Here goes. The McBanes. Well, you know how some people say a house has a history if there has been some dark events in its past? Well, the McBanes are a family with a history. You can trace them right back to Medieval Scotland where they were hell on wheels and, yes, I do mean that literally. The McBane’s closet is full of skeletons and the problem is, unless you slam that door real quick, they keep rattling out. You see, the McBanes have a rich and colorful history replete with pirates and bootleggers, slavers and murderers, executed criminals and more than a few 18th century graverobbers of the Burke and Hare ilk. But, to balance things out, branches of the McBanes have also produced clergymen, politicians, and decorated soldiers. There was even a 20th century McBane who became something of a soda pop baron in the UK.
But we’re not interested in those people.
We’re interested here in the McBanes as witches.
Yes, you heard me right: witches. As in black cats and broomsticks. For some of the earliest references to the clan involve accusations of sorcery, necromancy, and the conjuring of poltergeists. Most of it is pretty sketchy, but during the infamous North Berwick witch trials of 1590, the McBanes became very popular. The entire clan was indicted by the state for a bevy of unbelievable, awful crimes against “God and man.” Some of the charges are as follows: calling plagues of rats into the city; causing fields to go fallow; having commerce with demonic familiars; calling up the spirits of the dead and putting them to nefarious uses; the making of waxen conjure dolls; the selling of “ungodly, profane” charms and philters; the defiling of graves to obtain bones and corpse flesh from which they supposedly constructed awful little puppets or dolls which they sold to locals for the uses of revenge and murder. Well, you get the picture. They were accused of calling up storms and spreading disease and pestilence, all kinds of things. And not just the adults, either. For the McBane children were named as well.
Now, it is well-known historically that Scotland is second only in barbarity to Germany for the sadism of its witch trials. Most of this was accomplished under the auspices of the Presbyterian clergy and was considered savage even for that savage time. Well, back to the McBanes. The children were apparently shuttled off to monasteries and the like, but the adults were tortured viciously. The Spanish Boot and Witch’s Bridle, Caspie claws and thumbscrews, the ordeal of the pins and pincers. The entire family was “put to the question” as they said back then. In the end, some eight members of the clan were burned alive, two others strangled and then burned, and a few more simply sent to prison.
What the hell does this have to do with anything?
I’m getting there. Just understand that the McBanes have been mixed up in this business for centuries, whether real or imagined. A 17th century source claimed that the family was “cursed of God” and “contaminated by a degenerate heredity” and so forth. Earlier references mention that the McBane children, at birth, were of a “most loathsome appearance, displeasing to the eye.” Was this some possible hint to their origins? This “look” was known as the “McBane taint.” By their first birthday, the children had outgrown that unwholesome appearance… but it makes you wonder if there was some sort of unspeakable interbreeding in the family’s past.
Now, let’s jump to the present. Let’s imagine this “foul seed” being carried from generation to generation. Now, that night Ronny brought me home, a drooling wreck, he told me many things and I think he told me them as sort of a warning of what was to come. He told me that his father was not a necromancer like his father and his father’s father. He had no interest in such arcane matters as harvesting the spirits of the dead, which had been a family tradition for too long to remember. When Ronny’s grandfather died (Ronny surmised) his father burned all of his old books and diaries, to cleanse the family once and for all of that morbid stain.
But he didn’t get everything.
Sometime later, he took his own life. And that, I think, was the catalyst for Ronny’s domineering, demented mother to go on her rampage. You can check the criminal records on that. Suffice to say, the three McBane children, without their father’s protection, were brutalized and abused by their mother. They were whipped, locked in closets for days on end, burned with crosses (this after their mother found Jesus), put on starvation rations, beaten, lashed… well, you can full imagine the rest. And the point? Because, yes, in their mother’s violent dementia there certainly was a point. And that was because the children were McBanes and carried what she called “the filthy, godless stigma” of their cursed blood within them. They were filled with devils and said devils had to be purged, forever and Amen. The end result was that Ronny was the only survivor. His sister suffocated (supposedly) when she was three. His brother was strangled (accidentally) with a light cord.
And this left only distraught, alienated, unbalanced Ronny who liked to talk to dolls, to create personalities for them. When he was a teenager, Ronny discovered some family heirlooms up in the attic (as he was not allowed to leave the house) his father had not burned. One of them was a notebook kept by his grandfather. I will not say the rest of what he told me. Maybe I can’t say it. Now, who wouldn’t want their dead loved ones returned to them? What kid of Ronny’s age and mental aberration wouldn’t consider following extreme paths when a notebook showed him the way? Dear Christ, who wouldn’t have done what he did? Torn up by grief, alone and frightened and out of his mind? Who wouldn’t have? And especially a disturbed boy like Ronny.
When Ronny carried me up to my apartment that night, he said something to me. He told me there were blasphemies in that notebook, horrible, diabolical methods for doing things unthinkable to a sane mind. That to practice necromancy was to rip asunder a barrier that was not meant to be crossed. For your loved ones (their souls) were unreachable, but that there were other things out there, hideous things, malign and decayed intelligences waiting to be born, to be called down from the black spaces beyond. And these things… they were hollow and wicked, unborn and evil… yes, things, shades, shadows that were never meant by the Creator to inhabit flesh and blood, things that were never meant to be born.
Crazy? Yes, you think it, too, and I don’t blame you. Then again, I don’t care and why should I? You haven’t seen what I’ve seen and you haven’t felt what I’ve felt. Your mind, your soul has not been defiled by these malignant intellects. My number is almost up and I welcome death, it’s better than what I live with day in and day out, this madness. You are not haunted by a dummy possessed of infinite diabolic darkness. You do not wake to find that it has chewed the flesh from your numb leg. You do not feel it biting you in the dead of night. You do not see that grotesque, macabre corpse-puppet drifting outside your fourth story window, tapping at the glass, scratching it with those bony fingers. You don’t have to hear it creeping beneath your bed or calling your name from the closet. And you don’t know what it’s like when it comes, not alone, but with another… a cackling, squeaking pestilent thing with sharp teeth and a lurid baby-doll face.
I hope you never have to find out.
But if you do, if you are named as I have been named by that horrible dummy, then do what I should have done right from the first: burn the McBanes out. Burn that house and let the fire destroy everything inside. It will be a cleansing and a welcome relief for Ronny McBane who has suffered for his sins again and again. A purging. But whatever you do, stay out of the attic. Don’t go up there like I did. Don’t make that fatal mistake.
The letter ended there.