The Dark Somnium - The Dreams Beneath The Witch Tree | Scary Stories from The Internet
Episode Date: January 5, 2026Hey everyone! i hope you are having a good day! this is a new story by nick lowe called The Dreams Beneath The Witch Tree, I hope you enjoy it! Special thanks to DusklightRadio and RomNex for being ...in this video with me! check out more from the author here!: https://www.instagram.com/lowe.craft?igsh=d3ppbHF5aWJ6NXBy Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See https://pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
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Written below is the last known statement of Benjamin Harper, a former American Paris priest,
serving the village of Barton Cheshire.
Mr. Martin was relieved of his position by Bishop Gerald Ellison of the Cheshire Diocese taken here
to Byron House, a home for the mentally disturbed, shortly after suffering an acute episode
of hysterical anxiety.
There, he came under the direct care of one Dr. George Monroe, the head psychiatrist.
Mr. Barton's growing insanity is believed to have been triggered by his inability to accept
the loss of his close friend and predecessor, Stefan Adams.
Following the death of his mentor, Mr. Harper suffered a rapid decline in both his sanity and
his faith that ultimately led to his confinement.
Mr. Harper's stay in Byron House, however, brief, as he vanished from his cell not long after
this statement was recorded.
Through unknown means, he is thought to have overcome the security.
Staff, brutally murdering one of the junior physicians, Dr. Howard Fleming, before making
good his escape.
The weeks prior to his flight marked some of the most dramatic alterations in his demeanor.
The House staff would often report that Mr. Harper's mood would shift dramatically and without
provocation, particularly during the nighttime hours.
Some of the orderlies even refused to work with him, citing a disturbing smirk that would creep
across his face, most often as a precursor to his fluctuating moods.
In the months that passed since his disappearance, I have been able to directly confirm
several of the less outlandish claims made in his statement.
Some of the events described within, however, are simply too fantastical for me to officially
stake my reputation on acknowledging.
Others are woefully and worryingly repugnant in their authenticity.
There is little doubt that Barton is a strange place.
Stranger still is the unsettling grip that it has upon some of the village's residents.
There is a tangible miasma, superstition, and fear that lurks over the village like a blanket of fog.
Outsiders may very well scoff at those who put stock in old tales of witches and werewolves,
but to many residents of the village, there is little distinction between reality and folklore.
I cannot deny that I, despite being a man of science, find that I find that I, find that I,
the strange history of Barton seductive and even nourishing, as it is for all those who
harbor a secret and inescapable appetite for the weird.
We need only walk down certain decaying streets in the south end of the village and take
note of the odd symbols and signs that the common folk keep over their doors, to see that
a great many in Barton refused to let the old ways die.
During my time at Byron House, I too have seen things that I cannot fully comprehend or provide
reason for. I have treated many longtime Barton residents who firmly believe, with a level of conviction,
with a level of conviction not seen in many conventional religions that the devil makes his grotto
in the shadowed woods that crown the edges of the village. I have decided to share Mr. Harper's
account of his growing madness in his own words, in the hopes that many in the scientific community
will be able to gain an insight into how and why such episodes of insanity come to fruition,
and how they can be successfully treated.
It is also my hope that if any of the stranger occurrences written below ring true to you,
the reader, then this statement will also serve as a dire warning and lesson in meddling with the affairs of certain circles,
who clearly do not take kindly to outside interferences.
These, then, are the last known words of Benjamin Harper.
I don't understand.
What more do you want me to say?
I've told my story to the police, to the doctors here,
and anyone else who will listen.
You have no right to keep me locked up in this place.
I have committed no crime and caused no harm to anyone.
I would still have my freedom, and the village's safety,
had it not been for a lone passerby,
spotting me in the darkness of the cemetery on that awful night
and alerting the police.
This whole affair would have been covered up and done with,
and you would have remained blissfully ignorant to my involvement in the matter,
had those blundering idiots not interfered.
You say I'm mad.
You may well be right, but if you had come to the same conclusion as I did regarding the fate
of my poor friend, I am sure you too would have taken some form of desperate action.
No doubt the police report will detail the simple facts of the matter.
Without bothering to add the nuances that hold the whole affair together, I am confident
that the report will dryly state that in the early morning of December 5th, I, Benjamin Harper,
was found in the darkest corner of Barton Parish Cemetery.
I was discovered, the police report will say, disturbing a suspected burial site, digging up the
cold winter earth below an ancient and twisted witch elm tree, beneath which once lay the remains
of a wicked and vile occupant.
It will also state that, in a fit of unrestrainable rage, I attacked two police officers
with a shovel, rendering them unconscious so that my grim labor could be completed without interruption.
It is not my sanity that I fear for now.
Rather, the possession of my feeble mind and the body is currently master over, for I am now horribly aware that the mind, soul, and body are not as tightly intertwined as the so-called experts of medical and spiritual matters believe them to be, but are instead three separate spheres of mastery.
I can only hope that the truth of my tale is fully appreciated before an all-too-familiar terror.
is forced upon my mind.
For I now wonder if wickedness and insanity are truly mental conditions or some form
of spiritual sickness.
Can either be inherited, carried in the blood and passed on to our descendants?
Can they be transfused from parents to their children?
If so, what other darkness can be inherited carried along the roots of our family history?
It is possible that sin itself can plunge endlessly in the crimson rapids of our ancestors.
sisters veins, biding its time, waiting patiently for the chance to emerge within the next
generation.
I confess to you that I am uncertain as to the authenticity of what I am about to tell you.
The terrible truth is that ever since I came to Byron House, I cannot recall if what happened
was but a dream.
Even now, I cannot say with any certainty that I am awake or simply dreaming that I am awake.
The boundary between reality and hallucination is a frail shroud indeed.
And who can say from which side of that curtain any of us are truly peeking?
Hark, gentlemen, hearken unto me.
I beseech you to take heed of my words.
There is something wicked out there in the backwoods and borders of our village.
Though its earthly fetters have been laid to waste, the potency of its spirit lingers.
In time, it will find a new home and set its powers against us.
For the sake of my soul, as well as the soul of my dear friend,
I will now try to recount for you in detail that blasphemous chain of events that led me
to the grave of Francis Ellis Pendle, the occupant of that hidden burial chamber, and immerse
his body and acid until nothing but bubbling black sludge remains.
Stefan Adams had been a family friend for as long as I could remember.
A devout man of God, he had been the local vicar since I was a young boy and was very much loved
by the community he served.
He never married, or had much in the way of a family of a family of a young boy.
his own, and as such, I think he always looked at me and my mother as his own flesh and blood.
In the twilight of my teenage years, my father sadly passed away from a heart attack,
and my relationship with Stefan grew stronger, forming a bond that nurtured me into manhood
and shaped me into the person I am today.
For this, I owe Stefan a debt of gratitude.
One I hope I came close to repaying when I finally destroyed the horror that had infected itself
upon his life on that lonely December night.
Stefan was a true paragon, godly, honorable, and wise.
He was devoid of vice and all of the other flaws inherent in most of us.
I never once saw him grow angry, fearful, or dispassionate at any point, say towards the
very end.
Despite his almost saintly behavior, the man was also incredibly human and very much interested
in matters of science as well as faith.
He had on occasions, said that Darwin's theories made a lot of sense, and that he enjoyed
reading books covering topics such as biology, as well as chemistry, physics, and history.
He was a remarkably well-rounded and well-adjusted man.
Not once did his belief in God falter.
He was just about able to see the sense of how the world worked, and blended it into his love
of his fellow man and the Almighty.
When I came of age, I decided to follow in his footsteps and join the church.
myself. I can't say my mother was particularly pleased with my choice, but Stefan was very proud
of me, and it was this approval that fueled my desire to serve my God and community just as he did.
My mother had been warned with Stefan, despite how closely he associated with us both.
I suspected that they had once harbored feelings for each other, and that these had turned sour
around the time of my birth. My father had never allowed this matter to interfere with their own
friendship, and they had been like brothers, right up until my father's last breath.
It was Stefan who had been at my father's deathbed, who had spoken kind words into his
ear as he gasped for breath, and who had given a moving eulogy as his casket was lowered
into the ground.
I don't recall my mother ever mentioning my father's death after the funeral, nor had I once
seen her cry or lament his passing.
She simply grew colder and more distant with the people around her, including both me and
Stefan. As such, I didn't feel burdened by my decision to leave her and Barton behind. My heart
wasn't heavy at the thought, but rather the opposite. Stefan assisted my decision to join the
ministry, and as I spoke the several authorities from the diocese of Chester, and attended an
interview with my bishop, my resolve to become ordained only grew stronger. By the time I had
secured my place at the theological colon of Worcestershire, my mother had solely come to terms
with my choice, but I never received her blessing or encouragement for treading the path
I was determined to embark on.
Worcestershire wasn't close to Cheshire.
A five-hour train journey was required whenever I wished to visit my family home.
I remained in contact with Stefan Weekly, a letter, and regularly, a handwritten note
in a tale-tale, stiff card envelope would arrive for me in the post.
Our correspondence wasn't particularly thrilling, but it was welcomed as his letters of encouragement
helped to guide me through the more difficult parts of my study and fire up in me a conviction
that only he could coax.
Months of grueling study passed me by, and I am not too proud to admit that I occasionally
regretted my choice.
During these bouts of demoralization, I would call my mother, who would delight in such talk
and beg me to return home.
A gesture I found bemusing, considering her absent feelings for me, were part of the reason
that I chose to leave Barton.
It was Stefan's letters, however, that held me back and kept me upon the path I had chosen
for myself.
On rare breaks, I would return to Barton for brief stays, and we chat about the various
topics we had discussed in our exchange of letters.
Stefan's main area of interest had changed drastically in the months I'd been gone, and he
was now ferociously researching local Cheshire history.
In particular, our folklore and other esoteric matters, the details of which are lost on me.
I would make a token effort of visiting my mother, but the blanket of cold repression
that fell across the kitchen as we sat in silence over a pot of tea was becoming more and
more unbearable.
Once or twice, when I felt as if she wanted to tell me something, but she would stop
herself before anything significant left her lips, and she would instead inquire sarcastically
into Stefan's well-being before reaffiring her objection towards my study.
But as time passed, these sojourns to bar.
and ceased altogether, as I threw myself deeper and deeper into theological pursuits, relying
solely upon Stefan's letters to keep me informed about how my mother was doing.
It had been some weeks before I noticed a gradual change in my routine that piqued my interests
and matters beyond my own affairs.
So engrossed had I been in my studies that I had neglected to notice that Stefan's letters
to me had abruptly stopped.
I waited a week before sending him a note of my own, in hopes of a response.
But nothing came.
I could only assume that he had become engrossed in study himself, as he had the habit of picking
up a new topic and devouring as much information as he could before finding a new sphere
of knowledge to move on to.
To be quite honest, I was focused on my own study, and was so welcomed the break in my
weekly task of finding something interesting to fill my letters with.
This absence of communication lasted just under five weeks, when eventually one of Stefan's
letters arrived for me on a Friday morning. I was already on my way out, so opened the letter
and read its contents while walking to the local parish I was helping to curate at. Dodging traffic
and pedestrians alike, I read the note and folded it into my pocket, determined to pen my reply
as soon as time permitted. As best as my memory serves, the much-delayed letter read as follows.
Benjamin, firstly, let me apologize for my lack of communication with you for the past few weeks.
I have, as you may have figured out for yourself, stumbled upon a fascinating area of Cheshire history,
that our own parish was directly involved in some two centuries ago.
Now, I understand that this is hardly an excuse for neglecting you,
and I sincerely apologize if my absence has caused you any worry.
Please read on, and I shall attempt to explain.
I've been investigating our parish's history,
and in doing so, come across an obscure piece of information that points to a witch trial
taking place within our community,
well after the Witchcraft Act of 1735
had forbidden all forms of necromancy and sorcery
from being punishable crimes.
How scandalous!
To think that our dear community of Barton
was involved in some sordid affair
well after such matters had ceased to be acknowledged by the Crown.
Details are sketchy, but it seems much of the affair was conducted in secret,
and many later records destroyed in order to prevent the facts surrounding it from ever resurfacing.
Now, here comes the really intriguing part.
The individual tried and executed for practicing witchcraft is none other than a distant relative of mine on my mother's side, one Francis Ellis Pendle.
This is how I was able to unearth certain details as they've been sat in my family's records for every century.
The whole matter has me deeply excited, and I'm currently waiting on several sources to provide me with information on various subjects, but I believe I am so close to worming out the truth.
I have reason to believe that this ancestor is buried right here in the parish scene.
cemetery. Try as I might, I cannot find a grave, but from what I've read, witches were sometimes
buried in unmarked plots, a curse upon their names and a final punishment for trucking with the
devil. It was also a precaution, for if any of their coven could unearth the remains, they could
restore them to life, or so the folklore goes. But here I am getting ahead of myself again.
How have you been, my boy? I look forward to hearing about the past few weeks I've missed out on,
so please furnish me with all the details. I understand you,
be finishing your first year soon, and once you have, I ask that you come to stay with me
and Barton for a while, for there is much we must discuss about my findings. Take care of yourself,
Benjamin. The letter did not ennerve me in the least. It was just like him to find some new
topic to assess over, and I thought little of the matter. Stefan had always been this way. No doubt
in his next letter, he would be talking just as enthusiastically about a completely different topic,
with witchcraft far from his mind. I wrote a meager reply that.
night. Nothing terribly fancy, just a passive interest in what he had mentioned, and also
a little update on how my studies were going. I responded to his invitation to join him at Barton
Parish and said that it would be a pleasure to spend some time with him. After my first year
was finished, I was able to come home for Christmas. To my delight, my mother invited
Stefan to our home for lunch. Christmas itself is a busy time for the ordained, but I was grateful
for the snatches of conversation we managed to have.
To my surprise, Stefan had not dropped his inquiries into his ancestor and the various
Cheshire witch trials, both legal and illegal, that had occurred in the county.
In fact, he would speak of little else during my short stay with him.
He was particularly excited because he believed he had finally located where Francis Ellis Pendle
had been laid to rest.
He described to me in great detail over a brandy that at the very back of the cemetery,
close to where the Gunners Clough Woodland starts to encroach upon the hollowed ground,
that there can be found a small copse of witch elm trees, so called because witches were
once hanged from them.
It was his belief that Francis had been interred in the ground beneath one of these trees.
A precaution levied against him, as the old folk believed that the roots of the tree would pin
the witch's body and soul in place, denying either the power to rise from the grave and avenge
themselves upon the living. The next morning he took me out to see the cops where he suspected
the final resting place of his witch ancestor lay. Even in the daytime, it was a dark and blasted
place. The trees looked more dead than alive, the twisting dry branches that groaned like
the croaking of a floorboard as the wind lightly danced around them. Here, somewhere beneath
the dark ground, Stefan was convinced that the body of Francis lay. I cannot say with conviction
that even then I was worried about him.
I had convinced myself that his interest was purely historical.
He was nothing more than an enthusiastic amateur.
In hindsight, however, the warning signs were undoubtedly present.
I would come and visit Barton sporadically during my second and third year at college.
I think I was subconsciously outgrowing the place, but in the best possible way,
I was shaping into the man I always wanted to be, and I felt renewed by my growing.
independence from both Stefan and my mother.
It was during the last part of my ordination, my final year, that I first heard the growing
rumors regarding Stefan and his radical change in behavior.
The source of such gossip came from none other than my mother.
There was a certain sense of satisfaction in her tone upon informing me of the various distasteful
exploits that Stefan was being accused of.
He was now apparently drinking heavily and had been spotted meeting with certain unsavory
types after dark. Strange visitors had been seen in the cemetery. Always at night. He was, she said,
keeping company with odd strangers who spoke in foreign tongues and who wore bizarre clothing. Loud,
violent behavior in the middle of the night was becoming a regular occurrence for his neighborhood,
as voices were heard emanating from the church house at all hours. There was even talk that several
pets had gone missing in the village. In particular, Mrs. Zibowitz's tabby cat,
Chloe and Old Man Slatter's Greyhound Basel.
The latter was known to roam freely around the village and was almost always in constant trouble,
tipping over trash cans and chasing Jackduncle's chickens.
Some people assumed that the dog had either run off or been hit by a car, but a fair number
attributed a more ominous reason behind the dog's sudden vanishing.
The cat, however, was rarely seen outside of Zeebowitz's home.
Many assumed that the eldest son, Ian, was the culprit.
The boy always had a cruel streak and was disliked by almost everyone in the village, including
his own mother.
But when the decayed, headless body of a cat and the severed head of a greyhound were found,
casually discarded in the gunner's cloth by some local children the day after Walpurgus,
many began to suspect that Stefan's sinister new acquaintances were responsible.
The most disturbing revelation, however, was that Stefan's face appeared to have taken on a rather
unusual countenance, a kind of sardonic smirk that greatly unnerved those who saw it.
By all rights, the expression was wholly alien to the man, and when seen it appeared
to twist his face to such an extent that he looked like a stranger.
The bishop of the Chester Diocese had issued him a formal warning about his behavior, the
outcome of which I would soon learn of.
At the time, I found all this impossible to believe.
The evils being attributed to my friend were nothing more than the village gossip, I believe,
and to the usual bart and superstitions.
Something for the old codgers to grumble over whilst deep in their cups, and I refused
to accept the rumors or take the matter seriously.
Soon enough, however, I too became embroiled in the abnormal changes in Stefan's life.
Again, there was a period of time where I didn't receive regular correspondence from Stefan.
In fact, these periods had grown more frequent.
But I admit that I was beginning to grow worried.
As the rumors regarding his behavior churned in my mind and the large gulf between his letters
was growing even wider as time passed, I hadn't received a letter back from him for a
very long time, perhaps four months.
But when I finally did, it was far more disturbing than anything I had ever read from him.
And it filled me with an urgent need to see my friend and assist him however I could.
arrived for me unexpectedly, much like the previous one I had described, and despite looking
like a letter from Stephen, it was so hastily scrawled that for a few seconds I thought it
was just written by his stranger.
Benjamin, I am afraid to tell you this, but I fear I have let myself down a dark and winding
path.
So far have I descended into darkness, and so deeply have I gazed at the blackness that I wonder
if I will ever be able to find my way back to the Lord's light.
My meddling in the past affairs of the parish and my own family history have brought me nothing but misery.
I'm doomed.
It's the dreams, Ben.
The hideous dreams.
I dream constantly, so much so that I can no longer tell what is real and what is fantasy.
I dream often of a cold, godless place, devoid of warmth and comfort.
Above me, I see twisting black roots worming their way slowly towards me like serpents.
Try as I might.
I cannot move my arms and legs,
for my body is confined to a casket,
a buried, rotting, maggot-infested casket.
When I finally awake,
the clock by my bedside always displays the same time.
3 a.m.
The witching hour.
At a time you read this, I may not be at the parish.
I must leave this place, leave Barton, and never return.
I have some dire matters to attend to.
Most importantly, I must return
that which I have called. He has his own black designs, and I must ensure that they never
come to fruition. In my more lucid moments, I'm formulating a plan, but I must be prudent,
lest he suspects me of acting. I must be decisive and deliberate in my actions and conceal
all evidence from him before the sun sets and his time begins. He has his means. That is beyond
doubt, but I also have mine. I know of certain antique formulas and signs that can ward off his
spirit, potent as it may be. Once I am sure that this evil is returned to the cold ground,
his remains must be destroyed. Fire is no good. It will leave too much intact. It must be something
stronger, something that will obliterate him until there is nothing left. I will then take my leave.
I have already spoken with the bishop, and we both agree that you are ready to take my place, Ben.
May you be a better guide to the people of this parish than I. Ben, if I fail in my endeavours,
I can offer you only this warning.
Fear that which lurks beneath the witch tree.
Do not invite it in, for it will make it suffer home within you and through you work its black magic.
It will invoke those who lurk at the threshold, those unnameable blasphemies from the great outside.
And then, my friend, we are all ruined.
God bless you.
To say this letter disturbed me greatly would be a gross understatement.
I had never known my friend to be so worried or panicked over anything in his life, and yet
here he was, telling me that his very soul was in jeopardy.
I spoke with my superiors at the college, but I did not show them the note Stefan had sent
me.
I feared that should anyone else read the note, they would question his sanity, and that
might put in motion a whole course of events regrettable to the man's already frayed reputation.
No.
Best I speak to him first and get to the root of the issue.
A few days later, I was on a train, and bound home for Barton, I disembarked at the nearby
Eastwich station and caught a rickety old bus into the village, arriving around midday and hastily
made my way in the direction of the parish church.
Several locals recognized me, and I had to pause momentarily for a few quick exchanges
before resuming my journey.
I did my best not look panicked, and to keep my gate to an acceptable stride, as I gave each passerby
my time, but deep inside I was overcome with a crippling dread that only increased as I neared
when at last I arrived at the church gates, I found them closed but not barred. Pushing their
heavy iron frames inwards, I walked past the small stone fountain, which was bone dry and not
flowing with the gentle, trickling sound that usually welcomes visitors. The surrounding benches
that crowded the fountain were empty, as was the entire churchyard and cemetery.
I couldn't help but notice the serene yet disturbing quiet of the place as I headed straight
for the church doors, which were worryingly locked.
I looked around, puzzled.
Stefan should have been inside and getting ready for the evening service.
I picked up my bags and made my way around the church and towards the small residence
at the back where Stefan lived.
The front doors, like that of the church, was locked.
The curtains were open, and I peeked inside but could see no sign of life.
I then did a quick detour of the perimeter, knocking and calling on every door and window before
returning to the front.
I assured myself that there must be a perfectly mundane excuse for him not being present
at the church and mused that maybe he was out picking up provisions from Litter's store on
Townfield Lane.
The relief of such a normal explanation was abruptly shattered, however, by the gruff and familiar
voice of a man barking out to me from the direction of the cemetery.
Vickers gone, Ben.
I don't know it's spores he's coming back anytime soon.
I cocked my head in the direction of the voice and called out.
My words feebly battling against the gust of winds that were coalescing piles of brown autumn leaves,
causing them to dance around the dry, grey fountain behind me.
Is that you, Ted?
I called, already knowing the answer to my question.
To my reply, the tall and wide reframe of old Ted Quilt slowly emerged from behind a large headstone.
He had a small shovel in one hand, and was no doubt tending to the earth around the cemetery,
just as he had for as long as I could recall.
Despite the autumn chill, he wiped sweat from his brow and waved at me before picking up his tools.
As he made his way towards me, his long white hair and beard billowing in the wind, I could
not banish thoughts of the old pagan gods from my mind.
With his towering height and wizened but friendly old face, he reminded me of the old.
of Wadden, the chieftain of gods, and leader of the dreaded wild hunt from the old Saxon legends.
Sorry, Ben. Didn't scare you, did I? I heard you come in. Well, I heard the gate clan.
I figured I let you look around before speaking up.
No, it's quite all right, Ted. I replied. What did you mean just now, that Stefan was gone
and wouldn't be coming back?
Oh, it's best you come inside, boy. The vicar left me some instructions for you and
the keys to his house. Come on.
I'll make us some tea.
He rested one of his giant hands on my shoulder.
I won't lie to you, Ben.
I've got some queer things to tell you.
With that, he pulled the front door key from the back of his tattered trousers
and unlocked the front door of Stefan's house,
causing the lock to make a heavy clunking sound as the door opened the jar.
He entered, and I followed behind,
still confused as to what I could have missed in the time since I had heard from Stefan.
Ted immediately headed for the kitchen,
where, true to his words, he put on a pot of tea and sat down to roll himself a cigarette whilst
waiting for the tea to brew.
Hungry?
He turned to ask me, scraping his tongue across the cigarette's paper skin and gesturing to some biscuits
on a nearby plate.
Later, perhaps.
I replied with a weak smile.
The smell of the brewing tea filled the room and offered me a little comfort.
Stephan had always appreciated a strong tea.
I placed my bags down and looked around the room.
It was exactly how I'd remembered it, untouched and impeccably clean, as was Stefan's fancy.
Ted looked quite out of place in such an uncluttered arena.
With his wild beard and dirt-stained clothing, he didn't say anything to me, engrossed as he was in his cigarette rolling, which caused me to grow a little impatient with the man.
Look, if something happened to Stefan, you have to let me know quickly, Ted.
What is it?
He proceeded to pour two cups of tea, and after passing one along with a small jug of milk,
he struck a match and lit his cigarette before leaning back in his chair and sighing.
There isn't an easy way to say this, Ben, so I'll just come out with it.
Stevens left the parish.
His ways, shall we say, over the last few months had been unnerving many of the parishioners,
and the bishop felt it was in everyone's best interest that he takes his leave, at least for a few months.
I nodded.
Not so much in agreement, but simply out of shock.
I reached into my pocket and pulled out the last two letters Stefan had sent me and handed
them over to Ted, who placed his cup on the table and took them into his hands without saying a word.
He stroked his snow-white beard whilst intermittently nodding and sighing as he flitted from page to page,
occasionally pre-reading a section and then nodding once more.
Once finished, he handed them back to me, picked up his cup and took a sip,
straining the brown liquid through his beard.
Do these letters mean anything to you?
A little.
He was talking about that bloody witchcraft business an awful lot.
I knew some of what he was talking about,
especially those trees out back past the graveyard.
I used to play around the gun as cluff as a boy.
They would always tell about how evil that place was.
You're from Barton, you must have heard the old tales about ghosts and goblins,
and how old Salt Peter would get you if you lingered too long past sundown.
recalling the childhood memory of how my grandfather would warn me of entering the gunner's cloth
after dark.
You stay away from those woods, boy, he would say.
Salt Peter, Salty Pete, some call him.
On three legs he goes, he'll trick you into the woods using the voice of someone you know.
That's just an old wife's tale, Ted, I finally replied.
Stefan would never have taken such talk seriously.
Imps and witches, familiars, it's just childish superstition.
Well, I can't argue with you there, Ben.
He said, taking another sip of his tea.
But it was more of the weird changes in his nature that I wanted to talk to you about.
Not all of this witchy nonsense.
He tapped the letters on the table, as if to emphasize how little he thought of their contents.
Such as?
I said, picking up my own cup.
Well, a couple folks rumbled him good to the bishop over his knightly doings.
They say he'd been calling regularly with shady types of me switch and that he was involved in some
missing money here at the parish.
Quite as some if folk could be believed.
Then there's the strange sounds and stranger lights coming from the cemetery.
My mother was telling me about this weeks ago, I added.
I didn't want to believe her.
She's never been too keen on Stefan.
Not just that, Ben.
It was his own manner.
He just stopped giving her damn about the community.
He turned to this cruel, morose man, almost a complete stranger, really.
Unsettled a lot of the locals.
He took a few more.
Sips of his tea and finished his cigarette before continuing.
So there was a village meeting and with the agreement of the diocese and Chester and the
bishop, it was decided that he should leave us.
Can't say I know where he's gone, but I reckon they'd want you to take over his duties,
if you're willing, at least until the bishop could find a replacement.
He stood up and opened a nearby drawer, producing a sealed letter.
It bore the mark of Chester.
Opening it, its contents confirmed what Ted was hinting at.
I didn't know what to say.
I was supposed to start my tenure as a curate under Stefan, not become the village vicar.
Why didn't Bishop Ellison speak to me directly about this?
Ted simply shrugged before continuing.
There's something else you should know, Ben.
You brace yourself now because what I have to say, X, is going to upset you.
I stiffened my back in response and allowed him to continue.
Some believe that Stephen may be dead.
Let me finish.
I said some believe he may be dead, but that doesn't make it so.
nonetheless, no one has heard hide nor hair of him since he left.
Phil Crouch heard a rumour that a man who looked just like Stephen
a bit spotted down by the locks a few nights ago.
You know the ones on the river down past the canal that runs through Blackcroft.
He was ranting and raving as Stephen, that is,
almost as if he was having a quarrel with himself.
Well, Phil says he came to see what the fuss was,
and he swears hands down that he saw Stephen throw himself into the locks.
It's all the local bobbies about what he'd seen,
but they couldn't find anything amiss.
I thought you should know.
Lest you hear it from someone else in less favorable terms.
I felt my world come crashing down around me.
This was too much for me to absorb at once.
Every man, be he a saint or a sinner, has his share of faults.
But to hear of these developments coupled with the last letter Stefan had sent and the
news that he may have killed himself, not to mention the expectation that I should take
his place at the parish.
I need time to think about this, Ted.
I said, standing up slowly.
He nodded and finished his drink before standing himself.
I understand.
Look, no one is expecting you to hold a service or anything.
The whole village knows the situation.
I just think they and the council are glad to have you here.
You won't have to perform any public services.
Not until you're good and ready, at least.
No doubt a replacement will be found for him before too long.
I try not to worry too much about what Phil Crouch says.
You know him.
Stupor fiber drink after time.
I'm sure Stephen's fine.
He's probably just taking the time he needs.
He pointed to the keys on the table.
These are yours until it's all sorted out.
Look, I'd best get back to work out there.
If you need me, just say so, but I hope you'll stay.
Padding me on the shoulder, Ted left, leaving me sat alone in the kitchen.
My mind was ablaze with confusion and doubt.
Just what chaos had I returned to?
It took no small amount of time for me to settle into the house.
I avoided going into town at all costs and only received a minimal amount of
visitors, many of which were only at my door seeking gossip.
I quickly dismissed the worst of them, and focused instead on the genuine well-wishers
and sympathizers, of which there were depressingly few.
Apart from Ted, the only person I spoke to regularly was my mother, who was less than supportive
with the whole matter, and only offered a few snipes about the man I had come to think of
as my father.
I spent the rest of my time in the church, taking care of daily chores and wandering around
the cemetery, where I could occasionally bump into Ted and have a short, pleasant, although
sterile conversation about the weather before moving on. The days were going colder, and I would
frequently bring him hot tea and food, as he worked relentlessly on maintaining the church grounds,
especially those close to where the feral brambles of the gunner's cloth constantly encroached.
He wasn't bad company by any means, but as the days turned into weeks, we found less and less
to talk about. I also kept in constant contact with Bishop Ellison, who offered me all the
support he could in running the parish. He was confident that a replacement for Stefan would
be found quickly, but was very sensitive about discussing it in detail, knowing just how close
he had been to me. It was during one of these many daily excursions around the churchyard
that I decided to revisit the witch elm tree that Stefan had once shown me. I had explored
most of the large open cemetery, which borders the gunner's cloth. I cannot state with any clear
conviction what had possessed me to walk around that lonesome and lonely stretch of graveyard,
crammed as it was with the crumbling tombstones. The names of their occupants long since worn away
by the passage of time. In the shade of those large forsaken trees, there rested some of the
oldest and most decrepit headstones in the whole cemetery. Many of them leaned at steep angles,
and some had toppled over entirely, their surfaces now home to moss and lichen. I passed
each in turn, trying in vain to make out the names and dates that had been washed away by the
relentless reign of the northwestern England, until I came across the Witch-Am tree once more,
nestled at the very back of the coates, deep in the shadows of a particularly diseased-looking
tree, I could see a patch of ground that appeared to have been freshly excavated. I made my way
closer and stood in front of it, noticing that a small carved stone had been half submerged
in the recently disturbed soil.
It was green and furry with moss.
I bent down and ran my hand around it and found the clumps of moss growing upon its surface
easy enough to pull off.
Beneath the vegetation, I could spy that there was an inscription and date chiseled into
the sandstone underneath, where the moss had preserved it.
Here lies Francis Ellis Pendle, beloved by the devil, unforgotten by his disciples.
1751 AD.
The carving was undoubtedly old, and despite the protection afforded to it by the moss,
it was still eroded and worn away in parts.
As I pulled the stone out from the earth, I noticed a newer, fresher-looking carving
on the back.
It was an odd shape, some kind of hieroglyph.
It's difficult to truly say just what it was.
It appeared somewhat familiar to a pagan pentagram, but the lines were broken, resulting in
a series of independent points, in the middle of which sat what looked like a loggen-shaped eye.
In place of a pupil, there was instead a small flame-like shape.
The symbol must have been heathen in origin, for I had never encountered its like in my years
of religious studies.
The whole stone was perhaps only ten inches in height, hardly what one would call a tombstone,
but appearing to hold the same purpose. Instinctively, I dropped the stone close to where I had found
and rubbed the dirt off my hands. I felt as if I had just come in contact with something
unmistakably evil, as if my very soul had been touched by the hoary and Eldred's nature
of whatever darkness it had been used to commemorate. It was then that the words from the
Stefan's last note crept into my mind. The hour was growing late. The dimming sun caused the darkness
of Gunner's cloth to wash over me, enveloping me with its black folds.
I had no desire to stay in that place, and hastily made my way back to the house, determined
to reach it before the sun disappeared behind those vile trees.
Once again, I breathed a sigh of relief, and then set about preparing myself a supper
of some toast and fresh tea.
Try as I might, I could not banish the warning from Stefan's letter.
Eventually, perhaps driven by a need to see if I had remembered his words.
words correctly, I took the bundle of Stefan's letters from the kitchen drawer, where I kept
them tucked away beneath some parish leaflets, and sifted through them until I found the one
that mentioned Stefan's talk of witchcraft.
I unfolded it and reread it until I came to the passage with the warning.
I had indeed remembered it verbatim.
Unnerved, I folded up the letters and hastily placed them back in the drawer.
A moment later, Ted came into the kitchen, grumbling about the cold and wiping his muds
stained boots on the doormat. He nodded and helped himself to the tea I had brewed, before
sitting himself down and pulling out his tobacco to roll himself a cigarette. I waited a few
minutes for him to progress halfway through his task before broaching the subject of Stefan and his
strange decline. So, Ted, did Stefan ever mention a grave to you? Went out in the yard, close to the woods.
He put his tobacco down and nodded.
Aye, I saw him looking over it a bunch of times. It told me it was the grave to you.
for which hung for his crimes hundreds of years ago,
one of the last in England, he reckoned.
And that was what he was studying
before this change of character came over him?
He nodded again and lit his cigarette with a match
before extinguishing it with the shake of his hand.
Studied is one way of putting it.
Obsession would be another.
You know, he converted the cellar of this house
into some kind of study.
A library, I guess you could call it.
Filled with all sorts of queer-looking books.
Latin, I reckon, not unusual for a vicar, I suppose.
but some of them is written in German, and others in languages I can begin to understand.
Not only that, but he moved all kinds of bloody chemicals and equipment in there too.
Can't really say I recognise most of it.
Pliss stinks to why, Evan.
Is it still there? In the cellar?
No, I reckon he took almost everything with him when the bishop told him to leave.
Might be some bits of pieces down there, but you'd be looking to find much.
We both then sat in silence, Ted turning his attention to a local newspaper, folding on the table.
and myself to my thoughts.
The next day, acting largely upon a hunch, I contacted the Eastwich College and asked to speak
to their head, who turned out to be a rather jovial man called Lee Humphrey, who was all too
happy to answer any and all of my questions.
Over the phone, he confirmed a suspicion of mine that he and Stefan had some mild correspondence
concerning lab equipment and various chemicals, compounds, and acids.
He reeled off several overly long and complex names, oblivious to the fact that I was totally
ignorant to what he was speaking.
I thanked him and hung up the phone, a few more pieces of the puzzle slotting into place in my mind.
The distance between them, however, was too great to form a larger, cohesive picture.
Witchcraft and science, chemistry, and an obsession with 200-year-old hidden grave?
How did they connect?
Determined to uncover more, I decided to visit the library, Stephieff
had set up and then dismantled during that time we were separated. The entrance to the cellar was
in the kitchen, behind a narrow door that I first presumed had been a broom closet. It concealed a flight
of cold stone steps that led to a distinctly dank and musty underground room. A few cramped
shelves on the walls either side of the steps housed a collection of mundane objects, candles,
dried-out paint cans, and the like, but also luckily a working flashlight. I took the last
ladder and switched it on as I descended the steps. The cellar wasn't very far down, but the low
ceiling above the steps was frighteningly claustrophobic, and I was forced to cock my head to the
side to avoid banging it on the wooden beams. I reached the bottom and found an open doorway to my
right, which led into a very simple square room that, like the stairs, possessed an oppressively low ceiling
and a strong musty scent. I entered the cellar, relying upon the feeble cone of
sickly yellow light emanating from the flashlight to make out any firm details from the malaise
of murky darkness beyond. A large rotting wooden table served as a centerpiece of the room,
and there were rows of badly handmade shelves lining the back wall, sagging and leaning at odd
angles. The shelves were mostly barren, but there was evidence in the dust that a large
collection of books had once stood there, and a bare still skeleton of chemistry equipment and a few
empty bottles sat on the desk. As I moved the light around, it reflected off several large
bottles on another shelf to my right. Large, thick, almost barrel-like. Most were full of clear
yellow liquids. Others were nut-brown oil in color. A few were marked with hastily scrawled labels
that read Royal Water. Beyond the collection of chemicals, there was a door that appeared to lead
out of the cellar. This confused me, for I could not recall any.
outside entrance that led to the cellar beneath the house.
The door itself looked ancient, with its rusted bolt and handle barely holding on to the crumpling
wood to which they were both cruelly nailed into.
As I moved closer to it, the light from the flashlight caught something carved into the frame
above the door.
It was that curious star hieroglyph I had seen on the stone of the grave of Francis Ellis Pendle.
I ran my finger along the carving, almost as if to ascertain that it was.
was real. As my finger traced the freakish shape, I felt a chill creep over me, the same chill
that had caused me to flee from the shadows of the witch elms. This time, I refused to let the fear grip
me, taking the door by its rusted handle and pushing it inward. The door did not lead to
the outside of the house, but instead revealed another set of stone stairs leading further down
into the earth. The odor that assaulted my senses as I took a solitary step towards those stairs
was foul. It was a putrid stench, unlike anything I'd ever smelled before. If I was to describe
it as an ungodly mixture of some acidic compound and rotting excrement, I would be on the
verge of doing justice to that magnificent, invasive scent. I instinctively took a step back and raised
my hand to cover my nose, as if it would somehow relieve me of the burden of breathing in that
foul and fetid air. For a brief moment, I considered turning around and leaving the cell of
But out of burning curiosity, I slowly started to descend those awful stairs.
What lay at the bottom is something that will haunt me until my final days.
For laying beyond was a second chamber, not unlike the first, but whereas the above cellar
had been converted into some kind of perverse amalgamation of an esoteric library and alchemist
laboratory, this hidden chamber was nothing less than the devil's workshop. Strange images were
carved and painted onto the walls, many of which resembling the hieroglyphs I had seen on the meager
gravestone of Francis Ellis Pendle. There was little to tie the various pictographs together.
Some depicted spheres or eyeballs. Others were long snake-like tendrils that curled upon themselves
to create a rudimentary, alien text. As I edged further into the room, I could make out various
objects nailed to the ceiling. Some were rusted tools, like the kind you would find in a slaughterhouse.
Others were odd assortments of twigs held together with twine, creating shapes that had a vague
human outline to them. The crowning horror, however, was the table. This long stone edifice was
less a desk and more like a butcher's slab. Stained a hideous, frettish round all over. There were grooves
carved into the table's surface, all of which culminated towards a round hole, underneath
which a rusted iron bucket had been attached.
It was from this bucket that the stench appeared to originate, and bending down to inspect its contents
I could see the glistening, rotting hind limb of a dog.
Maggots wriggled across its surface, burrowing in and out of the putrid flesh.
I felt bile rise in my throat, but I managed to keep it down and continue my investigation.
At the room above, there were shelves fitted to the walls, but these were not bare, instead being
filled to the brim with various manuscripts, papers, maps, and glass jars.
The whole scene had an unmistakable sense of the bygone laid over it, as if it had sat here,
undisturbed for centuries.
Among the papers and jars, I found a small linen bag tied to a piece of string.
A brown stain on the bag's underside made me think twice about opening it, but I had
I eventually found the courage to do so.
Inside were numerous small white objects that looked like tiny stones.
But upon tipping the bag's contents out and inspecting them with the flashlight,
I found to my horror that they were children's teeth.
By the time the smell was becoming unbearable, and I had no wish to linger further,
by this time, the smell was becoming unbearable, and I had no wish to linger further.
Deciding to abandon my investigation, I spied a small, frayed notebook,
left on the right-hand side of what I now thought of as a vivisectionist table.
For whatever reason, I could not then fathom.
The curious woodblock image on the front must have caught my eye,
and I picked the book up and tucked it into my jacket
before making my way back to the sanity of the house above.
I immediately removed my jacket and threw it on the kitchen table.
Disgusted that the terrible stench from below had somehow attached itself to me,
like a parasite.
I then methodically opened up all the windows in the house, hoping that the chill air would
purify the hideous odor that had made a nest for itself in my nostrils.
Tired, my poor mind swirling from the revelations of that hypodian realm, I eventually collapsed
onto my bed and succumbed to exhaustion.
I cannot say how long I had been slumbering when the first of those terrible dreams came
to me.
My sense of time had been grossly warped by my exploration in the cellar, but it must have
been quite sudden.
As the sun was still in the sky, when I finally jolted awake, my pillow wet with sweat.
It is impossible for me to tell if the dreams were brought on by Stefan's final letters,
or if the hidden chamber below the house had awoken something macabre and unwelcome in my imagination.
I found myself standing within the cemetery outside, only it was different.
The land around me was sparser, with fewer tombstones jutting out of the soft mossy ground.
The gunner's cloth lay before me, its outline far more feral and foreboding than it had any right to be.
The sky above me was a blackened abyss, punctured by thousands of twinkling stars that glittered and gleamed from the great beyond.
The fat silver moon slowly crept above the tree line, casting its pale white light upon the cemetery, causing long, deep, deep,
shadows to detach from the headstones and crawl upon the ground towards me.
I took a few steps back, but they still found me, chilling as they swept over my feet,
legs, and body. Then, out of the tangled briars, he came, hopping out of the brambles,
the awful form of Salt Peter. On three legs he danced, the sleek body of a greyhound,
upon the neck of which there leaned and swayed the head of a cat. His eyes were milky
Orbs, faintly illuminated like phosphorus toadstools.
From his feline jaws there dripped a reddish clear syrup that hissed as it hit the sanctified
ground of the graveyard.
He momentarily ceased his insistent frolicing to scratch himself, but I could see that it was
missing the back legs that was attempting the impossible task, a raw, bloody stump that
justified feebly towards the source of his irritation.
Then, beyond the twitching imp, I could see another figure.
A man. Even at this distance, I can make out the repulsive details of his form. He was tall and thin,
his long slender fingers like twigs. His lengthy nose and sunken eyes were clearly visible
through the cemetery gloom. Worst of all, a sardonic and wolfish grin lay stretched
across his face. There was a hunger in that smirk, a dark and terrible burning hunger.
Then Salt Peter ceased his scratching and in a heart.
A voice that somehow sounded like my mother's spoke these words.
Come, child, come.
We have marmalade and marzipan, and all manner of baked treats for you.
We have seed cakes and toffee apples.
All that your heart desires.
Come with me into the forest, and I will show you delights beyond your dreams.
I felt myself pulled towards those honeyed words.
All the while the tall, sinister man said nothing.
grinning at me from beneath his wide, grimmed hat.
I can't.
I stuttered.
It's dark, and my mother will want me home for supper.
Supper.
Replied Saul Peter, his rotting pale tongue licking across his chops.
Oh, we shall have supper, won't we, master?
The imp then looked up towards the terrible man, who stayed silent while nodding his head in agreement.
I tried once more to turn away, but my feet were.
spellbound, marching me towards what I knew would be my demise.
Mother!
I cried out.
Mother, please!
I'm scared!
The terrible man laughed their saltpeter rubbed himself upon his master's blood-stained
breaches, a wheezing purr emanating from his twisted form.
Mother!
I cried out once more, the words mercifully pulling me back from the precipice of my
dreamless madness.
Mother!
I whimpered.
awake now, and once more in my bed.
To say that the dream, the nightmare, had unnerved me would be a lie.
In fact, it would be all I could think of for the next few days.
I did not dare to sleep again on that first day, and instead plied myself with the strong
Turkish coffee that Stephan had kept hidden away for special guests.
When I finally did succumb to sleep the next day, my dreams were less vivid and mercifully
brief. I felt the presence of Salt Peter and the terrible man on several occasions, but managed to
awaken myself before they can make themselves known. I also dreamt often of the gunner's cloth,
and the outer copse of witch-elm trees that lay beyond. The manuscript I had taken from the hidden
cellar chamber lay forgotten on the kitchen table during this haunted time. Until by chance a week
or so later, I happened to find it beneath a small pile of local newspapers that Ted had been
collecting. I was once again taken aback by the grotesque, demonical woodblock printing on the
front of the manuscript. Sitting down and inspecting further, I could see roughly a dozen or so
figures depicted in the image. Most were what I would describe as crones and hags, many of them
riding upon the backs of black goats and other less discernible creatures. Various furtive, demonic
characters were also shown, some of them dancing and copulating with the crones and disgusting
details.
Around them were various smaller figures.
I guess you would call them imps or familiars of varying anatomy.
Many of the figures were oddly named, the text appearing next to them to be what I took
for some form of early English, queer titles such as pie-whacket, grizzle greedy gut, and peek
in the crown.
but one of the odious creatures had a name next to its image that caused my heart to jump in
my chest for a moment.
The image was that of a three-legged hound bearing the head of a cat.
Next to the beast lay the words Salt Peter.
I paused for a moment.
Images of that terrible nightmare playing out in my mind like a perverse pantomime.
I glanced back at the yellowed manuscript.
There was no title on the front, so I slowly peeled back the first page.
And there, printed in bold, black lay the words the Sussex manuscript, Coltis Malafoccarum.
No author or date appeared anywhere on the front or back of the manuscript, but as I flicked through,
it opened on a section roughly half of the way through.
This particular chapter must have been referenced many times, for the manuscript almost
appeared to want to open to this point.
I glanced down and saw the title, Calling Upon Thy Black Imp.
It almost looked like something out of a cookbook, a repulsive recipe that was half-profane
culinary instruction and half-magical incantation.
Odious images accompanied the next page, showing a gnarled crone, grieffully chopping
up the bodies of rabbits, cats, and dogs, and calves with an oversived meat cleaver.
I decided to put the manuscript in the kitchen drawer next to Stefan's letters, and
did my best to banish its foul images from my mind. Days and then weeks passed by, and eventually
I managed to put most of the past behind me regarding the horrid manuscript, as well as Stefan
and his strange turn of personality. The dreams lingered for a while, but eventually they released
me from their grip, and my sleep grew more restful. I resumed my duty as a stand-in vicar,
with a renewed gusto and opened the church. At first the locals were slow to return, but
As word spread, my Sundays were soon busy, and I found myself welcoming faces new and old
to my service.
I allowed myself to forget about all of the talk of black magic and imps and witches that
had plagued my return to the village, and instead focused on serving my community, with
the help of a few curates appointed by the bishop to assist me.
I even found the courage to descend once more into the cellar, and bricked up the entrance
that led to the hidden room beyond.
Thoughts of Stefan still occasionally crept into my mind, of course,
typically in the form of short dreams I still experience from time to time.
But these were less disruptive than my prior nightmares,
being less sinister in nature.
I resigned myself to the awful truth that I may never see or hear from Stefan again.
And so spent more time with my mother and rekindled a few friendships in the village
that had grown cold whilst I was away studying.
I grew keenly aware that I was being groomed by the diocese to replace Stephan as the parish
priest and struggled with my conflicting feelings on the matter.
I managed, however, to develop a firm mental robustness that permitted me to carry on with
my new daily routine, growing my flock and welcoming the Lord's light and forgiveness into
the hearts and minds of my community.
Sadly, this period of respite would abruptly end with an event that was singular in its horror
and absurdity. It's an event that at a certain time in my life I would have welcomed wholeheartedly,
but it was now one that filled me with an inescapable cold dread. For the first time since
returning to Barton, I finally received word from Stefan, a note that plunged my mind back into
madness. The letter was from Stefan, but it wasn't obvious to me immediately, as it lacked not only
the hallmarks of his handwriting, but also that of any normal, sane human being.
The writing was a mere scribble, childish and scratchy.
The cramped script appeared as if it had been fighting with itself as it spilled onto the page
in a vain effort to form some kind of discernible legibility.
The paper itself was also odd.
It appeared to have been torn from a book, as the printed stamp, property of Barton Library,
appeared on the opposite side.
The paper was also slightly damp, with water stains and strange grit-like sediment dotted
around the written words.
The content of the note, as best as I care to remember, was as follows.
Ben, don't have long before these hands are not mine.
Managed to make it back to my body.
I could feel him pulling me back to his.
Don't think I can escape again.
I will try.
Do one last thing for me.
I beg you.
Beneath the tree, I am beneath the tree and in pain.
His spirit is free now.
It wants you.
My body is no longer suitable.
Yours is better.
I beg you, dig up the earth under the tree.
Take what you find beneath and burn it.
Not fire.
Must be acid.
Take the royal water and drench his remains in it.
None of the essential salts can survive.
Do you understand?
He can return if you use fire.
Dying slowly in the ground.
I cannot stand the blackness anymore.
I am myself for a few moments.
Back here in my own rotting body to write and bring you this note.
Soon I must return to the soil.
My own fault, I called him.
And he answered,
I'm so sorry for bringing you into this madness.
Do as I ask.
The note must have been hand delivered, for it lacked a stamp or even an address on it.
It was simply a folded up piece of paper with Ben scrawled on the front of it in the same
spidery penmanship.
I needed some fresh air to clear my mind after reading the baffling note and took a brisk walk
through the village.
The vanishing sun was pleasant enough, but it was a very strong.
punctured cruelly by a cutting wind that caused my skin to shrivel with goosebumps.
The village was quiet, and I saw only a few locals as I walked a loop around the village,
starting at Townfield Lane and then along Runcorn Road, and finally back to Leder Lane
and towards the church. There was so much chaos flowing in my mind that upon returning home,
I simply collapsed into a chair at the kitchen table and lay my head down. It weighed heavily
upon my mind that Stefan was out there somewhere, either a drooling madman or the victim
of some black sorcery that I could barely bring myself to give credence to.
But if God and his mighty kingdom were real, as I had been raised to believe, then surely
the devil and all the denizens of the pit must be also.
This affair did not strike me as madness.
There was a revolting authenticity to it, not to mention an alien element that my mind struggled
to grapple with in its complexity.
As the sun sank upon that day and gave birth to the inevitable darkness, I found myself drawn
to the decanter of brandy that Stefan had kept in the lounge and indulged myself heartily
of its warming contents.
The fire conjuring in my throat by the liquor was very much welcomed, and by the time I had
polished off a fourth glass, I was very much under the sway of hypnosis and carried myself
numbly to my bed.
For the first time in weeks, the dreams returned.
I tossed and turned all night, unable to settle.
My brain buzzed with a thousand thoughts as half-imagined fears danced in my mind's eye.
There was a horrid semi-realization that my slumbering form was being watched, and more than
a few times I felt my spirit lift out of my body and float above my bed.
From this observation point, I could see a dark figure standing in the shadowed corner of my room,
His eyes glaring at my sleeping body with an alien hunger.
I saw Salt Peter, that hideous abomination, leap upon my bed and paw playfully at my lips.
This one will do nicely.
The imp spoke, once more in a voice that sounded like my mother's.
This one, master, and then we are free.
When the morning sun blissfully shined through my bedroom curtains, I was able to banish
the night's dread back to whatever foul pitted its bond from.
But each night they returned.
I held sermons for the following fortnight, designed more to comfort myself than my community.
I spoke with a fiery conviction of how Jesus had defeated both death and the devil, and
how with his love there was no evil on the earth that could not be banished.
This settled my nerves somewhat, but the comfort or immemalicy that I craved eluded me.
A few days after receiving this crude note, I learned with great dismay,
that Stefan's body had been found on the Blackcroft heath.
Though his bloated corpse had been discovered some distance away from both the canal and the
nearby river, the coroner ruled his cause of death as drowning.
The funeral shortly followed, and I decided to lead the service, despite the bishop
offering to take that burden from me.
The turnout was higher than I expected, which comforted me, and I even saw my mother shed a few
tears for our village's departed vicar. Eventually, with both the terrible dreams and Stefan's demise
weighing upon me, I made the decision to step down from the parish and leave the church entirely.
What had once been a dream was rapidly transforming into an unending nightmare. I planned to leave
Barton altogether, to never again step foot within its haunted streets. I had concluded that the village
was not a good place to linger and made plans to relocate to Manchester.
This decision, final and resolute in my mind, did manage to bring some comfort, and I allowed
myself to hope that this whole affair would one day be behind me.
I didn't inform the bishop.
I was concerned that he would try to convince me to stay.
I gave myself no longer than two months to wrap up my affairs and then informed the diocese
of my decision.
As fate would have it, that decision, along with many others, was stolen from me on that awful
night that was to come.
The renewed sense of peace brought on by my impending resignation and relocation might have lasted,
had that crowning horror not invaded my world on that dark December night.
I had retired to bed early, but the constant lashing of the rain had been relentless all day
and was set to continue throughout the night.
I slept fitfully, and in sporadic episodes of thrashing, for I was experiencing the most vivid
and horrible dream imaginable.
I dreamt of being confined.
bound in the darkness.
My arms worked, but my legs felt numb and lifeless.
I struggled ceaselessly to remove myself from this foul bondage, but my body felt like some spindly
marionette whose strings had become tangled around my fingers, cutting off the blood flow
and leaving them numb and useless.
After what seemed like in eternity, I somehow managed to muster what little strength I had and
force my form through the cracks of my prison.
I dreamt of pushing upwards, forever upwards.
Past the rotting wood and the soft wet earth, past the worms and the matted tangles of endless
roots, and finally to the cold rain-lashed surface above, I awoke suddenly with that last
thought, sat upright in bed with cooling sweat pouring down my back.
But it wasn't the dream that had startled me awake.
As my senses adjusted, I could hear that it was the ringing of the church bells that
I had mercifully returned my mind from the abyss, the clear and familiar sound of ringing
bells pierced through the night, and I glanced at my clock to see it was just past 3 a.m.
The witching hour, I thought.
I jumped out of bed and grabbed my dressing gown.
No doubt the noise would eventually awaken the entire village, and I would be to blame.
I raced down the stairs and bolted out of the kitchen door into the chill of the night.
I barely noticed the cold rain pelting my face as I ran towards the church.
church. My slippers greedily soaked up the muddy water that cooled around my footsteps, and I shuddered
as the cold, damp mucks sank in between my toes. Determined to stop the commotion, I fumbled with my keys,
but the door was already ajar, and I pushed it open and made my way to the main hall in the
direction of the bell chamber. By the time I reached the door, the ringing had mysteriously stopped,
and I slowed down my pace.
As I bent over to catch my breath, I noticed a disgusting trail of mud and slime snaking its way
from the doorway and through the hall.
It seemed to lead directly to where I was headed.
I kneeled and swiped my fingers through the baffling sludge.
It possessed a carnal stench, not unlike that fetid aroma that had sickened me in the cellar
that terrible day.
I immediately pulled a handkerchief from my gown pocket and wiped that horrid jelly.
from my fingers as best I could.
I was determined to find out the cause of the ringing, but it crept over me that there were perhaps
a mundane yet unerving explanation.
Suppose someone had broken in and was using the bells as a diversion while an accomplice
robbed my home, I thought.
Still, as much as I would have liked to accept this solution as fact, I felt compelled
to investigate the muddy trail.
There was little of value in the house that a thief could steal, and, even if you were a
Even if that was true, I had no desire to confront a burglar in the dead of night.
I therefore slowly entered the teneprous chamber that housed the bell ropes beyond the main
hall.
There was a feeble sliver of light that gleamed through the window from the street lamps outside,
and I could just make out the basic parameters of the chamber.
I was certain that no one else was in the room, and I carefully walked deeper in the darkness
to inspect the six ropes.
All were unmoving except one.
which swayed gently in the dark.
Just like the floor outside, there was a smear of foul-smelling mud over the ground,
as well as on the moving rope.
I placed my hand upon it and stopped its swaying.
Then, just as I was considering leaving,
I suddenly became aware of a shape on the ground in the far left corner.
My eyes were still adjusting to the dark of the room,
but at first I fancied it looked like a mud-stained bundle of rags and twisted sticks.
But as I inspected further, a creeping horror washed over me, along with a terrible recognition
of what I was seeing.
What did I see?
That is at once an easy and difficult question to answer, and perhaps at the crux of this whole
affair.
For lying on the ground in front of me, face, or should I say skull, pressed to the stone
floor, was an ancient collection of decaying bones and mummified flesh, chunks of stinking, soddened earth and flayed, tattered
skin were wrapped around the chrisly mound of necrosis.
It was a brown, spindly thing, more bone than meat, with a whitish, cracked dome for a head.
Wrapped around its spine, close to what once passed for a neck, was the rotted damp rope
of the hangman's noose.
It was then I heard a muffled and strained sound emanating from the skeletal whore that lay
at my feet.
It was at once a whisper and a growl, human and bestial.
Disembodied and echoing all around me, yet at the same time focused upon that mass of rags
and fused bone.
The noise changed into a cry that shook the very foundation of my soul, for the voice was
that of Stefan Adams.
The corpse thing before me issued forth a single sentence before growing still and silent once
more.
BEN For the love of God's.
Those who have bothered to speak to me at any length know the rest of my story, half mad and
howling with a volatile mixture of fear and fury.
I retrieved the yellow chemicals from the basement, and together with the rotting bundle,
threw their contents into the self-exhumed grave of Francis Ellis Pendle.
At some point, two police officers accosted me, but I managed to overcome them and continue
my grisly task, dissolving the whole mess into accurate sludge.
I watched it bubble and froth into the black soil as the earth reluctantly absorbed the disgusting
mass.
Despite the obvious horror, I felt a great relief wash over me.
The chaos of the past few months of my life came sharply into view, like a knot unraveling
before me.
Madness gave way to clarity.
Though this is the end of my account, it's not the end of the matter.
For there was no doubt in my mind that beneath that lonesome witch elm, beneath the cold earth
of that hidden grave, the soul of my dear friend, Stefan Adams, had lain incarcerated for months
in silent torment.
He had called up the wicked soul of his ancestor for whatever purpose I can now only guess
at.
He had not been strong enough to put down that which he had called forth and paid for it
with his life and soul.
A terrifying spiritual transfusion had taken place.
Pendle had taken Stefan's body, and Stefan had been forced into Pendles.
At some point, Stefan had managed to take control of his own body long enough to hurl it
into the churning waters of the river, hoping to end that evil which had made a home for itself
within him.
Stefan had been reduced to a mere consciousness, as Pendle's spirit roamed freely, as the witch
set about renewing his coven and conjuring up his black imps.
Stefan's sentient mind, fully aware with its senses intact, understood with abominable clarity
that it now inhabited the two-year-old corpse of Francis Ellis Pendle.
He who had been hung for his crimes against God and King, he who had sought to bargain with
the devils of the sky and the earth, he who had slept relentlessly beneath the dark soil
of the gunner's cloth, his presence felt by all who dare enter.
He who had dreamt of nothing but the torment and wickedness he would unleash upon the descendants
of those who had delivered him to his grave, dreams of vengeance and dark oaths.
Those terrible dreams of blasphemy and madness.
the dreams beneath the witch tree
