Copyright © 2023 by Richard Gerald
I want to thank Randy for hosting
this March 17th event
and for inviting me once again. I know it has been a while since I contributed, but I've been working on a novel, and events in my personal life have taken more time. Please feel free to write to me with your comments. I will try to respond. I don't always get to read the public comments.
Darkness is all around me. I'm walking through a great forest on a narrow, treacherous lane. Large trees tightly surround me on all sides. I'm going home, but I can feel sinister specters lurking behind the trees, waiting for me to step off the path. There is no moon to guide me, but I know my way. I've walked this lane hundreds of times.
I come to the meadow. It is lit by a silver-gray light. I look up; the sky is covered by a dense blanket of stars. It is their light I see on the meadow.
Suddenly a figure appears, running. As she comes close, I can see it is a young woman, almost a girl. She is hidden by a long, hooded cloak.
When she pulls back her hood, she reveals her hair. It is black as a raven's wing, darker even than the night. Her oval face holds two perfect green eyes, wide in fright. They blaze like the reflection of fire over ice. I know her.
"Edward," she pleads, "help me, they're coming. Please, Edward, I'm the last of the witches—they're coming!"
I nod and go to put my arm around her. There is a blinding flash of brilliant light.
***
My wife, Lucy, has thrown back the bedroom drapes. The morning sun is all the more brilliant from its reflection off the fresh snow. The flakes began to fall before midnight. By morning, we had a foot of accumulation from the late winter storm.
"Oh! Please," I groused.
"No lying about," she commanded. "Remember, I'm leaving on my Miami trip today."
She was looking out the window at the accumulated snow, but then she turned and saw me.
"Oh! You're shaking."
I was lying in the bed, covers kicked off. The room was chilly, but I could feel the bedsheet damp from my sweat.
"That nightmare again?" she queried.
"Yeah, but it went further this time. She spoke to me."
"Oh, what did the raven-haired woman have to say?"
"I can't quite remember. Something about witches."
I'd had these nightmares for about a year, since we built our new house on the property along Osborn Road that I inherited from my family.
"Figures. It's a nightmare, witches and goblins. But you must get up because I need to get to the office. You need to clear the driveway."
I had my work cut out for me. Fortunately, my wife's Christmas present was a new supercharged snowblower. When I finished cutting us a path to the road, I went down the drainage channel until I reached the walkway to ensure Esmeralda Walcott had a way out if she needed it.
Esmeralda lives across the street from us in what is the oldest house in Hollybrook. It's called Blackthorn Cottage. This is a misnamed ten-thousand-square-foot structure. Her house was built over centuries by adding one room after another as needed.
The land I inherited from my family stops right at Esmeralda's property line. We built our modern house by the old woods my wife, Lucy, fell in love with, right off the lane to avoid the expense of putting in a new road.
It places our modern structure a little over a hundred feet from the front door of Esmeralda's sprawling home.
As my snowplow engine sputtered to a stop, Esmeralda opened her door.
"Very kind of you, Edward," she said.
"The least a neighbor can do," I replied.
Osborn Road is off the grid of Hollybrook Township. It's six miles to the town center, and the road has just a handful of houses. Fortuitously, our house and Esmeralda's are just a few hundred feet up a little street, right where Osborn joins the county highway. The county plows had been working all night. My wife would have no trouble getting to her office and then to Logan Airport in Boston.
"Come in for some hot chocolate," Esmerelda invited.
I took up her invitation, as it would be impolite to refuse. Esmeralda is a woman of considerable age. I have lived in Hollybrook all my life except for my years at school. Even as a young boy, I remember Esmeralda as an old woman. She is a permanent part of the landscape of Hollybrook. Her house reflects her heritage. At its center is an old saltbox design telescoped out on all sides until the original one-room dwelling is now the largest on Osborn Road.
The center of the house is one big, square room with a massive hearth against the back wall. It is a modest room of rough-hewn pine board with a ceiling of round, bare beams. Its modest furnishings would now be deemed valuable antiques.
However, it is the fireplace that dominates the room. Tall and wide enough for several people to walk into at once. It is made from brilliant, black stone and has hand carvings of a quality no longer seen in our automated world. One particular motif of an ouroboros (a snake eating its own tail) is bracketed by two feathery wings with an infant in a fetal position in the center of the circle.