not a pretty town. There was nothing in particular wrong with it. It had all the right ingredients; pretty flowers sprang from their perfectly groomed beds, litter was kept off the streets. The buildings all had uniform, old-world façades of wood and stone; no tumbledown shacks or ugly, unpainted edifices to break the charm. Livestock grazed contentedly in the lush meadows that surrounded the town and wild critters could often be seen darting from the woods.
It was like a dream, a postcard, but one had only to set foot in the town to sense the tainted air of the place. Especially on that day: Easter Sunday. No amount of town planning or aesthetics could mask it.
The town had a history, and not one that it was proud to tell. This was not something one would find in local tourist information pamphlets; it was known only to the inhabitants, passed around by word of mouth in whispered conversations designed to shock and frighten. Inevitably leaks occurred, rumors got out, and that history became a stigma that lay like a cloud over the town and stained gray the countenances of the inhabitants.
The story varied depending on the age of the teller and the shock-factor intended, but the basic plot was always the same.
It happened many years before, so many that those who could remember were long gone and only their great, great grandchildren remained. There lived a girl in the town. She was bubbly and pretty and outgoing, sometimes to an eyebrow-raising degree. Some called her feisty, headstrong; others called her a harlot. Perhaps it was due to the fact that her mother had died giving birth to her and she had never had that maternal figure to teach her the ways of ladies and coach her on decorum.
Whatever the reason, when a passing battalion stopped in the town, she became besotted with one of the soldiers and no laws of chastity could keep her from him. The whole town looked on with clucking tongues; nobody took the time to tell her.
And so the soldier passed on and the girl’s belly grew so that it could no longer be ignored. It was a disgrace; the talk of the town. Something had to be done before word spread to the neighboring villages.
She was hidden away, and for nine months that was how she stayed.
On Easter morning her child was born. All pink and wriggling it was taken away from her. She heard its first cries as the door closed on her lonely prison, her arms clasped over her empty chest. She never knew if she was mother to a son or daughter.
Nobody knows for sure what became of the child. The most PG rated stories told of it being sent off to an orphanage in a far away city. Other versions were not so kind to her progeny. There was a well in the center of town. For many years it had been closed up, cemented in, and water was drawn from a spring in a less convenient location on the outskirts. There is no documented reason why. The stench and toxicity of decomposing flesh after a time made for undesirable cooking water perchance? Maybe that was the ill-fated infant’s first cot, its newborn cries replaced by watery gurgles as it was held down with a stick like the unwanted litter from a stray cat, the dark and the cold closing in around it as its short life ended. I leave each to make their own conclusions on the matter, but the general rule of thumb is: the deeper buried the truth, the more heinous the crime behind it.
All that remained was the question of the girl. What to do about her? She was tainted, used, an embarrassment. No man would have her for a wife. And worst of all—she was the weak link in the town’s secret.
So she stayed locked up, and it soon became evident that she had her uses after all. There were men in the town who had needs that their wives could or would not satisfy. And of course there were those who had no wives—widowers, bachelors. You know, the upstanding citizens who could afford a penny or two for a ride of the corrupted daughter.
No one ever questioned why every nine months or
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