The Green Lady Who Keeps Watch at Old Bedlam — Fort Laramie, WY

I. The House the Army Left Behind

The wind had a way of arriving in Fort Laramie before anything else.

Before the sun cleared the cottonwoods, before the first tourist unfolded a brochure, before the rangers unlocked the old buildings and swept dead moths from the windowsills, the wind came sliding off the prairie in long, dry breaths. It combed the grass flat. It worried at loose shutters. It slipped under doors and through keyholes and up chimneys that had not smoked in more than a century.

Some folks said the wind was just weather.

The old families knew better.

They said it carried names.

Old Bedlam stood where it had always stood, broad and pale and patient, with its porches facing the open grounds of the old fort. It was the oldest military building in Wyoming, though age alone was not what made people lower their voices when they said its name. Age was common out there. The prairie was old. The river was old. The wheel ruts from emigrant wagons had been cut into the earth so long ago that grass had grown over their scars, and still they remained if you knew where to look.

No, what made Old Bedlam different was the feeling that it had not been abandoned by the people who once lived there.

Only by the living ones.

By day, it was preserved and respectable. A piece of frontier history. Officers’ quarters. Whitewashed walls. Interpreted rooms. Rope barriers. Signs explaining what life had been like when Fort Laramie was a hinge between worlds—the settled East and the swallowing West, the army and the tribes, the traders and the emigrants, the hopes of the living and the bookkeeping of the dead.

Visitors came with cameras, with children, with bottled water, with sunburned necks. They walked through the rooms and said things like imagine living here, and look at that old stove, and can you believe how small the beds were?

But dusk changed the grammar of the place.

At dusk, the rooms lengthened. Corners deepened. Glass turned black in the windows, and a visitor standing inside could no longer see the parade ground or the path or the last peach-colored light in the sky. They could see only themselves reflected back, pale and uncertain, with the darkness gathered behind their shoulders.

That was when the woman in green was said to come.

Not every night. Not for everyone. She was not a scheduled performance, not the kind of ghost that rattled chains for the benefit of summer crowds. She came the way memory comes, unexpectedly and without apology.

Some had seen her from the porch, crossing the grounds with her hem stirring though the air was still. Some glimpsed her in an upstairs window long after the building had been locked. Some swore she wore a riding habit of deep green, close-fitted and old-fashioned, the kind a woman might wear if she expected to mount a horse and vanish across the plains. Others said it was a dress, not a habit, the green of creek-shadowed willow leaves, or bottle glass, or old bruises fading at the edge.

No one agreed on her face.

That was the worst part, if you asked me.

A face pins the dead to a story. A scar, a smile, a name whispered into a pillow. But she had no reliable face, no grave that claimed her, no inscription that said here lies the lady in green, beloved or betrayed or lost. There were guesses, of course. Fort towns breed guesses the way riverbanks breed mosquitoes.

An officer’s wife, some said, sick with fever and buried before the thaw.

A laundress, said others, wronged by a soldier and left to wander.

A young woman traveling west, dead before she reached Oregon, her trunk and best green dress left behind.

A trader’s daughter. A colonel’s mistress. A bride. A widow.

The story changed depending on who told it, but the color stayed.

Green.

Always green.

I first heard about her from Nora Vail, who worked summers at the historic site and winters at the county library, where she kept the heat too high and the ghost shelves too well stocked. Nora had the manner of a woman who believed in ledgers, locks, and weather reports, but when she spoke of Old Bedlam after closing, she would touch the base of her throat.

“Don’t go upstairs alone near sunset,” she told me once.

We were sitting in the parking lot after a public history lecture, our breath clouding in the early October air. The fort lay dark behind us, the buildings pale as old bones.

“Why not?” I asked.

She looked toward Old Bedlam. Its windows reflected the last light with a dull, coppery stare.

“Because if she’s downstairs, you’ll hear her above you. And if she’s upstairs…” Nora stopped there and gave a humorless little laugh. “Well. Then you’ll hear her behind you.”

I thought she was joking.

Most people do at first.

That is how old houses get you.

They let you laugh.

II. Footsteps Overhead

The man who finally made me believe in the woman in green was not the kind of man who believed in anything he couldn’t oil, repair, catalog, or shoot.

His name was Ellis Roan. He was seventy-two that year, a retired maintenance worker who had spent nearly three decades tending the fort’s old buildings with the gruff affection of a rancher caring for difficult horses. He knew which floorboards sang in winter, which doors stuck after rain, and which windows required gentle persuasion rather than force. If a latch moved in Old Bedlam, Ellis could tell you whether it was due to humidity, foundation settling, or a careless tourist.

He had no patience for ghost stories.

“Buildings make noise,” he’d say. “People don’t listen anymore, that’s the trouble. They hear a nail pop and think it’s the devil clearing his throat.”

But there was one story Ellis told only after dark, and only if he’d had exactly two fingers of whiskey. Never more. Never less.

It happened in late November, long after the tourist season had thinned to almost nothing. The cottonwoods had dropped their leaves, and the prairie wore its winter color—the dun-gray shade of an animal holding still. Ellis had been asked to check Old Bedlam after a cold snap. A pipe had threatened trouble in another building, and the staff were nervous about all the old plumbing.

He arrived at 4:20 in the afternoon.

He remembered the time because the sun was already low, flattening itself against the horizon like it wanted no part of what was coming.

Ellis unlocked the door, stepped inside, and called out—not because he expected an answer, but because old habits are little charms against fear.

“Anybody in here?”

Silence.

He stood in the entry hall, listening.

Every preserved building has its own interior silence. Some are dusty. Some are hollow. Old Bedlam’s silence, Ellis said, was furnished. That was his word. Furnished. As if unseen people sat in every room, not speaking, waiting for a guest to say the first foolish thing.

He checked the lower rooms first. The kitchen. The parlor. The officers’ quarters with their old beds and stern furniture. Everything was as it should be. Cold, yes. Darkening, yes. But ordinary.

Then came the footsteps overhead.

Ellis froze with one hand on the back of a chair.

They crossed from east to west, slow and deliberate.

Not the creak-and-settle music of an aging structure. Not a squirrel in the eaves. These were steps. Heel, sole, pause. Heel, sole, pause. A woman’s steps, he thought absurdly, though afterward he could not explain why. Not light, exactly, but measured. Skirts brushing. A person mindful of propriety even after death.

Ellis swore under his breath.

The second floor was closed. No staff should have been up there. No visitors were in the building. He had locked the door behind himself.

“Hello?” he called.

The footsteps stopped.

That, he said, was the first moment fear touched him.

Noises that continue can be reasoned with. Pipes tick, beams groan, rodents scurry. But a noise that stops because you spoke? That is listening.

Ellis stood at the bottom of the stairs. The last light from the western windows lay across the floor in long, red bars. Dust moved in it, or seemed to.

“Park Service,” he called, feeling ridiculous and angry. “You need to come down now.”

Upstairs, a door clicked shut.

Ellis took out his flashlight. He climbed.

The stairs complained under him, one at a time. He knew their voices and they knew his weight, but that day they seemed louder, as if announcing him to whoever waited above.

At the landing, he swept the flashlight beam down the hall.

Nothing.

The upstairs rooms stood open except one at the far end. Its door was closed.

Ellis had left it open. He knew he had. He had a memory for rooms the way some men have a memory for cards.

He walked toward it.

This is the part of the story where listeners usually ask why he didn’t leave. Ellis always scowled then.

“Because I was paid to check the building,” he’d say. “And because a closed door is just a closed door until you let it become something else.”

He reached for the knob.

Before he touched it, a woman sighed on the other side.

Not a moan. Not a theatrical wail. A sigh. Tired, intimate, almost irritated. The sound of someone who had been waiting too long and was disappointed by what had finally arrived.

Ellis stepped back.

The hallway had grown colder. His flashlight flickered once. Through the window behind him, he could see the grounds turning blue with dusk.

Then the doorknob turned by itself.

Slowly.

Ellis did not run. He insisted on that. He backed away with great care, as if retreating from a skittish animal or a loaded gun. The door opened inward three inches. Four.

From the darkness inside came the smell of wet earth and crushed sage.

And something green moved there.

Not a figure, not fully. Just the suggestion of cloth passing across deeper shadow. A fold. A sleeve. The curve of a shoulder.

Ellis reached the stairs and descended without turning around. Behind him, the footsteps followed to the landing and stopped.

Only when he stood outside in the cold did he look back.

A woman watched from an upstairs window.

She wore green.

Her face was pale, blurred by the old glass, but Ellis saw one detail clearly enough to carry it to his grave: her hand was pressed against the pane from the inside, fingers spread wide, as if she were not haunting the building but trapped within it.

Ellis quit before spring.

When people asked why, he told them his knees were bad.

But Nora Vail told me that on his last day, he walked out to Old Bedlam alone, stood before the porch, removed his cap, and said, “Ma’am.”

Then he left Fort Laramie and never returned.

III. The Woman in Green

Years later, I came to Fort Laramie in October with a notebook, a recorder, and the arrogant hunger of a man who thinks stories are things to be collected.

I had written about haunted hotels, deserted mines, crying bridges, cemeteries where lights drifted between the stones. I had learned that most ghost stories are less about the dead than the living who need them. A town with a ghost has an aftertaste. A place where sorrow once happened keeps trying to speak, and if no one knows the true words, it invents a language of knocks, shadows, and cold spots.

Old Bedlam was supposed to be another chapter.

That is what I told myself.

Nora met me at the visitor center just before closing. She was older than when I had first known her, her hair silver now and twisted at the back of her head. The years had sharpened her rather than softened her.

“You still chasing things best left alone?” she asked.

“You still warning people with one hand and handing them maps with the other?”

She smiled, but not for long.

The fort emptied around us. Cars pulled away. Doors were checked. The flag came down. Evening laid itself over the parade ground in a thin, violet skin.

Nora had arranged permission for us to sit inside Old Bedlam after hours. Officially, we were documenting oral traditions connected with the site. Unofficially, I think she wanted someone else to hear what she had been hearing.

We entered at 6:12.

The building smelled of old wood, dust, and that faint medicinal tang common to preserved places, as if history itself had been treated with chemicals to keep it from rotting. Nora locked the door behind us.

“You don’t have to do that,” I said.

“Yes,” she said. “I do.”

We set up in the lower hall. I placed the recorder on a small table. Nora kept her coat on though the evening was mild.

For the first thirty minutes, nothing happened.

The building creaked. Wind pressed around the eaves. Somewhere outside, a night bird called once and then thought better of it. I asked Nora about sightings. She spoke of volunteers who glimpsed green fabric in peripheral vision. A child who waved at someone in an empty window. A ranger who heard weeping upstairs and found only a room so cold his breath smoked.

“And you?” I asked.

Nora looked toward the staircase.

“Twice,” she said.

“Seeing or hearing?”

“Seeing once. Hearing many times.”

“Where did you see her?”

Nora did not answer immediately. The recorder’s red light glowed between us like an unblinking insect eye.

“In the mirror,” she said.

Old Bedlam had an old mirror in one of the interpreted rooms, clouded at the edges. Nora had been passing through with a group of schoolchildren when she noticed a woman standing behind them in the glass. Green dress. Dark hair. Hands folded. Nora turned, ready to ask the woman not to cross the barrier.

No one was there.

But in the mirror, the woman remained.

“She looked at the children,” Nora whispered. “Not meanly. Not kindly either. Like she was counting them.”

The building gave a soft knock above us.

We both looked up.

Another knock followed.

Then a slow scrape, as of furniture dragged across a floor.

Nora closed her eyes.

“It starts that way sometimes.”

I felt a thrill then, I’m ashamed to say. Not fear. Not yet. A professional excitement. The recorder was running. My notebook was open. The old house was beginning its performance.

“How often?” I asked.

Nora did not open her eyes. “Don’t talk like that.”

“Like what?”

“Like it’s weather.”

The scrape came again, longer this time.

Then footsteps.

Heel, sole, pause.

Heel, sole, pause.

They crossed above us with terrible patience.

I stood before I realized I had done so.

Nora’s hand shot out and caught my sleeve. “Don’t.”

“We need to verify—”

“No,” she said.

But there are foolish men in every ghost story, and the worst are the ones who believe fear is something that happens to other people. I took my flashlight and went to the stairs.

The footsteps stopped.

From behind me, Nora whispered my name.

I climbed.

Each step lifted me out of one world and into another. Downstairs, there was Nora, the recorder, the faint safety of electric light. Upstairs waited a darkness that seemed less like absence than occupation.

At the landing, I paused.

The hall stretched before me. The air smelled suddenly of rain, though the day had been dry. Rain, wet earth, crushed sage.

My flashlight beam trembled slightly. I told myself it was my hand. That explanation seemed both obvious and unsatisfactory.

The doors along the hall were open.

All but one.

Of course.

At the far end, the closed door waited.

A floorboard groaned behind it.

“Nora?” I called, though I knew she was still downstairs.

No answer.

I walked forward. Every old instinct in my body told me not to. But another instinct, newer and far more dangerous, told me that if I turned back now, I would spend the rest of my life wondering what stood behind that door.

I reached it.

There was a gap beneath, black and narrow.

Something passed across it, blocking the dark.

A footstep sounded directly on the other side.

Then a woman spoke.

Her voice was so low I felt the words more than heard them.

“Have they gone?”

I could not breathe.

The question was not addressed to me, not exactly. It had the worn quality of a phrase repeated through time until meaning had rubbed thin. Have they gone? The soldiers? The emigrants? The family? The living?

My hand rose toward the knob.

Downstairs, Nora shouted, “Do not open it!”

The knob turned under my fingers before I touched it.

The door swung inward.

The room beyond was dark, though the window should have held some remnant of evening. Instead, it showed only blackness, deep and complete, as if the glass looked not out upon the parade ground but into a buried well.

She stood near the window.

Green dress. Or habit. Or both. The eye could not settle on it. The fabric seemed old, then new, then wet, then dry. Her dark hair was pinned badly, with strands loose around her face. She was young and not young. Beautiful and not beautiful. The dead do not obey the geometry of the living.

I could not see her face clearly.

That mercy did not last.

She turned.

There are faces we recognize because they belong to someone. There are others we recognize because they belong to no one and everyone. Hers was like that. A frontier wife’s face. A girl at a dance. A mother waiting for hoofbeats. A fever victim. A woman watching wagons pull west without her.

Her eyes were the color of smoke.

“Have they gone?” she asked again.

I wanted to answer. I wanted to say yes, the soldiers are gone, the wagons are gone, the traders are gone, the children are gone, everyone is gone but us and we are going too.

But another voice came from behind me.

Nora stood at the end of the hall, white-faced.

“No,” Nora said softly. “Not all of them.”

The woman in green looked past me.

The temperature dropped so sharply my teeth clicked together.

“Nora,” I said, but she moved forward as if walking in a dream.

Later, she told me her grandmother had worked near the fort long ago, and her grandmother’s grandmother before that. Family stories had filtered down: a woman in green waiting for a husband sent east, or west, or into a fight from which he did not return. A woman who had refused to leave the post. A woman whose name had been misremembered, then forgotten, then replaced by the color of her dress.

But in that hallway, Nora said none of this.

She only reached into her coat pocket and took out a small object wrapped in cloth.

A button.

Green glass, dulled with age.

“My grandmother found it in the floor,” Nora said. “She kept it. I don’t know why.”

The woman’s expression changed.

The dead can hunger.

Until that moment I had not understood that.

The room seemed to inhale. The walls darkened. Somewhere downstairs, doors began opening and closing in rapid succession, not slamming, but working themselves in agitation—click, creak, click, creak, click.

Nora held out the button.

The woman lifted one hand.

Her fingers were pale and long. There was dirt beneath the nails.

When she touched the button, the hall filled with sound.

Not screams.

Worse.

The ordinary noise of a place alive again: boots on boards, women laughing in another room, a baby crying, harness jingling outside, a man coughing near the stairs, a fiddle sawing out a tune, wind in canvas, rain on a roof, an officer calling orders, someone sobbing into a pillow, someone praying, someone saying don’t leave me here.

The sounds crashed together until they became the prairie wind.

Then they were gone.

So was the woman.

The door stood open on an empty room.

The window showed the last dull band of sunset above the grounds.

Nora collapsed.

IV. What Watches From the Windows

People like endings.

They want to know whether the ghost was laid to rest, whether the house grew warm, whether the woman in green smiled gratefully and stepped into the forgiving light. They want the dead to behave like guests who have overstayed, embarrassed at last, collecting their things and moving on.

I can only tell you what happened.

Nora did not return to work for two weeks. When she did, she asked to be assigned anywhere but Old Bedlam. The request was granted without fuss. Perhaps because she looked ten years older. Perhaps because Fort Laramie has always understood that some things are easier not to discuss.

The green glass button disappeared.

Nora swore she had dropped it when she fainted. We searched the upstairs hall the next morning with rangers and flashlights and the embarrassed silence of adults trying not to use the word ghost in daylight. We found dust, mouse droppings, a rusted nail, and one long black hair caught in a splinter near the doorframe.

No button.

My recorder had captured fifty-three minutes of audio. Most of it was useless: our voices, floor creaks, the muffled percussion of wind against the building. But at the forty-one-minute mark, just after my voice saying Nora? there came a sound that was not in the room with us.

A woman whispered, very close to the microphone.

“Not yet.”

I have played that recording for three people.

One laughed and said it could be anything.

One asked me to turn it off.

The third, an audio technician in Denver, listened with headphones, went very still, and asked where I had gotten it. When I told him, he took off the headphones and said, “There are more voices under it.”

I asked what they were saying.

He said he didn’t want to know.

For a while, the sightings stopped. That was the rumor, anyway. No green dress crossing the grounds. No woman in the upstairs window. No footsteps after closing. The staff relaxed by inches. Even Nora began to think, though she never said it aloud, that perhaps the button had been what the woman wanted. A small lost piece of herself. A token. A tether.

Then, the following spring, a family from Iowa visited the fort.

They had two children, both boys, seven and nine. The younger one wandered away from the group near Old Bedlam and was found standing on the porch, staring up at the second floor.

His mother scolded him.

He said, “The lady told me to wait.”

“What lady?”

“The green lady.”

The mother, pale now, asked what the lady wanted.

The boy pointed to the upstairs window and said, “She wanted to know if they had gone.”

That story made its rounds, as such stories do. Quietly. Unofficially. With nervous laughter. By summer, more people had seen her than ever before.

But something had changed.

Before, she had appeared at a distance: a figure on the grounds, a shape in glass, footsteps in empty rooms. After the night with the button, she came closer.

A volunteer opening Old Bedlam one morning found wet footprints on the upstairs floor, though there had been no rain for twelve days. Each print was narrow, pointed slightly inward, and dark with mud that smelled of riverbank.

A ranger doing an evening check heard a woman humming in the parlor. He recognized the tune though he could not name it. His grandmother had hummed it when shelling peas. When he entered, the room was empty, but a rocking chair moved gently back and forth behind the rope barrier.

A historian from back east, stern and skeptical, complained that the interpretive staff should not employ costumed reenactors without warning visitors. She had seen a woman in a green riding habit standing at the foot of the stairs.

“She was rude,” the historian said. “I asked her a question and she ignored me completely.”

“What question?” Nora asked.

“I asked her name.”

Nora’s pen stopped moving.

“And?”

The historian frowned. “She said she had one once.”

There is no official record of that, of course. Historic sites have budgets, maintenance concerns, educational missions. They do not have room on their forms for women who had names once.

But the stories continued.

I returned one last time in late September. I told myself I wanted to check on Nora, to walk the grounds, to see whether time had shrunk the memory of that night into something manageable.

That was a lie.

I wanted to know if she would remember me.

The day was bright, hard, and windy. Cottonwood leaves flashed silver. Visitors drifted between buildings. Children ran where soldiers had drilled, where emigrants had bargained, where grief had once sat down and refused to rise.

Old Bedlam looked harmless in the sun.

They all do.

Nora found me near the porch.

“You shouldn’t have come,” she said.

“Probably not.”

“Are you writing about it?”

“I don’t know.”

She studied me with tired eyes. “If you do, they’ll come looking.”

“For her?”

“For a thrill.”

I thought of myself on the stairs, hungry for proof, and felt ashamed.

We stood together without speaking. The wind moved around Old Bedlam, testing every seam.

Then Nora said, “She isn’t what people think.”

“What is she?”

Nora looked up at the windows.

“A place can remember too much,” she said. “Maybe she’s one woman. Maybe she’s all of them. Maybe she’s what the house uses for a face.”

That evening, I waited until the last visitors left. I did not ask permission to enter. I did not need to. I had learned, finally, that some doors should remain closed by choice if not by lock.

I stood outside Old Bedlam as dusk gathered.

The upstairs windows blackened one by one.

For a long time, nothing happened.

Then a pale hand appeared behind the glass.

It rested there, fingers spread, just as Ellis Roan had described.

A figure stepped close behind it.

Green cloth. Dark hair. Smoke-colored eyes.

I could not tell whether she was looking at me or through me, toward some road beyond the fort where wagons still creaked in memory, where horses still screamed, where soldiers marched away young and returned old or not at all.

The wind dropped.

In that sudden stillness, I heard her voice though the window did not open.

“Have they gone?”

This time, I answered.

“Yes,” I said. “Most of them.”

Her hand remained against the glass.

Then, very slowly, she shook her head.

Not in denial.

In pity.

Behind her, in the dark of the upstairs room, other shapes began to gather. A man in a cavalry coat. A child with hollow eyes. A woman holding something wrapped in a blanket. Faces pale as candle ends. Too many faces for the room. Too many for the house.

Too many for the fort.

The woman in green lowered her hand.

The window reflected the prairie, the sinking sun, and my own small figure standing outside with nowhere meaningful to hide.

Then all the windows of Old Bedlam went black at once.

I left Fort Laramie before morning.

I have not gone back.

But sometimes, when the wind is right and the evening has that dry Wyoming taste even hundreds of miles away, I think of Old Bedlam standing patient in the dusk. I think of visitors laughing in its rooms, of children pressing hands to old glass, of staff turning keys in locks that may or may not matter.

And I think of the woman in green.

Not waiting for release.

Not asking whether the living are gone.

Asking whether the dead have finished arriving.

And the answer, out there on the prairie, is always the same.

Not yet.