“Did you have breakfast this morning?”
“Just some juice and fruit,” Kim said.
“How about stopping for coffee and a donut?” Edward asked.
“Sounds good,” Kim said.
Since it was still early and the bulk of the tourists had yet to arrive, they had no trouble finding parking near the Salem Commons. Just across the street was a coffee shop. They got coffee-to-go and strolled around the center of town, peeking into the Witch Museum and a few of the other tourist attractions. As they walked down the pedestrian mall on Essex Street, they noticed how many shops and pushcarts were selling witch-related souvenirs.
“The witch trials spawned an entire cottage industry,” Edward commented. “I’m afraid it’s a little tacky.”
“It does trivialize the ordeal,” Kim said. “But it also stands as testament to the affair’s appeal. Everybody finds it so fascinating.”
Wandering into the National Park Service Visitor Center, Kim found herself confronted by a virtual library of books and pamphlets on the trials. “I had no idea there was so much literature available,” she said. After a few moments of browsing, she purchased several books. She explained to Edward that once she got interested in something she usually went overboard.
Returning to the car, they drove out North Street, passing the Witch House again, and turned right on Orne Road. As they passed the Greenlawn Cemetery Kim mentioned that it had once been part of the Stewarts’ land.
Kim directed Edward to turn right onto a dirt road. As they bumped along, Edward had to fight with the steering wheel. It was impossible to miss all the potholes.
“Are you sure we’re on the right road?” Edward asked.
“Absolutely,” Kim assured him.
After a few twists and turns they approached an impressive wrought-iron gate. The gate was suspended from massive stanchions constructed of rough-hewn granite blocks. A high iron fence topped with sharpened spikes disappeared into the dense forest on either side of the road.
“Is this it?” Edward questioned.
“This is it,” Kim answered as she alighted from the car.
“Rather imposing,” Edward called as Kim struggled to open the heavy padlock securing the gate. “And not that inviting.”
“It was an affectation of the age,” Kim yelled back. “People with means wanted to project a baronial image.” After removing the padlock, she pushed the gate open. Its hinges creaked loudly.
Kim returned to the car and they drove through the gate. After a few more twists and turns the road opened up to a large grassy field. Edward stopped again.
“Good Lord,” Edward said. “Now I understand why you said baronial.”
Dominating the enormous field was a huge, multistoried stone house complete with turrets, crenellations, and machicolations. The roof was slate and pockmarked with fanciful decorations and finial-topped dormers. Chimneys sprouted like weeds from all parts of the structure.
“An interesting mélange of styles,” Edward said. “It's part medieval castle, part Tudor manor, part French château. It's amazing.”
“The family has always called it the castle,” Kim explained.
“I can see why,” Edward said. “When you described it as a huge, drafty old place, I had no idea it was going to look like this. This belongs down in Newport with the Breakers.”
“The North Shore of Boston still has quite a few of these huge old houses,” Kim said. “Of course some of them have been torn down. Others have been recycled into condos, but that market is flat at the moment. You can understand why it’s a white elephant for me and my brother.”
“Where’s the old house?” Edward asked.
Kim pointed to the right. In the distance Edward could just make out a dark-brown building nestled in a stand of birch trees.
“What’s that stone building to the left?” Edward asked.
“That was once a mill,” Kim said. “But it was turned into stables a couple of hundred years ago.”
Edward laughed. “It’s amazing you can take all this in stride,” he said. “In my mind anything over fifty years old is a relic.”
Edward started driving again but quickly stopped. He’d come abreast of a fieldstone wall that was mostly overgrown with weeds.
“What’s this?” he asked, pointing at the wall.
“That’s the old family burial ground,” Kim said.
“No fooling,” Edward said. “Can we look?”
“Of course,” Kim said.
They got out of the car and climbed over the wall. They couldn’t use the entrance since it was blocked by a dense thicket of blackberry bushes.
“Looks like a lot of the headstones are broken,” Edward said. “And fairly recently.” He picked up a broken piece of marble.
“Vandalism,” Kim said. “There’s not much we can do about it since the place is vacant.”
“It’s a shame,” Edward said. He looked at the date. It was 1843. The name was Nathaniel Stewart.
“The family used this plot until the middle of the last century,” Kim explained.
Slowly they walked back through the overgrown graveyard. The farther they went the more simple the headstones became and the older they got.
“Is Ronald Stewart in here?” Edward asked.
“He is,” Kim said. She led him over to a simple round headstone with a skull and crossed bones done in low relief. On it was written: Here lyes buried y body of Ronald Stewart y son of John and Lydia Stewart, aged 81 years Dec’d. oct. y 1. 1734.
“Eighty-one,” Edward remarked. “Healthy guy. To reach such a ripe old age he must have been smart enough to stay away from doctors. In those days with all the reliance on bloodletting and a primitive pharmacopoeia, doctors were as lethal as most of the illnesses.”
Next to Ronald’s grave was Rebecca Stewart’s. Her stone described her as Ronald’s wife.
“I guess he got remarried,” Kim said.
“Is Elizabeth buried in here?” Edward asked.
“I don’t know,” Kim said. “No one ever pointed out her grave to me.”
“Are you sure this Elizabeth even existed?” Edward asked.
“I think so,” Kim said. “But I can’t swear to it.”
“Let’s see if we can find her,” Edward suggested. “She’d have to be in this general area.”
For a few minutes they searched in silence, Kim going one way, Edward another.
“Edward!” Kim called.
“Did you find her?” Edward asked.
“Well, sort of,” Kim said.
Edward joined her. She was looking at a headstone similar in design to Ronald’s. It belonged to Jonathan Stewart, who was described as the son of Ronald and Elizabeth Stewart.
“At least we know she existed,” Kim said.
They searched for another half hour but didn’t find Elizabeth’s grave. Finally they gave up and went back to the car. A few minutes later they pulled up in front of the old house. They both got out.
“You weren’t kidding when you said it looked like the Witch House,” Edward said. “It’s got the same massive central chimney, the same steeply pitched gable roof, the same clapboard siding, and the same diamond-shaped panes of glass. And most curious, there is the same protrusion of the second story over the first. I wonder why they did that.”
“I don’t think anyone knows for certain,” Kim said. “The Ward House at the Peabody-Essex Institute has the same feature.”
“The pendants under the overhang are much more decorative than those at the Witch House,” Edward said.
“Whoever turned those had quite a flair,” Kim agreed.
“It’s a charming house,” Edward said. “It has so much more class than the castle.”
Slowly they strolled around the aged building, pointing out its details. In the back Edward noticed a freestanding, smaller structure. He asked if it were equally as old.
“I believe so,” Kim said. “I was told it was for the animals.”
“A mini-barn,” Edward said.
Returning to the front door, Kim had to try multiple keys before she found one that unlocked the door. As she pushed it open it creaked just like the outer gate to the compound.