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
September 1692
Beware of sturdy branches.
Not only apples hang
from trees.
Oh, 'tis no consolation
that the apples be poisoned,
to shoot them too soon
from the branch,
and know 'twas you
who made the wretched bullets!
For you who are the last log
on the load of lumber,
'tis you what crush them flat.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Mercy does not answer
when I knock on her door.
“'Tis but Ann,” I say sweetly,
and push open the door.
“What do you want, Ann?” she asks.
She and her room look like a hailstorm
furied down upon them.
“What can I do to help?” I ask her.
“Nothing. Leave me rest,” Mercy snaps,
and turns from me. “I must think.
We have more trials and hangings,
but we must stop harming the innocent.
We must have strategy.
Oh, my head does ache.”
I purse my lips to whistle in Wilson
but stop before sound escapes my mouth.
I inch to Mercy's side and stroke her hair.
“There must be something
I
can do,” I say.
She brushes off my hand.
“I know you mean to help,
but just go home, Ann.
Leave me my peace.
I will see you come 'morrow.”
I turn to leave.
“Will you not come back home, Mercy?
Mother misses you, Father too.
I miss you most.”
“I know that you do,” she says,
and rushes me out the door.
Even though he sits still and peaceful
as a river on a windless day,
I growl at Wilson.
Though he gnarls not one tooth,
I still kick him: “Stupid dog.”
He yelps, and I muzzle the devilish thing.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Ingersoll's smells of rot,
week-old bones aboveground.
I hold my sleeve to my nose.
“I seen not a specter,”
I say. “Has anyone
honestly
seen one?”
None speaks.
“This must end.”
I say it bold.
Silence. The drip of a leaky roof,
the pant of canine tongue.
Abigail smiles. Margaret seems
to almost nod, and Elizabeth clasps
my hand.
Ann shakes her head.
“Have you all gone mad?”
she finally says. “We shall return
to nothing, if we are not seers.
The Lord has chosen us
to be guides, and we shall do so
as long as the Lord permit us.”
“We are not chosen to see.
We have been choosing who to see.
And who are we to choose?
This must end.”
I pound the table.
Ann grabs my arm
rough enough Wilson barks,
and the few folks in Ingersoll's
eye us. “Giles Corey.
You are made ill by Goodman Corey,”
she orders me like a servant.
I shake free of her
and march sure-footed
out of that grave-digging hole.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Elizabeth stares out my window.
“It is too quiet,” she says.
I wave her off, pull the brush
through my locks,
but when I listen
the night has lost
its hum and chirp,
no horse hooves sound,
no wind shakes the branches.
We hear the front door
bang open and the Constable
brush off his boots.
He thumps into his seat
at the table. I push Elizabeth
away from the door,
so that my ear presses against it.
“The committee went to see
the kin of those witches.”
I know the voice, but cannot
place the speaker.
Elizabeth's hand twists the doorknob,
but I stop her from opening the door.
Constable says, “They suffer.
I think Reverend was right
to leave the Nurse family be.”
An insistent tap tap tap
at the door, and another
enters the house.
Elizabeth's body arches.
Her skin pales, just listening
to the new footsteps, the drag
of her uncle's cane.
“If he knows I am here,
he will beat me raw.”
Elizabeth slumps to the ground.
“Worry not, we will sneak
you home faster than your uncle
can travel. Hush now!” I say.
“How fare all in Andover?”
The man whose voice
I still cannot recognize asks Doctor Griggs.
“They have caught not only
scarlet fever, but the young girls
be afflicted by witches.
Witches are coming out
everywhere to overtake
Essex County, it seems.”
Doctor Griggs lowers himself
creak by creak into a chair.
“All more reason why we must talk
to our brethren not attending church.”
The mystery voice grows larger now,
powerful enough I wonder if the speaker
be not one of the magistrates.
Constable stands with a dull thud.
He bangs his head on the low ceiling beam
above the table as he always does.
“All these witches in Andover
I hear do confess to signing
the Devil's book,” he says.
“Who is with the Constable
and Doctor Griggs?” I ask Elizabeth.
She shakes her head.
“Well, never to mind,” I say.
Elizabeth grabs my arm.
“The Devil's Affliction
is spreading across the county?”
I shrug. “How can that be?”
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Wilson gnarls his teeth at me.
I drag him to Ingersoll's,
where Elizabeth and Margaret
and Abigail do congregate.
“What are you doing with Mercy's dog?”
Abigail asks, and pets the beast.
Wilson nuzzles her hand.
“I would not touch him
were I you. This dog be Charlotte Easty's
familiar.” I nod my head.
Margaret lowers her voice to a hush.
“You know 'tis a lie.
Wilson be first your father's dog
and then be Mercy's.” Margaret signals
Wilson to come to her side, and he does.
I huddle the girls around me.
“Mercy talks a fool lately
about quitting our accusations.
She needs be taught a lesson,” I say.
“But you don't mean to hurt Wilson.”
Elizabeth now hugs the ratty fleabag.
“Oh, Elizabeth. 'Tis but a dog;
your fits have sent
Christians
to Gallows Hill,” I say.
Elizabeth motions Wilson to leave
with her, tears channeling down her cheek.
“Are you so quick in your boots
to return to Doctor Griggs and his beatings?
Your home is here with us.
Give up that dog and sit down,” I command.
Margaret rises to rescue the dog.
“Forget not, Margaret, Mercy be not your friend.
She be always before your enemy.
Why defend her? What bind has she to you?”
Abigail sobs, “So Mercy be banished from us?”
I shake my head.
“No. She just needs be taught
a lesson.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
I stare at Elizabeth
as they shoot him,
a creature without growl or bite,
but only lying there in the sun.
The sound of the gun
blocks out all else
as though everything
stops moving except the bullet.
Ann and Abigail nod.
“That's the beast
Charlotte Easty's specter
rode and tortured,” Abigail says.
My sweet dog's blood floods
the ground, pooling
toward Ann's feet,
but she remains unmoved.
The tears burn my cheeks.
“This be wrong,”
I say to Elizabeth.
Elizabeth with her soft eyes
looks to embrace me,
but I shrug away.
“Wilson never did but love.
It be we who do the Devil's work,”
I say.
I run toward my Wilson
but like a root snarling my path,
Ann trips me and says,
“Don't dare touch that dog!”
My face blares red as Wilson's blood.
I leave her and Abigail and Elizabeth.
I march away from them and their stench.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
I knock but Mercy
does not respond.
I crack open her door.
Her clothes crumple
over her body, her room
dungeon damp and dingy.
She stands up in her
undergarments;
and, without even
looking at me, Mercy leads
me out of her room.
Elizabeth, Margaret and I
ride to town,
silent as the cornfields we pass.
“Mercy is not herself,”
I say with a slight smile.
“Leave Mercy be,”
Elizabeth snaps,
quick and mean
like an angry gnat,
unlike herself.
I don't look at Elizabeth
the rest of the ride into town.
Before we testify against him,
Judge Stoughton asks Giles Corey,
“How will ye be tried?”
Giles Corey says nothing.
His lips, like great boulders,
will not be moved.
“Will you not enter a plea?”
Judge Stoughton's eyebrows
frown on his forehead.
All the judges look
to one another and murmur;
still Goodman Corey
does not speak.
I look to Mercy for what to do,
but she is not here.
I signal the girls to stay quiet.
“If you do not enter a plea,
that by God and your country
ye are either guilty or innocent,
ye shall be given peine forte et dure.”
Judge Stoughton peers
over his table to meet
Giles in the eye.
Giles nods his head.
“Ye will be pressed to death,”
Judge Stoughton says.
The courtroom chatter
escalates to frenzy,
more noise today than ever before.
Judge calls the day
as he cannot calm the crowd.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Though the mosquitoes
bite fierce and the hour falls
deep in the belly of the night,
I do sneak from the house.
I cannot be contained.
I crunch through the thicket.
I pat my thigh
three times calling
for the ghost of my dog,
the only one who really cared
for me in this town,
now rotting in a shallow grave.
I faint back into leaves
loosed from fat-trunked trees
and bury myself.
I wish to find family
somewhere, even if it's underground.
Margaret Walcott, 17
Isaac be there to watch Giles Corey
die,
the man for whom he rode 'bout town,
petitions in his satchel,
trying to save.
As they do drop heavy stones
'pon Goodman Corey's chest
I clutch my own heart.
Why never did Isaac visit me
or speak to me after
he peeled away my bloomers?
My anger flattened out,
I wish to be back against Isaac's chest.
I be not understanding why
Giles asks for more weight.
I fear well enough the stone
I'd be bearing were the town
to know I sinned out of wedlock.
They send all us home
for the night scares the sky,
and Giles Corey cannot yet be crushed.
Mercy Lewis, 17
My throat's dry as the ground.
The oxcart of eight condemned witches
catches in the road.
Abigail shouts, “The Devil
holds back the wheel.”
Ann nods. “Yea,
the Devil tries to save
his witches from their hanging.”
The cart breaks free of the rut
and journeys to the top
of Gallows Hill.
Elizabeth recites the Lord's Prayer.
Margaret nudges her to quiet,
then directs her eyes to Isaac.
The crowd's breath upon my neck,
I feel no tingles,
no power in my fingers.
The sky above layered with gray,
I cannot tell where the light
comes from or if the sun
shines down at all.
Martha Corey
folds her hands to God.
I pray for swift death,
but she gasps,
for the noose
is not quite tight enough
to break her neck.
Her body convulses like shocks
of lightning flaring the sky
for fifteen minutes.
Elizabeth and I clasp each other
in iron-bound restraint
so we will not run up
and cut her rope.
They noose the last witch,
Samuel Wardwell:
a man I do not know,
have never seen.
He opens his mouth
to proclaim his innocence,
but the executioner's pipe smoke
chokes him and clogs his last words.
The crowd rumbles and storms.
“The Devil stands beside the witch
on the hanging platform.”
Abigail yells above the mob's
mumbles and roars.
I see nothing.
I want to say I see nothing,
that I am tired
and wish to be left alone,
wish to be like the field
left fallow this autumn.
I stay mute now,
but 'tis too late.
What, Lord, have I done?
Reverend Parris
shakes his head at the corpses
dangling by their necks.
“What a sad thing it is to see
eight firebrands of Hell hanging there.”
Ann lifts her chin like a general
and says, “We meet 'morrow
at Ingersoll's.”
“Not I.”
The wind blows behind me,
and hurries me to the Constable's.
I burrow under bedcovers
as if I were among the soil
and the rocks and the worms.
As if I were all bones, no brain,
as rotted on the outside
as I feel poisoned within.