The Screaming Skull
F. Marion Crawford's "The Screaming Skull" is a masterwork of Victorian supernatural fiction, first published in 1911, that combines the conventions of the ghost story with psychological terror and moral ambiguity. The narrator, an old retired sea captain, recounts to a friend the disturbing history of his inherited house and the mysterious skull that produces an unearthly scream, while gradually revealing his suspicion that the skull belonged to his cousin's murdered wife—killed by a method the narrator himself inadvertently described at dinner. The story explores themes of guilt, complicity, and the thin line between natural explanation and supernatural horror.