‘(sponsored content)
‘A Place for Followers of the Gray Witch, Roki,’ is, admittedly, a venue with limited appeal but, for followers of the Gray Witch, Roki, it is certainly a must-see. It is difficult for the author, as somebody who does not subscribe to the teachings of nor follow the Gray Witch, Roki, to describe exactly how ‘A Place for Followers of the Gray Witch, Roki’ is appealing to its audience, per se, but, if you’re a follower of the Gray Witch, Roki, and you enjoy seclusion and forested locales, then it is likely a place for you.
Card-carrying members of the followers of the Gray Witch, Roki, (and, here, the author remains unsure as to whether actual membership cards exist or if it is simply a turn of phrase) are granted free access to ‘A Place for Followers of the Gray Witch, Roki,’ though space is quite limited and all potential visitors are asked to call ahead in order to arrange accommodations. The owners ask that followers of the Gray Witch, Roki arrive in groups no larger than three.
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“Ah ha!” an old woman screams, leaping out from behind a graceful sycamore and stabbing me in the shoulder with what looks to be a ceremonial dagger of some sort.
“What?!” I scream back, before lapsing into comfortable unconsciousness.
When I wake I find myself tied to a chair in a dimly lit room that smells like dust and caramel. A short burst of static draws my attention to the gray-green lump of my backpack on the floor to my left. My shoulder aches under a bandage.
“Hello?” I ask and then, lowering my voice to a whisper, “Radio-person, can you hear me?”
The bag spews another second or so of static but offers nothing further. I wonder if my radio understands enough about me to know I would rather not deal with the police, or if it knows enough about this situation to call them anyway. I wonder, maybe for the first time, how much it knows about me at all.
I shake in the chair, to see if anything about my bindings will come lose, but several bells tied into the rope behind me ring out and I hear footsteps approaching the door. The woman steps into the room, smaller and frailer than I remember from the stabbing. She wears an apron and yellow, rubber gloves, neither of which suggest a particularly positive outcome to this situation.
“Found yourself cut off from Roki, have you?” the woman asks, “Must have something to do with these…”
She points to the ceiling, to the cryptic posters tacked to it. They seem to be a hodgepodge collection of runes and occult symbols, though some simply have the name ‘Roki’ written and crossed out in thick, red ink.
“I’ve been at this for some time, young man, do not underestimate my cunning.”
She pauses and I try to think of something to say that won’t get me stabbed again.
“Curious,” she continues, “Have you no hexes for me? No curses to spit in my face?”
“I…”
“Ha!” she yells, tearing off her apron to reveal a tangled collection of amulets and talismans hanging loosely about her chest, “I bet my life you have no magic so powerful as to…”
“I’m not…”
“Not a follower of the Gray Witch, Roki, eh?” she asks, “Think I haven’t heard that one before? And how did you find this place, exactly?”
“The…”
“The book!” she cries, “The advertisement! The bait to my little trap. Tell me, oh innocent tourist, what about ‘A Place for Followers of the Gray Witch, Roki’ appealed to you? That advertisement was carefully crafted to appeal only to followers of the Gray Witch, Roki which means a follower of the Gray Witch, Roki you must be!”
“Who…”
“My sisters and I have devoted our lives to hunting followers of the Gray Witch, Roki. Patricia hunts the strongest, Clare hunts the most clever, Eliza hunts the most faithful, and I hunt… the rest…”
She pauses so that I can respond.
“You must get a lot of guys like me, then.”
“Much like you, yes,” she says, “And now, we… what?”
“I didn’t…”
“What are you doing?” she screeches, cupping her hands over her ears, “How have you… the talismans! Stop this!”
I shuffle the chair back as she stumbles forward and draws the dagger from her waistband. She screams again and presses her arms to her head.
“Stop!” she cries, “I surrender, I-”
The woman collapses onto the floor, the dagger skittering across the linoleum to my feet. It is very quiet, for a moment, and in that quiet I am eventually able to make out a subtle, whine.
“Traveler,” the voice on the radio startles me, “I’ve done something cruel to the woman’s hearing-aides.”
“Thanks,” I say, trying to scoop up the dagger with my bound feet.
“Wait,” it says, and it sounds as though it may be struggling to suppress a chuckle, “I also made a call.”
The door opens behind me again and I smell… smoke.
-traveler