Authors: Stephanie Hemphill
Tags: #Trials (Witchcraft), #Juvenile Nonfiction, #Girls & Women, #Witchcraft, #Juvenile Fiction, #Poetry, #Fantasy & Magic, #General, #United States, #Salem (Mass.), #Historical, #Occult fiction, #People & Places, #Fiction, #Salem (Mass.) - History - Colonial period; ca. 1600-1775, #Novels in verse
Mercy Lewis, 17
The tailor of cloths and hides
gazes at me.
I do not know this man
to point a finger at.
Only Ann does that.
“He is upon the beam,”
Ann says, and all look
up to the rafters,
but I see neither person
nor specter there.
Judge Corwin points at the tailor.
“Be this man a witch?”
he asks us Afflicted.
Elizabeth says, “Yes, sir.
He is the one who hurts me.”
But her voice quivers
as she speaks, like a branch
rattled in the wind.
Allowed back in court for the first time,
Abigail looks to Ann,
but Ann stares toward the window.
In a voice unsteady
as a one-legged man Abigail says,
“He is the man. He is very like the man.”
Margaret says, “Yes, he is very like the man.”
The tailor's eyes plead with me.
I shift on the court bench.
“He is not the man,” I say.
Gasps and chatter fly
about the court like roused hornets.
Judge Corwin calls, “Silence.”
Ann's eyes enlarge
and she demands of Nehemiah Abbott,
the tailor, “Be you the man?”
Ann spits and sputters,
writhes and kicks herself
onto the floor.
She cries, “Did you put a mist on my eyes?”
We are dragged outside
and asked again
to look upon the countenance
of Goodman Abbott.
All the girls nod with me this time.
Though Goodman Abbott
be like the specter,
he is not the same man.
They release Nehemiah Abbott
from his chains.
Little Ann folds her arms,
grinds her toe
into the dusty path.
I stroke her head
and she straightens up.
Her eyes hold back water.
“Did I do wrong?” she asks me.
“Of course not,” I say.
“In fact, you did exactly right.”
I lift my head
to be for once
not only a part
of the beloved choir
but its lead soloist,
the whole town listening.
Margaret Walcott, 17
I fold my skirts into Ann's bureau,
my entire wardrobe crammed
into one drawer.
This room smells like a waste bowl.
I light a taper.
I open the bureau
and Mercy's green shawl lies
inside right where my blue
one ought to go. I toss hers to the floor.
“How dare she go against you
like that? Ye are our leader.”
I feel the anger break
through my veins like waves.
“But Mercy was right,” Ann says.
I roll my eyes. I turn round
to shake out my blanket,
and Mercy looms in the doorway.
“How long you been loitering there?”
I ask her.
“Long enough.” She strokes Ann's arm.
“Ann, would you bring us tea?
I set the water to boiling.”
Ann's off like a ship in high gales.
“Now heed me,” Mercy says.
As she speaks I spot a flaw of hersâ
her teeth are too big for her mouth.
I pull back my arm and crack
my blanket at her face like a whip.
The shock stuns her.
I laugh at her popped eyes
and her hair stuck up
like some frightened cat's.
I strike her again.
She catches the blanket
and drags me toward her.
I dig in and yank backward,
then release my hold,
and she crashes into the wall.
But I let her go with such strength
I tumble myself down too
and bruise my tailbone
direct on the floor.
Mercy smiles and laughs
like we be sharing a joke,
but I do spit 'pon the ground
rather than smile at her.
“Listen, Margaret,” she says.
“I'll not listen to thee.
Go and fetch, servant girl.”
Mercy slows her voice.
“You best apologize.
You should not treat me as such,
Margaret Walcott. I be offering
you a hand in friendship.”
Now I could nearly laugh.
“You are not my friend.”
“No,” Mercy says,
and she dusts her skirts.
“I suppose I am not.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
I pull open another drawer
and not a bloomer to be found.
“Wilson, do the witches
now steal my wash and stockings?”
My sweet dog taps his tail
upon the boards; his tongue
quivers in the affirmative.
Margaret's laughter stokes
the hallways and shatters the ears,
sounding like a spoon scraping an empty pot.
Her cackles are followed by
a deep moan, and Missus Putnam hollers,
“Mercy, fetch a pail and cloth!
Our guest has fallen to fit!”
I wiggle back into my dirty dress
and haul a bucket toward Ann's room,
but halfway there my knees bend under
and I slip to the floor.
I slither as a beast upon the ground
until Mister Putnam carries me
back to my bed.
“The girl is not well.
She cannot attend to others,”
I hear Mister say
after I have been
tucked into my covers
and relieved of my day.
Wilson snuggles aside me.
I stretch my arms above my head,
rise and tiptoe to my window
to watch the morning bowl of sun
soak the fields with God's first light.
“Mercy?”
Ann knocks upon, then opens,
my door.
She holds her brush in hand.
“I cannot be in that room
with Margaret one moment more.”
Ann hoists up on my bed
and motions for me to sit up
so she can brush out my hair
while standing on the bed above me.
Ann grumps, “Margaret lights tapers
so my room smells
of wax and burn. I hate it!
Why did she have to come?”
I shrug. “I think she was made to.”
Ann throws down her brush.
“I might have to sleep in here with you.”
“That would not please your mother.”
“My mother will have to learn
to do as I wish, or perhaps
I shall call her a witch?”
Ann's voice is more question
than statement.
“No, Ann, you must never do that,”
I say, and fold her into a seated position.
I give her back the brush
and begin her hand stroking my hair.
But perhaps, you call Margaret
â¦
I shake the idea away.
Margaret Walcott, 17
Aunt Ann squeezes my hand.
“A goodwife does always
as her husband does bid her.
To honor him be never a sin.”
But what of the betrothed? I want to ask.
Instead I stammer, “What of Mercy?”
“Mercy shall never be a goodwife,
because she is too low
to marry into a proper name.
Her slim beauty will be scoured away
unlike your fair silken own.”
Aunt lowers her voice to whispering
and purses her lips like she suffers
from a bitter yam.
“If she be seen at all, 'twill be
as one of tawdry repute.”
The tears crash down my cheeks.
How then could Isaac�
Aunt stares on me till I say,
“I miss Isaac.”
“I shall have Thomas ask
Isaac and his father to supper.
What else, child?”
“Ann sees so many
witches
,”
I blurt faster than I did wish.
“I be meaning, I feel as I cannot say
all the specters I see.
I know not the names.”
Aunt Ann smiles larger than her land.
“I can help thee. Just speak with me,
dear Margaret, and I will provide thee
names for the specters you know not.”
She cradles me to her breast.
“Oh, I am so glad you are come.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
Mister Putnam straightens his back.
Goodman Farrar, Isaac's father,
a small man with a fair face
and the manners of a minister's wife,
sits aside Mister Putnam.
He nods at Missus Putnam.
“Thank ye for the fine meal.”
Missus cooked not a crumb on the table.
“Thou art quite welcome, dear sir,” she says.
The baby wails from the nursery.
All mugs beg filling.
And the plates ought be cleared.
I rise to tend the child.
Isaac and his father stand when I do
as though I am the lady
I was born to be.
Margaret clenches her fork.
Ann follows me, and Missus
nearly slaps her back to seating.
“Let Mercy attend to matters alone.”
Only Wilson be permitted to trail me now.
I tramp down the hall
and lean over the baby's cradle.
“Shhhh,” I say until his storming settles.
I clear the plates, refresh the mugs
and set to wash the pots.
“Mercy,” Isaac says from a foot behind me.
“Thomas asks that you sit
and take cider and tea with the family.”
Even though he just supped,
Isaac looks at me as though
he has not eaten in weeks
and would lick
my palms to taste me,
I smell to him so sweet.
Wilson begins a growl,
but I muzzle his snout.
How lovely would it be to witness
Margaret the Mean, the bloomer thief, churn
because of my doings for once?
I flick my curls behind my shoulder
and bloom my eyes as petals
at Margaret's beau.
I drop the cloth in my hands.
Isaac bends to pick it up,
and I stoop too.
Isaac breathes upon my neck.
“Ye areâ” he begins.
“Your father calls you!”
Margaret's voice severs our air.
But Isaac does not cut his stare from me.
Margaret quivers in her speech.
“I shall stay and help Mercy.”
I scrub the pan to rid it
of grease and burn.
Margaret clamps my arm.
“Do not speak to him,” she threatens.
“I did not,” I say.
I wipe my hands, turn from her
and swirl into my place
aside Mister Putnam.
Isaac's eyes fasten on me
tighter than the collar at my neck.
Margaret ruptures in fit.
“Goody Hobbs pinches me!”
Isaac greens. He shakes his head.
His father, who has offered
not an impolite word the night long,
says, “We shall be off,”
and leaves without finishing his tea,
without a “thank you” or “good evening.”
“But Deliverance Hobbs
admitted to being a witch!”
Margaret's fists pound the floor
until her hands bleed.
Tears wash her face.
Though Margaret's speech turns gibberish,
I distinctly hear her say, “Isaac,”
but I repeat this not
for I know she does not mean
to name him witch.
Margaret Walcott, 17
Papers stack the courtroom.
Signatures Isaac gathers
enough to empty an ink pot,
all saying the accused
be not the Devil's kin.
The Village divides
like a gash sawed through
the center of the church.
Reverend Parris and us girls
and those believing
in the witches we name
and them what don't.
My Isaac stands square
on the other side of the church
from me.
I try and straddle
the hole between us
but it be growing wide.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Mother says,
“Remain in thy room
at lesson today.”
Mother says, “See that Margaret
has the covers she requires for her bed.”
Mother says, “My head doth ache.
And my stomach has unrest.
Fetch me a cloth.” Mother says,
“Ann, pick not at thy skirt.
Hold thy shoulders straight.”
Mother demands, “The next to be
accused will be one who watched
me as a child, John Willard.
One who was too ready with his whip.”
Mother says, “That Mercy speaks
too often for a servant.”
Mercy feels not well,
and still Mother loads Mercy's basket
with mending and all the needlework
Margaret ought do, and when I lift
one finger to aid or accompany Mercy,
Mother says, “Do see what thy cousin
is about.”
“But my cousinâ” I say.
“Defy me never,” Mother says.
And I decide
'tis time Mother
learns to speak kinder
to Mercy and me.