He raised his arms and the crowd fell quiet. "But we will not burn her! We are not worthy to judgeher — we are ALL miserable sinners."The voice took on a quiet, doom-laden tone as he confided: "Our Lord God Almighty will be her Judge, Jury and Executioner!""Praise be to God!" the crowd shouted.
"TO THE RIVER WITH HER!"
he commanded.The crowd clamoured round her, urging the wagon on, guiding it towards the water. Then handsgrabbed at her, pulled and prodded her, touched her in places that only her late husband had touchedher ... threw her to the ground.She curled up like a newborn baby, glad to be off her feet, tired and wanting to sleep, but bootskicked her along in the mud, into the water.Then hands dragged her to her feet. She was face to face with her tormentor.Matthew Hopkins, the Witchfinder General pushed forward, his face only inches from hers,
"YOUHAVE BEEN CONSORTING WITH THE DEVIL!"
'He doesn't need to shout, I can hear him well enough.' she thought as she stared back at him.
"YOU AND YOUR FAMILIARS HAVE BEEN DOING THE DEVIL'S WORK. WHERE ISHE HIDING ... WHAT FORM HAS HE TAKEN NOW
?
"
'I'm going to die ... they are going to kill me ... why have they all turned against me? … Will no-one speak for me? … I might as well die, I do not want to live with them.'
"WHAT FORM HAS HE TAKEN NOW ... WITCH! … WHAT FORM HAS THE DEVIL TAKEN NOW
?
"
She took a deep breath and choking thought, 'I can taste my blood. But I'll show him, I can shouttoo, look him square in the eye, that's the way.' —
"MATTHEW HOPKINS, YOU ARE THEDEVIL'S FAMILIAR. WHEN THE DEVIL WENT OUT THE DOOR, YOU CAME IN. THEDEVIL'S FAMILIAR HAS TAKEN YOUR FORM!"
Mustering all her remaining strength, she spat blood at him. But she was weak, and only a fewcould hear her defiance; and only those closest could see the blood spreading over the clean whiteshirt and well-scrubbed face.
"INTO THE RIVER WITH HER! THE ALMIGHTY GOD WILL DECIDE — IF SHE IS AWITCH, SHE WILL FLOAT. THEN WE WILL BURN HER."
Images flashed through her confused mind, 'Hands touching, touching all over, lifting, swinging ...letting go, flying through the air. The water's cold, it stings.'The Witchfinder turned away; he already knew what the result would be. No-one ever floated, and proof of her innocence was not long in coming. The tired and beaten old woman sank to the bottomof the river. At last no-one was poking, feeling or punching, no-one was hurting her.She did not struggle; eyes open, she watched the bubbles as she sank. Beyond them, she could seethe blue sky and a single solitary cloud, like a puff of smoke, drifting across her view. A relaxedcalm came over her, she let her breath out slowly, and the cloud drifted on.She could hear nothing but the sound of the bubbles rising through the water and the beating
of her heart. A calmness seemed to settle over her as the solitary cloud descended into the water aboveher.
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