I am a fiction writer, and this is one of my first
stories. I love this site and decided to submit this in
order to become a part of it. I got the inspiration for
this story from an article I read online at
Crimelibrary.com about Elizabeth Bathory. I hope you enjoy
it.
The Blood Countess
“It is so ridiculous that you can’t be in a dark room
with a mirror, Annie.” My mother squawked at me from the
master bathroom where she was curling her dark hair in
short, tight little ringlets close to her round
head. “Can’t you just grow up and get over it?” “No.” I
answered, lazily, a hint of sarcasm in my voice, “It‘s not
something you can get over.” She continued trying to
beautify her pudgy, marshmallow like face with gobs of
cheap makeup. “It’s not like anything real ever actually
happened to you. It was only your imagination. God, you‘re
such a baby.” She was now plucking at her double chin, as
if pulling at it would somehow make it disappear.
I looked down at my hands, complete with painted
fingernails and class ring. I was 18 now, old enough to
know that there were real things to fear, things that
weren’t silly and made up, things that didn't disappear
when the light went on. But though I knew that rapists and
murderers existed, they could be fought. How do you fight
something that might only exist in your mind? Something
like what had happened to me when I was only 13.
It all began when my best friend Lara came to
school one morning. “Hey Annie!” she’d cried at me, yanking
my attention from the daydream I was having, staring at my
current crush. She came running towards me, the picture of
adolescent insecurity. Her long blonde hair was carefully
arranged in two pigtails, her blue eyes were heavily lined,
and her jawbone was slightly gray from too much foundation.
Her entire face was covered over with a thick layer of face
powder, and she wore a trendy short denim skirt with a
light blue man-style shirt and a white tie. Small pink
sneakers with thick white lines on the sides adorned her
feet.
“Annie, guess what?” she squealed
excitedly. “What?” I asked, apprehension thick in my
voice. “My parents said I could have a slumber party
tomorrow night when they go and visit my Aunt Beth! Isn’t
that great?”
“That’s great Lara, but my parents will never let
me go if your parents aren’t there, and you know as well as
I do that I’d get caught if I lied.”
“My sister Jessica’ll be there,” she said, matter-
of-factly, absent-mindedly straightening her too-tight
clothes.
“Oh, that’s encouraging.” Lara and I both despised
Jessica. She had a bad habit of screwing up our plans and
telling our secrets. She acted more like Lara‘s younger
sister Kaylee, who was always the first to tell on us.
Therefore, anytime we did anything, parents were quickly
informed by the Snitch Sandwich.
“You know what that means, Lara. Our party will be
competing with the kegger she’s planning to throw while
your parents are gone, and she’ll blame any mess her stupid
drunk friends make on us. Your parents think she‘s so
perfect, they‘d never believe us.”
“Jesse’s not gonna throw a kegger, this time,
Annie. She can’t. My parents caught her the last time,
remember? Their idea of her being perfect has been totally
screwed up and Mr. and Mrs. Bonagel are gonna be coming
over and checking up on us twice each night to make sure
she’s not doing anything she‘s not supposed to. Oh, come
on, Annie! I’m sure your mom’ll say yes if you just ask
her!”
I figured my mom would say yes too: she wasn’t the
one I was worried about. It was my Dad. He’d accidentally
overheard a conversation I’d had with Annie about what had
happened the last time, and now he was convinced that
Lara’s innocent little parties weren’t so innocent anymore.
“Fine, I’ll ask, but I don’t think they’ll say yes,
especially after what happened las-” The bell rang, but
Lara nodded as she ran off to her first class, home
ec. “I’ll see you at lunch!” she shouted, and I nodded back
like a robot, waving before I scampered off to my English
class.
At lunch, we talked about the usual stuff. At that
age, the most important things in most girls’ lives are
boys, sleepovers, and make-up. I can't say that I was much
different, but even as I say that, I know that I wasn't the
same, either. I was always a little strange, not quite as
Barbies and make-up as the other girls. I was always the
last to fall asleep at a slumber party and the first to
wake up, the only one that could tell a decent ghost story,
and the first person my friends came to when they had a
problem.
“Hey, Annie, do you think that we ought to play
truth or dare this time, I mean, after what happened to
Lyndsay last time?” I looked at her over my peanut butter
and jelly sandwich, some of the white bread undoubtedly
sticking to my teeth. “Sure,” I answered, “Why not?” “Well,
I guess if we have rules this time it’ll be okay.” she
said. Even as she said it, though, I wondered if we would
ever feel completely safe playing that game.
Of course, truth or dare sessions when I was on the
active end weren't all that interesting. I wasn't stupid
enough to take the more dangerous dares given me, and I
hadn't led an interesting or secretive enough life to make
truth questions worthwhile. But, the truth questions and
dares that I made up were always the best. No one could
resist them. In fact, that’s what had happened to poor
Lyndsay Saier. She had taken one of my dares; something
that I never thought would have worked in a million years.
But that doesn’t matter now.
We continued planning the party, discussing the
amounts of chips, candy, ice cream, and soda that would be
needed, as well as which movies we should rent. I suggested
Sleepy Hollow, as it had recently come out, but none of the
other girls wanted to see that, and Lara jokingly called me
a Christina Ricci wanna-be. I laughed it off and
said, “What’s wrong with that?” causing the other girls to
dissolve into a paroxysm of giggles. Lara changed the
subject from Sleepy Hollow to The Mummy after that, and I
was content to sit quietly during the video discussion.
After all, I hadn’t won one of these yet, and I figured
that my luck wasn’t going to change now.
That was when Lyndsay came and sat down at the
table with us. She hadn’t slept in days, as evidenced by
the dark circles crowding her cheekbones and pressing on
her eyes, bulgy with the bags of a much older woman under
them. Her entire face was sallow and sunken, covered with
too much make-up that, rather than concealing her misery,
made it all the more obvious.
“Hi, guys.” she said, a weak smile playing on her
graven features. “How is everyone?”
“ Fine.” Lara said, her sad, pitying eyes showing
up the broadness of her fake smile. “We’re fine, Lyndsay.
How are you? Are you sleeping any better?” I asked, wanting
her to say yes so that I could be rid of the guilt that
grew inside me a little every time I saw her. “Well, maybe
a little better.” she said, showing me a polite smile that
made it so obvious she was lying. Lying for my benefit, but
lying nonetheless.
“Lyndsay, you look awful!” came a declaration from
above. It was a feminine voice, and we all looked up to see
who it was. My eyes locked with those of the speaker, deep
blue eyes reminiscent of the color of new blue jeans. It
was Beth Morson, the girl we all loved and hated
simultaneously. She wasn’t too popular, too pretty, or too
nerdy. She was simply too good.
She genuinely cared about everyone, regardless of
who they were or what they’d done to her. She was so nice
that you couldn’t dislike her, though you desperately
wanted to. She was the girl who you wanted to be friends
with because she would genuinely love you, but that you
wanted to ignore because her perfection was stifling.
We always invited her to the slumber parties, but
she rarely ever came. She wasn’t there the night that
Lyndsay… anyway, all that matters about her is that she
had a tendency to be a little too responsible for our group.
“Lyndsay, when was the last time you slept?” Beth
asked, her blonde brow furrowed in concern as she stroked
Lyndsay‘s thick dark hair. “I don’t know. A few days ago, I
guess.” “Why can’t you sleep?”
Lyndsay’s eyes went blank at that, her mind
obviously in the dark bathroom of Lara’s house, the only
place where there was a big enough mirror for the dare… she
had come out of there screaming, slamming her body against
the closed door as if something was after her. We had all
been waiting in the hallway, listening as she chanted,
waiting for her to come out.
I’ll never forget the look on her face. Her face
was expressionless, but her eyes. Oh, her eyes! They had
shined like diamonds in the dim light. She had been
somewhere between sobbing and screaming when she flew out
of the bathroom, like someone awaiting her own execution.
She refused to leave that door the whole night: afraid that
if she didn’t stay on her guard, something horrible would
escape from it. She never told us what she saw.
I knew, though. I knew because the only thing she
could have seen was what I dared her to conjure up.
Elizabeth Báthory. The blood countess of Transylvania. I
read of her somewhere a few weeks before, and decided that
the next time we played truth or dare, I’d have one of my
unsuspecting girlfriends try to summon her the way they
tried to summon Dracula or Bloody Mary: by chanting into a
mirror in a darkened bathroom, a flickering candle her only
light.
I made up the necessary chant and decided that the
ritual would be to hold a large dark red candle in front of
you, look straight into the mirror and say, “Erzebet,
Erzebet, (Erzebet had been her name in Transylvanian) take
your vengeance on me! The king has come, your life is done,
evil, evil, Erzebet!” You must say this over and over again
until a beautiful woman with long dark hair appears. She
will then open her mouth to show bloodstained teeth, and
perhaps a little blood will drip, fresh from her latest
victim.
I never in a million years thought that anything
would actually happen. I had done the Dracula and Bloody
Mary chants a thousand times, and they had never appeared
to me or to my girlfriends. After the party, I wanted to
try the chant myself. If I hadn’t been on hand during
Lyndsay’s experience, I would have.
“Oh, I guess it’s a growing thing. Mrs. Porten
said that we might have trouble sleeping if we’re still
growing, didn’t she Annie?” Lyndsay’s terror-filled eyes
gazed at me with a “Please help!” type of expression. She
could tell that I knew what had happened, in part at least,
and she was desperate for one of us to back her up.
“Sure.” I said, faking excitement about the
idea, “Mrs. Porten told us that like three weeks ago.”
Remarkably, that was about how long ago I’d heard of
Erzebet. Why couldn’t I stop thinking about her? “Well,
lunch is almost over. We’d better head to the bathroom and
touch up our make-up before class starts again.” Lara said,
trying to change the subject.
“Yeah, I guess we must.” I sighed, evoking a few
nervous giggles around the table. We all got up and started
heading for the girls’ restroom. We had come in before the
rush, so it was easy to monopolize the three mirrors
available. There were about nine of us, including Lyndsay,
but Lyndsay refused to look into any mirror larger than her
compact’s 3-inch one. She sat on the floor facing the door,
turned away from the crowded sink stands. She was always
the master at balancing her make-up on any surface.
We all went about our business, curling eyelashes,
applying mascara, blush, lipstick, etc. We were all staring
into the mirrors, trying to get a good look at our young
faces that we were trying to cover from the world. I had
finished putting on mine and was fixing my hair when I
heard a little gasp from Lyndsay. Curious, I handed my
brush to one of the girls that had forgotten hers, and went
over to where Lyndsay sat cross-legged on the tile floor.
“What’s wrong?” She looked at me, her face awash
with terror.
“She’s there!” she gasped in a whisper.
“Who’s…where?”
“She’s in the mirrors, staring at us, smiling.
Smiling that awful smile!” She buried her face in her arms,
sobs slowly taking over.
“Lyndsay, how did you see her if you were facing
the door?”
She gazed up at me, her bloodshot eyes awash in
tears,
“I caught the big mirrors in my compact on
accident, and there she was! I can‘t get away from her, I
can‘t!” she cried, the sound turning into an almost
inaudible whisper in her dry throat.
“I can’t stay in here! She’ll kill me!” The other
girls continued their teenage babbling and giggling while
they applied their make-up, acting as if nothing at all was
happening. This angered me, but at the time, I wasn’t
willing to get into it with them. Lyndsay was more
important.
I scooped up her backpack and pulled her to her
feet.
“C’mon, I know where we can go where there aren’t any
mirrors.” Pulling her by the arm, I expertly navigated the
school, avoiding pillars and open doors until we came to a
small stairway. We went down until we reached the third
landing, backpacks crashing to the floor as we slid down
the concrete walls.
“She follows me everywhere! Why can’t she leave me
be!”
She started rocking back and forth, a caricature of
insanity. I wrapped my arms around her, and let her sob. It
was the only thing I or anyone else could do for her. She
wept for a good half hour, soaking my t-shirt and wracking
my heart and soul with guilt. I had done this to her. If
only I hadn’t dared her. She would probably be fine now.
Why? Why was I so stupid! How could I do this to my friend?
Regret settled upon me like night over the world. I
had made the worst mistake of my young life, and it had
been made against one of my dearest friends. This poor
sobbing creature was a giggling girl once. Not even two
weeks ago, she had been completely normal. Now she was a
pitiful, horrified shell, afraid of her own shadow, and it
was my fault. Mine and mine alone. I began to cry too,
trying to ease my suffering with tears.
When Lyndsay realized that I was crying with her,
she turned her watery cess pools on me and whispered,
haltingly through stifled sobs and more tears, “Annie, don-
don’t blame your-yourself. You couldn’t ha-have known. It-
it’s not your-or fault.” The eyes that locked on mine were
so tired and terrified, but they were full of pity for me.
She knew how I felt, how anyone would feel if something
like this happened to someone you love and all because you
dared them.
We sat there awhile, content to remain quiet as our
bodies calmed and our tears dried.
“Annie?” Lyndsay spoke quietly in the dimly lighted
stairwell;
“Annie?” she said again.
“Yeah?” I whispered.
“Do you want to know what I saw that night, and
what I keep seeing, every night?”
“Yeah, if you want to tell me.”
“I’m not sure I want to or if I should tell you,
but I feel like I need to tell you, to tell someone who
won’t think I’m crazy. Will you listen?”
“Of course. What are friends for?”
She laughed a little, seeing the irony in the
situation. And then she began her tale.
“Well, when I went into the bathroom, I expected it
to be like Bloody Mary and Dracula, nothing would really
happen, and after awhile, you guys would open the door and
ask me if I was done chanting because you guys were all
getting bored, and blah blah blah. The fifth time I said
the chant, a form began to appear, it was like a fog but
it wasn’t like any kind of person. It was like a picture,
or a painting. I kept on chanting, totally sucked into what
was happening. Each time I said the chant, the picture
became clearer.’
‘The tenth time I said it, the picture was clear.
It was a castle courtyard, like the ones in our world
history book, and there were 15 women in a line, waiting
for something. I said the chant again, for the last time,
and the picture started moving. It was almost like a movie,
except I felt like I was there. And that’s when it
happened. I wasn’t in Lara’s bathroom anymore: I was in the
picture. I was at the back of the line of women I had seen
not two minutes earlier. I looked down and saw that I was
dressed like them, too, and my hair was done like theirs.’
‘When I looked around, I saw the mirror on a rock;
it was only a speck of light from where I stood. The women
ahead of me were filing into a large blank room. It had
walls and floors of stone, and there was a hole in the
middle of the room, something like a drain, I thought. They
all seemed excited to be here, like whatever happened in
this one room was going to make or break their futures. I
had no idea why until I saw her. Erzebet; Elizabeth Báthory
herself.
‘She came striding into the room, and her face was
totally white. I guess she painted it or something. No one
is that naturally pale. She was wearing a purple gown that
came to the floor and then swept out into a long train
carried by two little dark-haired girls with awful, pale
faces; each stared into space with cold green eyes. The
roses that should have been on their little cheeks were
substituted with small brown burns.
‘As soon as I saw them, I remembered everything
that you’d told us about how evil Erzebet was. I was so
scared, Annie. I didn’t know what to do, and all the women
in the room were smiling, but the two little girls both
knew better. They knew the evil of her ladyship, the
Countess of Transylvania. They had both seen the murders of
too many women, sacrificed for Elizabeth‘s pleasure. I saw
through the charade she put on. As her mouth moved, I
realized she was speaking a language I didn‘t understand,
but I heard English. Plain, ordinary English.
‘She was asking each of the girls how their trip
was, asking them all which province they had come, and why
they had decided to come. She complimented every last one
of them on something superficial, her dress, face, or body.
Finally, she came to me. She looked into my eyes and
said, “Well, Miss Lyndsay Saier, how was your journey to my
castle?”
‘I didn’t know what to do. She was obviously in
control of this, and I had no option but to play along. “It
was lovely, Madam.” I said and I curtsied! I actually
curtsied to that awful woman! I didn’t want to give her a
reason to torture me, Annie. I felt I was really there,
really staring down her royal evilness. I had to have been
there. How else would she have known my name?
‘Anyway, she kept questioning me, asking next by
what vehicle I had come. “Why, my own two feet
carried me to my new employment here, Madam.”
“And why did you accept my servant’s proposal to
work for me?”
“Well, because I wished so desperately to work for
a woman, Madam. I have worked for men for quite a few of my
young years, and have learned the hardness that they govern
women with.” She nodded her head as I waited for the
compliment. It didn’t come. Instead, she leaned toward me
and whispered plainly in my ear.
“I know very well where you came from and how you
got here, little miss. It is also in my wisdom the
knowledge that you have received from your little friend on
the other side. Bring her along next time you come to visit
me, will you? You both look so deliciously fresh.”
‘That was when I found myself in the bathroom
again, only I wasn’t alone. She had somehow come back with
me. She had me around the neck and had her hand over my
mouth.
“Remember, little Miss Lyndsay, I’ll not rest until
I’ve tasted your flesh. It matters not how long it takes
for me to catch you alone. I will come for you, one night.
And you’ll not know when. I would take you now, but why
remove the pleasure of anticipation?” After she said that,
she disappeared back into the mirror, and that’s when I ran
out of the bathroom. Annie, I, I…”
She dissolved into yet another paroxysm of tears in
my lap, a portrait of the terror that overcame her so many
times. I didn’t know what to do. Erzebet knew that I was
the one who had uncovered her legend for the frightful
enjoyment of my friends and myself. I was the one who had
released her evil. I was the one who deserved to pay the
price.
But, had I released Erzebet, or had I merely found
the tools to do so? It was a question that didn’t deserve
discussion. I had been involved, regardless of what
technicalities did or didn’t save me from a torturous death
at her royal evilness’s hands. I deserved to die as much,
if not more, than poor Lyndsay who was going out of her
mind with terror. I had to face her.
My anger for this woman grew rapidly throughout the
day. I pictured facing her and telling her to leave Lyndsay
alone. By evening I was like a soldier: I was so angry and
so excited that whatever happened to me didn’t matter. All
that mattered was winning.
That night, I went into my bathroom, a large red
candle in my hands. I began to chant Erzebet, Erzebet, take
your vengeance on me! The king is come, your life is done,
evil, evil Erzebet! I repeated it the necessary five
times, and I began to see the form in the mirror. The tenth
time found me in 16th century Transylvania, a servant girl
waiting to be devoured. I was in the same line leading into
the same room behind the same kinds of women that Lyndsay
had been in. I traipsed along slowly, waiting for my turn.
As I walked along, I felt and heard her hot breath,
sticky with the blood of 600 women and girls, against my
ear. “Ah, it is the gatekeeper herself! Brave enough to
come and find me, eh? Such bravery should be rewarded! Ah,
but not now, not now. Soon enough, young Anne, you’ll find
your reward. And it’ll be more than you could have hoped
for.” I continued to follow the line, until I finally came
face to face with her. She passed me and went on speaking
to the other young women, asking them the same questions
and getting the same answers.
I went about the business of deciding on a strategy
for her destruction. This had to be a dream: you don’t
merely chant something and end up in Transylvania. But, of
course, it wasn’t. I was a part of something much, much
larger than myself. Something I couldn’t control. I had no
idea how I could escape. There seemed to be no way out of
this terrible prison of the mind.
The most horrible thing was that there didn’t seem
to much of a way in either. I had done nothing but look
into the mirror at the line of young women when I became
one of them. How would it be possible to reverse such a
process by myself? I didn’t have a clue.
Her royal evilness had made it that way on purpose:
I was at her mercy, nothing I could think of could save me.
She was done interviewing us now, and she looked me
in the eye as she revealed her horrible smile one last time
before leaving us, saying in Transylvanian, “Welcome once
again to Csejthe Castle. I hope you’ll all be good wenches
and that punishment shall not be necessary for you. You are
all now dismissed into our head housekeeper’s hands. All
but Anne. You shall be trained to be my personal servant.
Come with me.”
Hands trembling, I followed her, every part of my
headstrong nature cringing at the idea of being told what I
should do in this way, especially by someone so evil. She
and the two other women with her, no doubt her accomplices,
led me to a long staircase, winding round and round the
center of the tower. This was her tower. Erzebet’s Tower.
I was afraid that I’d be shown to a room filled
with instruments of torture, the crusty brown of old blood
the only decoration on the walls and floor. Instead, I was
admitted to a large bedroom equipped with a wardrobe, a
canopy bed, a large chair, and a full-length gilded mirror.
Rather than blood, there was deep blue silk on the walls
and large Oriental rugs graced the floor.
“May I ask milady, what dost thou wish me to do?” I
said, as unsarcastically as possible, attempting
desperately to mimic without mocking the common deference
of that time. A part of me thought that maybe good service
could save me.
Erzebet dismissed her accomplices who each curtsied
deeply before turning to leave. Then she smiled
again, that same horrible smile. “Oh, no, Anne. There will
be no dusting, sweeping, or washing for you. You’re far too
clever for that, aren’t you? After all, you did discover a
bit of information about me, not to mention making up a
chant all by yourself. No one else has ever opened their
world to me like that, Anne. No one.”
It suddenly struck me that she was really speaking
English now, I wasn’t merely hearing it. I knew because her
lips moved to the sounds escaping them, not out of sync
like in a bad Japanese film, the way she spoke before.
It seems it is time, gentle reader, for me to
describe her, in all her awfulness. She wasn’t very tall,
perhaps a little over my height, which was 5’4” at the
time. She had deep black hair that was twisted around her
head, reminding me of a boa constrictor squeezing a melon.
The only thing about her that I know I’ll never forget
besides her horrific smile is her eyes. They were the exact
same shape and color as mine, green-hazel round almonds
staring heatedly into my soul. The only difference between
our respective sets of eyes was that hers were both warm
and steely cold at the same time, creating a paradox of
feeling.
She wore dresses of the era, but with strange
patterns embroidered into them. Nothing Satanic or evil, or
anything like one would expect a mass-murderess to wear;
but there were spirals and strange geometric shapes, things
of this nature. Not like a sorcerer’s robes, but like the
paintings of Picasso or Van Gogh: strange, but recognizable.
She turned to me and said, “You see that mirror in
the corner?” I looked towards it, and nodded. I couldn’t
find the breath to speak. “Well, that mirror may be your
rescuer. Or is it? Hmmm… I don’t seem to remember.”
Suddenly, a light bulb went on in my head. She wanted
something from me. That’s why I was here, that’s why I was
separated from the others to be her personal servant, and
that’s why she stared at me as though I were a combination
safe.
I turned to her and said, “And why would I need to
know such information? I know enough about this time to
survive, and enough about you to escape, Erzebet. The real
question is, what do you want badly enough to bring me
here?” She glared at me, angry that I saw through her
little scheme and too surprised to hide it. However, she
suppressed her urge to destroy me, looking straight into my
eyes.
“When your little friend Lyndsay was ushered into
my presence, I became aware that you existed. You’re the
one who formulated the chant that sent her and yourself to
my former corporeal time, a place where I am locked for all
eternity. I am doomed to grow old while never aging, to
live while my soul is dying, to be trapped in a world of
blood all my own creation. But, all that could change,
Anne, if you’re willing to offer your assistance. Remove me
from my living dead existence by liberating me from this
pit of time, and you‘ll go free.”
Suddenly, I couldn’t breathe. I felt like my brain
was going to explode. Could this be real? Lyndsay had told
me that Erzebet had come with her into the bathroom. Why
was she asking me to tell her how to escape from here? I
scarcely knew how I had transported myself in.
A thought went spiraling through my fevered brain
at that moment,, setting me aflame with the glow of a
thousand dangers. If a chant and a mirror sent me here,
wouldn’t a chant and mirror send me home? It made perfect
sense, especially since there didn’t seem to be any other
way out of here. I resolved to try it.
Then another thought, equally as fiery, came to me.
Where would I find a large enough mirror in a dark enough
room undisturbed enough to allow me the privacy necessary
to escape? I turned around and saw a sliver of bright
looking glass through a gap between two long, flowing
curtains.
This mirror was my salvation, particularly since it
was in a tiny room separate from this one. However, I would
still have to be able to gain access to it away from her
royal evilness.
Erzebet was still talking, her horrible voice
grating on my nerves like broken glass on sunburned skin.
She was apparently outlining my duties as her personal
servant. I was to take her laundry down to the castle
laundress, fetch her food from the cook, taste her food,
help dress and undress her, brush her hair, bathe her, mend
and make her clothes, and be sure to keep her bedding clean
and mended.
That was, of course, unless I wanted to return to
my own time with her. “Madam, Lyndsay told me how you
followed her into the bathroom. You can already come and go
through other times. Why are you lying to me?”
“You think I’m lying to you?!?” her eyes nearly
popped out of her face with anger, “Why should I have any
reason to lie, you miserable little welp! I, who have more
power than you could possibly hope to have in all your
life!”
“If I have no power, why do you need my help?”
Being thirteen, disobedience and disrespect were my forte.
She glared at me, the fire of murder in her horrible eyes.
“You had best learn to stop asking questions,
little miss. They only result in tears. The truth is that
my power is limited in your world, and I wish it to be
complete. I’ll ask you one more time today. Will you or
will you not invent a chant to send me in completion to
your time?”
“No, I won’t take a murderess into my time. I‘ll
stay here until I die before I agree to take you there.”
She stared at me with cold eyes.
“Very well. We’ll see how you like being my
servant. That may change your mind.” She dismissed me then,
and I curtsied in common deference, and departed, really
having no knowledge whatsoever as to where I should go now.
I saw a young woman, perhaps five years my senior,
round the corner as I was leaving Erzebet’s apartment. I
went after her, walking quickly on the stone floor, my
steps making a pat-pat sound as I went along. I finally
caught up with her a few moments later and asked her what I
should do, now that Erzebet had dismissed me.
“She gave you your duties, did not she?”
“Yes.”
“Well, go about those. I’m sure there’s some
mending to be done, and she usually takes her supper in
about an hour. Goodness, have you never waited on royalty
before?”
“No, never.” I replied, awaiting the dismissive
sigh and shake of the head that I was sure to receive from
her. It never came. She was far too elegant a person to
demean me like that. You could see it in her eyes as she
surveyed you: a goodness that traversed the bonds of time
with ease. She giggled a little, making her pretty face
that of a school girl.
“Well, I’d better be getting back to my duties.
Good luck to you- oh, what was your name, dear?”
“Anne. My name is Anne.”
` “Nice to meet you, Anne. My name is Penelope. I do
hope that you do well as my lady’s personal servant.” With
that, she disappeared around the next corner, her large
basket bumping into walls here and there as she managed her
way through the crowded hallways.
I thought of Erzebet again, wondering if Penelope
was meant to be one of her victims. Maybe she is and maybe
she’s not. Either way, I’ve got to get myself out of here.
I saw Penelope later on that day, carrying a basket
of laundry fresh from the palace clothesline. “Penelope!” I
cried, running after her with my own basket of clothes
bouncing against my hip like some strangely-formed child.
She spun around and shot an inquisitive glance at me. She
looked right at me without seeing me, and turned back to
her walking. “Penelope!” I cried again, and she stopped and
waited a moment this time. When she saw me rapidly catching
up with her, she waved to me, a large smile on her pretty
face.
An instant later, I was at her side. “Penelope, I
must tell you something. Is there anywhere that we can be
alone and talk without being interrupted by the palace
guard?”
Her doll-like head nodded, tossing her deep brown curls
across her back.
“Follow me.” she whispered. I did, gladly.
She first slipped off to the far side of the
courtyard, something she did in order to collect laundry
from the large field of clotheslines there. She bade me
follow her to the edge of the field where we consulted
behind a large sheet, probably that of one of the royal
bedchambers.
“All right, what is it?” she asked, curiosity
glinting in her large blue eyes. “Well, the countess is
extremely evil and very powerful in her evil, Penelope.
She’s killed hundreds of women, exactly like us. The only
way to survive is to escape. Will you help me?”
“Hundreds of women.” she said, her tongue dripping
with skepticism, “And you know this is so, young Anne? I‘ve
heard rumors of the like, day in and day out, we hear that
someone‘s been cut up or eaten or murdered. ‘Tis your first
day among us, and you simply know that the countess is a
fiend. You listen to far too much gossip for your own good.
Oh, what a waste of my time!”
Penelope picked up her basket and began her journey
back to the path, intent on getting back to her real
duties. I let her go. I didn’t have the time to try to
convince her. I picked up my own basket and also continued
on my original way, returning to my duties as well.
I worked harder that day than I had ever worked in
my life. I scrubbed floors, did dishes, washed clothes,
baked bread, mended clothes, made candles, and helped
Erzebet dress, wash, and eat.
I refused to refer to her as “milady” or to use
any other phrases of deference that she tried to force on
me. Thus, during dinner, she hissed at me for addressing
her improperly, particularly when I called her by her first
name in front of her husband, who himself was obliged to
call her Countess, at the very least, but was never to call
her “Erzebet.” I knew that I was stretching my welcome, but
a part of me didn’t care: if I wasn’t able to return to my
time, there was no need to remain alive and in torment for
the rest of my years.
Finally, it was time for her to retire. I pulled
back the coverlet on the mattress and helped her into bed,
her vile body twisting into the comfort of the covers. I
curtsied and left, shutting the door quietly behind me. I
then nodded to the guards and proceeded to walk about ten
yards down the hall until I reached a small alcove carved
into the wall itself. I had decided earlier that this was
the best place to hide in wait for Erzebet, feeling that
she would soon leave her bedchamber in search of a bout of
torture to soothe her wicked soul into a peaceful slumber.
I was right. She evacuated the chamber not 15
minutes later, her blue silk robe trailing behind her on
the stone floor. Her long brown hair was in seven braids
that reached almost to the end of her train. She walked
quickly, the velvet and leather slippers on her small feet
making virtually no sound against the hard floor. She
passed me, a mere shadow in the dark. I stole out from my
hiding place and followed her, taking care to be quiet in
my spying. She followed the staircase down until she came
to a door near the bottom of the castle. She had no candle,
making it difficult to see where it was she was going.
I was barely able to discern where the door was
that she opened, but I could hear how far it was. When it
opened, no sound or light emanated from it. It was as if it
was merely another part of the hallway, an unimportant
addition. I thought that I knew what it was, though: it had
to be the door to the dungeon, where hundreds of women had
died in her torturous grasp.
Then I heard it: the sound of heavy breathing and
continuous loud bumps against the wall. Curious in my
innocence, I cracked the door open a bit and peeked inside.
There in the moonlight was Erzebet and one of the knights
which had frequented the table that night writhing
strangely against one another. I had no desire to see any
more, and left immediately, finding yet another small
alcove to hide in nearby.
Approximately an hour later, Erzebet emerged from
the knight’s quarters. She looked almost the same as she
had before she entered, just a bit disheveled. She returned
to her room and remained there the rest of the night, much
to my surprise and dismay.
I slept on the cold gray floor, resting my head on
my arms. I didn’t want to miss her when she finally
descended to the chamber I knew existed. Near dawn, I was
awakened by a penetrating scream from deep within the
bowels of the castle. I had missed Erzebet’s move from her
room to the dungeon, and now I had no idea where it was. I
felt foolish and helpless until a new idea occurred to me
that I had access to the mirror in her bedchamber. The only
problem was the guards, but then, I was her majesty’s
personal servant.
I approached the door and found the guards standing
there. “Good morning, gentlemen.” I said, trying to sound
as cheerful as possible. “Her majesty has instructed me to
tidy up her bedchamber. Would you mind terribly letting me
by?” I smiled, trying to appear sincere. The guards didn’t
say a word, but they didn’t let me through,
either. “Please, sirs. The Countess shall be very cross
with me if I do not do as she tells me. Please let me by!”
I pleaded, trying to use the little girl expression that
was sure to melt any man’s heart.
Still they refused. Dejected and upset, I slinked
away, pretending to be about other duties.
“All right! Come back here and clean up her room.
You only have a few moments though, before I come in and
drag you out by your skirts if you’re not done.”
“Thank you, sirs!” I cried, full of gratitude. As
soon as I got through the door, I found myself cloaked in
darkness. I crept to the silk curtains and revealed the
mirror. It stared down at me, a powerful piece of
quicksilver and gold. I stared into my own reflection and
began chanting: “To my home, oh, to my home, to my home I
wish to go. There is no where I’d rather be, please, oh,
please let me go home!” I chanted it three times before I
saw Erzebet sit up in bed. In the mirror, she was a ghastly
sight; a rotting corpse with braided hair and blue robes.
Her eye sockets were empty except for the maggots that
feasted there. Her face was swollen with puss under the
thin, leathery skin that still remained stretched across
her horrible features.
I suddenly realized that this mirror was the
reason she was able to remain alive here. She couldn’t
traverse dimensions into other times without this mirror.
This mirror was the seat of her power.
“Guards!” she cried, making her awful mouth contort
in such a way that I almost puked right there. “GUARDS!!!”
She stared at me.
“You, little miss, are going to die now. I hope
you’re prepared!” She jumped from the bed then, still human
but yet so disgustingly not. Grabbing onto my arm with
enough strength to restrain a grown man, she pulled me
after her, treading past the guards and down the stairway.
I tripped but she continued to pull me, dragging me down
the stairs.
My limbs were flailing after me as I bounced off of
each step, pain digging into my consciousness like
toothpicks into an apple. At last, we reached the torture
chamber that I imagined. There were huge pokers, knives,
and strange-looking instruments adorning the walls. The
floor was like one huge drain: a large grate with an
extremely hot fire burning under it formed the center of
the room, and everything else, with the exception of an
iron chair set in the center of the grate, was sloped
slightly towards it.
Remarkably, the chamber seemed exceedingly devoid
of blood. I could not see one drop of it anywhere. I was
shocked at this, so I scanned the room. Nothing. Nowhere
was there one red droplet.
That was when my eyes rested on a large basin
filled with water and blood, standing in the corner of the
room, a bucket of clean water sitting next to it. This was
where the blood went: directly into the moat after it was
diluted with enough water to make it look like normal human
waste.
I cried out in terror then, and received a punch in
the chest for my trouble. Erzebet dragged me to what looked
like one of the beds they strap mental patients down on,
only it was made of wood and the straps were leather rather
than plastic or rubber. I had no idea what was going to
happen to me, I only knew it was going to be bad.
That was when I looked over and noticed poor
Penelope lying on a similar contraption. Her legs and arms
were missing, along with some of her teeth. The stubs where
her limbs had been cut off were open wounds, still gushing
blood; her white bones were displayed nakedly in the
center. Her hair had been pulled out in patches and her
once beautiful face was covered with blood. Beneath her on
the floor laid her arms and legs; all of the finger and
toenails had been pulled off, and her poor hands rested
quietly, streaks of blood almost spelling out words on
them.
Penelope was in shock if she wasn’t dead, that I
knew for certain. She would probably never speak again,
dying horribly, only one of the many casualties of Erzebet.
As for her royal evilness, she now stood over me, malice
thick in her face as she contemplated the best and most
painful way to kill me. She picked up a knife and cut into
my skin. I closed my eyes and bit my lip, determined not to
make a sound. She began skinning me alive, revealing my
muscles to the cruel air, making water stream involuntarily
from my eyes as she continued to give me as much pain as
humanly possible.
Finally, as my nerve-ends were shrieking to be
covered and I was crying uncontrollably, I let myself
scream. I screamed louder than I have ever screamed in all
my life, loud enough to give Erzebet the thrill she wanted
and to send her assistant, which had just recently arrived,
running as fast as her feet could carry her in the opposite
direction. I knew I had no skin, but I refused to give up
and die.
That was when she began to pull out my fingernails
one by one, relishing the whimpers I was involuntarily
making. When I was still alive and not begging for the
mercy of death, she cut open my stomach and had her
assistant force me to watch as she pulled my intestines
from my body. Once she cut into my stomach, I passed out,
unable to take the pain anymore.
After what seemed like hours, I woke up to see her
sitting placidly next to me. I had no idea how or why I was
still alive, but I was. Each breath caused a horrible
gurgling sound in my chest, and the pain was horrific, but
I was still alive, and I could still see. I looked up and
saw Erzebet standing over me with a long, thick poker. She
was stabbing my body with it, I realized, but I couldn’t
feel it. I could hardly keep my eyes open, and my mind
barely recognized where I was. She was screaming as she
forced this huge and horrible make-shift spear into my once
soft skin. I couldn’t make out what she was saying, so I
asked her, in my nearly delirious state, what it was.
The way she looked at me, with more hatred than I
could ever have imagined, slathered more terror onto my all-
ready drowning consciousness. She walked away for a moment,
and I thought perhaps I was saved, allowed to die in peace.
Then I realized that she had picked up a pair of red hot
metal tongs, and was coming towards me with them.
She opened them a little, and then dug them into my
eyes, melting them. I screamed in pain, and then sank into
darkness.
When I woke up, I found myself in my bathroom at
home. I was perfectly fine. My skin was flawlessly tight on
my body and I had no pain. Then I looked up with eyes that
were still intact. There was Erzebet, smiling horribly at
me with her half-rotted smile from within the torture
chamber. She was trapped in the mirror, the torture chamber
had now taken the place of the castle courtyard.
“Remember, young Anne! I may still come for you!”
“Wanna bet!” I yelled, picking up one of my
mother’s large ceramic figurines and smashing it into the
mirror, right in the middle of her malignant face. I heard
a scrambling in the house, and my dad’s voice crashed
through the bathroom door. “What are you doing in there?” .
I opened the door and my mother gathered me into her arms,
tears streaming down her face.
I was so happy to see them and to be free that I
hugged them both, tightly as I could. My dad asked me why I
smashed the mirror, and I told him that I scared myself by
playing around with Bloody Mary chants because I thought
that I saw someone in the mirror. It all wound down once
they thought I had sufficiently explained to them why I
smashed it, as is what always happens with parents, or at
least with my parents. I was expected to pay to replace the
mirror of course, but life goes on.
That was when my mother turned to me and
said, “Anne, we have something to tell you. It might
explain why we were so upset when we heard the mirror
break” She glanced helplessly at my father who mirrored her
worried look. “Anne, Lyndsay was found dead in her bathroom
a few hours ago.” Almost instantly, I was mentally
transported to the scene.
Her mother had called in hysterics. She told my
mother that she had found the words, “HERE IS YOUR DEATH!”
written on the wall in blood. Lyndsay didn’t write it
though. She had shot herself through the head. The bullet
from the gun she fired into the mirror to kill Erzebet had
ricocheted, and went through Lyndsay’s head instead. There
was blood everywhere, of course, but she didn’t have any
other wounds besides the one in her head, and she had
obviously died instantly. It had been Erzebet’s doing, and
I was the only one in the world who knew it.
Horrified, my gaze traveled upward, landing
blankly on the mirror above the fireplace; and there,
staring down at me, were Erzebet’s green eyes, smiling down
at my pain. I looked up at her, tears streaming down my
face as I thought of Lyndsay‘s horrific death. “Try to kill
me. I dare you.”
Contact me here: PrincessLorri@msn.com
Submitted From: