Wicked Girls

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Wicked Girls Page 6

by Stephanie Hemphill


  Heart-shaped pink and white

  blossoms sweeten the wind.

  Winter’s scraggly witch hazel

  and furred pussy-willow buds

  crouch not alone

  on the hillside.

  The spring air smells

  ripe and ready.

  IMPIOUS DISRUPTIONS

  Margaret Walcott, 17

  Meeting seems smaller near the pulpit.

  ’Tis like we be closer to the Lord.

  The front pew smells not

  of dung-covered boots.

  Martha Corey grips her bench,

  refusing to look on us girls

  now she been accused.

  Though none dares defy

  a preacher during sermon,

  Abigail do rise and say

  to the visiting Reverend,

  “Stand up and name your text.”

  Ann announces that Goody Corey’s

  spirit and her yellow bird

  perch high above the congregation.

  She says the black-eyed bird flies

  to Reverend Lawson’s hat

  hanging on the front door peg.

  “I see it too!” Betty says.

  Mercy and Elizabeth nod and agree.

  Do they all really see except for me?

  Abigail cries and points at Goody Corey,

  “Witch and her familiar!”

  Isaac shakes his head

  when she cries out.

  His eyes scold and judge.

  His face full of disgust

  like Abigail speaks

  in drunk soldier’s tongue.

  Reverend Parris and Mister Putnam

  hush us then: “Quiet your tongues

  and let good Minister Lawson

  finish his sermon.”

  I sneak behind the meetinghouse

  before afternoon sermon,

  but for the first time

  Isaac be not there.

  My stomach squeezes

  and I trip over a rock.

  Why is he not there?

  What have I done?

  Did he not like what I did

  in the forest?

  Where is Mercy?

  Someone seizes my shoulders.

  Martha Corey turns me to her and scolds,

  “I will dispel these accusations.

  I am a Gospel woman.

  I will stand victorious

  against you and your mischievous friends.”

  Her breath steams across my cheek.

  But before I can speak one word,

  the other girls circle round me

  like the Queen’s guard

  till Martha Corey be gone.

  Ann says, “Do not fear, Margaret,

  that witch will be known.”

  I nod at her and the other girls.

  Except for Mercy. I stare on her.

  Sunlight runs over Mercy

  and her golden temptress hair

  liken some waterfall of jewels.

  Who will protect me

  from the witch

  among us girls?

  DISTRACTED CHILDREN

  Mercy Lewis, 17

  The courtroom chatters and churns.

  Goody Corey raises her eyes at us,

  as if to say, “I’ll get you girls.”

  Ann’s eyes roll back until

  only the whites show,

  and someone in the crowd cries,

  “Bewitched!”

  “We must not believe

  all that these distracted children say,”

  Martha Corey insists as she stands

  for examination. Her eyes twitch

  gray as a storm. She smooths her skirt,

  then rubs her hands together.

  Ann, Abigail, Margaret and Betty

  all mimic Martha Corey

  with the sharp jerking movement

  of a wheel catching in a rut,

  then pulling free.

  “Stop praying, Elizabeth,”

  Ann speaks without moving her lips.

  She pulls Elizabeth up from her knees.

  “Forget not, Martha Corey beat you too.”

  “Perhaps I was deceived.

  Perhaps we were all deceived.

  It is not too late to beg forgiveness.”

  Elizabeth looks to Margaret.

  “I know Goody Corey is a witch, Lizzie.

  She pricked me last night.”

  Margaret reveals red bumps on her back.

  Elizabeth nods. She rubs her arm

  and curls her hands into her sleeves.

  Abigail says, “The Devil whispers

  in Goody Corey’s ear.”

  Ann hollers, “I see the turning spit

  and a man roasting on it,

  just beside Goody Corey.”

  Abigail speaks again,

  a cavern’s echo of Ann,

  “Goody Corey roasts a man

  for the Devil.”

  Margaret and I are to suffer next.

  We feel jabbed and strangled

  and collapse to the floor.

  Margaret kicks her boot

  a little too close to my head.

  Through clenched teeth I tell her,

  “Mind yourself.”

  Margaret points at Goody Corey,

  but it is me she names sinner

  with her eyes as she screams out the word.

  “Any woman who bears babies

  out of wedlock must be a witch.”

  They bind Goody Corey’s hands

  with sailing rope. Still,

  she flutters her fingers.

  Each time she does, our fingers wrench,

  shot up by her Devil’s lightning.

  I stare at my hands,

  fingers hooked in pain,

  and see something new.

  These hands are not just

  implements to serve.

  They are weapons.

  The gavel smashes down.

  Goody Corey,

  like all other witches

  the girls and I name,

  shall face trial.

  CAN WE SEE GOOD?

  Mercy Lewis, 17

  “I told them witches

  I will not eat. I will not

  drink. It is blood. It is not

  the Bread of Life.

  It comes not from Christ.

  And I spat at Goody Proctor,

  the wife of the tavern keeper,

  the one selling whiskey blood.”

  I pant, uncertain whether I can continue.

  Mister Putnam strokes my hand

  as though I am his child and says,

  “Do tell us, Mercy, what next ye saw.”

  “A shining figure comes

  and all the witches fled.

  All I could see was a glorious light,

  and the voices of Christ

  singing like crystal bells

  and telling me I am worthy

  to take the book, the Book of Life

  from Christ. And then the angels,

  all of them in rows singing psalms,

  and I pled, ‘Please let me stay here,

  let me not leave.’ But then I woke.”

  Ann says, “Mercy is chosen.

  She’s been shown good, not evil,

  in the Invisible World.

  She is the first to see it.”

  But Missus Putnam is quick

  to shake her head,

  “No, Ann dear, others

  have seen a man in white.”

  Mister Putnam hovers near my cheek.

  He kisses my forehead.

  “Mercy, Satan doth love to present

  himself as an Angel of Light.

  Good that you did not sign that book.

  It were Satan in disguise.”

  The tears come fast

  as a mudslide down my cheeks.

  We must see evil.

  But then the man I serve

  kneels to me,
/>   comforts me

  with his kerchief.

  What shall I do?

  POWER BEYOND THE PULPIT

  Mercy Lewis, 17

  The meetinghouse during lecture

  might well be the courthouse.

  All of us girls sit in the front pew

  like we are the town council,

  the heads of family, like we are

  disciples of his Grace.

  The Reverend blasts,

  “Have I not chosen you twelve?”

  He looks past us girls and declares,

  “And one of you is the Devil.”

  Whispers whirl around the room.

  Eyeballs wander like seeds in wind.

  Who is the Devil among us,

  the one who betrays?

  Which of the good folk

  is really a witch?

  And then the eyeballs settle,

  how water smooths after storm.

  The eyes look not

  to the preacher to answer

  their questions, to guide them,

  but to us girls, the Afflicted.

  We are the ones who see witches.

  The good folk nearly plead,

  “Pray tell us who be the witches,

  who are the devils in our midst?”

  PRAY

  Margaret Walcott, 17

  Isaac gone before

  I might turn to look.

  The meetinghouse drains

  of members, except for Elizabeth,

  who kneels on the hard floor,

  her head bowed down.

  “Oh, Margaret, fall to your knees

  and pray with me.”

  She grasps my hand

  and drags me to the ground.

  “Dear Lord, guide our spectral sight.

  We follow your call

  and bow humbly before you.”

  Elizabeth’s eyes pulse

  and her body quivers.

  “They wait for us outside.”

  I tug her arm now.

  I do not want Mercy Lewis

  broken from my sight

  such that Mercy might make

  her eyes fall ’pon Isaac,

  or worse, his eyes fall ’pon her.

  I kneel and whisper in Elizabeth’s ear.

  “I see you be cleversome,

  but pray let us do this not today.”

  Elizabeth just stares forward

  as in a trance. She lies down

  ’pon the floor with her hands

  laced in worship above her head.

  “O Lord, lead me in your ways.”

  She stops all moving

  and seems not to breathe.

  Be she truly tormented by a witch?

  The Reverend stalks above us.

  “Has a specter hold of Elizabeth?”

  he asks me.

  I nod yes.

  But then Elizabeth pops up,

  as if she’s possessed, and shakes her head.

  “There are no specters here.

  We pray to the Lord for guidance.”

  How dare she defy me?

  She must be ill. I clench her arm

  tighter than I did intend.

  Lizzie tugs down her sleeve.

  “Or perhaps Margaret did see a specter,”

  Elizabeth says, and lowers her eyes.

  THERE IS ANOTHER: WHAT TO DO WITH THE PROCTORS’ MAID?

  Mercy Lewis, 17

  Not everything in a garden

  belongs.

  Ruth Warren,

  the Proctors’ maid,

  starts crying witch,

  naming the same

  witches we do see.

  She follows Ann

  around after meeting,

  inquires about joining

  us later at Ingersoll’s.

  Ann asks if we should

  fold Ruth into the blanket

  of our group.

  I scratch my head.

  “What know you of Ruth Warren?”

  “She be maid to John

  and Rebecca Proctor.

  And my father and John Proctor

  stand on different sides

  of the church aisle.”

  I advise, “Let us not invite

  her into the group yet,

  but test her loyalty.

  We have been given

  a power here together,

  we best retain—

  to do so we must be strong

  and we must be stable.

  Nothing foul among us.”

  LEADERSHIP

  Ann Putnam Jr., 12

  Mercy and I agree—

  in order for us to be stable

  someone must take up the head,

  must direct the troop through battle,

  one of us hold the torch

  and shout out command,

  else we shall see things unlike

  and our voice be scattered,

  the body that makes us strong

  cut into many pieces.

  Betty too young, Abigail too eager,

  Elizabeth wavers like a loose tooth,

  and Margaret without rank and stature

  and breeding and brain—

  It must be me.

  I am the rightful leader.

  ANNOYANCE

  Ann Putnam Jr., 12

  “They sent Betty away.”

  Abigail heaves and snorts as she speaks.

  She wedges next to me, so I squeeze

  into the back of the bench.

  I search for Mercy, who was to meet me

  at Ingersoll’s an hour ago.

  “Reverend now depends on me alone

  to tell him of the Invisible World.

  I seen witches all last night. Goody Proctor

  and Goody Nurse and Goody Good.”

  “Abigail.” I wish to fasten my hand

  over her mouth. “Tell not our elders

  what you see without first speaking to me.”

  “But Reverend wants me to—”

  I cut her words. “Speak not.

  Do ye understand me?”

  She nods. At this moment,

  the sight of Abigail, the scratch of her voice,

  brings my lunch to my throat.

  Where be Mercy?

  “I must go,” I say.

  “Oh, me too. I’ll come with thee,”

  Abigail chirps.

  I hurry toward the door.

  “What have ye seen?” Goodman Rhea

  asks as I make to leave the tavern.

  “Goody Proctor did bite and pinch me.”

  Abigail thrusts forth her arm.

  “Let us see.”

  Goodman Rhea bars my exit.

  I wish to box Abigail in the cheek:

  again she acts without my instruction.

  If only Reverend Parris had sent away

  both his daughter and his niece.

  AN INNOCENT RIDE

  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 recall—”

  “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 servant—” 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 now—he 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.”

  THE PROCTORS’ MAID RECANTS HER AFFLICTION

  Margaret Walcott, 17

  The note Ruth Warren

  nails to the meetinghouse door

  Ann reads to us:

 

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