This gothic tale of dark eroticism is an entry in the 2022 Halloween contest. Votes are appreciated! Trigger warning; scenes of supernatural non-con.
New England, 1702 A.D.
Shadows from the twilight hour had overtaken the woods on this October eve as Grace ran towards home. Her brown curls bounced from her bonnet and the mushrooms she'd collected threatened to tumble from her hand basket as she sprinted towards the dale still out of view. Twigs scratched at her legs and snagged upon her mulberry dress as she dashed along the faint dirt trail bare foot and afraid. Every noise was a stalking wolf or Native man or the footsteps of the devil himself. Upon reaching the forest's edge unharmed, she ceased her running. She stood there for a few seconds to lean against a birch tree as she huffed and puffed to catch her breath. Calmed by the orange glow from the distant kitchen window her father's drab grey two story wooden house, Grace walked the remainder of the way home, trekking across the dewy grass as she's done for years. She passed the closed barn and empty pigsty, and upon reaching the front door, she stopped to adjust her bonnet and bodice before entering the safety of her family's home.
Grace's older sister, Constance was at the hearth, stirring a thick rabbit stew in the kettle hanging above low orange flames. With her fair skin, dark blue eyes, and hair as black as night, Grace found her to be reminiscent of a crow. Constance's fondness for dressing in black, her inquisitive nature and keen mind leant to her raven-like persona. The elder sister looked up and gazed at Grace with imperious eyes as the younger sister entered the kitchen.
Grace set her basket upon a kitchen table and said, "I don't want to go into the woods alone anymore. It frightens me."
Constance pulled back the cloth to reveal her sister's harvest and frowned. "Grace, you're going to be the death of us all. What did I tell you about mushrooms?"
Grace hung her head in shame and murmured, "I forgot. That's why I picked them all."
Constance plucked a bunch of mushrooms from the basket and said, "The brown capped ones like these are the good ones. The ones with the wide white caps are poisonous. And these little ones, the ones in a cluster, they'll leave you wobbly. I watched a stag eat them once and it staggered around like a drunk man before collapsing in the brush. He was gone the next morning. I find that humorous, don't you?"
Constance threw the flat white mushrooms in the rubbish pail and the brown ones in a bowl to rinse. But to Grace's consternation, Constance sprinkled a little salt over the drunk man mushrooms before wrapping them in waxed parchment to dry. She pressed them under a book as their mother had done when drying flowers and herbs.
The younger sister asked, "What are you going to do with those?"
Constance cheerily replied, "They can be used as medicine. Mother was right. Everything you need can be found in the forest."
In a rushed whisper, Grace replied, "You shouldn't speak of her."
Constance began to rinse the edible mushrooms and glibly answered, "Father is in the village. I may speak as I please."
"Constance, hold your tongue," Grace replied, knowing God hears her every word.
Constance rolled her eyes. "Why? Because we should be obedient women?"
Grace nodded. Constance stopped her chore to give Grace her entire attention. Grace took a step back as Constance approached saying, "We are women. We bring forth life. We have powers. Why should we listen to men? They are hardly our equals."
"Why do you say such things?"
Constance leaned into Grace's face and menaced her with stormy eyes. "You speak to beasts and they obey you. That is not the natural order of man. It is of preternatural power."
Grace felt the bile rise to her throat. She backed away from her sister but Constance stepped forward once more. The younger Talcott turned on her heal and bolted from the kitchen and up the narrow stairs to second floor. She raced into her bedroom and slammed the door behind her to flounce onto her bed she shared with her sister. She grabbed her mother's Bible from a bedside table, and rocked back and forth with her eyes tightly closed. Her heart was racing as the chattering of a hundred night creatures filled her head. When Grace opened her eyes, she yelped at the sight of Constance standing before her, glaring down at her in disgust.
Grace cried, "Why do you torment me so?"
She cruelly said, "Our mother was a witch."
"No, she wasn't!" Grace wailed before sobbing. "She was found innocent! She didn't fly! She drowned!"
"She was murdered by fearful men. She was a witch and so are we. That is our nature. Accept it. Now wash your feet and put on your stockings and shoes. Father will be home soon."
Constance left her sister to return downstairs and stir the stew while humming a bawdy sailor tune.
Reverend Shepard Talcott's dappled grey mare ambled up the traveler's road before instinctively turning off the road at old Goodwife Billingsley's house and onto the wheel rutted dirt trail that led to the Talcott house. The clean shaven thirty nine year old Harvard educated man hummed an old sailor's tune as he approached his house. His wheat colored hair hung low at his collar where it curled at the end. He had a sturdy frame and was known for his long strides of a confident man. Upon securing his horse in a barn stall, he removed his saddle from the mare before retrieving a packet of papers from the saddle bag and left the barn, latching it shut before heading to his house. He unlatched the front door and entered the warmth of his home and was met with the smell of a savory stew. The good reverend set his packet upon a side table and hung his hat on a peg before heading into the kitchen.
His daughters turned to him and in unison, greeted him with a respectful, "Good eve, father."