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When I was a young man growing up on a farm
in rural Western Pennsylvania in the mid 1930's,
we had an experience with these phenomenon, some
call evil spirits.
It was mid-winter and there was an outbreak
of what was then called influenza, in the town.
Several of our neighbors had perished and it had
been a dark and dismal winter. Just trying to
find the chance to bury these victims was
distressing, because the ground was frozen and
undiggable. Most of these poor souls were loaded
into a wagon and left in Dambaugh's barn until
the weather would break.
My family of eleven, included my five
sisters, and the four of us boys. Now in a family
this size it is almost impossible to avoid some
terrible outbreak completely, but in this year it
seemed that we might be able to, by the grace of
God.
But suddenly, on about the 5th of January,
my sister Eldiva, the youngest of the girls,
awoke in the morning with the dreaded symptoms.
For the first day, it seemed to be just any
normal flu outbreak, but momma cared for her
herself, not allowing any of the rest of us to
get too near her, in case we to would fall victim
to it. The second day she took a turn for the
worse, and by the third day, Eldiva had a very
high fever and was turning ghostly pale. Doctor
Ziegler had made the arduous winter trip to our
farm, from the town of Zelienople, but after
leaving some medicine for momma to give her, he
had to leave to get back to all of his other sick
patients. He said that Eldiva had already passed
the point of no return- and after being allowed
to see her one last time-we all had to agree with
him.
But momma refused to give up on her baby
girl. She remembered the gossip she had heard in
town last week about old Hattie Peytas. She was
an old woman who lived on a very unkept and
overgrown farm in the hills on the other side of
town. The women were cackling about the fact that
Hattie insisted that people weren't dying of
influenza, but, rather from evil spirits that had
taken up residence in our town. Hattie boasted
that if she had been called instead of the
doctor, she could have saved them. At the time
mother found this amusing , but, now she was
desperate, so she sent my brother Bob to bring
old Hattie back.
As soon as she arrived Hattie ran to my
sisters bedside.She pried open her eyelids and
peered into her unresponsive soul. Then she
lifted her limp hands and looked at her palms.
She shut her eyes and when they reopened, she
focused on the large feather pillow under
Eldiva's head. We gasped as she quickly whisked
the pillow out from under the girls head and took
a knife from her bag and slit the pillow down the
middle. Feathers filled the air but, Hattie still
had her eyes glued to the now ripped
pillow. "Look here", she said and we all leaned
forward to see a circle of feathers, held
together by an unknown source and bound in an
almost perfect circle. Then Hattie raised her
old, worn hand and ripped the circle apart. She
told me and my brothers to gather up the feathers
and all of the pillow and take them out back and
burn them, until there was nothing left but
ashes. And we did.
While we were gone, Sis says that Hattie
checked all of our pillows for more feather
wreaths, to no avail. When we returned, Eldiva's
fever seemed to be dropping and color was
beginning to come back to her face. Having
convinced herself that there were no more evil
spirits in our house, Hattie went outside and
threw some kind of dust she had in her bag, all
over the doors and windows of our house. Saying
her work was done, she asked my mother for a
handsome stipend, and then got back into the car
for Bob to drive her back home.
The next day, Eldiva's fever broke
completely. She went on to live a long, happy
life. Mom later admitted that Hattie told her
that if the wreath of feathers had closed to make
a complete circle, Eldiva would have died. So
from that night on we were convinced that old
Hattie had saved our sister, and more convinced
than ever, that old Hattie was a witch.
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Submitted From: Pennsylvania, USA
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