September 2, 2010
Latest Articles
The Wooden Spoon
By Carmen Ruggero - Published: August 23, 2010

And Just Like That...
By Carmen Ruggero - Published: August 17, 2010

Self-portrait formed with words.
By saveyrgrace - Published: August 12, 2010

Shit @ Dancing (Cool in '93).
By sunken - Published: August 6, 2010

Ohhhh the tangled webs we weave
By saveyrgrace - Published: July 28, 2010

Mad
By sirba - Published: July 17, 2010

Stop to Think
By ShannonCorinna - Published: July 16, 2010

Dolly Blue---and things!
By Gerry. - Published: July 5, 2010

Volcanic Disruption.
By Gerry. - Published: April 30, 2010

Ashes of Roses
By HarryB - Published: April 22, 2010
  [1] 2 3 ... 40   Next

Latest Comments
Carmen Ruggero - August 29, 2010
The Wooden Spoon
Thank you, Gerry for...

dbsdream - August 28, 2010
Stop to Think
There are parts of t...

Gerry. - August 26, 2010
The Wooden Spoon
A very moving little...

Carmen Ruggero - August 18, 2010
And Just Like That...
Thank you, Gerry. I&...

Gerry. - August 18, 2010
And Just Like That...
Carmen, a very perce...

Latest Posts
Bourbon Penn (ongoing)
Posted by bintarab
September 3, 2010

Cha: An Asian Literary Journal
(ongoing)

Posted by bintarab
September 2, 2010

Affordable Proofreading and
Editing

Posted by Textcrafter
September 2, 2010

BULL: Fiction for Thinking Men
(ongoing)

Posted by bintarab
September 2, 2010

Aurora Wolf anthology of New
Fairy Tales due 1 Oct '10

Posted by bintarab
September 2, 2010

Flash challenge - the narrow
road - closes 12th September

Posted by marilyn
September 2, 2010

Rock and Roll is Dead
Posted by bintarab
September 2, 2010

Rock and Roll is Dead
Posted by neilmarr
September 2, 2010

Flash challenge - the narrow
road - closes 12th September

Posted by delph_ambi
September 2, 2010

Flash challenge - the narrow
road - closes 12th September

Posted by delph_ambi
September 2, 2010

Author:
Title:

Keyword:


 First Edition
 Signed

| Flash Fiction | Short Stories | Essays | Poetry | Playscripts | Novels | Articles |

bibliophorum

Home  >>  Submit Here  >>  Short Stories
By HarryB
Published: October 9, 2009
Updated: October 9, 2009
Print    Email

 

 

Brimstone

Harry Buschman

Sadie Devons was denounced as a witch, but in an age when witches were burned at the stake she enjoyed a long and comfortable life. She owed it all to her one-eyed cat “Brimstone,” she said.

It was a handsome cat. Jet black except for its left front paw ... which was white as snow.

Sadie claimed Brimstone was an enchanted cat and had learned the secrets of the occult, (such as they existed late in Salem in the seventeenth century). Without the one-eyed Brimstone by her side, Sadie was the first to admit that she, too, would have shared the same fate as her sister witches in Massachusetts. Though Sadie and her one-eyed cat may have been in league with the devil, and could lay a hex on the citizens of Salem, she declined to do so, for Sadie was a well behaved witch.

There is not much difference in the outward appearance of a good witch and that of a bad witch. Sadie had a wart on the side of her nose, there were bats in her cellar and unlike the good women of Salem, she never swept her front walk. But Sadie, with input from her one-eyed Brimstone, only told people what was good for them. She offered helpful suggestions to lovelorn spinsters and tongue tied swains, helpful hints to harried housewives and valuable counsel to gamblers on the odds against drawing to an inside straight.

“Tell the widow McCullough she’ll never get a man that way,” the one-eyed cat whispered in Sadie’s ear, “black lace underwear is what the men are looking for. Tell the widow to take off those burlap potato sacks and get into some Victoria’s secrets, they’re having a sale down at the Salem Mall.”

She told George Washington to get the carpenter to make him a set of wooden teeth. “It’ll improve your digestion no end,” she said, “and furthermore you’ll be able to smile at public functions ... and by the way,” she added, “take off that stupid wig, you’re only wearing it to hide your bald spot.” She promised Benjamin Franklin the shock of his life if he went outdoors and flew a kite in a thunderstorm ... and what happened? Franklin discovered electricity!

To hungry families in Salem, Sadie pointed out the unsung qualities of the wild turkey. She reminded them that, “It may be the ugliest bird on the face of the earth, but remove the head and feet, stick it in a moderate oven for four hours or so and it’ll feed a family of eight for a week.”

When her cat, “Brimstone” closed its only eye and breathed its last, Sadie closed up shop. She was a wealthy woman by then, lived in a fine brick house and hired other women to cook and clean for her. She may have consorted with the devil ... but hell, nobody’s perfect!

 

 



437 Views - View Comments (1)
Login Panel
Username:
Password:
Remember Me

Not registered?
Register now!

Forgot your password?

Get the eBooks in any digital format HERE!

Random Articles
The Naming of Stitch Funkhauser (Essays and Creative non-fiction)
By Jerusha - Published: November 6, 2008
Print Print   Email Email

Patent NonScience (Short Stories)
By GeoffNelder - Published: October 16, 2007
Print Print   Email Email

Novel Writers Work-sheets (Articles)
By Michael J Hunt - Published: March 14, 2008
Print Print   Email Email

The Transfigured Penny (Short Stories)
By howard - Published: January 10, 2008
Print Print   Email Email

The Touch (Flash Fiction)
By Jerusha - Published: November 6, 2008
Print Print   Email Email

Casanova's Women (Poetry)
By DonnaG - Published: October 16, 2007
Print Print   Email Email

Leaving Wichita (Short Stories)
By HarryB - Published: April 22, 2008
Print Print   Email Email

Governor Elect (Flash Fiction)
By HarryB - Published: April 2, 2008
Print Print   Email Email

Turquoise Silk (Poetry)
By Veemem - Published: October 17, 2007
Print Print   Email Email

I Thought I Heard You Calling (Poetry)
By Valerie Muriel Mckinley - Published: October 16, 2007
Print Print   Email Email
Top Posters
User: Posts:
bintarab 4876
delph_ambi 1362
neilmarr 960
willie 680
viceversa 389