smoke. But it didn’t. A tall man in a dark coat stepped out. He stood for a long moment at the edge of the walk. Then, he turned the knob and entered without knocking. The door swung open smoothly, like it had been waiting.

By noon, the truck was gone. No one had seen anything carried in or out.

That night, a light glowed faintly in the attic window—the first time anyone had seen one inside in decades.

The next day, the town’s quietest librarian, Mrs. Evelyn Crane, who hadn’t missed a shift in forty years, did not show up for work.

They found Mrs. Crane’s front door wide open, her coat still hanging by the hook, tea cooling on the counter. Nothing was out of place—except for the fact she was gone.

On the floor of her study, neatly laid out, was a photograph no one remembered being taken. It showed the Sims’ house bathed in golden afternoon light. In the top-floor window, a shadowy figure could just barely be made out. A figure with Evelyn Crane’s unmistakable silhouette—bunned hair, long cardigan, glasses catching the light.

The photo was crisp, fresh—too fresh. The paper hadn’t yellowed, and the ink hadn’t aged. Yet, the style, tone, and eerie texture of the photograph made it feel as if it were decades old.

Sheriff McKinley requested a discreet investigation. 

Quiet was always the town’s way. A formal missing person report was filed. It was filed only after a week had passed. The report was done with hushed voices.

The librarian’s house sat untouched after that—no one eager to enter it. On the morning of the seventh day, someone noticed a flicker in the Sims’ attic window. The light now flickered slightly. Like a candle in a room with a draft. Like someone moving just beyond its reach.

Then others began to disappear.

Not suddenly, but subtly. A school janitor didn’t show up for work. The pharmacist’s assistant left for her lunch break and never came back. With each absence, the same pattern followed—no signs of struggle, no witnesses, just something left behind. A photograph, a trinket, a drawing… always showing the Sims’ house. 

Always with a shadow in the attic.

One morning, the mayor ordered a city records search. He wanted to find any deeds, wills, or other documents related to the Sims family’s legal existence.

The file was blank.

No birth certificates. No death records. No property tax history. Just a penciled note in the margins of a 1933 zoning map:

“Leave undisturbed. Occupied.”

By whom, no one knew. But the attic light still burned. And some said if you stood on the sidewalk long enough, you would hear soft music playing. A woman humming. And the sound of someone pacing slowly across wooden floors.

Would you like to explore who—or what—is in the attic next? Or maybe follow a new character brave (or foolish) enough to enter the house?

His name was Jonah Bell. A drifter by most accounts, though some swore he’d grown up just a few towns over. He had that type of face—familiar, yet hard to place—late thirties. Wore an old canvas satchel, carried a notebook bound in cracked leather, and spoke only when spoken to.

Jonah arrived on foot, just before dusk. He stopped outside the Sims’ house. He looked it over for a long minute. He muttered something under his breath that sounded like “Still standing.”

A few townsfolk watched him from a distance, expecting him to keep walking. Instead, he opened the rusted gate, walked straight up the weedless stone path, and knocked once.

No one had ever knocked before.

The door creaked open as if it had been listening.

He stepped inside.

The air in the entry hall was still and dry. It was faintly perfumed with old cedar and beeswax. There was also a hint of something sweeter, like lilacs. The floors gleamed under a thin veil of dust. Every piece of furniture stood precisely placed, as if awaiting a long-anticipated visit.

Jonah took out his notebook and began jotting down notes. He whispered as he walked, like he was reciting some memorized litany to keep his courage close.

He passed through the parlor—walls lined with books, many handwritten, their spines bare. The grandfather clock stood frozen at 3:17. In the mirror above the fireplace, his reflection wavered slightly, a half-second behind his movements.

He didn’t stop.

At the end of the hall, the narrow staircase rose, twisting sharply to the left halfway up. It was there, on the sixth step, that the air grew colder.

He reached the landing, hesitated only briefly, then started the climb to the attic. Each step groaned—not with age, but with reluctance, like the house was reconsidering his welcome.

The attic door was shut. White paint cracked along its edges. Carved into the wood, nearly invisible unless you looked for it, was a single word:

“Stay.”

Jonah opened it anyway.

The attic was warm, despite the chill below. A low, golden light poured from an unseen source, casting no transparent shadows. Dust floated like tiny spirits in the air.

In the center of the attic was a rocking chair. And in it, a woman sat.

She was facing the window, her back to Jonah. Gray hair pinned neatly. A music box was on a small table beside her. It played a lilting tune. This was the same tune Evelyn Crane used to hum at the library desk.

Jonah didn’t speak. He stepped closer, notebook open, pencil ready.

The woman turned her head slowly, not startled—expectant.

She had no eyes.

Just smooth, unbroken skin where they should have been. Still, she looked at him.

And she smiled.

“I was wondering,” 

She said in a voice like leaves scraping on glass, 

“When you’d come back.”

Jonah’s pencil trembled. A page fluttered loose from his notebook.

It was a drawing—sketched in charcoal—of this very attic. The woman in the chair. The music box. The golden light.

Dated: October 13, 1922.

Jonah stared at the sketch, hands trembling, mind racing.

“I don’t remember drawing this.” 

He said aloud, but only to himself.

The woman in the chair—still smiling—nodded slowly. 

“You never do, not at first.”

He took a cautious step closer, boots silent on the attic’s polished wood. 

“Who are you?” 

He asked. 

“What is this place?”

The woman tilted her head. 

“The house remembers.” 

She said. 

“Even when you forget.”

Jonah knelt to retrieve the page. His fingers brushed the corner of the rocking chair. In a sudden rush, something opened in him. It was a flood of memory. It was not like something recalled, but like a dream breaking the surface after years of sinking.

He was ten. Standing in this very attic. A woman—this same woman—was brushing his hair, humming that tune.

Her face was younger, but the eyes—nonexistent yet somehow seeing—were just the same.

“You called me your boy.” 

He whispered, blinking hard. 

“But that can’t be. You’re not… real.”

“Oh, I’m real.” 

She said. 

“As real as anything you forgot.”

He backed away. 

“I’ve never lived here.”

The woman raised one hand and pointed to the rafters. Jonah followed her gaze.

Up near the slanted beams, nailed between two joists, was a faded photograph. A family portrait—sepia-toned. 

A tall man with a mustache. A small boy with serious eyes. And a woman in a white dress, her arms around them both.

Jonah felt his knees weaken.

The boy was him.

Same face, same eyes.

He staggered back.

“No, no, this can’t—”

“You were born here, Jonah.” 

The woman said gently. 

“And you left. They made you leave. But the house… the house never forgot. Neither did I.”

He looked around now with different eyes. Not the attic of a haunted place, but something older. Familiar. As though the walls were whispering lullabies from a life he’d buried.

“I don’t understand,”

He murmured.

“You don’t have to.” 

She said. 

“You only need to remember why you came back.”

He looked down at his notebook again. Page after page of sketches—rooms in the house. A hand-drawn map of the garden. Symbols he didn’t recognize but somehow understood. At the very end, a single phrase repeated over and over:

“The house is waiting. The house is watching. The house wants me home.”

Suddenly, the attic door slammed shut behind him.

He didn’t turn.

The rocking chair creaked gently as the woman leaned forward.

“Now,” 

She said, her voice sharper, colder. 

“Are you ready to take your place?”

Jonah closed the notebook and looked out the attic window again. Down below, on the street, a child stood at the edge of the lawn. Watching the house and watching him.

The way he once had.

The woman’s eyes—those smooth, sightless hollows—seemed to deepen as she leaned closer.

“You were always meant to return.” 

She said. 

“Not as the boy you were, but as the man we need.”

Jonah’s voice caught in his throat. 

“We?”

The rocking chair stopped moving.

Suddenly, the attic air thickened, as if the room had drawn a breath and was holding it. All around him, the golden light faded. It was replaced by a dim, pulsing glow from the floorboards beneath his feet. The wood creaked in rhythm—a heartbeat.

And then the whispering began.

Not from the woman. From the house.

It came from the walls, from the pipes, from behind the bookshelves. Countless voices, layered over one another. Some frantic, some pleading, others calm and patient, like they had waited an eternity.

He was made out the names—EvelynTommyClara—names of the vanished.

“We are here.” 

The voices murmured. 

“Waiting. Watching. Living still.”

Jonah stumbled backward toward the attic window, but the light outside had changed. The sky beyond was no longer dusky violet but deep, ink-black. No stars. No moon. Only the faint shimmer of fog rolling in across the lawn.

The child he had seen moments ago was no longer there.

The woman in the chair stood.

Not slowly. Not creakingly. She rose, as though the gravity in the attic shifted just for her.

“The house keeps what it claims.” 

She said. 

“And it chose you long ago.”

Jonah opened his notebook again, desperately flipping pages. The last one had changed.

Where once the phrase had repeated—The house is waiting. The house is watching.—now there was only one line:

“The house has taken root in me.”

His hands began to tremble. He dropped the notebook.

The floor beneath him rippled slightly, the wooden planks softening beneath his boots. He looked down. He saw the faint outline of veins—not his. They were pressing against his skin from below. The veins snaked up his legs like ivy. His reflection in the attic’s glass window twisted subtly—his eyes darker, his face slackening.

The woman smiled gently now.

“You will remember everything soon.” 

She whispered.

Then her body folded in on itself, collapsing like smoke caught in reverse. She vanished, leaving the rocking chair slowly swaying, empty once more.

Jonah tried to scream but found no sound.

The voices filled the attic.

“Welcome home.”

Outside, the porch lantern flickered brighter.

And in the attic window, a tall man is now be seen standing in the golden glow, perfectly still. Eyes like shadow. Watching.

Jonah Bell had returned.

But he would not be leaving again.

The next morning, a thin layer of fog clung to the outskirts of town, thickest around the old Sims’ place. The porch lantern had burned through the night, casting a low amber halo across the perfectly trimmed lawn.

A small group of townsfolk had gathered again on the sidewalk, just beyond the rusted gate. They stood quietly—arms crossed, coffee cups in hand, pretending they were just out for a walk.

Sheriff McKinley stood among them, jaw tight, his badge catching the early sun.

“Who was he?” 

Asked Mr. Darnell, the barber, adjusting his cap.

“No one local.” 

Said the sheriff.

“Drifter, maybe. Name’s Jonah Bell. Didn’t leave a car. Walked in, like they all do.”

The crowd fell silent again. No birds sang. Even the breeze seemed reluctant to pass through the yard.

And then, from the attic window, the light flickered once.

Mrs. Calloway, who had lived on that block the longest, shook her head slowly and muttered, half to herself:

“Oh dear. It’s starting all over again.”

No one disagreed.

They stood a while longer, staring at the house. They quietly dispersed. Each of them walked away faster than they meant to.

None of them noticed the child standing just beyond the fog, clutching a sketchpad and watching the window.

Waiting for the house to notice him.

Haunted Memories: The Ghosts of Groff House

GROFF MEDIA 2024© TRUTH ENDURES IMDBPRO

Presented by benandsteve.com By: Benjamin Groff II©s

5–7 minutes

The Old Groff House
The Groff House first moved to Binger from Anadarko, Ok

The old farmhouse was to be our new home. Moving from the city to the farm felt like an adventure, but the others didn’t share my enthusiasm. They struggled with giving up indoor plumbing, a telephone, and dependable electricity.


For my father, though, this was the beginning of a dream—a quarter-horse ranch of his own. The house had been moved from another town and placed onto a block foundation. Uneven concrete blocks, haphazardly arranged, served as makeshift steps leading up to the front door. The door was old, with a large square glass pane in the upper half and weathered wood below. Layers of peeling white paint flaked away inside and out, revealing the scars of time.


But what stood out most was the screen door. It had a single spring that pulled it shut with a sharp clap. This sound still echoes in my memory. Above it, a simple porch overhang provided some protection from the rain. It offered slightly less protection from the sun. The overhang always seemed too small for its purpose.


I was the youngest of six children—or seven, depending on how you counted. My mother’s youngest brother, Uncle Ricky, practically lived with us. He had been raised alongside my older brothers, and I always considered him one of us. These memories of our close-knit family bring a sense of nostalgia and warmth.


My sisters and I stayed close to the house initially. Our parents were wary of hidden dangers lurking in the fields and pastures. Rusted cans, barbed wire, and remnants of years gone by littered the property. My brothers were tasked with clearing the land, ensuring no horse would stumble upon a forgotten hazard. But even without the safety excuse, the grown-ups didn’t need us underfoot as they worked to build barns and fences.


The house felt enormous to my sisters and me. It had only four rooms downstairs. There was one large room upstairs. The ground floor had interconnected doorways. These doorways allowed us to run in endless circles around the stairwell. The kitchen, with its worn linoleum floor and a large propane stove, was the heart of the home. The living room had threadbare furniture. Its windows had seen better days. It was where we gathered in the evenings. We were expected to behave when our parents were home, but the house became our playground when they weren’t.


One evening, my oldest sister shared a story she had heard at school. A man, unknown to us, had been found dead in the upstairs room. Hung himself, they said. His wife had passed away downstairs, and he had followed soon after. My younger sister and I absorbed the tale. We were unsure whether it was truth or fiction. Nonetheless, it rooted itself in our minds.


My parents’ conversations surfaced bits and pieces of the house’s history. They assured us no one had died there—at least, not to their knowledge. But then came the phrase that stuck with us:

“But if they did, there’s nothing to worry about.”

It was as if they had confirmed it without confirming it. They planted just enough doubt to keep our imaginations running wild.


And then, one night, something happened that we would never forget.


It had been an unbearably hot day, the humidity clinging to us like a second skin. We had no air conditioning. We relied on a single box fan upstairs for the boys at night. During the day, we moved it downstairs. As evening fell, a storm rolled in. The sky darkened, thunder rumbled, and the first lightning strike knocked out our power.


We huddled by the screen door, watching the storm unfold. Rain poured down in sheets, lightning flashing every few seconds. We saw him in one brilliant burst of light—a rider on a white horse just beyond our fence.


My oldest sister called for our mother.

“There’s a man out on the road! Should we call him in?”


The lightning illuminated him again. The horse and rider are stark white, motionless against the downpour. They turned into our driveway and stopped at the yard gate. The rider tilted his head, water spilling off the brim of his hat, but he did not move.


We yelled for our parents, urging them to look. The rain intensified, drumming against the roof. And then, in the next flash of lightning—he was gone. No retreating figure, no horse galloping away. Just empty, rain-slicked ground where he had stood.


That wasn’t the last strange occurrence. The memory of the white horse and its rider haunted us, lingering in the corners of our minds. We couldn’t shake the feeling that we were not alone in the house. We felt that unseen presences were walking the same halls.


The dirt roads in Oklahoma turn sandy in the summer. They capture every footprint—deer, bobcat, rabbit, and occasional lost traveler. One morning, waiting for the school bus, we saw her.
A tiny older woman walked at a steady pace past our house. We called out a greeting, but she didn’t acknowledge us. The school bus approached from behind, and I considered asking the driver to stop and offer her a ride.


But when we reached the road, she was gone.


What we didn’t see was more unsettling than her disappearance—tracks. There were no prints in the soft sand, no sign that anyone had walked there.


I looked at my sisters. One of them whispered,

“Don’t say anything. They’ll think we’re crazy.”


Later, an old-timer visited us often. He told us about a train depot standing across the road long before we arrived. He suspected that some soldiers returning from World War I, whose bodies were unclaimed, never left that station. He spoke of ghostly figures wandering the fields at night. Strange sounds echoed from the direction of the old depot. His stories added another layer of mystery to our already haunted farmhouse.


Over the years, my father and I rode our horses through the backcountry. We found old graves. Some were Indian graves, others belonged to settlers, and some were marked only by time-worn stones. One day, I asked my father if it was sad that they had been forgotten.


He looked at me thoughtfully.

“They’re remembered the way they’re meant to be. You don’t need a grave to be remembered. It’s what you do while you’re alive that matters.”


I understood what he meant, but some of me still felt sorrow for those lost souls. Maybe they weren’t as alone as I thought. They still walked in the rain, strolled along dirt roads, or found another way to be remembered. The mystery of their existence lingers, leaving us with more questions than answers.

The Legend of Arizona’s Red Ghost Faris And His Caravan Of Former Calvary

Presented by benandsteve.com By: Benjamin Groff II© Groff Media 2024© Truth Endures IMDbPro

Sailors and an Arab camel herder load
a Bactrian camel aboard the USS Supply
during one of the two expeditions to
procure camels – National Archives

In the sun-scorched deserts of Arizona, the vast emptiness was once filled with the pounding hooves of horses and the steady march of soldiers from the United States Cavalry. But for a brief moment in history, an unlikely companion joined their ranks—the camel. Brought from distant lands, these towering creatures with their humped backs and long legs had intended to be the army’s answer to the challenges of traversing the rugged terrain of the Wild West.

A/I Created Photo

In the mid-1800s, under the guidance of Secretary of War Jefferson Davis, the U.S. government embarked on a truly unique experiment-the ‘Camel Corps’. Camels, renowned for their endurance in desert conditions, were imported to America and tasked with the challenging job of carrying supplies across the barren landscapes where wagons and horses often struggled. The soldiers stationed at the forts in Arizona and New Mexico were initially skeptical. They were baffled by the strange creatures that spit and moaned, their massive feet gliding over the desert sands as if weightless.

Among the camels, one stood out—a massive bull camel named Faris. He had traveled across the seas from the deserts of Egypt, his broad hump towering over his fellow camels. With piercing eyes and a personality as stubborn as the most seasoned cavalrymen, Faris became the pack’s leader, guiding the other camels through endless miles of scorching desert, carrying their loads without complaint.

Library of Congress

But the experiment was short-lived. As the Civil War loomed, funding for the Camel Corps dried up, and the forts in the Arizona desert began to close one by one. With the forts gone and no practical use for the camels, the military made a fateful decision: they turned them loose, setting them free in the vast desert wilderness. The soldiers and settlers who remained watched with mixed emotions as the camels slowly strode off into the horizon, their long necks and humps silhouetted against the setting sun.

Library of Congress

Faris led the herd, now wild, into the vast stretches of land where no human tread. Once tethered and burdened with human supplies, the camels embraced their freedom, roaming the desert, their calls echoing in the canyons and across the mesas.

For years, sightings of the camels became the stuff of legend. Travelers and settlers spoke of giant creatures wandering the wilderness, spooking horses, and disappearing into the dunes as quickly as they were seen. Stories of ‘The Red Ghost’ surfaced, a phantom camel said to be terrorizing ranchers, with strange tracks left in the dust after raids on isolated farms. The mystery deepened with some claiming to see a human skeleton strapped to the back of one rogue camel, but no one knew for sure whether this was fact or fiction.

Library of Congress

Faris, now older but still commanding, led his herd deeper into the desert as the years passed. The camels, with no soldiers to guide them, learned to live off the sparse vegetation, adapting as always. They became masters of the land, surviving where few others could, a testament to their remarkable adaptability.

Generations of Arizonans grew up hearing tales of the camels. Old ranchers would sit by the fire, recounting when they saw a lone camel watching them from the top of a ridge, its eyes gleaming in the moonlight before they vanished into the desert night. Cowboys whispered of Faris, the great camel leader, still roaming the wild, the last of a forgotten army, king of the untamed desert.

So, the camels of the Wild West became more than just a footnote in history—they became legends, ghosts of a time when even the most foreign creatures found a place in the rugged and unforgiving land of the Arizona desert.

A released camel or a descendent of one is believed to have inspired the Arizonan legend of the Red Ghost.

One of the few camel drivers whose name survives was Hi Jolly. He lived out his life in the United States. After his death in 1902, he was buried in Quartzsite, Arizona. His grave is marked by a pyramid-shaped monument topped with a metal profile of a camel.