Mavis Harrelson’s Blue Light

A Piedmont Lantern Story

Well now, if you’ll permit me to dust off my old quill and dip it in a jug of moonshine-sweet ink, I reckon I’ll tell you the tale of Mavis Harrelson. Mavis is a woman whose name, in the town of Piedmont, became a cuss word, a whisper, a warning, and finally, a miracle.

It all started, as most troubles do, with a lie.

Mavis Harrelson wasn’t a bad woman. She wasn’t even a particularly interesting one, at least, not until the rumors started. She was a widow, forty-two, with hair the color of burnt sugar and eyes that held the quiet wisdom of a woman who’d buried two husbands and raised three boys who all turned out to be lawyers. She kept a neat garden, baked pies that made the preacher weep, and never missed a Sunday service. Not even when the church was half-empty, and the choir sounded like a pack of dying geese.

But in Piedmont, a woman who’s too quiet, too kind, too clean is a woman who invites suspicion. And suspicion, once it takes root, grows faster than kudzu in July.

It all started with the postmaster’s wife, a woman named Eliza Potts, who had a tongue sharp enough to clip a hedge and a heart about as soft as a week-old biscuit. Eliza claimed she saw Mavis sneaking into the back of the general store after hours. Not to steal, mind you, but to pray over the jars of pickled eggs. “She was whisperin’ to ‘em,” Eliza said, her eyes wide with righteous horror. “Like they was alive. Like she was askin’ ‘em for forgiveness.”

Now, I don’t know if Mavis was prayin’ to the pickled eggs, I never saw it myself, but I do know that Eliza Potts had a grudge against Mavis because Mavis once refused to lend her a cup of sugar, on account of Eliza never returning the last one.

But in Piedmont, a grudge is a seed, and a seed, if you water it with gossip, will grow into a forest of lies.

Next came the rumor that Mavis had a “strange light” in her windows at night. Not the warm glow of a kerosene lamp, but a blue light, like the kind you see in a witch’s cabin in the woods. Mrs. Peabody, who ran the Piedmont Hotel boarding house, swore she saw it. “It ain’t natural,” she said, clutching her shawl like it was a shield. “It’s the devil’s lantern.”

Then there was the tale of the missing cat. Ol’ Mr. Jenkins’ tabby, who vanished one Tuesday and was found three days later, curled up in Mavis’s porch swing, purring like a steam engine. “That cat’s been bewitched,” Mr. Jenkins declared, his voice trembling with righteous fury. “Only a woman who meddles with dark things could make a cat forget its own name.”

By then, the town had divided itself into two camps: the “Mavis is Innocent” crowd, mostly the young folks and the folks who owed her money, and the “Mavis is a Witch” crowd, mostly the old folks and the folks who were just plain jealous.

Mavis, for her part, said nothing. She didn’t holler, she didn’t cry, she didn’t even slam her door. She just kept baking her pies, tending to her garden, and going to church. Though now, she sat in the back pew, where the dust was thick, and the hymns sounded hollow.

The rumors grew uglier. They said she cursed the crops. They said she hexed the well. They said she danced naked under the full moon with a broomstick between her legs. That claim was made by a certain boy named Billy Joe, who’d been caught stealing apples from her tree and was trying to save his hide.

And then, one night, the unthinkable happened.

The church burned down.

Not a small fire. Not a spark. A full-blown, rip-roaring, roof-collapsing, steeple-splintering inferno that lit up the sky like the Fourth of July. The fire department came, but they were too late. The church was gone; reduced to ash and charred timber, the pews turned to cinders, the stained glass melted into colorful puddles.

And who was the first person they blamed?

Mavis Harrelson.

“She was seen near the church that night,” said Sheriff Tatum, a man who’d once been Mavis’s suitor and still carried a torch for her, though he’d never admit it. “And she had that blue light in her windows the night before.”

The town was in an uproar. They wanted her run out of town. They wanted her tarred and feathered. They wanted her burned at the stake. Of course, they didn’t say that part out loud, because they were Christians, and Christians don’t burn people anymore. Not officially.

But Mavis? She didn’t run. She didn’t hide. She didn’t beg.

She just stood on her porch, her hands folded in front of her, her face calm as a summer lake, and said, “If you want to know the truth, come to my house tonight. I’ll show you what’s in my windows.”

And so, they came.

Not all of them, mind you. Only the curious, the brave, the ones who still had a spark of doubt in their hearts. They gathered on her porch, their faces lit by the flicker of lanterns, their breaths held in anticipation.

Mavis opened the door.

And there, in her upstairs bedroom, was the source of the “blue light.”

Not a witch’s lantern.

Not a devil’s flame.

But a stained-glass window.

Not just any stained-glass window, neither. It was a window she’d been restoring for the church, piece by piece, over the last six months. A window that had been damaged in a storm, its glass cracked and its frame warped. She’d taken it home to fix it, to save it, because she loved the church, even if the church didn’t love her.

And the “blue light”? It was the lamp shining through the glass. The blue glass she’d painstakingly replaced, the blue glass that caught the light and threw it across the room like a blessing.

Mavis turned to the crowd, her eyes shining brighter than the glass, and said, “I ain’t cursed the church. I tried to save it. And if you want to know who burned it down, look for the man who’s been tryin’ to buy the land for a parking lot. Look for the man who’s maybe been payin’ folks to spread lies about me so you’d turn against me.”

The crowd fell silent.

Then, from the back, a voice spoke. It was Billy Joe, the boy who’d stolen her apples. “It was me,” he said, his voice trembling. “I lit the fire. I was mad ‘cause you wouldn’t let me have no more apples. I didn’t mean to burn the whole thing down.”

The sheriff stepped forward, his face red with shame. “I knew it,” he said. “I knew it was him. I just… I let the rumors run because I was mad you didn’t love me back.”

And then, from the front, Eliza Potts stepped forward. “I started it,” she said, her voice small. “I lied about the pickled eggs. I lied about the light. I lied because I was jealous of your pies.”

The crowd stood there, their faces pale, their hearts heavy.

And Mavis? She just smiled.

She didn’t gloat. She didn’t scold. She didn’t even cry.

She just said, “Well, now that we’ve got the truth out, who’s hungry? I baked a pie.”

And they ate.

They ate the pie, and they wept, and they hugged, and they forgave.

And the next day, they started rebuilding the church. Not with new wood and new glass, but with old wood and the old glass, and they put Mavis’s stained-glass window back in the front, where the sun could shine through it and throw blue light across the pews.

And Mavis? She kept baking her pies, tending to her garden, and going to church, though now, she sat in the front pew, where the dust was thin, and the hymns sounded sweet.

And if you ever find yourself in Piedmont, and you see a woman with hair the color of burnt sugar and eyes that hold the quiet wisdom of a woman who’s buried two husbands and raised three lawyers, don’t whisper. Don’t gossip. Don’t fear.

Just say hello.

And if she offers you a slice of pie?

Take it.

It’s the best damn pie you’ll ever taste.

And if you’re lucky, you might just catch a glimpse of the blue light. Not in her windows, but in her soul.

That’s the truth, y’all.

And, you know I ain’t never lied to you.

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