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
Ann flurries into the house
and unstrings her bonnet
with fierce excitement.
“Elizabeth be dead!”
I cannot stand.
My legs suddenly made of dust,
not bone, I crash to the floor.
“She was run down
by an oxcart.
Some did say
'twas the Devil
taking back his own.”
The tears flood me.
I wish to pound the floor
like a mad gavel
and scream, “Why?”
But none in this house
would care,
so I swallow
the hot iron brand
of my anger.
Ann looks to her mother.
“The driver said he never
saw Elizabeth in the road.”
Missus Putnam nods to Ann
with an almost smile,
“Well, 'tis a pity, but she should
have been more mindful
walking in the road.”
The floor beneath me
opens as a pit in my mind,
bottomless,
and I know I will never find
footing in this house.
Margaret Walcott, 17
Never will my father speak
of what we girls done
the past year, for the Devil does deceive.
'Tis better to pretend nothing
happened than to admit
we girls were wrong.
But there is no lying in my father's house,
and I am not to speak
lest I be answering back.
And if I wish to be wed
I best never step boot
out of the house
(except when my father commands).
And I shall eat all what's served me
and show proper gratitude for it.
But most important of all
I must, at all times,
act a lady
or find home elsewhere.
Father smacks the table,
grabs his coat and hat
and gusts out the door.
Step-Mother sneers at me
like a dockside rat.
She drops the largest basket
of laundry and mending to my feet.
She smiles and gives me
a nasty little “Hmmph,”
testing whether I be fool
enough to talk out of turn.
I be muted now like one what
cut off her own tongue.
I straighten my bonnet.
At least no bastard grows within me.
Father's edict and Step-Mother's tricks
be temporary as a storm;
come spring I
shall
live elsewhere.
Before the hearth, I kneel
and fold prayerful hands,
asking the Lord and my mother
for strength.
I treadle. I mend. I scour
better than the maid.
None says, “Fine work,”
but I know what I have done.
Mercy Lewis, 17
On my way back
from town
I lose my trail
in the thick forest snow
and pass Gallows Hill.
I hold my breath
as even after all these months
it smells of blood.
Ghosts wander the grounds
where no birds lay nest,
no fields bear crops,
no trees can root,
except the scraggly one
which dangled the dead.
“Witch!” I scream it
to the stillness,
for there are none to hear me.
But I wonder if somehow
my mother can hear me now.
I have not thought of her
all these months of trials;
perhaps if I had
no bodies would have
swung from that tree.
Mother, we did wrong,
we were deceived.
Pray we will be forgiven
as we are forgotten.
A villain and a vagrant,
must I lay root elsewhere?
I have accused.
Perhaps I cannot stay here.
Margaret Walcott, 17
Hollow as a gutted
fish.
Lonely as
driftwood
banked to shore.
Not a friend,
not a foeâ
would any really
care if an oxcart
crushed me?
Mercy Lewis, 17
She sweeps the meetinghouse floor,
the look of the doe been shot
in her wide blue eyes.
“Mercy!” Abigail runs to unlatch
the doors and let me in.
She clings to me like I am
her mother lost and now returned.
“What be about the parsonage
of late?” I whisper.
She too hushes her voice.
“Betty come home.”
Abigail looks to cry.
“'Tis wretched. The Reverend
be feared they what lost kin
in the witch trials will come
after him.” She glances down
and says in a quiet
that does rival Elizabeth,
“And he blames me.”
She bunches up her sleeveâ
scars of burning begin
at her shoulder and line
to her wrist.
“How dare he!” I grab the broom
and charge toward the entrance
to the residence to
blame
the monster himself.
“Mercy, I beg thee no.”
Abigail hugs tight my leg
so that I must drag her.
I stop. She is right.
'Tis not worth hanging
to harm the Reverend.
Abigail looks up at me.
“I have written to my aunt
in Maine, and soon I will live there.”
I pat the front wood bench
where we resided most
of the year, fitting and screaming
in Affliction.
I motion Abigail to lay her head
in my lap such that I might
stroke her hair.
“But until you depart,
what will you do?”
With closed eyes
but a direct tongue she says,
“I just never speak
so as to be forgotten.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
Baby Hannah curdles
the night air with her screaming.
I rush into the hall,
but the crying be gone.
'Tis almost as if I imagined
the sound.
I shake from cold,
cannot find warmth
beneath my covers.
I pull my knees
into my belly
and again I hear Hannah.
I light a taper
and creak open my door.
Ann paces outside my room,
rocking Hannah.
“Do you want me to take my baby?”
I ask.
“She is not your baby!”
Ann's eyes widen as her tongue whips,
“She is not even your sister!”
Ann backs me into my quarters.
“And thank the Lord, for all kin
of yours find death.”
Though I did not mean
to call Hannah my own,
'twas but twisted words,
I wonder what it would be
to rock my own child.
My arms pretend to cradle
a baby against my chest.
I reach behind the wardrobe
until my fingers find the envelope.
The letter from my father long lost,
but the address
to Aunt Mary Lewis Skilling Lewis
is what I seek.
I must believe that some of my kin live,
for my roots did not take to this soil.
No family tree will grow for me
in Salem Village.
I found only a hanging tree
of more death.
I smooth the envelope.
It feels as though
I clutch a ticket
as important as passage papers
to the New World.
Margaret Walcott, 17
Step-Mother growls
as I hand over my plate.
She removes the bread
and sets the rest down
for Ridley.
“Ann's new sister, Hannah,
must be a month old by now,”
I say. “Might I go visit them?”
Father stomps into the room.
“Does seem that I heard
a voice in this room.
Or perhaps 'twas the wind,
because no one I know
would talk when not required.”
He swings a scarf round his neck.
“No one else leaves this house.”
The door stays cracked open
behind him. I push it closed.
Step-Mother sits at the wheel.
“Ye are not so important
as ye believed, since the governor
closed down that court.”
She smiles sly as a sinner.
“I will chop the wood.”
I find my mittens under the bench.
“Ye are not to leave this house,”
Step-Mother says.
“Or I will tell your father.”
I feel as to burst.
“He meant I could not
go outside
for chores
?”
“Watch thy wicked tongue.
I believe that be
exactly what he meant,”
she says without a glance at me.
She tosses trousers which smell
of horse dung on my lap.
Step-Mother commands,
“Get to work.”
Six months, only six months
more in this house.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Baby Hannah cries and cries.
I almost want to just set her down
and go to my room and close the door.
“You want Mother, don't you.”
I drop the baby in Mercy's arms.
“I can do no other chores,” I say.
“I thought I was not to tend Hannah.”
Mercy hands Hannah back to me.
“She is hungry.
Give her to the wet nurse.”
“Wet nurse left for a family in Boston;
conditions are better there.”
I roll the infant back to Mercy.
Mercy bounces Hannah,
and she stops crying like
Mercy cast a spell upon her.
“Mother
and
Father stricken.
I pray we don't lose them both.”
I lean against the table.
Mercy holds the baby in one arm
and chops the legs off a chicken
with her free hand.
“I would be sent to live with Uncle John.
My brothers and sisters
would be scattered all about,” I say.
White feathers gather like piles of snow
on either side of Mercy.
“Yes,” Mercy says.
Her eyes never rise from her work.
My chest heaves.
I huff and fall into a chair.
“That would be dreadful
to lose our house and farm.”
I touch my forehead and say,
“I might have a fever.”
“Ann!” Mother screams,
loud and troubled.
“Mercy,” I plead.
“I have been tending her and Father
for two days. I
must
rest.”
“What other help do we have?”
Mercy asks. Her eyes are the bull's
“right before he runs.
“None. They are helping repair
“the meetinghouse so that it won't
“be dreadful cold every Sabbath.
Father promised the Reverend
“that he wouldâ”
She holds up her hand.
““Just go.”
“The other little ones are napping,”
I say, and limp to my bedroom.
A scream from the nursery
“feels like knives in my side.
I quicken my steps.
“Ann!” Mother hollers again.
I bury my head under the pillow.
Mercy Lewis, 17
The house creaks farewell.
Gales blow up snow
as sand pebbles are moved
by the tides.
The gate bang, bangs
in the wind, sounds
as if it might fly off its hinges.
Morning cracks over the trees
orange and gold.
All my dresses on,
the blue atop the brown,
each step, I feel how heavy it be.
I grasp the envelope
addressed Aunt Mary Lewis Skilling Lewis
written by Father so many years back.
Pray she will take me in,
for there is no loyalty as strong as family.
The snow falls fresh this morning,
I track no ashes of the Invisible World.
In New Hampshire I start anew.
in order of appearance
MERCY LEWIS
(age 17)
In 1692 the real Mercy Lewis was indeed seventeen and did serve in Thomas Putnam's home. Mercy legally accused fifty-four people of witchcraft and gave formal testimony at twelve public examinations or trials. After the crisis of 1692 Mercy moved to Greenland, New Hampshire, to live near her aunt. She bore a bastard child in 1695 and later married the presumed father of her child, Charles Allen. She and Charles then moved to Boston.
Â
MARGARET WALCOTT
(age 17)
Margaret Walcott is based upon the real Mary Walcott. Mary was involved in sixty-nine legal complaints and testified twenty-eight times. She married Isaac Farrar in 1696 and bore him seven children. They raised their family in his hometown of Ashford, Connecticut.
Â
ANN PUTNAM JR.
(age 12)
The real twelve-year-old Ann Putnam Jr. made fifty-three legal complaints and formally testified twenty-eight times. One of the last girls to end her accusations and testimony, Ann is recorded as having testified up until May 1693. Her parents died within two weeks of each other in 1699, and Ann was left to care for her seven siblings. When Ann joined the Village Church in 1706, she begged forgiveness and declared that Satan had deceived her into accusing people of witchcraft. Ann was the only accuser known to account for her actions in the crisis. Ann Putnam Jr. died unmarried in 1715.
Â
BETTY PARRIS
(age 8)
The real Betty Parris signed only three legal complaints. She never testified. In March 1692, Reverend Parris moved his daughter to the home of his friend Stephen Sewall, in hopes that her torments might ease. Betty Parris married Benjamin Barron in 1710. She raised five children and died at age seventy-six.
Â
ABIGAIL WILLIAMS
(age 12)
The real Abigail Williams lived with her uncle Reverend Parris during the crisis of 1692. She and Betty Parris, her cousin, were the first two afflicted girls. Abigail accused forty-one people of being witches and testified in seven cases. What became of the real Abigail Williams is not part of the historical record. It is surmised that she died unmarried.
Â
ELIZABETH HUBBARD
(age 17)
The real “Betty” Hubbard formally accused forty-one people of witchcraft. She testified in thirty-two cases. After the crisis Betty moved to Gloucester, probably to live with one of Dr. Griggs's married children. There she met and married John Bennett. Betty Hubbard's death date is unknown.
Â
SUSANNAH SHELDON
(age 18)
The real Susannah Sheldon signed twenty-four legal complaints but was recorded to have testified in only three cases. After her participation in the Salem trials, she moved to Providence, Rhode Island. But because Susannah was “a person of Evil fame,” the Providence town council warned her out of town. What happened to her after that is not certain, though it is likely that she went mad. It is believed that she died unmarried before 1697.