MrBallen Podcast: Strange, Dark & Mysterious Stories - The Curse
Episode Date: February 22, 2024Our stories typically have really big plot twists at the end, and today’s story is no different. However, the plot twist today is so unexpected, so abrupt, so horrifying… that it will kee...p you guessing until the end.Story name, preview & link to original YouTube video:#1 -- "The Curse" -- The plot twist in this story is so horrifying and unexpected, it'll keep you guessing until the end (Original YouTube link -- https://youtu.be/vs936bysimI?feature=shared)For 100s more stories like these, check out our main YouTube channel just called "MrBallen" -- https://www.youtube.com/c/MrBallenIf you want to reach out to me, contact me on Instagram, Twitter or any other major social media platform, my username on all of them is @mrballenSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Our stories typically have really big plot twists at the end, and today's story is no different.
However, the plot twist today is so unexpected, so abrupt, so horrifying, that it really will keep you guessing until the very end.
so horrifying that it really will keep you guessing until the very end.
But before we get into today's story, if you're a fan of the Strange, Dark, and Mysterious delivered in story format, then you've come to the right podcast because that's all we
do and we upload twice a week, once on Monday and once on Thursday.
So if that's of interest to you, please change the fourth song on the Amazon Music
Follow Button Sleep playlist to the loudest heavy metal death music you can find.
Okay, let's get into today's story. I'm Emily and I'm one of the hosts of Terribly Famous,
the show that takes you inside the lives of our biggest celebrities.
And they don't get much bigger than the man who made badminton sexy.
OK, maybe that's a stretch, but if I say pop star and shuttlecocks,
you know who I'm talking about.
No?
Short shorts?
Free cocktails?
Careless whispers?
Okay, last one.
It's not Andrew Ridgely.
Yep, that's right.
It's Stone Cold icon George Michael.
From teen pop sensation to one of the biggest solo artists on the planet,
join us for our new series, George Michael's Fight for Freedom.
From the outside, it looks like he has it all.
But behind the trademark dark sunglasses
is a man in turmoil.
George is trapped in a lie of his own making
with a secret he feels would ruin him
if the truth ever came out.
Follow Terribly Famous
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or listen early and ad-free on Wanderie Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
Hello, I am Alice Levine and I am one of the hosts of Wondery's podcast, British Scandal.
On our latest series, The Race to Ruin, we tell the story of a British man who took part in the
first ever round the world sailing
race. Good on him, I hear you say. But there is a problem, as there always is in this show.
The man in question hadn't actually sailed before. Oh, and his boat wasn't seaworthy. Oh, and also
tiny little detail, almost didn't mention it. He bet his family home on making it to the finish
line. What ensued was one of the most complex cheating plots in British
sporting history. To find out the full story, follow British Scandal wherever you listen to
podcasts, or listen early and ad-free on Wondery Plus on Apple Podcasts or the Wondery app.
In the late summer of 1930,
Rafael Ponsardi and his wife, Leonardo Cianciulli, moved with their four young kids to a little town in northern Italy called Correggio.
A terrible earthquake had destroyed the family's previous village
and killed nearly all of their
neighbors. And so this family was feeling very lucky to be alive, but when they arrived in
Correggio, they really had nothing and were hoping that, you know, the people of this town will just
be very welcoming and generous and kind of help them get set up again. And the people of this town did exactly that.
Correggio was this beautiful place inside of a fertile valley where people lived in these
cottages surrounded by rice fields and mulberry trees. And the people who lived there were very
tight-knit and looked after each other and cooked for each other and had parties together. I mean,
this was a real community. And so when Rafael and Leonardo arrived,
the townspeople immediately found them this cute little cottage by a stream with a whitewashed
front door and a beautiful stone hearth for cooking. And there was an attached storefront
on this cottage that they were giving them. And then on top of that, once the family had moved in,
the family's new neighbors helped get Rafael a job,
and they also helped Leonarda set up the attached storefront that was part of their cottage so she
could sell her homemade soap bars out of the shop. And so very quickly, the family just completely
fell in love with Correggio, especially 36-year-old Leonarda. Losing her home and her previous neighbors in that terrible
earthquake had been a tragedy on epic scale, but it was far from the first tragedy that Leonarda
had been forced to live through. Leonarda had been born into poverty. Her mother had actually
come from a very wealthy family, but they had cut Leonardo's mom off
when she became pregnant with Leonardo. And so when Leonardo's mom gave birth to her,
she blamed Leonardo for their poverty and all of their problems, and so beat her relentlessly.
And then on top of that, Leonardo's father died when she was very young,
and so she was stuck at home being abused
constantly by her mother. When Leonarda was 21, she met Rafael and fell in love with him, and he
was a very kind and gentle man. He really made a very strong first impression on anyone who met him.
But when Leonarda went to her mother and introduced Raphael to her and said, I'm going to marry this man, I love him,
her mother flew into a rage and then literally cursed Leonarda.
She actually out loud muttered the spell and then told Leonarda that because of the spell,
Leonarda would have evil following her forever.
Now, of course, Leonarda was very used to her mother's terrible behavior, and so she did
not actually think she was at risk of this curse affecting her life in any way. But not long after
actually marrying Raphael, Leonarda began to see evidence that this curse might actually be real.
It started with Leonarda having these sudden fits of seizures for no
particular reason. And then Leonardo, every time she got pregnant, she would miscarry and lose the
baby. And so feeling really sad and desperate because all she wanted was a family, Leonardo
actually went to a fortune teller in hopes that they would tell her that in the future, her life got better,
not worse, which to Leonardo meant, you know, the curse was not real if my life improves.
But after this fortune teller took Leonardo's hands and studied her palms, she looked up at
Leonardo and gave her grave news. She said, Leonardo, you're going to have living children, This experience totally shocked Leonarda and confirmed for her that her mother's curse must be real.
And sure enough, over the following years, Leonarda and Raphael would go on to have 14 living children,
and 10 of them would die when they were babies or toddlers. And so by the time Leonarda had arrived
in Correggio with her family in 1930, she was absolutely petrified that her last four precious
children would die because of this curse.
And so in order to keep her kids safe, she basically never let them out of her sight,
and then she also made sure they always adhered to these strange rules and beliefs that Leonardo had come up with
about good and evil that were designed to somehow protect the kids from this curse.
protect the kids from this curse. But the incredible show of generosity and support and kindness that Leonardo and her family had experienced when they arrived in Correggio
had really done something to Leonardo. In fact, it really kind of changed the way she viewed the
world. Suddenly, she was less concerned with this curse and how to protect her family from it,
and instead she was just kind of content.
She felt safe. She felt happy. The women in the town loved Leonardo and always came by the house to say hi to her and eat some of the amazing tea cakes that she would make. And also, Leonardo had
become best friends with this woman named Virginia, who was a former opera singer from Milan, who was
very elegant and beautiful. and every time she went to
a dinner party, she would invite Leonardo. And also, Leonardo and her family were becoming
financially stable really for the first time ever. Leonardo's soap shop that she ran out of their
cottage was really successful. People came from all around to buy her soaps because nobody could
make them like she could. And Raphael's job as a clerk was very
steady, and he too was becoming well-respected in town. And so because of how well this transition
to Correggio had been, at some point, Leonarda made a promise both to herself and to the universe
that instead of focusing all of her time and energy on this curse, which had plagued her her whole life,
instead she was going to focus on helping the people of Correggio any way she could,
because they had done so much for her.
And that is exactly what Leonardo did, but in a kind of ironic way.
Because of the fear Leonardo had for her mother's curse, she had gone to that fortune teller many years ago.
And even though the news she got when she saw the fortune teller was horrible,
Leonardo had left that experience kind of fascinated with the art of fortune telling and magic and sorcery.
It just really appealed to her.
And so now that Leonardo was running this very successful soap shop out of her house,
there were all these people coming from far and wide that would ask to barter for her soaps.
Bartering is like trading one item for another item versus paying for something outright with money.
And so Leonardo began bartering with these travelers whenever they had books about fortune telling,
about magic, about sorcery,
about how to make potions, about the occult. And after reading through all of these books and
learning as much as she could, Leonarda, in addition to selling her soaps, began offering
fortune telling services to the people of Correggio. And it would turn out she was really
good at predicting the future, to the point where people in town basically began
going to her for all kinds of advice. She helped women find love, she told farmers what crops to
plant, she created these charm bags for people and told them they would protect them, she also began
creating these herb potions for people when they got sick. It actually got to the point where people
trusted her so much that when they got sick they didn't even to the point where people trusted her so much that when they
got sick, they didn't even go to the doctor. They just went to her. And so very quickly,
Leonardo felt very proud of the fact that she had lived up to the promise she had made both to
herself and to the universe to always help the people of Correggio at every turn. But more than
that, Leonardo was starting to think that this newfound sense of
purpose and happiness she was getting in helping the people of Correggio through her various
services had finally broken her mother's curse. By 1939, Leonardo and her family had been living
in Correggio very happily for almost 10 years, and at the time, Leonardo's oldest son, Giuseppe,
was 17 years old. Giuseppe was tall, he was handsome, he had dark hair, he had dark eyes,
and all the girls loved him. And Giuseppe and Leonardo had always had a very close relationship.
Every day, Giuseppe would come home, and he and his mom would sit in the kitchen,
and they would chat for a while and eat some of her tea cakes. But now, in 1939, when Giuseppe would come home and he and his mom would sit in the kitchen and they would chat for a while and eat some of her tea cakes. But now, in 1939, when Giuseppe was 17, he started to act a little
bit different. He would come home and instead of going into the kitchen to sit with Leonardo,
he would just go straight to his room and shut the door. And when Leonardo or Raphael would ask him,
you know, hey, is everything okay? Giuseppe would
get very defensive and say he was fine and to please just leave me alone. But to Leonardo,
it seemed really obvious that her son was not fine. And she thought, you know, maybe he has
some sort of secret he's keeping and that's what's making him act this way. He's hurting on the
inside, but he can't share it with the world. But Leonardo had
no idea what this secret might be. And then one day, late that same year, Leonardo was walking
through town when one of her neighbors came up to her and said, hey, are you aware that your son,
Giuseppe, has signed up for the military and he's leaving for training in just a few months?
Leonardo had not heard about this. People were talking a lot about World War II,
which had just started around this time, but Leonardo had never considered that her precious
son would go off to fight in that war. But now, Leonardo realized that Giuseppe's recent strange
behavior suddenly made sense. This was the secret he was keeping. He had joined the military,
and he hadn't told his family. Leonarda turned around and went straight home. She went right into her bedroom, shut the door, and she just sobbed. To her, it felt like her mother's curse
was back, and now her precious son was going to go off into the war, and he was going to die.
Unless she found a way to combat this evil that was now following her again.
So, for the next several days, Leonarda did not open up her soap shop, she didn't come downstairs,
she just stayed locked in her bedroom and read through all of her books about magic and sorcery
and the occult, looking for some sort of solution for how to fight this curse. And finally, she figured out what she had to do.
She read that if she gave something beautiful to the universe, the universe would reward her. And
in Leonarda's mind, that reward would be sparing her son. And so Leonarda decided that the most
beautiful thing she could offer the universe would be to help the people of Correggio.
Which she was already doing, but in her mind, she thought she could really ramp up her efforts
and really try to change people's lives.
And she thought if she could do that, the universe was sure to notice and it would save
her son's life. I'm Peter Frankopan.
And I'm Afua Hirsch.
And we're here to tell you about our new season of Legacy,
covering the iconic, troubled musical genius that was Nina Simone.
Full disclosure, this is a big one for me.
Nina Simone, one of my favourite artists of all time,
somebody who's had a huge impact on me,
who I think objectively stands apart for the level of her talent,
the audacity of her message.
If I was a first year at university,
the first time I sat down and really listened to her
and engaged with her message, it totally floored me and the truth and pain and messiness of her struggle
that's all captured in unforgettable music that has stood the test of time. I think that's fair
Peter? I mean the way in which her music comes across is so powerful no matter what song it is
so join us on Legacy for Nina Simone.
In May of 1980, near Anaheim, California, Dorothy Jane Scott noticed her friend had an inflamed red
wound on his arm and he seemed really unwell. So she wound up taking him to the hospital right away
so he could get treatment. While Dorothy's friend waited for his prescription, Dorothy went to grab a car to pick him up at the exit.
But she would never be seen alive again, leaving us to wonder, decades later, what really happened to Dorothy Jane Scott.
From Wondery, Generation Y is a podcast that covers notable true crime cases like this one and so many more.
that covers notable true crime cases like this one and so many more.
Every week, hosts Aaron and Justin sit down to discuss a new case covering every angle and theory, walking through the forensic evidence,
and interviewing those close to the case to try and discover what really happened.
And with over 450 episodes, there's a case for every true crime listener.
Follow the Generation Y podcast on Amazon Music or wherever you get your podcasts. Faustina, who was in her 70s, was desperate to get married,
but to many people in town, including Leonardo, she seemed kind of beyond help.
She was totally antisocial, she was awkward,
and just kind of given her age, it seemed like marriage was just not in the cards for her.
But this is where Leonardo thought she could step in and change everything for Faustina.
She would find her a husband.
So Leonardo reached out to Faustina and told her about a friend of hers, a man,
who lived in a city to the north, who was also alone in his old age,
and who was likely looking for marriage, and she could set them up if Faustina was interested.
And so Faustina was immediately interested and wanted to meet this guy. But Leonardo did tell her that, you know, this guy, the reason he's not married is he's kind of difficult to be around. He's kind of a jerk, but he's got a wonderful heart. He means
well. I think he'd be a great fit for you. And so again, Faustina's like, great. I want to meet him.
I want to marry him. I'm ready. And then finally, the day came when Faustina actually went to this
other town and met this guy in person and they fell in love. And Faust, the day came when Faustina actually went to this other town and met this guy
in person, and they fell in love. And Faustina just moved right in with him, and before long,
she was sending happy postcards back to Correggio, telling everyone about how happy she was and how
thankful she was for Leonardo's help in setting them up. And so Leonardo was obviously thrilled,
not only for her friend's happiness, but also it
really felt like she had checked the box in terms of really going above and beyond to help someone
in Correggio in an effort to get the universe to spare her son. But her son was still a couple
months away from leaving for training, and Leonardo, she's very superstitious, and she's
thinking, okay, I don't know if that was enough to get the universe to save my son.
And so I need to find somebody else I can help.
So in September of 1940, Leonardo began her next good deed project with another woman in town.
She was a widow in her 50s named Francesca.
She had worked as a teacher, but when her husband got sick, she quit her job,
and then when her husband ultimately died, she was left with nothing. So, Leonardo reached out
to Francesca and told her that she, Leonardo, would be willing to reach out to her own mother's
rich family to see if maybe they had a job they could finesse for Francesca. Now, of course, Leonardo was not
excited about talking to her mother's family, who had disowned her mother and had shown no interest
in Leonardo. But Leonardo wanted to do this for Francesca and for the sake of her son and getting
the universe to notice what she was doing. And so sure enough, Leonardo would reach out to her
mother's family, and they were remarkably open to the idea, and they got a job for Francesca in Switzerland.
And so eventually, Francesca jetted off to Switzerland, and then a couple of days later, she was sending postcards back to Correggio saying how happy she was and how thankful she was for Leonardo's help.
she was for Leonardo's help. And so again, Leonardo was so happy about this outcome,
both because she cared about Francesca, and also because this was yet another kind of check in the box of her good deeds that the universe was going to notice that in turn would save her son.
But again, after Francesca didn't need any more help, Leonardo found herself looking at her son,
who was getting closer and closer to
leaving for training, and she would think to herself, have I done enough to protect him?
Have I really stopped this curse from killing him after he leaves? And Leonardo eventually decided
that no, she had not done enough. She needed to do at least one more really big good deed for
someone in this town. And who better to help than her best friend,
Virginia, the former opera singer. Leonardo knew from all her talks with Virginia that Virginia
really missed living in the big city and going to the opera house. And so Leonardo reached out
to Virginia and said, you know what, I can reach out to my mother's rich family, and maybe they can find a job for you in a big city if you're interested.
And so Virginia was like, wow, yes, I would love that.
That's an amazing opportunity.
And so Leonardo again would contact her mother's rich family,
and again they came through,
finding this job as a social planner for this very rich guy in Florence, Italy,
who often funded plays and operas. And so
this job was perfect for Virginia. When Leonardo told Virginia about this opportunity, Virginia
cried tears of joy. After packing up all of her things, Virginia made a stop at Leonardo's house
to say goodbye and thank you. and the two women would hug and laugh
and cry, they would drink wine together, and then finally when it was time for Virginia to go,
even though Leonardo was very sad, she was also quite happy because finally she felt like this
good deed was enough to get the universe to spare her son. However, Leonardo, being a very superstitious person, did have one more little
thing she wanted to do with Giuseppe before he left for the military. And this little thing
was her, Leonardo, bathing her son, her 18-year-old son, with a particular bar of soap,
and then she also wanted to feed him a special kind of tea cake that she was going to make.
and then she also wanted to feed him a special kind of tea cake that she was going to make.
The soap and the tea cake had these special herbs and ingredients and different things she had pulled from her books of magic and the occult, and they would kind of form like a protective barrier both
outside and inside of Giuseppe. So on the same night that Virginia headed off to Florence,
when Giuseppe came home, Leonardo
approached him and said, I want to give you this bath and I want to feed you these tea cakes.
And Giuseppe was not remotely enthused at the idea of having his mom bathe him. He's 18. But he knew
she was highly superstitious. She seemed pretty emotional about this, and it just seemed like it was extremely important to her,
and so he said, okay.
And so Leonardo washed her son with this special kind of magic soap,
and then she also gave him the tea cakes,
and then afterward, even though Giuseppe was really annoyed by what he had just been asked to do,
Leonardo was so happy she was practically floating.
She felt like she had done everything she could possibly do,
and now she could just relax because her son was safe.
But soon, Leonardo would learn that that was not actually true.
A few days after giving her son the magical last bath and magical tea cakes,
the police showed up at the
front door of Leonardo's house. And when she opened the door and saw the police, she asked
what was going on. And the police would say to her, hey, the three women that you supposedly
helped that left town recently, they've all been reported missing by their families. They don't
know where they are. And so Leonardo, she was totally shocked by this. And she said, no, that's not possible. I write to them all the time. I get postcards that
come in very regularly from all of them. And then, Leonardo went and got the postcards and showed the
police, like, look, I'm talking to them. How could they possibly be missing? And so, the police, they
would look at these letters and they would agree with Leonardo that it is pretty strange that she'd be getting these very authentic seeming letters from these
women if these women were also missing. And so eventually the police would leave and they would
tell Leonardo that they would be in touch if they needed anything. And then over the next couple of
days, Leonardo was very concerned about these three women, but she received numerous postcards
from these women over those several days, and all of these postcards were totally normal seeming,
and so Leonarda was fairly confident that whatever was going on with the police had to have been a
mix-up and she wouldn't be hearing from them again. But a couple of weeks later, the police
did come back to Leonarda's house, except this time they didn't knock, they just barged right in.
After the police had spoken with Leonardo that first time,
they did some digging on these letters that she was receiving,
and they managed to trace them all back to their start point.
And it turned out all of these letters from all three of these women were originating from one
place. It was this little town to the north of Correggio. And when police went to this little
town, they discovered that these letters that were starting in this little town were all being mailed
by the same person. And they got a physical description of this person who apparently
was pretending to be these three
women. And the description was of a tall, handsome young man with dark hair and dark eyes. It was
Giuseppe. After the police barged into Leonardo's house, they went straight to Giuseppe's room,
where they accused him of murdering those three women, and then they hauled him out of the house
and brought him to the station to question him about where he dumped the bodies. When the last police officer left
Leonardo's house, Leonardo walked outside and just stood there wondering what she was going to do.
It was like she had done everything in her power to protect her son from this curse,
but somehow this curse she knew had done this to her son. And so now
she knew there was only one thing she could do. Without saying anything to her husband,
she went inside, she got her things, and she began making her way to the police station.
At this point in her life, Leonarda looked much older than her actual age of 46. She had very gray hair, her face was very wrinkled, and she was stooped over,
and she was always carrying these charm bags and magical potions
and little stick figures that she claimed protected her family.
And so her overall appearance when she wandered into the police station
was that of a very frail old woman who was also very strange. And so Leonardo hobbled her
way up to the front desk, and in a trembling voice, she asked the attendant if she could speak to the
detective who was working on her son's case. And then a moment later, she was led into an interview
room where she was told to wait. And then a little while later, the lead detective walked into the room,
he sat down across the table from Leonardo, and he said, what can I do for you? And immediately,
Leonardo said, my son Giuseppe is innocent. And the detective, when he heard this, he was not remotely surprised. In fact, this is fully what he expected this conversation was going to be.
He knew Leonardo loved her son very much,
and of course she was going to say he was innocent. This is what parents typically did
in cases like this. But the detective decided he wouldn't try to stop her. He would just let this
very distraught mother kind of talk for a bit. He would tell her that he would follow up on whatever
she was saying, and then he would drive her back home. But this detective was not expecting
the things that would come out of Leonardo's mouth
over the next couple of hours.
In fact, her story about why Giuseppe was innocent
was so shocking and so bizarre
that the detective outright said,
I don't believe you.
I don't believe this.
This can't be true.
And then other officers were called in to listen to her story to see if they believed it. And they too said, this doesn't seem real. But the police would follow up on the day that Faustina, the first woman that Leonardo pledged to help in order to get the universe to save her son,
when Faustina was set to go north and meet her future husband, Faustina stopped by Leonardo's house to say bye. And when she was in Leonardo's house, something very unexpected happened.
When Faustina walked into Leonardo's kitchen where Leonardo was, Faustina was so excited about meeting her potential future husband that her hands were shaking and she was smiling ear to ear.
And so Leonardo said to Faustina, hey, you need to calm down.
And so she handed Faustina a glass of wine.
And so Faustina took the wine and she had a couple of sips of wine.
And right away, Faustina took the wine and she had a couple of sips of wine. And right away, Faustina started feeling dizzy.
And before long, she was grabbing the table just to keep from falling over.
It would turn out the wine was poisoned by Leonardo.
And so Faustina, she's kind of looking up at Leonardo.
And Leonardo is looking down at her and she's got an axe in one of her hands.
And she says to Faustina, I'm so sorry.
And then she winds up and she strikes Faustina in the chest with the axe and lodges it in her chest.
And so she lets go of it, expecting Faustina to die.
She doesn't. Faustina is just standing there with an axe in her chest.
And so Leonardo grabbed the handle of the axe.
She pulled it out of her chest and then began wailing on her head over and over and over again
until Faustina did fall to the ground dead.
Then, Leonardo lit a fire under her big metal pot on the stove,
and then she cut Faustina's body into nine pieces.
She drained the blood out of the body into a bucket,
and then she chucked those nine pieces into the pot on the stove
and began to
mix them with caustic soda, which is a powerful dissolving agent that's used to make soap. And
then she boiled the ingredients, her body parts, and this caustic soda for hours. Faustina's body
slowly turned into this horrible black mush inside of this pot, and Leonardo was watching this the
whole time, and she just had a look of total disappointment as this this pot. And Leonardo was watching this the whole time,
and she just had a look of total disappointment as this was happening. And then at some point,
she just took the pot off the stove and dumped the ingredients, Faustina's body, down the septic tank.
And then Leonardo waited for Faustina's blood that she had dumped out to coagulate,
which means it became semi-solid. And then she heated it up in the oven and then
ground it into flour. And she would use that flour to make tea cakes, which she fed to her
friends the next day, as well as her son Giuseppe. Leonardo also asked her son to mail some letters
for her from the little town to the north where Faustina had supposedly gone. These letters, of course, were written by Leonardo pretending to be Faustina
to give the impression that she was still alive and well.
And Giuseppe, when he was told to go mail these letters, didn't think anything of it.
He was used to doing errands for his mom.
Even though Leonardo basically got away with killing Faustina,
her plan for Faustina had not really gone the way Leonarda had hoped.
When she boiled Faustina's chopped up body parts and this caustic soda, they didn't really mix the way she wanted them to.
Leonarda was convinced that the reason for this is because Faustina was too skinny, and so there wasn't enough fat on her body for the mix to be
perfect. So, Leonarda had come up with another elaborate story, this time for another woman,
Francesca, about that job in Switzerland she got through her mother's rich family.
Of course, none of that was true, and when Francesca came by Leonarda's house to say
goodbye to her, she was offered a glass of poisoned wine,
and after she sipped from it, she became dizzy, and then Leonardo showed up with an axe and hacked
Francesca to death. But again, when the body parts and the caustic soda were in the pot on the stove
boiling together, they were still not coming together the way Leonardo wanted. And so again,
Leonardo, with a look of disgust,
just dumped the pot down the septic tank and wound up making tea cakes from Francesca's blood.
Then the next day, she fed those tea cakes to her friends, as well as Giuseppe, and she also
asked Giuseppe to send a few more letters from up north. These letters were, of course, from Francesca.
Still feeling totally unsatisfied with how the last two killings had gone,
Leonardo moved on to her third target, her best friend, Virginia.
And this time, when Virginia came by Leonardo's house to say goodbye, everything went to plan.
Leonardo was able to poison Virginia, she killed her with the axe. She chopped her up.
She put her in the pot.
And this time, the nine chunks of her body mixed beautifully with the caustic soda.
And so after adding a few fine perfumes into the pot,
Leonardo was finally able to create the thing that she had not been able to create
with the other two women's bodies.
And that was a beautiful, rich, creamy bar
of soap. She also, again, made tea cakes from Virginia's blood. That night, when Giuseppe came
home, Leonardo demanded that she be allowed to bathe him with her magic soap, i.e. the soap made
from Virginia's body. And so she did that. She scrubbed him with Virginia's body soap.
And then while she was doing that,
she fed him the tea cakes that were made from Virginia's blood.
It would turn out,
Leonarda did in fact believe
that in order to save her son from this curse,
she would need to give something beautiful to the universe.
And at first, she really had to give something beautiful to the universe. And at first, she really
had believed that the way to do that was by helping the people of Correggio above and beyond anything
she had ever done before. But at some point during her interactions with Faustina, the first woman,
Leonarda had decided that, you know what, that wasn't enough. She really needed to make sure that her son was going to be safe. And so the only way really that Leonardo could guarantee her son would be safe
would be if she actually took a life and gave that back to the universe. That would save her son.
The reason Leonardo wound up taking three lives and not just one life is because she also decided
that as an extra protective measure, she wanted to make sure that she actually bathed her son,
literally, in the body parts and kind of essence of the life she had taken. And so that's where
the idea of the soap came in. However, the first two women, their body parts didn't mix right, and so she
couldn't turn them into soap. But then Virginia came along, and her body did mix with the caustic
soda, and so Leonarda was able to make her soap. She was able to bathe her son with Virginia's body
and feed him Virginia's blood. And so in Leonarda's mind, she had done everything she could to protect her son at that
point. Leonardo would ultimately be sentenced to 30 years in prison, as well as three years
in an insane asylum, just as the fortune teller had predicted. Leonardo died in 1970 when she was 76 years old. As for her family, they fled Correggio, and three of her children changed their names and vanished.
And her prized son, Giuseppe, who she had killed to protect, had gone on to join the military and he would go to war,
and he either was killed in combat or simply changed his name and vanished as well.
Thank you for listening to the Mr. Ballin Podcast.
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