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
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
“Mother, I believe I saw John Willardâ
the one who tended you unkindly
when you were a child.
The specters of John Willard
and Rebecca Nurse
told me they murdered
baby Sarah last summer.”
Mother looks down at her stomach,
now round with a new child.
Mother's eyes fuel.
“My dearest Ann,
'tis true.” She attempts
to clasp my hand.
I withdraw my palm
from hers like we play hot coals.
“Or perhaps, I did not.”
Mother looks perplexed.
I stroke her arm and smile.
“My sight can
sometimes
become
hazy and
sometimes
be made clear.
Same with the other girls.
I see more clearly when you are kind
to
Mercy
and me.”
Mother exhales out her nose
and says with direct eyes,
“Then I shall be kinder to you both.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
The cave of Ingersoll's shrouds me.
I pat Wilson's head
and close my eyes.
Ann says, “Margaret,
I care not who Mother told ye
she knew to be a witch.
'Tis who
we
say.
This week we see old man Giles Corey,
whose wife be already in prison.”
Stead of gnashing her gums,
Margaret nods at Ann.
“For all his tongue-lashing against us,
Goodman Corey ought have it nipped.”
“We also see Mercy's prior master,
Reverend George Burroughs.
Remember to call him the Grand Conjurer,
the leader of the witches.
Father sent a party up to Maine
already to arrest him.”
Margaret shakes her horse head:
“Mercy lies. Reverends are not wizards.”
Abigail whispers hesitantly,
“I seen 'em both.
Uncle says Reverend Burroughs
stole from Salem Village
when he was pastor here.
He must work for the Devil.”
Ann be not impressed with Abigail.
“Do you think I know this not?”
Ann squints one eye at the rest of us
as though
her
words be luminary.
“Both men have been known
to
murder
wives and servants.”
Elizabeth peeps open her mouth,
“I seen none ye named.
I cannot testify.”
“If ye testify not and see not,
then out with you.”
Ann's words fierce as frostbite,
she motions toward the door.
“Go on serving always Doctor Griggs.”
Margaret adds,
“Defy your calling, Elizabeth,
and the Lord will punish you.”
Elizabeth shivers.
She rubs her shoulder.
“I follow the Lord.
Pray do not send me home.”
Isaac Farrar enters the ordinary
as a gust of wind.
Margaret loses breath.
But Isaac looks not on her;
he beckons me with his eyes.
Margaret be turned over.
I could melt her to nothing.
She be that much a gob
of butter. All I need do
is sashay over to Isaac
and bat my lids
and call him outside.
I stand,
but Wilson bites my sleeve
and pulls me down to seating.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
“Susannah,” I say, and a girl
twice the size round and half
the size tall she ought to be
waves at me from the corner.
I sink. My idea to replace Abigail
with this new, older girl
seems now nothing but folly.
“Ann Putnam,” she says
in a voice overfull of cheer.
“'Tis your father who issues
complaints against the witches
who torture meâwhat a man he must be.”
“Yes,” I say. Susannah Sheldon's
yellowed dress rags at the edges
and has been let out more than once.
“You are as all do say.”
Susannah puts her stubby hand on mine.
“A perfect lady.”
“Want some?” I offer her
a piece of my bread.
No doubt she'll take it.
Susannah shakes her head.
“Cannot. Martha Corey chokes me
each time I try to take a bite.”
She brings the bread to her lips
but as soon as she tries to bite,
her face blues and her throat tightens.
All the folk in Ingersoll's
stop their dining and look on Susannah.
I pry the bread from her hand.
“Goody Corey stops her eating,” I say.
Susannah returns to color and breath.
“Ann, you saved me.”
She says it so all hear.
June 1692
Why uproot
a perfectly healthy
white blazing star
from the soil
to allow room
for a roadside weed?
The purple love grass
may appear somewhat
spectacular at first
with its bright-colored veins,
but it grows wide and irreverent,
knows not how to
contain itself
within the garden.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Ann flits about the room
in her white streaming nightclothes.
Her skirts pick up
under the little gusts of air
created by her wake.
“Abigail”â¦she hesitates like
the squirrel who tests his branch
before scurrying onto itâ¦
“speaks out of turn.
She follows not as the others.”
I say, “She is young, and she will follow
orders better than most. You shall see.”
Ann ventures onto the branch,
wobbly on her little paws.
“Do we really need Abigail
to be part of the group?”
I brush out my hair.
I wish to brush out this nonsense.
“She was one of the first two to see,
and she lives with the Reverend.
What have you against Abigail still?”
“She acts like my baby sister.
I think I have a girl to replace her.”
“Who, Ann? Who else has our sight?”
I pull hard on my brush.
Ann stands behind me
so I cannot see her face.
She gulps in some air.
“Susannah Sheldon, a maid
from Salem Town. She is very nice.
And she speaks well and torments well.”
“Ann, 'tis dangerous to bring
new people into the group.
Forget not the lesson of Ruth Warren
the traitor,” I say.
Ann's face sulks like the willow's branch.
“But of course, we should ask
all the other girls,” I say,
my brush clenched tight.
“Perhaps it will be decided to be
a fine idea.”
“And what about Abigail?” she asks.
I stroke Ann's head.
“She is good to have at hand.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
We leave Susannah
loitering outside the tavern
like a beggar.
Ann says, “She'll be of help to us.”
“But she's not from the village.
She dwells in town,” Margaret rebuffs
her cousin.
Abigail looks down,
afraid to give speech.
Elizabeth struggles to put her words
together. “Maybe we should pray
and let the Lord guide us.
We do not know Susannah.”
“Exactly the truth.” Margaret stands.
She says, “We know not
that we can trust her.
She is from the outside.”
“But we must grow in numbers.”
Ann's hands ball into fists.
I open my lips to say
let Susannah
remain where she is,
shut out of our doors,
'tis dangerous to let in new blood.
But then Margaret blurts
from her sour mouth,
“Must we grow
with orphans and servants?
Will the town believe
words of them so low?”
“We need to enlarge our group.”
I push away from the bench.
I open the doors to the ordinary,
strain my eyes against bright noon
and let Susannah Sheldon
into our circle in the shade.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Susannah's hands nearly twist
full-round at the wrist
like a weather vane
swept up in a great gust of wind.
Her fingers arrow at each witch
Ann names, even ones Susannah
must never have set eyes upon.
The crowd gasps.
Ruth Warren stuns silent on the stand.
She cannot playact afflicted again;
none can match Susannah's skill.
Abigail opens her mouth
to cry out “Ruth Warren,”
but her lips move without sound.
Tears sink her eyes,
and Abigail tries to sit down,
but Susannah occupies
double her rightful space
on the bench, and Abigail
is forced into the pew behind us.
Ann smiles. I look away.
Margaret whispers to Elizabeth,
“Susannah be a braggart”
as she elbows Susannah's jaw
like one harsh gavel blow.
Elizabeth's eyes focus on the doors
like she herself feels chained
and examined and awaits her moment
to run.
I exhale.
This feels nothing
like a court examination
but as though
one might next see
a three-headed horse
parade round the pulpit.
Margaret Walcott, 17
“They be needing aid at the Wilkins home,”
Uncle Thomas says to Ann and me
and stinking Mercy.
“Bray Wilkins suffers and they believe
'tis witchcraft what causes his grief.
You girls must visit and tell all
what ye can see of the Invisible World.”
Mercy look at Ann, and I know
Mercy been deviling with Ann's mind.
Ann clutches her father's arm.
“Let Mercy travel on first.
I have a lesson to finish
and so does Margaret.
Ye shall check our pages
and when they are correct
send us forth to join Mercy.”
I contain my grumble,
the stove of my anger
so hot I got fever.
Mercy grins at me out of
the side of her lips.
“I'll set a carriage for Mercy
and ye girls shall follow,” Uncle says.
Aunt Ann swells with a new baby,
but none in the house dare speak
about it, for Aunt fears it will curse the birthing.
Aunt says, “I do not think 'tis wiseâ”
Ann stares at her and she stops
talking like she lost her throat.
Ann tugs my arm.
“Come quickly. I must finish my copy
so I can join her,” she says.
“I don't want to do that healing
to none anyway. 'Tis work of heathens
and slaves.” I yank away my arm.
After Ann leaves
I rip my paper into dust.
I pound my fist so all them pieces
shower round me, hiding the rain
of my tears. How can I lose
both Ann and Isaac to Mercy?
Mercy Lewis, 17
Benjamin Wilkins's eyes cling
to me. I toss my cloak
so that it covers his head,
and the room laughs.
Poor old Bray Wilkins
sits in his armchair,
his legs elevated,
his face a place of pain.
His water stopped for over
a week now, and like a stream
clogged by a fallen tree,
his river swells.
His face's red
and bloated enough to burst.
Goody Wilkins asks,
“Mercy, can ye tell us
what happens here?”
I hush the room
with a lift of my hands
and close my eyes.
When I open my lids
I say, “I see the Invisible World.
John Willard jumps upon
the belly of his grandfather, Bray Wilkins.
The same man I am told tended
Missus Putnam as a child.
He presses down on old Bray Wilkins
hard enough to crack ribs.”
I begin to faint,
draw my backhand
across my forehead,
and my legs go limp.
Benjamin catches me.
His eyes no longer paw.
He looks at me now
as though I am a spirit.
Ann blusters through the door.
“Yes, John Willard,
whose specter I saw whip
my baby sister Sarah to death.
I see him too.”
Ann's uncle, the Constable,
punches the air where we point
the invisible witches to be.
My legs jerk and my arms spasm
each time he strikes a witch.
They lift Ann and me out
of the Wilkins home,
nestle us in the horse cart
as my feet are too weak
to hold up my body.
Benjamin bounds toward me.
“Grandfather, he looked not pained.
He smiled, teeth and all,
and said his aches were released
for a spell when Constable Putnam
hit those witches. Thank you.”
I nod at him, wave him well.
Parched now
and tired beyond sleep,
I look out at Salem Village
and feel like this place
calls me its own.