Tuesday, December 22, 2015

The Legend of Bloody Mary, Swamp Witch.


The nights are cooling, its fall in Hogtown, 1859. It’s time for harvest and a time for slaughter.

Mary Worth, is a witch
.
She lives in a swamp, southeast of the settlement, by herself. Mary has a skeletal appearance, her hands and face are covered in warts and cist from embedded thorns that infected and never removed. Her fingers have long yellowed nails with embedded filth. Her face is wrinkled, with sunken eyes covered with a dull haze with black circles surrounding her eyes. Mary’s hair is long, black matted but mostly gray. She walks with a stoop and a mystic stick for support. She wears tattered, black clothing with a hood to cover her face.

Mary Worth, is a witch.

She makes a monthly trip to the general store, with a sled, of sort, strapped across her shoulders. When she walks through the swamp and forest, the dragging sound of the sled and the thump of the mystic stick echoes throughout.
Mary was met on a trail, the year prior, by a local farmer who had heard the tales of Mary. He stood in her way and looked down upon her. What do we have here; the dreaded witch from the swamp? Look at you, you are nothing more than a tattered vagabond, go back to your swamp, quit scaring my children. I do not fear you! Mary raised her mystic stick towards the farmer and hissed at him through her yellow and green teeth. A cold chill ran down the back of the farmer and the smell of earth surrounded him, as Mary hissed at him once again. The farmer stepped aside and let her pass. Later that year, his wife and children caught the fever and died. He became weak in the heart and spent the last months of his life begging, bedridden in filth. There are far worse things in life, than death.
Mary would come to town for nothing more than salt and occasionally some black cloth. She would lay her coins on the counter, never speaking a word. The merchant would set her change on the counter in front of Mary and wait till she walked out of the store before brushing the coins into a bucket of lamp oil, because he was afraid to touch them.

Mary Worth is a witch.

The next morning, the town was stirred up with fear; a young girl was missing. They searched the town and the woods surrounding the settlement, she was nowhere to be found. A week later, another girl was missing and the townspeople searched every house and building, the woods and all the way to the swamp; she was nowhere to be found. The following night, another girl became missing. It’s the witch, she’s taking the girls, the parents cried out; she’s taking our girls! Several men gathered together and made their way into the swamp to search for Mary. It took most of the day for the men to find Mary’s homestead, fighting the muck and the vines and the insects.  When they approached her shack, a dark figure was standing in back, stirring a cauldron over an open fire. The merchant stepped forward and called out to Mary. Mary, we have young girls missing; do you know where they are? Mary never looked up or acknowledged him, she just kept stirring the cauldron. You old witch; where are the girls? She turned sharply and starred at the merchant, but something was different. Her hair was straight and the gray was gone. Her eyes had a sparkle from where there was only a dull haze before and the black circles and wrinkles were gone. The moles and cist were smaller and she actually had a color to her skin. She raised her mystic stick and held it out in front of her towards the merchant; Be Gone! He could feel the pressure of her mystic stick on his chest and the smell of earth surrounded him. Be Gone, she scolded one more time, this time almost knocking the merchant off his feet. The other men started stepping backwards then turned and run. The merchant struggled through the vines and muck trying to catch up with the other men as they ran away from Mary’s homestead.
It was past dark when the men made it back to the settlement, exhausted, scratched and filthy with the memory of Mary Worth, embedded into their conscious. The merchant walked to the pump, and drew a pail of water to clean up before entering his home. The oil lamp gave an orange hue to the room as he opened the door and met his wife, waiting for him at the dining table. He explained the happenings of the day and made his way upstairs to their bed before an uneasy night of sleep.
The merchant was awaken at 12:08 by his wife; Sarah is gone, Sarah is gone; she screamed! The merchant, in a sleeping stupor, grabbed his gun from the wall, loaded two silver bullets into the chamber and headed down the stairs. He grabbed a lantern, raised the globe and lit the wick and headed out into the darkness screaming Sarah’s name. “Sarah”, “Sarah”, “Sarah”! Several neighbor, hearing the commotion, come out in their night shirts and called for Sarah. Other men gathered with lanterns and head off in different directions, in search of Sarah, calling out her name. The merchant saw a small white figure a hundred yards in front of him, it was Sarah and she was walking towards a bright light. The merchant screamed out Sarah’s name but she kept walking. As he ran closer, he saw it was Mary Worth, holding her mystic stick up, glowing in light he had never seen before. He dropped the lamp, pulled the hammer back on his gun, aimed and shot Mary in the thigh. The glowing stick fell to the ground and went dark, as did Sarah. The merchant clutched his daughter as several men ran past them to where Mary Worth lay. She had changed, the woman on the ground was a younger Mary Worth, but it was Mary. Several men tackled her, bound her wrist and ankles with hemp, drug her into a clearing beneath a grand oak. The cast a rope over a limb and hoisted Mary, by her hands, over twenty feet in the air. More townspeople gathered around to witness the witch hissing and screaming as she dangled from the branch. Several men gathered lanterns and headed back into the swamp to Mary’s shack to find the missing girls. When they arrived at the shack, coals glowed beneath the cauldron and the shack was aglow from burning candles. The door was open and what they found sickened them. One of the men found his daughter’s corpse hanging above Mary’s alter. A blood covered challis sat upon an altar, dried blood coating all parts of the challis and alter. Dried blood streams running down the sides of the altar to the skeletal remains of a child. Alongside the altar was a box of salt and when they brushed the surface, the face of the other missing girl was exposed. The men gathered the remains of the children and wrapped them in the black cloth from Mary’s bed. The poured lamp oil on the walls of the shack and lit it as they walked into the darkness. The flames rose quickly and roared above the trees as the men entered the swamp and back to Hogtown.
It would be first light before the men returned to the settlement with the remains. The townspeople cast judgement and began gathering liter and wood to pile beneath the hissing witch. At sundown, the townspeople gathered around the woodpile as judgement was passed and the pile lit. Mary Worth screamed and called out; you will all be damned! Your children will call upon me. The flames rose as Mary screamed as the flames touched her feet and her clothing started to smoke, the merchant cut the rope, casting her into the flames. The following day, they gathered the ashes, took them to the edge of the swamp and scattered them into the dark water.
Today, as you walk along Lake Alice at sundown, step off the sidewalk onto the dirt path that runs along the east side. Look across the lake, close your eyes and call out; Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary. You’ll hear the sound of her sled rails and the thumping of her mystic stick and the smell of earth with surround you.

Mary Worth is a witch.

Young girls will gather in slumber, sit cross legged on the floor with a lighted candle, a bowl of salt and a mirror, hold hands and call out; Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary. Her image will appear in the mirror.

Mary Worth is a witch.

Only the brave will venture into a dark room, alone, with a candle and bowl of salt held out in front of them, stare into a mirror and call; Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary, Bloody Mary. As her image appears, your soul will be cast into the mirror to spend eternity with Bloody Mary.


Mary Worth is a witch. 


If you want to read the rest of the story, the book is available here.

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