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
The house quiets
after so many footsteps
in and out of our door.
I rock my little sister
Hannah in my arms.
Mother will not hold Hannah
or look on her. The last baby
she held was blue and still,
and Mother could not nurse it to life.
“Witches killed my baby.
Witches will murder this new child,”
Mother keeps repeating
as she pulls at her bedclothes.
Her bleeding not stopped
since she birthed Hannah.
“I will take care of you, little sister.”
I kiss the baby's forehead.
“Protect you from the witches
and devils in our midst.”
Mercy appears in the doorway,
her apron clean, her hair brushed
and swept up on her head like a crown.
“Can I hold the baby?” she asks me.
I raise my eyebrows. I stroke
Hannah's head with my hand.
Mercy looks on us with a smile
soft as down feathers,
and I slowly roll the infant
into her arms.
“All of our kin except Joseph,
my father's youngest brother,
came to the baptism,” I say to Mercy.
The baby purrs in Mercy's arms.
Mercy could have her own child by now.
She could be with a husband,
not minding our house and playing
scotch-hoppers with my siblings.
“Is Joseph not the one with whom
your father does not get along,
the one your grandfather favored
and gave most of his estate?” Mercy asks.
“Yes, Joseph is my father's half-brother,”
I say.
“Is it true that he keeps a horse saddled
and goes about always armed
for fear they'll arrest him for witchcraft?”
Mercy looks at me with saucer-sized eyes.
She rocks Hannah in her arms, squeezes
the baby close to her chest.
“Yes,” I say.
“Mercy, you do not know Joseph.
He is not like one of us.
He does not believe we fight the Devil.”
Mercy nods. “No, I understand.
He is not really a
Putnam
.”
I snatch Hannah away from her.
I want to scream, And
you
are
definitely
not a Putnam,
but instead I say,
“I need to put my sister to sleep.”
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
When I learn Mercy
told Elizabeth to quit
my group of seers,
I punch and kick and stomp
my pillow. I feel not better.
I smash the candelabra
Mercy stole from my uncle.
Still I fury. I toss all her clothes
upon the floor and trample
them with my muddy boots.
But I am still mad.
Mercy coos Hannah
on the divan.
I snatch my sister
from her claws.
I say to Mercy,
“You shall never again
tend Hannah.”
The baby screeches full-throat
in her gosling torment.
Mercy raises suspicious eyes.
“Mother says,” I say.
Margaret Walcott, 17
The Reverend opens
his arms as he reads,
“Canticles chapter one, verse two:
âLet him kiss me
with kisses of his mouth,
for thy love is better than wine.'”
Feet shuffle and someone
releases a frustrated “humph.”
Isaac sits among the Nurse family
and friends, those who were not hanged
as witches. They all track the Reverend
as he staggers 'bout the room,
like the Reverend were a wolf
they might musket.
Reverend Parris's voice breaks
like a boy's, and he clears his throat.
“All true believers are urgently
and fervently desirous of sensible
and feeling manifestations
of the love of Christ. That is what
this text says to us.”
I glance to my left.
Elizabeth hunches in her pew,
her eyes closed, her hands
pressed so hard together in prayer
she could crush her own bones.
She looks guilty as a thief
wearing stolen shoes.
Ann and Mercy sit beside each other,
across the row from me,
but you wouldn't know
they knew each other's names.
Ann scoots forward on the bench,
places Mercy behind her
and refuses to look back.
Reverend continues his sermon
and folk shift and murmur.
“Kisses are very sweet
among true friends
after some jars and differences,
whereby they testify
true reconciliation.”
But no one looks to kiss
one another. Only me and Isaac
seem able to do that.
This room cracks right apart,
like a great earthquake shook
the village and broke
east from west. Families firm
on their side of the land.
They wish ill, not kisses, on their neighbors,
each side believing the other
conspires with the Devil.
And I just changed my side
of the bench. I scoot closer
to Missus Farrar and lower my head.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Sent to the cordwainer
to pick up shoes for Mister Putnam,
I see six girls stretch into daylight,
released from Salem jail.
They mount their fathers' oxcarts
pointed northwest toward Andover.
Thin as spider legs,
with blackened hands
and soiled dresses,
still they walk regal.
Their fathers smile
in the way they hold
their shoulders, all of them
grateful as Sunday prayer.
I smile joyous for their release.
“They put up bail for 'em girls,”
a man with a crooked hat
and a missing front tooth
whispers on the street.
“'Tis all come round. Now those
what confessed say they were scared
witless and confessed only what
they were toldâthat they are innocent,
not witches,” his friend with a cane
and an eye that never moves says,
and licks his lips.
The first old man motions
with his chin to me.
“Is that not one of the afflicted girls?”
I turn my head away from them,
pull my shawl to cover my cheek.
“I surely know not,” the second man
says, and leans on his cane.
“Crazed of mind, that's what
those afflicted girls be, not no angels
of the Lord,” says toothless one.
“What become of them?” says the man
with the cane.
“Who does know and who does care,
now that the court be closed down?”
The man without his tooth looks on me again.
“You sure that ain't one of the Afflicted?”
“No, fool, that be some two-bit girl
from the docks.” The second man lifts
his cane to me with a wink and a leer.
They turn their view
to a lady on the street
holding her daughter's hand.
I toss off my shawl and walk into the crowd.
I look for my shadow tall on the ground.
I look for someone to point at me
and say, “Sinner, face thy punishment!”
But I am less visible than a witch's specter.
Margaret Walcott, 17
I stand too long outside
of the door. The wind blows
and clears his horse's hoofprints.
“It will only be six months,”
Isaac said, and raised my chin.
“They need as many men
to finish the fort at Pemaquid.
The French boats swarm
the waters already.
And the Canadians press down
from the north.”
I clutched his arm so tight
my fingers branded his skin.
He told me, “I must go.
I will be back.” Isaac kissed
my cheek and mounted his steed.
I stand waiting for him
to turn round, waiting for the winds
and God and the governor
who calls fasts and the convocation
of ministers today, to call off the war
and ship home soldiers, not send
them away to be captured or killed.
Step-Mother yells, “Maaargaret.”
She trots outside.
“Come inside now, you'll die of cold.”
Whether it be lack of food,
or lack of Issac, I desire for the first time
to put my arms round Step-Mother
and lay my head in her lap.
But when I draw near her
she smells sour as old dog's tongue
and her manner be suited to fit.
December 1692
Cold restores order.
Shrill winds muffle
screaming, and the trees twist
more deviant arms and legs
than Affliction.
The witch hunt is snuffed.
The accusers slip
under the silent ice
of indifference.
Mercy Lewis, 17
Cold as a January snowstorm,
I rub my hands by the hearth
and tiptoe into the hallway.
“Now Reverend Hale too
is against us,” Master Putnam says.
I cannot see Master Putnam speak,
but his boots smack the ground
quick and anxious.
“He now believes that the Devil
impersonates innocent people,”
Reverend Parris responds.
Ann bumps my shoulder.
“I thought you did not care
anymore about witchcraft?”
Ann talks as though she stands
on stairs above me and must
stoop to speak with me.
“I don't,” I say.
Ann smiles sweetly and calls,
“Reverend Parris.”
She licks her lips.
“Father!” She yells loud
as though her hand were on fire.
Ann's father and Reverend Parris
rush into the room.
“What see you, child?”
Reverend Parris asks.
“Mercy stands about idle,”
Ann says. “And when I told her
Mother asked for aid, she refused
to come.”
I clench my tongue.
None would hear my speech
if I dared.
Master Putnam looks at me,
and with a voice of thorns
he says, “Be off this moment, girl,
to help Missus Putnam!”
The Reverend shakes his head at me,
eyes me as though
I had ripped pages from his Bible.
I gather my skirts. “Yes, sir,”
I say without another look to Ann.
Margaret Walcott, 17
I survey that no familiar eyes be about.
“Elizabeth,” I call from the weaver's shop.
I wave her come near and ask,
“Why be you in town?”
“I come to buy flour and salt,”
she says like she speaks to a stranger.
We stand looking at each other,
none talking.
“So you are staying longer at your uncle's?”
I say.
Elizabeth nods yes and tugs down her sleeve,
trying to cover the bruise on her forearm.
I expect her to say something,
but I know not what.
“I will marry Isaac in the spring,”
I finally say, and square my hands
on my hips.
The snow falls in pieces
thick and wet. Elizabeth's hair
looks full of Queen Anne's lace.
She sees something over my shoulder
and backs away as though
a beast crept up behind me.
I turn round.
My father looms over me.
“Ye are not to be alone and speaking
on the street, Margaret!”
He snatches my arm
and looks on Elizabeth as though
she has the curse of the leper.
Elizabeth keeps backing
into the street.
I hear the wheels
and run of an oxcart.
“Out of the way!” a voice hollers.
I should grab after her.
But, dear Lord, I cannot move.
Elizabeth trips, stumbles upon
her boot and falls into the street.
A horse whinnies and moans.
A terrible screech sounds,
like a thousand birds crying
all at once.
I start to run forward,
but Father holds me back
and turns me round.
“Do not look behind ye,”
he commands.
And I do as I be told.