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
“Mercy, bring this wool
to the weaver,” Missus orders.
I bundle the yarns
under my cloak.
I feel as though I've been thrown
to an ocean of ice floes,
the weather so flays my skin
and gnaws at my bones.
I hand the weaver's son
the yarns to dye.
“What a pretty cloth
for such a pretty one,” he says.
His eyes tighten upon me
like a corset.
“'Tis not for me,” I say,
and turn to leave.
He catches me by the shoulder,
his hand stained indigo.
“Did one ever tell thee
thou hast bluest eyes?”
“Jonathan!” His father rumbles
right as a reverend.
“Thou art needed to mix the dye.”
Jonathan boy scurries off.
But his father looms down on me,
tries to stare me apart
like I be one of the dock girls
flashing stockings and crinoline.
Without a flinch, I gather my scarf
and push back into the freeze.
Even in deep winter
the town of Salem swells.
The port fills with merchandise,
and pockets droop heavy with pounds.
On the barge, bags of grain
and jugs of cider unload,
for the Salem Village farms
see meager crops.
I am told the slaves used to eat pudding
at Thomas Putnam's table,
but not in a winter this cold.
Few in Reverend Parris's flock
dine far above broth and grain.
I meet the eyes
of a uniformed soldier.
I cannot praise and bow.
The wars up north
echo in my skull
like the sea inside a shell.
A different kind of battle bruises
Salem's shores.
For here neighbor to neighbor,
brother to kin,
old money against the new,
jealous feuds
whistle through the night.
And I have barely a bonnet
to protect my head.
Why, Lord? Why am I here?
Margaret Walcott, 17
Sky's painful bright outside
the parsonage, even without sun.
I scratch the wet topping my hood
and sneeze. “Hole in the roof
been dripping me in meeting.
I fear I caught the cough,” I say to Ann.
“Perhaps tomorrow at our gathering
we'll find you a remedy.” Ann smiles.
She turns her head from me
and stares dumb-like at her new servant girl.
I shake and spit up a cough and a sneeze
what pierce the ears
like a horsewhip cracking.
Folk turn and stare.
I whisper, “Ann, have you a kerchief?
I must be looking all spotted and ugly.”
Ann shakes her head no
and steps back from me.
“You know you always look fair.”
She pulls her cloak tighter
round her shoulders.
My nose be dripping worse than the roof.
I need to wipe it on my glove.
I sniffle.
Break in morning service be at an end
and brethren file toward the meeting door.
“Wait, and we'll go in after the others.”
I hold Ann's arm, but she wiggles free.
“Mother said I must not dawdle
outside meeting.” Ann shrugs
and darts toward church.
When all's gone into the meetinghouse
or be looking that way,
I turn myself back
toward the parsonage.
I swipe back and forth
my nose 'pon my sleeve
till my cuff be wet as my head.
I look up,
and he stares on me.
I want to crawl under my skirt.
His shoulders be broad
as a boat's bow.
I feel cherry-cheeked.
Will he tell I be not a lady?
He walks toward me.
I see now 'tis worse
than I did think.
He is not my elder.
“Isaac Farrarâ”
I cough and the tears
brim my eyes.
Oh, I will be always
the girl who uses her sleeve.
“It be not⦔ “I meant but to⦔
I wince at the thought
of his scold or laugh.
Only three feet from my own,
Isaac just smiles.
And not like some snake in low grass,
but a smile like warm,
sweet milk.
I turn away quick
and stumble over my own foot
as I run direct into church.
Margaret Walcott, 17
“Life is not for joy and jolly,
but for toil and test,
an order ordained.”
Reverend rings in our ears.
The men of land and money
lined up front
like a fence of wood stakes.
My father snug among them
what serve on town council
and vote as church members.
After Mother died, Father sold his cargo ship,
built the biggest house in the Village
and wed the sister of Thomas Putnam
to sit on that bench where he does.
Behind my father, the men
of mended trousers
straighten their necks.
I try never to stare
directly at the upright heads
of those what sit behindâ
the good sons, all them
not off or lost to war.
My eyes shift 'pon Isaac.
Did he just glance this way?
Nothing best smudge my face.
My hands heat under my gloves.
A drop of water dins my head
and I swallow hard a cough
screaming at the roof of my throat.
I switch fast my gaze
to the row below Isaac,
where sit the Gospel women,
which my father
wishes
me
to be.
Following the wives
of upstanding men
fall the lesser women,
and I sit behind them, us girls
and servants. The slaves and heathens
are not allowed
in church at all.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Her name is a blessing,
not simple and plain like Ann.
Ann with sticky spiderweb hair,
not the gold that willows
down Mercy's back, smooth
and perfect as God's breath.
All the men stop
whatever they are about
whenever she goes past.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
“Mercy, let me help you
carry the other bucket,”
I say, and sidle next to her on the path.
We walk along in silence.
I want to ask her how she slept,
what it was like when she lived in Maine,
did she have a horse,
did she see any Indians,
does she like me?
But instead I ask,
“Is Mother well this morning?”
Mercy doesn't even turn to look at me.
“Yea, she seems quite herself.”
Mercy sets down her bucket,
rubs her hands together.
“I can carry both buckets if you like,” I say.
She shrugs and smooths her bonnet.
I walk a step behind her
all the way home,
just so I can watch
the way she swings her arms.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Two weeks in this new place,
and night comes restless
with wind that claws
over the roof
like trapped cat paws.
When I close my eyes to sleep
I see my mother.
She holds my father's scalp.
Mouths of my sisters and brothers
gash open in scream.
Yet I hear no cry, no yell, nothing.
Under the bed, I pressed
my hands against my ears.
Bare Indian feet pounded
the floor, blood splattered
like a bucket of paint
hurled against the wall.
Blood raindrops fell
thick as mud, slow as dew.
As before, I cannot budge.
My legs dead wood.
I cannot lift my finger,
cannot blink an eye.
I do not think I breathe.
Like twisted wind
I hear the heavy breath
of the man who slays my mother.
I clasp my hands and pray
that this is just night sleep
and come morrow
I will be with my family.
But I wake in servant's quarters
under a thin quilt warmed by low fire,
rise to another day of fetching
for Missus Putnam and her babies.
Still I welcome the dawn.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Little Ann circles, buzzes
in my ear like a barnyard fly.
I should almost like to shoo her
off my shoulder, but she fixes on me
with those chestnut eyes
like I were her queen.
“Let me put the baby to nap.”
Ann relieves my arms.
Master Putnam shakes open the door,
a gust of wind shoots snow
behind his head like a fountain.
He staggers to his chair.
I untie his boots, yank free
his gloves and rub his red hands
to salve his numb and cold.
His eyes, like a flaming torch,
search over my body,
and I want to be anywhere
but bent at his feet.
Will this new man I serve
be the same as the last?
Wilson barks and shakes madly
his fur so that I am blanketed in white.
Master Putnam withdraws his hands,
“Go and fetch thee some dry clothes.”
My heart ceases panic
as I turn the corner to my room.
“Why are you covered in snow?”
Ann startles me, then gallops to my side.
I point at the dog.
“Well, you had better change
to dry skirts,” Ann says.
“Thank you, Ann.
I had not thought of that.”
Ann blushes. She tags behind me
with a strange eagerness to help me
be rid of my soggy clothes.
I prevent her entering my room.
“Do you not have your gathering
and visit the Minister's girls today?
Should you not like to find
your cloak and gloves,
and then I will say you are at the stables?”
Ann sprouts up on her toes.
“Oh, yes! I shall find them.”
I close my door, but a whine
and a scratch, and the door is wide again.
“Well then, dear Wilson, my prince,
in with thee.”
Margaret Walcott, 17
“I refuse playing at Scotch-hoppers.”
I roll my eyes at little Betty.
“I did not sneak away
to play them baby games.”
Abigail punches her younger cousin
in the side. “That be a game
for warm weather.”
Ann paces the floor.
Her eyes fire.
“We could play Queen
and her subjects!”
“Fine. I be the Queen,” I say.
“I command ye all
to sit under the table
and speak not at all.”
The three little girls scurry
beneath the table like rabbits
scared into a hole.
I kick up my feet
and fluff my long black hair
in the hand glass. If only
my nose were not so red.
“What now?” Betty asks
after several minutes of quiet.
“You lose!” Abigail laughs.
“Silence!” I hold up my hand.
“You both lose. Stand in the corner.”
The girls' eyes edge with tears.
Ann crawls from under the table.
“This is dull. Let's play at something new.”
“This game be fine.” I smile at her.
“We can tell fortunes.” Ann dangles
my favorite before me.
Betty shakes her head.
“But that be a sin.”
Ann whispers, “Not if none
does catch us.”
I frown as they gather
a glass of water and four eggs.
“Do we form a circle?” Abigail asks
as though she's never done this.
I sneeze and my nose does drip.
I lift an arm to swipe it dry
and Isaac Farrar
with his wide shoulders and buttery smile
jumps into my thoughts.
My stomach squirmsâ
what a
fool
I acted,
rubbing my nose on my sleeve
in front of him!
I shake my head.
“What then do we do?” Abigail asks.
“Oh,
you
are a
fool
,” I say,
and grab the bowl of eggs.