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Sir Francis back in Port?

Submitted October 23rd, 2000 by Editor

Over last week there have been several confirmed reports of a ghostly galleon sailing up the River Thames towards the London waterfront. First spotted near Tilbury, this spectral ship has appeared only at night, in the midst of a moving bank of fog.

Additional sightings in Purfleet, Erith, Creekmouth and Woolwich have given some weight to the ghostly apparation.

“It was downright odd. Usually there’s a little traffic on the river, even late at night. But this fog rolled in out of the blue, and from the river you could hear the creak of old wood and the slap of wet canvas. I peered into the mist, and could make out the shape of one of those old ships, huge and black in the middle of the fog. When it passed, the fog lifted.”

The ship has been spotted along the outskirts of London proper, moving within it’s private fog bank, occasionally passing through other ships.

“Damndest thing that’s ever happened to me. We’re pushing a barge up river, when this fog rolls in. Nothing too unusual in that. The weather’s always a little unpredictable. Then out the stern, someone spots a huge old ship headed straight for us. I figured we were in trouble. The tug’s steel, but that was a big ship headed for us at full speed. Then, it disappeared, the fog going with it.”

Other reports of similar encounters have been popping up all week. Several witnesses have described what appears to be a large gilded deer on the rear of the vessel. Compass researches have linked the device to that of the Golden Hinde, Sir Francis Drake’s flagship.

Whether or not this ghostly ship is indeed the Hinde is yet to be determined, however, Compass reporters have also noted that a table in the Middle Temple, which is reportedly made from the wood of the Golden Hinde, has been steaming during the last week, perhaps giving off some of the same fog that surrounds it’s phantasm.

Headlines, Stories

End of an Era

Submitted October 21st, 2000 by Editor

The London Compass has some rather upsetting news for our viewers. A long standing tradition has ended this year.

For over thirty years, the Compass and it’s staff have launched careers, created celebrities and lifted a number of previously unknowns to new heights.

This week, that tradition ended. The Page 5 girl is no more.

The London Compass has been brought under suit in civil court by various groups determined to enforce their ideals of morality on the paper and the public. Representing these groups is the legal firm of Chalmers, Goldstein and Dunnen known for their high profile clients and old money connections.

The Compass’s team has discovered that among the family clients of C, G & D are the notable Meins family. Which is where we at the paper begin to suspect some foul play.

This week was supposed to feature one Lady Victoria Meins-Cooper. A beautiful bombshell of a lady, laid out across Page 5 in conjunction with the news of her acting career launching.

Lady Victoria is slated to appear as the next Doctor’s companion in the latest incarnation of the BBC’s Doctor Who. She had approached us for a pictorial, and we, knowing our loyal audience, opened our studios to the blond aristocrat.

What we didn’t expect, however, was a Cease and Desist order from the Meins family Lawyers a day before we were scheduled to go to press. We fought as best we could, but unfortunately, we did not have deep enough pockets to keep their solicitors from bankrupting the paper.

As a result we have shut down the printing operations of the Compass and moved to a wholly online site. Unfortunately, the Page 5 archives, over 1500 pictorials over 30 years, have been confiscated by the courts as evidence, and an injunction was filed preventing us from soliciting new pictorials. (For now)

We plan to continue on. While we’re prohibited from putting up new pictorials, the rest of the paper will continue, and now that we’re online, we hope to reach a global audience while still remaining true to the small paper that was just crushed by small minded pettiness and legal maneuvering.

Headlines, Stories

Witches Brew?

Submitted October 11th, 2000 by Editor

Local pub owner and small brewer Gregory Hannason has returned from a long strange trip.  Following the trail of some thieves that had been breaking into his cellar and stealing casks, the brewer stumbled into what can only be described as Fairyland.

“I followed drag marks from one of my casks to the back of the pub’s cellar, right into a wall.  The pub’s been here for a long time, longer than my family has, and I inherited the place from my grandfather, so I thought it might have been an old tunnel, back when they put in the Underground.”

Gregory set up watch behind some old shelves for a week, spending his nights awake in the cellar, waiting for the thieves.

“I still can’t believe my eyes.  A section of the wall opened up, and this bright light shown through.  Then one of the casks lifted up and floated through the opening.  Plain as day.”

Mr Hannason scoured the wall the next day, looking for the catch that would open his newly discovered secret door.

“My Gran told me to spread salt across the floor right in front of the wall instead.  I did it to humor her, but the thefts stopped right after.  Maybe the salt jammed up the door’s mechanism or something.”

The Compass had been invited to investigate the pub’s basement (Along with a sampling of some of the Brewmaster’s private stock.) and found no evidence of a secret passage into the Underground.  However, our reporters did sit up with Mr Hannason one night as he brushed the salt away from the wall.

Our correspondents may have had too much to drink that night, but both of them describe a section of the basement wall “opening” and a light as bright as full sunshine coming through the door.  A pair of casks, filled with some of the pub’s finest dark were pulled through the door, which sealed up again.  Mr Hannason immediately put salt back down across the wall.

Headlines, Stories

Lights over London

Submitted October 4th, 2000 by Editor

Are they some sort of new art installation?  A naturally occurring phenomenon? Or is it something more interesting?

The last few nights have shown a new light show appearing over parts of London.  Mysterious, glowing orbs have been spotted, and in some cases photographed zipping, dodging and otherwise moving playfully among the city’s buildings.

Most often spotted late, these lights have appeared each night for the past two weeks, no more than five in a single area.  Some have reported the sounds of flutes or pipes during the disturbances.

“It was really quite pretty, you know?  We were sitting out in the garden when we heard this soft music.  But it really wasn’t music, ya know?  More like someone was just playing around with a flute.  Anyway, my Roger points up, and there’s four or five little lights, just bobbing around above our neighbor’s garden. They were up there for five or six minutes before they just swooped away, taking the music with them.” – Chelsea Bettenridge (43), London

But not everyone is delighted with this new phenomena, as several traffic accidents have been reported, citing the cause as either trying to avoid a “glowing orb” or due to the distraction the lights have been causing at night.

Headlines, Stories

Devonshire Arms Punch Up

Submitted September 27th, 2000 by Editor

Long known for its Gothic atmosphere and its gothier clientèle, the Devonshire Arms Public House is finding itself in the midst of a supernatural sighting that puzzles even its owners, people accustomed to the strangeness of its patrons.

Police Sketch of the Suspect

Police Sketch of the Suspect

Last night, just prior to the pub closing, the Arms called the local constabulary, reporting a brawl breaking out between most of its clientèle and a single patron.  When they arrived, the police were tasked with sorting out the survivors from the wreckage of the bar.  Some thirty patrons had been severely beaten and thrown about the Arm’s taproom along with most of the furniture.

One of the survivors, who refused to be identified, claimed that the bar had been destroyed by some sort of patchwork Frankenstein monster.  The monster, who had been quietly drinking in the bar, had apparently gone berserk and began attacking another patron after last call.  A number of bar patrons, their courage sufficiently bolstered by drink, ran to the rescue of their compatriot, prompting the creature to pick up the large pieces of furniture.  Soon, a bar wide brawl broke out.

Another witness, who also refuses to be named, said that the creature was provoked, when a drunken lout began pawing at the monster’s companion.  When warned away, the patron redoubled his efforts, prompting a response from the patchwork monster.

Neither the creature, nor its companion has been seen since the event at the public house, and management has promised to open the Devonshire Arms tonight, as usual.

Police have released a sketch of the creature, and are asking the public for any information on its whereabouts.

Headlines, Stories