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
A young man with shoulders broad as a lake
trails Mister Putnam round the stables.
“Fine mare,” he says, his voice
deep earth brown.
“She'll produce fine foal, I believe.
I'll not be trading her if that be
what ye desire, Isaac Farrar.”
Mister shakes his head.
“No, sir,” Isaac says.
“But might I take her for a ride?”
Mister nods, and Isaac mounts
the spotted mare.
As he grabs hold the reins
his eyes saddle upon me.
I shade red to be caught watching him
for I never do care to observe anyone,
and I ought be slopping the pigs.
Mister Putnam notes my presence with a smile
and calls, “Mercy, come yonder
and fetch a cup of water.
I hand Mister Putnam the tin,
and he squeezes his arm around me.
“Mercy doth see the Invisible World.
She and my daughter Ann,
the Lord has called them.”
Mister ruffles Wilson's head,
but calls not his dog away from me.
Isaac fixes upon me
without cessation or flinch.
“I be acquainted with Mercy,” he says.
“Beg your pardon, but I do not recallâ”
“Do you ride?” he asks like a gunshot,
before I can finish my speech.
Mister twists his face, such that I cannot
tell if it be in anger or pleasure.
“'Tis not proper for a servantâ” I begin.
“Do you ride?” Isaac insists, and leads
his own horse over to me.
“Yes, I ride,” I say, and hold fast
the reins of Isaac's gaze. I remember
him nowâhe helped me carry my firewood.
I nearly wish to smile at him, but I cannot say why.
“She cannot ride.” Mister grinds his teeth.
“She might find fit and fall.
It be too dangerous. It be not proper.”
Mister turns me round and pushes
me toward the house.
I hear him say to Isaac,
“I think it best if I rest
Beatrice this afternoon.
She was rode hard this morning.
And she does not take well
to strangers.”
Margaret Walcott, 17
The note Ruth Warren
nails to the meetinghouse door
Ann reads to us:
“Thank ye in public
for my condition did but improve.
I do rightly believe the Devil deceived,
and we girls did but speak falsely.
The magistrates might as well
listen to someone insane
and believe what she said
as any of the afflicted persons,
for I submit there be as much truth in madness
as in any of the girls' claims.
Our fits and pains may be put to end
by the Lord's will and concentration of mind.
I humbly ask ye all to forgive
my weakness against the Devil.
Your gracious servant, Ruth Warren.”
“I've a mind to whip
that Ruth Warren
same as Goodman Proctor did,” I say.
Ann flicks my arm.
“Quiet your tongue.
Cause not disturbance, Margaret.”
I want to say, Or else what?
What'll ye do? Who crowned
thee queen? But I hold in
them words for now.
“Do you suppose Ruth be beat
into writing all that?”
I whisper to Elizabeth.
Inside the meetinghouse
all the eyes of the church
lock on us Afflicted
tighter than a bridle.
The question whirling
o'er the rafters, gathering
fast as storm cloudsâ
If Ruth Warren
recants that she was tormented,
if she can stop her fits,
why then do we other girls
not quit ours?
I stare straight at the pulpit,
try not to let the fire
of their eyes burn my cheeks.
I glance over at Isaac,
want to wave up my hand
and have him lead me out of
this stomach-churning church.
But he never looks my way.
After meeting the sky's
still and gray as a dead fish.
We girls gather in a cluster.
Uncle Thomas speaks loud, so many hear,
“I believe Ruth Warren must have signed
or at least placed her hand upon the Devil's book.”
The crowd gasps and nods.
Doctor Griggs adds, “Were our girls
to do that, their aches would leave them too.”
“But their souls be blackened.”
Reverend Parris's voice shakes the trees.
Abigail steps in the center
of the churchyard
and wilts onto the ground,
falling like a leaf blown down
in a rustle of wind,
her face red as the Devil's book.
“What be she doing?” I say
to the other girls. Ann's eyes boil.
Reverend Parris clasps his scaly hand
on my shoulder. “Be you brave, Margaret Walcott?”
He looks at Mercy and Ann and Elizabeth and me.
“Do not sign that book of blood.
Push away Satan's quill.”
We all nod our heads.
Reverend tears down
the note Ruth Warren tacked
to the meetinghouse door.
He rips down her recant
of seeing witches,
her attempt to cast
the rest of us liars.
Soon as he be gone
my step-cousin says,
“Five of us. One of her.
Ruth Warren will face regret.”
Mercy Lewis, 17
All look on Abigail,
fainting skirts upon the ground,
but one.
I feel him once again
wrap gaze around my shoulders
like a shawl, a woolen cloak I need not
on this steam-hot day.
I turn my back to Isaac
though I wish to turn round.
Ann pulls me aside.
“Mercy.” She sounds
as though she holds stones
on her tongue. “Ruth Warren,
how shall we make her pay her trouble?”
I whisper to Ann,
“Does any yet look on us?”
“None.” Ann taps her foot
as though she has somewhere else to be.
When I draw up my eyes,
his look is still roped upon our group.
I point Ann with my glancing,
“But what of that one with your uncle?”
“None stands by Uncle and Father,
save Isaac Farrar, Margaret's betrothed,”
Ann says. “And he always be staring this way.”
“Your cousin will be wed?”
I choke out the words.
Ann nods, then insists,
“What of Ruth Warren?”
“Call her a witch,” I say.
May 1692
Ruffle the goose
and she'll snap at your tail,
kick you to stream
and bar you
from the row of ducks.
The water muddies.
'Tis hard to know
where next
to dunk your head
and bite the new fish
when you be
scouting the sea
alone.
Margaret Walcott, 17
I be weeding the garden
and mending the fence round it
to keep the vermin out
when a large shadow falls
over the seedlings.
Isaac bends to my ear.
“Follow me, fair Margaret.”
I can't protest, for as I stand
he be already to the stream
beyond our house.
The sun squints my eyes.
I wipe my hands 'pon my apron
and dash into the woods
past the barn till I find
my sweet one lying in the clearing
flooded in sparkling light
looking more handsome
than Christ himself.
He pats the ground, says,
“'Tis a fine day.”
I nod and lie beside him.
He curves me against him
like a belt drawn into a loop.
His kisses tender but brutal,
I wish them never to end.
He begins then at unlacing
my dress. I shake my head.
“But we are betrothed,” he says,
and slides a hand beneath
my petticoat.
I feel cold with fright
as though the day be winter ice.
I skirt away from him.
“I think I hear Father call me,” I say.
Isaac's eyes roll
and he blows out
an angry sigh
as he places my hand
in that same unholy place
beneath his clothes
he did afore in the woods.
“Not all be as cloistered
in their stockings as thou,” he says.
I pretend not to know
what he does imply,
close my eyes
and set to work
while whirling high above us
the wind screams
wild lashings
across the leaves.
Mercy Lewis, 17
The breeze smart
against my neck,
dewy leaves and grass
tickle my nose.
Wilson and I wander
a new route
this morning
on the way to Ingersoll's.
Across the field
out in their garden
they praise the day
like three smiling
blossoms.
Rebecca Nurse
and her two sisters
plant and weed.
Laughter sprinkles
across the soil
as Charlotte slips
in the mud.
Rebecca
lifts Charlotte to a stand,
brushes off her skirt.
I wish to rush across
the meadow
offer my hand,
and join the row of happy sisters.
I stare at my hands,
my horrible filthy hands,
and run.
Mercy Lewis, 17
She knows her little fists
like cannonballs
have the power to crumble
fortress and family.
She decides that Goodwife Cloyse,
the sister of Rebecca Nurse,
will be next accused.
“Sister of a witch.
She must also be a witch,”
Ann says.
Abigail's words jump from her mouth
so she be the first to say,
“Goodwife Cloyse did flee meeting
last Sunday right in the middle,
and she has not been back to the parsonage.”
Margaret nods. “And she has been speaking out
against the accusation of her sister.”
Ann looks to me to add comment,
but I just stroke Wilson's head.
“But I never did see the specter
of Goodwife Cloyse.
Did ye all?”
Elizabeth's voice be quiet,
but her words be loud.
Margaret clasps Elizabeth's hand.
She says the words that Ann
wishes would come from my lips.
“This matters not.
Kin what stand up for each other,
must make their home in jail.”
Elizabeth rises to leave our table.
Her uncle enters the ordinary
and she quickly sits down.
Her body trembles
as she tugs upon her sleeves.
Ann Putnam Jr., 12
Just before sun's at mid-sky,
the meetinghouse stacks with people.
I grab Abigail outside the courtroom.
“You best keep quiet sometimes.
You cannot see everything.”
Goody Cloyse stands first in the confession box.
Abigail says, “I saw Goody Cloyse
and Goody Nurse serve our blood
at a meeting of the Devil's
where forty witches come to my uncle's pasture,
congregating till a fine man in white
scared them away.”
When Goody Cloyse faints
and the crowd's eyes are diverted,
I kick Abigail hard enough she squeals.
A second witch appears chained before us.
When the magistrate asks,
“Does Goody Proctor hurt you?”
Mercy and Elizabeth and I cannot form words.
Abigail opens her mouth wide as a baby bird.
I stuff it with my bonnet.
The rest of us flap like geese in a pattern.
I head the formation,
and our wings fly all the same speed.
We girls shake together
whenever a witch looks our way.
And the witches become felled birds
the constables chain and cage in jail.