Moonlight Madness
SHORT MYSTERY NOVEL
By Elaine Faber
Born 1943, F, from Elk Grove,
California, United States
Even six weeks later, near the
end of October, 2001, the country still reeled from the World Trade Center
attack. Newspapers still wrote of little other than the dreadful aftermath of
the incident depicting the nations' agony.
Hoping to present our subscribers
a different reading experience, the editor of the Sacramento Daily Sun burst
into my office several days ago. "Clive. Pack your bags. You're going to
Salem, Massachusetts to cover their Halloween celebration."
With yet another heart-wrenching
editorial in my computer on the loss of 341 firemen in the Towers, he had me at
the words, "pack your bags." Anything to get away from the
twenty-four-seven news cycles.
It seems that October 31 is big
news in Salem every year. 250,000 visitors swarm the city to experience haunted
houses, costume balls, dancing to live music and holiday parades. This year,
even more spectacular events were planned due to a scheduled full moon on
October 31, the first full moon on that date since 1974. Apparently, the
occurrence is so rare, this happens only four or five times each century. The
next such occurrence isn't expected for another twenty years, on October 31,
2020!
Entering Salem, I was impressed
by the witches and goblins, pumpkins and ghouls decorating every house and
business, much as we decorate for Christmas back home. Witches are big in Salem
all year long, due to its bleak history of the Salem witch trials, but this
year, especially so, what with the full moon phenomenon. Apparently, Salem's
city fathers thought the citizenry should get their mind off our national
tragedy and onto business as usual. Let the nation mourn. Strike when the moon
is full!
Cornstalks lined the streets.
Jack-o-lanterns hung from each light pole. Shopkeepers, decked out in witch and
warlock, ghost and vampire costumes, hawked merchandise. Every shop window
displayed witches and cauldrons, spirits and ghouls. Tourists clamored through
the town.
I stopped at a little diner and
was served by a charming dark-eyed beauty with long black hair, sparkling eyes
and fluttering lashes. We chatted and laughed. Jenny had a way of looking into
my soul that churned up feelings I hardly remembered, being a widower well past
middle-aged, and an almost regular church goer.
When I opened my napkin, it read:
Meet me outside tonight. 11:25 P.M. Come alone. I must see you.
I left my lunch half-eaten and
stumbled outside to ponder this situation. With the city full of young men,
what could she possibly want with me? As I photographed the holiday events that
day and well into the evening, the questions never ceased. Even knowing it was
a fool's errand, at 11:15 P.M., I was drawn back to the diner, compelled to see
Jenny again.
****
At 11:20 P.M. Jenny wiped down
the last table, flipped over the CLOSED sign and locked the cafe door. What
were the odds that a middle-aged man with silver-white hair and mustache should
arrive at the last possible moment to change her destiny? She had nearly given
up hope. Then Clive walked through the door. He was exactly what she sought.
Jenny wrapped her cape around her
shoulders and stepped out the front door. He was waiting, as she had hoped! She
always had a sixth sense about the future. She knew when the phone would ring
and when a visitor would appear at her door. She had even felt an oppressive
spirit on the morning of September 11, feeling something evil on the horizon.
But, she did not know if she would escape tonight or if the curse would take
her. Her destiny rested with this man. Before the clock struck 12:00 P.M.
tonight, she would know one way or the other.
"Hello. Thanks for
coming." Jenny placed her small white hand on Clive's arm, hoping her
smile would bend his will to her own. "You're the only one who can help
me." She had powers over men, but on this night of nights, with the full
moon shining overhead on this auspicious date, her fate lay in the hands of
this stranger. Without his cooperation, she could not escape the family curse.
"I'm happy to oblige. But,
why come to a stranger? Don't you have family or friends who could help
you?"
Jenny lowered her head, brushing
her lashes against her pale face. She shook her head. A white curl tumbled down
her forehead, seemingly out of place from her mass of black curls. Her lip
trembled and a tear trickled down her cheek.
"Here, here, now, none of
that." Clive brushed Jenny's hair back into place. "I'll help you if
I can, my dear. Don't cry." He tipped up her chin. "Now, give me a
smile and tell me all about it."
"I fear you'll think me
crazy, sir, but I swear it's the truth." Jenny sat on a bench and began an
inexplicable tale.
It seems that she was a
descendent of the judge who had unjustly hanged Sarah Good as a witch in 1692
right here in Salem. Since Sarah Good's death, the judge's descendants had
suffered a terrible curse. Upon the rare occasion, only about four or five
times each century, when the full moon appeared on All-Hollow's Eve, any female
descendent between the age of 18 and 29 was in grave danger.
As the full moon was upon them
this night for the first time since 1974, and to avoid the curse, Jenny must
find a middle-aged man with long silver-white hair, who resembled the judge who
sentenced poor Sarah to death. Before midnight, a drop of this man's blood must
be placed on a particular stone that stood at the edge of town. Would Clive
shed a drop of his blood on Sarah's commemorative stone to save Jenny from the
curse?
"What kind of curse, my
dear?" Clive raised a perplexed eyebrow.
"It is so terrible, I dare
not speak it aloud." Whispering these words, Jenny clung to Clive's
shoulder and wept piteously. Would it be enough to convince him to go with her
to the stone? And once there, did she have the courage to do what she must do
to save her body and soul?
****
Clive was at first speechless.
Never had he encountered such a stunning creature that so captivated his heart
within minutes of meeting. Never had such a ridiculous tale so captured his
imagination. He was inclined to leap from the bench, take her by the hand and
ask directions to the stone in question.
After a sudden surge of common
sense, he pummeled his rash impulses into submission and sat back on the bench,
staring up into the starry sky.
The moon hung blood-red over the
city, casting an orange glow across the sidewalks, still churning with tourists
in costume, jostling and laughing, some singing into the night wind.
The young woman stirred in his
arms, her sobs finally ceased. She dashed tears from her cheeks and looked up
at him. "You are going to help me, aren't you? I'm so desperate. We only
need a teeny-weeny bit of blood, really. It's so important and I'd be ever so
grateful."
Even a gentleman couldn't help
wondering, 'how grateful?' considering the unusual request. And just exactly
what did 'shed his blood on the stone' mean? On a night such as this, and if
she truly believed her outrageous tale, was he dealing with a crazy woman?
Clive shivered. The wind had come
up, and the corn husks tied to the lamp posts rustled. A thin cloud crept
across the center of the moon, seeming to cut it in half.
Clive stood and glanced at his
watch. 11:40 P.M. "Well, let's get on with it. Can we walk to the
stone?" He would humor her and see where all this would lead. His hand
rested around a small penknife in his pocket. If a drop of blood is all it takes
to satisfy her fantasy, I can do that.
The wind whistled overhead as the
cemetery loomed into view. Groups of tourists ambled amongst the grave stones.
Raucous laughter came from the direction of Bridget Bishop and Martha Corey's
graves, also victims of the 1692 Salem witch trials. One would think it was an
amusement park rather than a cemetery from the sound of merriment coming from
the shadows.
Jenny squealed at the sight of a
man dressed as a vampire loomed from the bushes.
Clive put his arm around her shoulder
and pulled her close. She was really a dear little thing, and he wanted to calm
her fears. Perhaps she would be very grateful!
Sarah Good's commemorative stone
gleamed in the moonlight.
Jenny ran her fingers over the
grooves in the stone forming the letters¨C Sarah Good 1653 ¨C 1692 "Poor
thing. I'm so sorry, Sarah. Please forgive my ancestor." Jenny glanced at
her watch. "Are you ready? Do you have a knife, or shall we use
mine?" She drew a huge serrated bread knife from her purse. "We don't
have much time. I only have five more minutes. Clive?"
At the sight of Jenny's wild eyes
gleaming in the moonlight, Clive stepped back, the thrill of the moonlight
adventure fading and reality finally setting in. Apparently, she had no
intention of settling for a pricked finger and a drop of blood. With the knife
in her hand, she crept closer and closer.
"Hold on, there, young
lady." He backed away, glancing left and right. Where had all the costumed
tourists gone? The witches and ghosts and even the vampire had disappeared at
the first sight of Jenny's knife.
In the distance, the town clock
began to strike. Twelve o'clock,¬ the witching hour. Bong¡-bong¡¬bong. The hour
that a real witch, if there was such a thing, might easily take the life of a
stranger to thwart her twisted notion about an imaginary family curse.
Bong¡¬bong¡¬bong.
Clive's dull life suddenly held a
great deal more appeal and he wished for all the world he had never heard of
Salem.
Bong¡¬bong¡¬bong.
Jenny's beautiful smile, only
moments ago holding so much promise, faded, and was replaced by a fiendish
leer. Only his blood splashed across the accursed stone would make her smile
now.
Bong¡¬bong¡¬bong. ¬
Jenny shrieked and rushed at him,
the knife raised...
Paralyzed with fear, Clive closed
his eyes and held his breath, waiting for the death blow.
Bong! Midnight!
Seconds ticked by. Clive ran his
hands up and down his chest. "I'm still alive?" He opened his eyes.
Jenny's cape and the bread knife
lay on the ground, but,¬ Where was Jenny? Had she waited seconds too long to
strike? The curse had taken her¡ ¬but where? How?
Sarah Good's stone gleamed in the
moonlight. A small black cat hunched beside the stone, her tail whipping around
her black toes. A white blaze crept over her nose, across one eye, ending
beside her ear, in shocking contrast to her long black fur. She stared up at
Clive.
"Jenny?" Clive walked
closer to the stone. Didn't people used to believe that witches could turn into
black cats? He'd never believed such tales before, but... He stroked the cat
and peered into her eyes. "Jenny?" He gasped. It was as though Jenny
stared back. The curse! It was true. Poor Jenny needed him to protect her from
the curse. She had failed, but he wouldn't abandon her now. She still needed
him. "Don't worry, Jenny. I'll take care of you."
He would write his 2000 words
newspaper story about Salem, about the haunted houses and the costume ball and
the decorations and the Halloween parades. The story would be colorful and for
a few minutes the readers might forget about the tragedy that took almost 3000
lives on September 11. But, he would not write about a 300 year old curse that
could turn a Salem witch into a little black cat on the night of the first
Halloween full moon in the last twenty-seven years. Who would believe it? Not
even his publisher would believe it.
Clive walked back to town with
Jenny cradled in his arms.
~Fin
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