"By the sympathy of your human hearts for sin, ye shall scent out all the places--whether in church, bed-chamber, street, field, or forest--where crime has been committed, and shall exult to behold the whole earth one stain of guilt, one mighty bloodspot."
Nathaniel Hawthorne
Youthful Niceman Black had been warned his entire life to never wander into the forest. However, when he found Hope collapsed at the butter churner, he knew he had no choice.
"My poor wife," he said, holding her sagging form to keep her from toppling over. Fevered and weak, he stroked the damp strands of blonde that fell from her bonnet. Her skin burned beneath her dress. "My love and my faith. You know of the choice I must make. It is the only way."
"N-niceman," she rasped, weary from afternoons of coughing and haphazard exertion. "Please put that dark thought from thy mind and lock it away. Spend your night with me in your own bed. Let's not waste what moments we have --"
"Do not speak of such things, Hope," Niceman reproached. He knew her words ventured into despair. Niceman refused to believe her death loomed near. "We will be rid of this. I promise."
Placing his hand atop his heart, he put it to hers, feeling the crackling heaves of her breath. He carried her into their marital bedroom. Handling her as he would an infant, he put her back into bed, making sure to cocoon her in warmth. Her forehead scorched his lips as he leaned in for a kiss. She had already fallen into the shadows of a deep, distrubed sleep.
Niceman rose to his feet, walking to take his hat off of the table. Through the window of their modest kitchen, he gazed out to the unknown through which he would trudge. Rumors had always emanated throughout the village at what lay within those gloomy trees. Hushed whispers spoke of witches, ghouls, or perhaps even the Devil himself lurking about in the forest.
Until this particular sunset, Niceman had kept his ears shut to such speculation. He had always looked to the church and his righteous gods, electing a life of duty, propriety, and ignorance. For meek though he was, his discipline to his catechism and his work remained unparalleled. But like many of his neighbors, he too found the forest a frightening temptation. That wall of trees teased a realm of potential answers or opportunities. It seemed a place that accommodated a man with drive and determination, of which he had in spades.
He moved to the door, pausing at the threshold. He took one last look at Hope and knew that she would be with him. Taking up his walking stick, he set out amongst the tall grass that marked the last stretch of civilization.
As he walked, he sensed movement in the grass to his left. Argus, the village stray, seemed to bid him a concerned farewell. Seeing so much worry in the canine's amber eyes, Niceman knelt to reassure him.
"Don't allow yourself to carry the weight of worry, pup. That burden is mine. I don't know what awaits me within the embrace of these trees, but I need you to watch over Hope while I am away. And with the cure I bring for my wife, I'll also bring a rabbit for her guardian." He gave the clever dog a nice scratch between the ears. Argus blessed him with a sloppy kiss on the chin and turned to go sit on the porch of his home. With one last wave, he turned heel and stepped into the forest.
Red light of the dying day shone through small gaps in the trees. Insects and vermin did not drone and sprawl in these trees. All was quiet as the tomb, save for the dead leaves that crunched beneath his steps. Despite the unease that this place inspired, Niceman Black trekked forth.
Within the last moments of dusk, he came into a clearing. In its center, stood two women. One of them he recognized as Goody Cloyse, a woman of utmost piety and wisdom and a prominent figure in his village. The hunched old woman peered up to the other who stood a few inches higher, hooded beneath a cloak black as shadow. Niceman could not make out her face, but the design of her matching gown sported the lowest neckline that Niceman had ever seen.
The women of his village were modest, always covered to the collar. This woman did not seem to come from a Puritan village. A split that started at her naval tapered into a wide V barely contained the swell of her breasts. The smooth skin of her exposed torso bore no hue of color and resembled a streak of moonlight. Unable to help himself, his eyes scanned the woman's body as he moved closer to them. The skirts of her sable gown were woven of a fine material that clung to her slender waist that widened into a pair of healthy hips. Niceman just knew she had a rump on her. Remember why you're here, peeped the voice of his conscience. Niceman had finally realized why he'd been warned of the forest.
The cloaked woman held a hand to silence Goody Cloyce as Niceman approached.
"Niceman Black," she intoned in a voice that sounded more playful than her sensually sinister appearance exhibited. However, he found himself more surprised that she knew his name. "You were almost very late."
"I didn't know that I was... expected," he said as he approached them. "Goody Cloyse," Niceman called, diverting his attention from the woman. The wrinkly spinster appeared startled at his call and moved her surly gaze to him. "You shouldn't be out and about in such treacherous terrain without something to support your legs." He pushed his walking stick into one of her gnarled, shaking hands. In return, she thumped him hard on the head with it.
"Young Niceman Black in the forest. What depravity led ye here, lad? I don't even want to know!" She squawked her old Puritan grandmother reproach, punctuating her points with wallops of his stick to his chest. "Come Lecture Day, I'll have ye speaking thy catechism until blueness colors thy heathen face." Niceman knew better than to talk back and just let her tire out. Breathy from effort, Cloyse turned back to the hooded woman.
"Now, what should I do about that young bitch Goody Clenman?" Without a word, the cloaked woman reached into her sleeve to retrieve a vial filled with a nefarious pink liquid. Niceman felt himself wanting to look away from that sickly stuff, but Goody Cloyse licked her gums, an expression of perverted greed molded into the wrinkles of her face.
"Ensure she drinks this in her ritual wine," the woman intoned. "It'll cause a horribly contagious pox to spread to her nethers. That way, you'll know if your nephew has done what you claim. He will itch. Then he'll burn. As will she and any... others that there may be. Does this suit you?"
"Yeah. Yeah. Gimme it," the crone urged. The woman relinquished the vial and reached out to grasp Goody Cloyse's face in a firm grip. Manicured nails sunk into the ancient folds of the twisted woman's face.
"Hold on, now," Niceman stepped in with the intention to intervene.
"We'll have council soon, Niceman Black," the woman said, never breaking eye contact with Cloyse. She spoke through clenched teeth, and her words bore a supernatural resonance. Niceman made no further move.
"Don't forget who owns thee, Goody Cloyse," she said, her tone low, yet severe.
"When I peer upon you, I do not see your sallow, pitiful flesh in its house of cracked bones. No, I see the dents of your sins upon your hideous soul. Languish now in your gossip and intrigue, because you will be mine soon." She released her, and the old woman limped off, using his stick for support.
"But... she taught me my catechism," Niceman said, watching her leave, his tone laced with betrayal. His attention was diverted as the woman reached up and lowered her hood. She had raven hair that rivaled the blackness of her open-chested gown. A toothy smile slashed the beautiful highboned structure of her face. Irises that bore a glow of supernatural emerald pierced his gaze, and he had to look down from her.
"You act like you do not recognize me, Niceman Black," she said, narrowing her eyes at him.
"I do not."
"You know me well. I can be seen within every crevice of that stinking village of yours. In every theft of coin from the collection plate. In every adulterous movement of the priest wife's whore lips. In every scheme hatched by that snake Goody Cloyse. Your kin I know just as well as the others. I helped your father, the constable, as he lashed the innocent woman he accused of being a witch so brutally that she perished. I even helped your grandfather place the sixth torch that incinerated the horde of savages who inhabited these lands before your kind."
As that terrible, beautiful woman spoke her words of poison, she had ushered in the night. Moonlight washed the clearing in a ghostly glow of silver. "But you, Niceman Black," she continued. "Have always seemed to be one of the good ones. Therefore, I will not bother you with trickery and blight. You gave that snake Cloyse your own walking stick. A display of true kindness to one so wicked. I know your purpose for straying into these lands, and it pains me to admit that I cannot help your wife. But there are others, deeper in this forest who can. At least allow me to give you my blessing."
Niceman felt himself get pulled into her, and she wrestled her lips to his. He debated resisting, but decided against it as his cock went hard in his trousers as the softness of her tits pressed against his chest. Her sweet tongue slithered into his mouth, and he looked down to watch her ample cleavage press into him. She took one of his hands and pried it from his side, placing it on one of her mounds to let him knead their softness.