The Burning
The fight for my sonâs soul began just after the witch burning. Weâd gone up to London together, leaving little Nate with the Cutlers as I didnât think heâd handle the journey. We were far from the stake, given the crowds, but we did have the farm wagon to stand on, so we could see the witch tied up there, and the piles of wood. Once the fire started, smoke obscured everything but the flash of the bishopsâ golden crosses as they warded us against evil. Owain gave Elisha a penny to buy a banner from one of the vendors, so thatâs what led him away to where it happened. What with the smoke we couldnât see the Devil manifest in the flesh of his witchâsaints be praised! we couldnât see thatâbut Elishaâd run right down in there, and it was that brought corruption to our house. Iâm sure it was.
When the priest who found him brought him back to us, the boy was different. Insisted heâd seen an angel, not the Devil at all, and no amount of praying nor beating would get it out of him. He kept touching his cheek, like heâd been kissed, and it was Father John told me the Devil had touched my son.
Owain smacked the boyâs cheek hard after that. Me, Iâm at my witâs end. Not only my sonâs been touched by the Devil, but Owainâs gone on a tear, trying to beat the evil out of Elishaâs flesh, and the whole time looking scared half to death. But I never seen him look so scared as he did when Father John come up to the house after Elishaâs outburst. Taking him to church more often shouldâve shown him back to the Lord, yet it only made him wilder, saying the priests had let an angel die, and heâd seen it all. It was me brought Father John back to the house, after bringing Nate down to the Cutlersâ, but I mightnât have done it if I had known how Owain would react.
I gave the priest the chair, and me and Owain took opposite benches, Elisha kneeling at his fatherâs back, still bleeding a little from the corner of his mouth. That boy did look wretchedânot like he wanted to believe what he said, and itâs that makes me sure of the Devilâs touch. My boysâre strong-willed, no doubt, and Elisha was fighting the Devil with all of his nine years, but he needed help, and Owain . . . well, my husband didnât know what to do but beating and pleading and neither of those did any good.
Owain sat with his hands gripped between his knees, not looking at the priest, but his eyes flashed white now and then in the firelight, round and gleaming. âThe ladâs always been headstrong, Father, you know that. Thereâs no Devil in him.â
âWitchcraft requires a firm response, Owain.â Father John leaned forward, shadows deepening his features. âPeople are beginning to talk. They know what happened at theâthe city.â Father John managed a wan smile. âAnd the interventions of the church on behalf of your son have not gone unnoticed, so incidents like this cannot simply be ignored. Some are beginning to suggest a dunking.â
A dunking! If Elisha floated, he was the Devilâs and if he sank, he went to God. I clamped my hands on the edge of the bench.
âFather.â Owain drew up at that, the line of his chin strong and handsome still. âI have disciplined himââ He reached back and caught Elishaâs chin, tipping the boyâs face to display a reddening bruise. âHeâs got this idea stuck in his head, and Iâll beat it out of him, I promise you.â
Elishaâs blue eyes glinted in the dim light, staring openly at the priest, and I clucked my tongue at him, trying to encourage at least a show of obedience.
Owainâs back stiffened and he let the boy go. âWhat is it, Edith? Donât you think Iâve beat him well enough?â He always did know when I had something on my mind.
The priest nodded at
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