(1915, Louisiana) A Priest Counted 47 Children With No Shadows. His Letter Was Never Answered.
Over 11 years, more than 4,000 people crossed the Black River on a ferryman’s raft. Not one of them could remember the crossing. They remembered stepping onto the raft. They remembered paying the fare—15 cents. It was always 15 cents, never negotiated, never waived. They remembered the ferryman’s face, or parts of it. And then, the next thing they remembered was standing on the opposite bank, dry, upright, with the money gone from their pocket and the river behind them. They possessed no memory, none at all, of the water, the crossing, or the time between one bank and the other. Four thousand crossings meant 4,000 identical gaps in 4,000 separate memories.
One man decided to find out why. His name was Edmund Price, a journalist. He crossed the river twice in one day and wrote down everything he experienced. His account was published in a Springfield newspaper. By Monday, every copy of that edition had been purchased and destroyed. Six days later, Edmund Price disappeared. His notes survived, and this is what they say.
The Black River in Stone County, Missouri, in the years following the Civil War, was not a river that invited casual crossing. It was wide enough in the stretch between the town of Galena to the north and the settlement of Elijah to the south—perhaps 120 feet at its narrowest point—and deep enough that a man on horseback could not ford it without risk. The current was deceptive; the surface moved slowly, but beneath it were channels and undertows that had drowned experienced swimmers and overturned boats with a regularity that the county records, when they bothered to record such things, described simply as “the river.”
There was no bridge. The nearest one was 26 miles upstream at a crossing that added a full day to any journey between the eastern and western halves of the county. For the people who lived and worked on either side of the Black River in the section between Galena and Elijah, the only practical crossing was the ferry. The ferry had been operating since approximately 1862, though the exact date of its establishment remained uncertain because the man who operated it did not file any of the documents that a county government would normally require of a commercial operator. There was no license, no bond, no safety inspection, and no registration of the vessel. He simply appeared with a raft and a pole at the narrowest point of the river sometime during the war years and began crossing people for 15 cents a passage.
His name, or the name he gave, was Harlon. No surname was ever recorded. No one who used the ferry in 11 years of operation ever reported learning Harlon’s last name, his place of origin, his age, or any biographical detail beyond the name itself. He was, as one county document from 1871 described him, “the ferryman of the Black River crossing,” and that description appears to have been sufficient for everyone who dealt with him.
He was described in the various accounts that survive as a man of indeterminate age, somewhere between 40 and 60, depending on who was asked and when. He was tall and thin. He had dark hair that he wore long and a beard that he kept trimmed close. He spoke rarely, and when he did, he used as few words as the transaction required. He did not engage in conversation. He did not ask where his passengers were going or where they had come from. He collected the fare, he pulled the raft across the river, and he waited on the opposite bank for the next passenger. That is the ordinary description of Harlon, the description that would appear in any routine account of a rural ferry operation in the postwar Ozarks.
The extraordinary description begins with what happened during the crossing itself. The first documented account of the memory gap comes from a letter written in 1866, four years after the ferry began operating, by a woman named Lucinda Crane, age 38, who lived on the eastern side of the river and who crossed regularly to visit her sister on the western side. The letter is addressed to her sister and is preserved in a collection of family papers at the Stone County Historical Society.
She wrote: “I have crossed Harlon’s Ferry perhaps 20 times now, and I want to tell you something that I have not mentioned before because I was not sure it was worth mentioning. Every time I cross, I lose the crossing. I do not mean that I fall asleep. I do not mean that I am distracted. I mean that I step onto the raft and I pay Harlon his 15 cents, and then the next thing I know I am standing on the other bank and the crossing is behind me. I have no memory of the water or the time on the raft or anything that happened between one side and the other. It is as if someone has cut a piece out of the afternoon and sewn the remaining pieces together so neatly that you would not notice the seam unless you looked for it. I have asked Thomas about this and he says the same thing happens to him. I have asked Mrs. Coulter and she says the same. I have not asked Harlon because Harlon does not answer questions that are not about the fare. I am writing this down because I want you to know about it before your next visit. It is not unpleasant. It is not frightening. It is simply strange. And I wanted you to be prepared for the strangeness rather than surprised by it.”
This letter, written in 1866, is the earliest known description of what would eventually be reported by hundreds of people over the following seven years. The accounts are remarkably consistent across all of them. The memory begins at the moment of stepping onto the raft and ends at the moment of stepping off on the opposite bank. The space between those two moments is absent—not confused, not blurred, not dreamlike—it is simply gone, as though the crossing had not occurred at all and the passenger had been relocated from one bank to the other by a process that left no trace in the conscious mind.
Several passengers attempted over the years to defeat the gap by deliberate effort. A merchant named Orin Hail, who crossed the river weekly as part of his trade route, described in a letter to his brother in 1869 his attempt to remain alert during a crossing by counting aloud. He stepped onto the raft. He began counting. He reached the number four. The next thing he knew, he was on the opposite bank. He had no memory of reaching five.
A schoolteacher named Katherine Flood described in a diary entry from 1870 her attempt to write in a notebook during the crossing to physically document what happened on the raft by recording her observations in real time. She opened the notebook. She uncapped her pen. She wrote the date at the top of the page. The next thing she knew, she was on the opposite bank. The notebook was closed. The pen was capped. The page with the date on it was blank beneath the date. She had not written a word.
These accounts—Lucinda Crane’s letter, Orin Hail’s letter, and Katherine Flood’s diary—are among approximately two dozen first-person descriptions of the crossing that survive in various archives and private collections across Stone County and the surrounding area. They were written independently by people who did not know each other and who had no reason to coordinate their accounts. They all describe the same phenomenon. They all express the same mild bafflement. It was not terror, not outrage, but the particular discomfort of a person who has encountered something that does not fit into any available explanation and has decided, rather than force an explanation, to simply describe what happened and move on.
The crossing took approximately seven minutes. This was the estimate of observers who watched the raft from either bank—people who did not cross, but who saw the raft moving across the water at Harlon’s steady pace, carrying its passengers from one side to the other. During those seven minutes, the passengers standing or sitting on the raft appeared normal. They did not collapse. They did not close their eyes. They did not behave in any way that suggested anything unusual was happening. They simply stood on the raft, and Harlon pulled, and seven minutes later, they stepped off on the other side with no memory of the seven minutes that had just passed.
One observer, a boy named Daniel Marsh, age 14, who lived near the western landing and who watched the ferry from the bank on many occasions, was interviewed by Edmund Price in 1873 as part of the journalist’s investigation. Daniel told Price that he had noticed something about the passengers during the crossing that he had never told anyone because he was not sure it was real. He said that the passengers on the raft, about halfway across the river, appeared to stop. Not that the raft stopped moving—it continued to move, and Harlon continued to pull—but the passengers stopped in a different way. Their bodies went still in a manner that did not look like the stillness of a person standing on a raft.
“It looked,” Daniel said, “like the stillness of a person who has been paused. Like a clock that has stopped ticking, but whose hands are still in place.” They remained in this condition for what Daniel estimated was about 30 seconds. Then, they resumed. They shifted their weight. They moved their heads. They became normal again, and the raft completed its crossing. He said he had seen this happen on every crossing he had watched. He said Harlon never paused. Harlon was never still. Harlon continued to pull the raft throughout, as though whatever was happening to the passengers was not happening to him. Daniel Marsh told Edmund Price this in the spring of 1873. Price wrote it down. It appears in the notes that survived.
Edmund Price was 31 years old in 1873 and had been working as a journalist for the Springfield Weekly Patriot for six years. He was, by the standards of regional journalism in the postwar Ozarks, a serious and capable reporter—the kind who verified what he could verify, attributed what he could attribute, and maintained a clear distinction between what he had observed personally and what he had been told by others. He had covered county courts, elections, agricultural disputes, and the occasional crime. He had not, before 1873, covered anything that fell outside the boundaries of what a reasonable man would consider normal.
He came to the Black River crossing in March of 1873 because the accounts of the memory gap had begun to circulate beyond Stone County and had reached the attention of his editor in Springfield, a man named Charles Pelum, age 55, who recognized a story that would sell papers and assigned Price to investigate. Price arrived at the crossing on March 14, 1873. He spent two days on the western bank interviewing passengers, observing the ferry, and taking notes. He spoke with Lucinda Crane, Orin Hail, Catherine Flood, Daniel Marsh, and approximately a dozen other people who had used the ferry. All described, in language that varied in detail but not in substance, the same experience of the memory gap.
He also attempted to speak with Harlon. He walked down to the landing on the morning of March 15 and found the ferryman standing beside his raft, waiting for passengers. Price introduced himself. He explained that he was a journalist working on a story about the ferry crossing. He asked Harlon whether he would be willing to answer some questions. Harlon looked at him. Price described the look in his notes as the “most complete assessment he had ever been subject to,” as though every part of him, from his intentions to his shoe size, was being evaluated simultaneously and without hurry.
Harlon said, “You want to cross?” Price said he did eventually, but that first, he had some questions. Harlon said, “15 cents.” Price asked how long the ferry had been operating. Harlon said, “15 cents.” Price asked where Harlon had come from before he established the ferry. Harlon said nothing. He looked at the river. He looked back at Price. He waited. Price understood after several more attempts that Harlon would not answer any question that was not a request for passage. The ferryman’s vocabulary, as far as Price could determine, consisted of the fare, the occasional directional instruction to passengers, and silence. Everything else was outside the scope of what Harlon was willing, or perhaps able, to provide.
Price decided to cross. He crossed on the morning of March 16, 1873, going east. He had prepared carefully. He had a notebook in his left hand, open to a blank page. He had a pencil in his right hand, sharpened and ready. He had told himself repeatedly that he would write continuously from the moment he stepped onto the raft until the moment he stepped off on the other side. He had trained his hand the previous evening to write without looking at the page, a skill he had developed in courtrooms where looking down at a notebook was sometimes inadvisable.
He stepped onto the raft. He noted the time on his watch: 9:42 in the morning. He began writing. He was standing on the eastern bank. His watch read 9:49. Seven minutes had passed. He was holding his notebook. He was holding his pencil. The page was blank. He had no memory of the crossing. None. He remembered stepping onto the raft. He remembered the feel of the wood under his feet. He remembered the 15 cents leaving his hand. And then he was here, on the other bank, with a blank page and a gap where seven minutes should have been.
He stood on the eastern bank for a long time. Then, he walked back to the landing and paid another 15 cents and crossed again, going west. The same thing happened. He stepped on. He prepared to write. He was on the western bank. The page was blank. His watch showed that seven minutes had passed. Two crossings, 14 minutes of total time on the raft, zero memory of any of it.
Price sat on the western bank and examined his notebook. Both pages—the one he had opened for the eastbound crossing and the one he had turned to for the westbound—were blank. But on the second page, he found something. A single mark—not a letter, not a word—a short, straight line, approximately half an inch long, made by his pencil at the top of the page, as though he had begun to write and had gotten no further than the first downstroke of whatever letter he had intended to form. One mark, half an inch. That was all that had survived of his attempt to document 14 minutes of continuous experience.
He examined himself carefully. His clothes were dry, which was consistent with a raft crossing, but worth noting. His watch was running normally. His money was correct; he had left the boarding house that morning with $2.35, and he now had $2.05, which was exactly $2.35 minus two 15-cent fares. The arithmetic of the crossing was perfect. The fare had been collected. The service had been rendered. The only thing missing was the experience itself.
He checked his body for any signs of physical change—marks, bruises, soreness, anything that would indicate that something had happened to him during those seven minutes that his body registered, even if his mind did not. He found nothing. He felt exactly the same as he had felt before the first crossing. Not tired, not confused, not disoriented; simply missing seven minutes twice with the clean precision of a surgeon’s cut.
He walked back to the landing for a third time. He stood at the edge of the water and looked at Harlon, who was standing on the raft on the far side of the river, waiting. Harlon looked back at him across the water. Price had the strong impression—he wrote this in his notes with the caveat that it was an impression and not an observation—that Harlon knew exactly what he had tried to do with the notebook, and that the knowing did not trouble the ferryman at all. He felt that the ferryman had seen this before, that other people over 11 years had tried similar things: tried to write, to draw, to mark their own skin, to count, to sing, to do anything that would anchor their consciousness to the crossing and prevent the gap from taking hold. He felt that every attempt had failed in the same way, and that the ferryman regarded these attempts with something that was not contempt and not amusement, but something more like the patience of a person watching a child try to reach a shelf that is simply too high.
Price did not cross a third time. He returned to the boarding house and began writing his article. He wrote up his findings that evening at the boarding house in Galena. His article, which he titled “The Ferryman of Black River: An Account of the Crossing That Cannot Be Remembered,” was approximately 3,000 words long. It included his own experience, the accounts of the witnesses he had interviewed, Daniel Marsh’s observation about the passengers pausing on the raft, and his failed attempt to speak with Harlon. He posted the article to his editor in Springfield on March 17.
The article was published in the Springfield Weekly Patriot on March 22, 1873. On March 24, the following Monday, every copy of that edition of The Patriot was gone. Charles Pelum, the editor, arrived at his office on Monday morning to find that the newsstand copies had been purchased in bulk. He sent a boy to check the other distribution points in Springfield—the general stores, the hotels, the rail station. All copies had been purchased. He contacted the newsboys who had sold copies on the street on Saturday. Each of them reported that a man had approached them on Saturday afternoon—a tall, thin man with dark hair and a close-trimmed beard—and had purchased their remaining copies at twice the cover price.
Pelum did not have many extra copies; The Patriot was a weekly paper with a modest circulation. The entire print run for that edition was approximately 600 copies. By Monday morning, Pelum could not locate a single one. He still had the typeset plates; he could have reprinted the edition. He considered it. He told his wife in a letter that survives in the family’s papers at the Springfield-Greene County Library that he had considered reprinting and had decided against it, not because of the expense, but because of a visit he received on Monday afternoon from a man he did not recognize.
The man was tall. He was thin. He had dark hair worn long and a beard trimmed close. He did not give his name. He came into Pelum’s office, stood in front of his desk, and said in a voice that Pelum described as “quiet and without any quality that I would call threatening, except that I was, in fact, profoundly threatened by it”: “I have purchased your newspaper. I would like to purchase the plates as well.”
Pelum asked who he was. The man said, “I am the ferryman.”
Pelum asked why he wanted the plates. The ferryman said, “Because the account is accurate, and accurate accounts of certain things should not circulate.”
Pelum asked what would happen if he refused to sell the plates. The ferryman said nothing. He looked at Pelum the way Price had described being looked at—the complete assessment, the evaluation of everything at once, without hurry. Pelum sold the plates. He did not record the price. He told his wife only that the ferryman paid in cash, that the amount was generous, and that the transaction was completed without further conversation. The ferryman took the plates and left.
Edmund Price disappeared on March 28, 1873, six days after the article was published. He had been staying at a boarding house in Galena on the western side of the river, completing additional interviews for a follow-up article that he had proposed to Pelum by letter. His belongings were found in his room. His horse was in the stable. His coat was on the hook behind the door. His notebook, the one with the blank pages and the single half-inch mark, was on the bedside table. He was never found.
The Stone County Sheriff’s Office opened an investigation. The investigation focused naturally on the ferryman. A deputy named Howard Slade, age 29, rode to the Black River crossing on March 30 to question Harlon. The ferry was not there. The raft was gone. The landing posts on both banks were still in place, but the raft, the pole, and the ferryman were gone. The small shelter that Harlon had maintained on the western bank—a leanto of rough timber where he had presumably slept during the 11 years he had operated the crossing—was empty. There were no personal effects inside it. There was no indication that anyone had occupied it recently, though the deputy noted that this could have been the result of Harlon simply having very few possessions.
The ferryman had vanished. The journalist had vanished. The newspaper edition had been purchased and presumably destroyed. The typeset plates had been purchased and removed. Within a week of the article’s publication, every physical trace of it and of the man who had written it had been systematically eliminated.
Deputy Slade searched both banks of the river. He found nothing. He interviewed the people who lived near the crossing. None of them had seen Harlon leave. None of them had seen anyone visit the crossing on the night of Price’s disappearance. Several of them said they had not actually seen Harlon in several days and had assumed, without thinking much about it, that the ferry was simply not running. The absence of concern was itself notable, and Slade remarked on it in his report. A ferry that had operated daily for 11 years had ceased operation, and not one person on either bank had found this remarkable enough to investigate or even to discuss with a neighbor. It was as though the ferry’s absence had produced the same kind of gap in attention that the crossing itself produced in memory—a blank space where awareness should have been, a thing that should have been noticed and was not, a silence where there should have been a question.
Slade also attempted to determine whether anyone had seen Edmund Price after the evening of March 27, the last date on which Price’s landlady at the boarding house confirmed seeing him. No one had. Price had not been seen at any of the businesses in Galena. He had not been seen on the road. He had not been seen at the river. He had, like the ferryman, simply stopped being present. Not dramatically, not with any evidence of violence or struggle, but with the quiet completeness of a person who has been removed from a scene by someone who knows how to remove things without leaving marks.
Slade interviewed the landlady, a woman named Agnes Frell, age 61, who had rented Price his room. She told Slade that Price had been a courteous guest who kept regular hours and who spent his evenings writing at the small desk in his room. She said that on the evening of March 27, she had heard him moving in his room at approximately 9:00—the sound of a chair being pushed back, footsteps, the ordinary sounds of a man preparing for bed. In the morning, the room was empty. The bed had not been slept in. The chair was pushed back from the desk. The notebook was on the bedside table. The window was closed and latched from the inside.
Agnes Frell told Slade one additional detail that he recorded but did not follow up on, perhaps because he did not know what to do with it. She said that at approximately 11:00 on the night of March 27—two hours after she had last heard Price moving in his room—she had woken briefly and heard from the direction of the river the sound of water. It was not the normal sound of the river, which she had lived beside for 20 years and which she no longer consciously heard. It was a different sound. The sound of a pole in water. The rhythmic push and drag of someone pulling a raft across a river in the dark. She had gone back to sleep. In the morning, Price was gone.
One woman, Lucinda Crane—the same woman who had written the first documented account of the memory gap seven years earlier—told Slade something that he noted in his report, and that is, in its quiet way, the most unsettling detail in the entire case.
She said, “I have been trying, since your deputy came to ask about the ferryman, to remember what he looks like. I have crossed his ferry perhaps 50 times in seven years. I have stood three feet from him on a raft for seven minutes. Fifty times. And I cannot remember his face. I can describe him—tall, thin, dark hair, beard—because those are words I have used before to describe him to other people. But when I close my eyes and try to see his face, there is nothing there. The space where his face should be is the same space where the crossing should be. It is empty.”
Slade noted this in his report without comment. The investigation was closed in May of 1873. Neither Harlon nor Edmund Price was ever located.
The notes survived because Price had mailed a copy to his brother in St. Louis before he disappeared. He had done this as a precaution—the kind of thing a careful journalist does when he senses that the story he is working on has begun to work on him. The brother, a man named Walter Price, age 35, received the envelope on April 1, 1873, four days after Edmund vanished. He opened it and found inside a complete copy of the article as published, Edmund’s personal notes from the investigation, and a brief letter.
The letter reads: “Walter, I am sending you these because I want them to exist somewhere outside of Stone County. I have a feeling—I cannot explain it more precisely than that—that the ferryman knows I have written about him and that he does not want what I have written to survive. I may be wrong about this. I hope I am wrong. But if I am right, then the fact that you have these notes in St. Louis may be the difference between this story existing and this story disappearing the way everything else seems to disappear around that crossing. I crossed the river twice today. I remember nothing of either crossing. The pages I tried to write on are blank. I am sitting in my room in Galena writing this letter and I am aware, as I write it, that I am the only person who has ever attempted to document the crossing while it was happening and that the documentation failed. Whatever happens on that raft during those seven minutes is not something that the human mind is permitted to record. Whether the ferryman is responsible for this, or whether the river is responsible, or whether the crossing itself is a thing that exists outside the boundaries of what memory can hold, I do not know. I know only that 4,000 people have paid 15 cents to cross a river and that every single one of them has arrived on the other side with the same seven-minute hole in their experience. Four thousand identical holes. That is not a natural phenomenon. That is a policy. Someone or something has decided that the crossing is not to be remembered. I intend to find out why.”
The letter ends there. Walter Price kept the notes and the letter for the rest of his life. He did not publish them. He did not share them with journalists or historians. He kept them in a locked box in his home in St. Louis. And when he died in 1911, the box passed to his son. And when his son died in 1943, the box passed to his son’s widow, who donated it, along with a collection of other family papers, to the Missouri Historical Society in 1958.
The notes sat in the Missouri Historical Society’s archives for 31 years before anyone connected them to the Black River crossing. In 1989, a researcher named Patricia Develin, working on a study of river commerce in the postwar Ozarks, came across the notes while searching for documents related to ferry operations in Stone County. She recognized what she had found. She published a brief article in the Missouri Historical Review in 1991 that brought Price’s account to academic attention for the first time. The article generated limited interest. A few local historians in Stone County noted it. A reporter for the Springfield News wrote a short piece about the crossing in 1993 that ran on page 12 of the Sunday edition. The story did not gain traction. It was too strange. It did not fit into any framework that journalism or academic history was equipped to process.
Develin herself continued to research the case intermittently over the following decade. She found in the Stone County Courthouse records 17 missing person reports filed between 1862 and 1873 that she believed could be connected to the ferry crossing. The reports were for travelers—people passing through Stone County on business or migration, people who had been seen on one side of the river and had never appeared on the other, people whose last known location was the road leading to Harlon’s crossing. Seventeen people over 11 years who had set out to cross the Black River and who, as far as the available records show, never arrived. Seventeen people, added to the 4,000 who crossed and lost their memories, added to Edmund Price, who crossed twice and disappeared six days later.
Devlin noted these 17 cases in her research files but did not publish a follow-up article. She retired from academic work in 2003. Her research files were donated to the Missouri Historical Society, where they are housed alongside Edmund Price’s notes in a section of the archive that is, by some coincidence of cataloging, directly adjacent to the collection of family papers from which the notes were originally recovered.
She wrote in the final entry of her research journal, dated August 2002: “I have spent 11 years thinking about the ferryman. I have thought about him the way Lucinda Crane thought about his face, reaching for something that should be there and finding nothing. The more I research, the less I understand. Not because the evidence is insufficient—the evidence is remarkably consistent—but because the evidence describes something for which I have no category: a man who erased memories, a crossing that could not be documented, a journalist who tried to write down what happened and was left with a blank page and a half-inch mark. I keep coming back to the mark. That single downstroke on the second page of Price’s notebook. The beginning of a letter he never finished. The first stroke of a word that the crossing would not let him write. What was the word? What was he trying to write in those first seconds on the raft before whatever happened during the crossing took hold and the pencil stopped moving? I do not think we will ever know, but I think the fact that he got as far as a single mark—that some part of him resisted the gap for long enough to press a pencil against a page and begin to form a letter—tells us something about what the gap is. It is not natural. It is not passive. It is not the way memory simply fails when there is nothing interesting to record. It is active. It is something that reaches in and takes. And the half-inch mark is the evidence of the moment when it reached in. Price’s hand was still moving, and the two forces—the force of a man trying to write and the force of whatever was erasing the writing—met each other on the surface of a page. The erasing force won. It always wins.”
The Black River still flows through Stone County. The stretch between Galena and Elijah is still there—still wide, still deep, still carrying the same deceptive current that drowned swimmers and overturned boats in the 19th century. There is a bridge now, built in 1924, 51 years after the ferryman disappeared, that carries traffic across the river.
People who cross the bridge today remember the crossing perfectly. They remember the sunlight on the water, the hum of their tires on the asphalt, the passing scenery. They carry no 15-cent debt, and they retain every moment of the journey. The gap is gone. The ferryman is gone. But sometimes, when the water is high and the air is heavy with the humidity of a Missouri summer, locals say that if you look down from the center of the bridge into the deep water below, you can almost see the suggestion of a raft.
Some claim it is a trick of the light, a pattern of the current against the bridge pilings. But others, those who have spent their lives listening to the stories of the river, aren’t so sure. They wonder if the bridge truly replaced the ferry, or if it simply made the crossing invisible to those who are not meant to see it.
The records of the missing are tucked away in dusty boxes, the letters of the witnesses are yellowed with age, and the notebook of Edmund Price sits in its climate-controlled archive, a permanent testament to a story that was never meant to be told. The mystery of the Black River does not lie in the disappearance of the people, nor in the disappearance of the man known as Harlon. The mystery lies in the silence—the immense, collective silence of 4,000 people who stood on a wooden raft in the middle of a dark river and lost a piece of their lives to a force they could not name, could not fight, and could not remember.
Historians have debated for decades whether the “ferryman” was a supernatural entity or a master of some long-forgotten science of the mind, a man who possessed a technique to induce profound amnesia through suggestion or some environmental trigger unique to that bend in the Black River. They analyze the geology of the riverbed, the limestone caves nearby, and the folklore of the region, trying to find a logical anchor for the impossible. They study the chemical composition of the water, searching for substances that could cause mass cognitive gaps, but they find only clear, cold river water.
Yet, in the deepest archives, there are whispers. There are those who suggest that the ferryman was not operating a business, but a gatekeeper of something much older, a sentinel stationed at a point where the veil between the known and the unknown was dangerously thin. The 15-cent fee was not a payment for travel; it was a toll for passage through a space that did not obey the laws of time.
Consider the “pausing” that Daniel Marsh witnessed. If time truly stood still for those on the raft, if for 30 seconds the world ceased to flow for them while the river continued its inevitable course, then the ferryman was not merely a pilot. He was a master of a pocket dimension, a small, fragile bubble of stillness in a chaotic, post-war world. And perhaps, when the newspaper published the truth—when the light of public scrutiny fell upon his work—he decided that his contract with this world had expired.
The fact that the plates were destroyed, the newspapers gathered, and the evidence purged with such surgical efficiency suggests an intelligence that was far beyond the reach of a simple backwoods recluse. It suggests a process. It suggests that once the secret was exposed, the “policy” was to terminate the operation. The disappearances were not acts of malice, perhaps, but of maintenance. When the experiment is compromised, the lab must be cleared.
One wonders what happened to those 17 people who never arrived. Were they the ones who resisted? The ones who, like Edmund Price, tried too hard to witness the mechanics of the void? Did they see something on that raft—or in the eyes of Harlon—that necessitated their permanent removal from the record?
Every time a car crosses the bridge today, they cross over the graveyard of a memory. The 4,000 who forgot are now long dead, their secrets buried with them. Their children and grandchildren walk the banks of the Black River, oblivious to the fact that their ancestors once stood on a raft and traded 15 cents for a blank page in their own history.
And then there is the mark. That half-inch line on the paper. It is the most haunting artifact of the entire mystery. It is the only physical evidence that the human soul, in its final moments of conscious thought, rebelled against the erasing force. It proves that the gap was not a natural function of the mind, but an external imposition. It is a monument to the brief, desperate, and heroic struggle of Edmund Price, a man who dared to look into the darkness and try to name it.
He lost, as all who look too closely eventually do. But he left a mark. And in that mark, we find the truth: that the story is not about the river, or the ferry, or the man named Harlon. It is about the fragility of our own reality. We trust that our lives are continuous, that our memories are ours to keep, that the past is a solid, unmoving landscape behind us. But if 4,000 people can walk off a raft and not remember the journey, then how much of our own lives are simply gaps that we have forgotten to account for? How much of our own “history” is merely a neatly sewn seam, hiding a truth we are not meant to comprehend?
The Black River flows on. It does not care about our questions. It does not care about the bridge or the archive or the researchers who spend their lives chasing shadows. It simply is. And in the silence of the woods near Galena, where the water ripples over the sunken remains of a raft that was never found, the ferryman continues his work, drifting in the timeless, memoryless void, waiting for the next passenger who is willing to pay the toll and step into the silence.
Some researchers, in the quietest hours of their investigations, have speculated that the “ferryman” never really left. That the geography of the river itself is a loop, a closed circuit of experience that repeats for those who are sensitive enough to sense it. They speak of a cold wind that blows across the bridge at night, a sound of wood scraping on gravel that makes travelers turn their heads, searching for a boat that isn’t there.
Is it possible that the ferry never truly ceased? That the 4,000 who “forgot” were just the beginning, and that the story of the Black River is an ongoing, infinite process of clearing, a mechanism designed to ensure that certain secrets remain outside the grasp of human history?
We may never know. The archives are sealed, the witnesses are gone, and the bridge stands as a modern monolith of forgetfulness. But every time we find ourselves trying to remember a moment that seems to have slipped through our fingers—a seven-minute hole in our day, a conversation we know we had but cannot recall, a place we visited and yet feel no connection to—we should remember the Black River. We should remember the 15 cents. And we should wonder, just for a moment, if we are still on the shore, or if we have already stepped onto the raft, and the ferryman is already pulling.
The story of the Black River is more than just an local legend; it is a mirror. When we read of Price’s struggle, we are reading the history of our own limitations. We are reading about the fear of the unknown that we all carry, the fear that at any moment, the narrative of our lives could be interrupted, edited, and rewritten by a force we cannot perceive.
We search for patterns, as Patricia Develin did. We look for clues in the margins, as Edmund Price did. We try to pin down the truth with logic and evidence. But the Black River teaches us that some truths are not meant to be pinned down. Some truths are meant to remain fluid, like water, moving in channels and undertows that we can never map.
Perhaps the most important lesson is not what the ferryman was, but why he chose that particular stretch of water. A place of deep, deceptive currents. A place where the land was divided. He chose a place of transition. And as long as humans are forced to move from one side to another, there will always be a need for someone to guide them—or to ensure they don’t see too much on the way.
The story is over, yet it never truly ends. It exists in the space between the pages of our own experiences. It lives in the blank spots of our own memories. It is the story of the human condition: the desperate, ongoing struggle to write our own names in a world that is constantly trying to erase them.
Edmund Price once said he intended to find out why. He never finished that sentence. But in a way, his failure is the most profound answer of all. The reason is the gap. The reason is the silence. The reason is the ferryman. And as long as the river flows, the story of the crossing will continue to haunt those who are brave enough—or foolish enough—to listen.
The wind picks up on the riverbank, and for a second, the water seems to stop. The current slows. The trees on the opposite bank appear, for a heartbeat, to stand perfectly still. And then, the movement returns, the water flows, and everything is normal again. But those who know the story know better. They know that the pause was there. They know that the ferryman was close. And they know that some things, once they are taken, are never meant to be returned.
The Black River keeps its secrets. It always has, and it always will. And in the end, that is perhaps as it should be. For if we knew everything, if we remembered every moment, every crossing, every seven-minute interval of our lives, we would likely find that the truth is far more terrifying than the silence. The gap is not a theft; it is a mercy. It is the way the world protects us from seeing the things that live in the middle of the river.
And so, we drive across the bridge. We go about our lives. We cherish our memories, even the ones that are thin, even the ones that have holes. We trust in the continuity of our days. We believe that we are in control. But sometimes, when the light hits the water just right, and the air goes still, we feel a shiver—a small, icy prick of intuition—and we remember that 4,000 people once stepped onto a raft, and none of them ever came back quite the same.
The ferryman is still waiting. Or perhaps he never was. Either way, the river flows on, deep and wide and silent, holding the pieces of a story that is etched into the very stones of the county. A story that is, in the end, only 15 cents away.