12/02/2026
🌿The Lady in White - A Terrifying Encounter in Siparia. (1973)🌿
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Edwin George looked like a man who had already outlived himself. The years had hollowed his eyes, bent his frame, yet his words came out sharp, cutting against the silence.
When he finally began, it was to draw me into a memory from the early seventies. One of an encounter that had shaken him deeply, and left his life forever changed.
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It had been a lazy Sunday morning when Edwin set out from Couva, driving south to Siparia where Jacob’s brother was to be wed. Jacob, his best friend, had urged him not to miss it.
The wedding itself was brief, a delicate ceremony of vows and smiles, but soon the streets filled with the sound of drums, the clinking of glasses, and the laughter of neighbours sharing food. The celebration carried on long into night. Edwin stayed late, and so did Jacob, who, by the time the moon was high, swayed drunkenly against him, insisting on a lift home.
"He had a caramel-coloured girl with him," Edwin noted, "In a white dress and white hat, but at that point I didn't really see her face de way she turned her head. So I say no worries I'll carry them and leave one time."
Jacob stumbled out of the front passenger seat when they arrived at his house, disappearing into the bush at the side of the yard without a backward glance.
The woman who had accompanied him though, didn’t move.
For a moment Edwin thought maybe she was intoxicated as well, but when he asked softly if she was staying with Jacob there, her lips parted just enough for a single word to escape... "No."
"As any gentleman would do," he continued, "Since Jacob was soo drunk, I say I'll drop her home. Told her to ride in de front, and we was on our way."
Edwin drove on, following her directions from the small, precise movements of her hand. Right, then left, then into a narrow gravel road that crunched beneath his tires.
The deeper he went, the heavier the air became. Branches reached overhead, grazing the vehicle's roof. The headlights caught only the narrowing track, hemmed in by the press of forest. Edwin frowned, unease gnawing at him. The girl remained perfectly still beside him.
"Then I realised it had no more road to drive," He recalled, "I felt dotish, really dotish for takin' directions from her, blind leadin' de blind I thought. So then now I say I'll drop her back to de weddin' reception because she probably too drunk to know where she goin'."
Edwin cursed under his breath and shifted into reverse. The gear clicked into place, but the tires only spun, grinding against gravel. Sweat broke along his brow. It was then he turned to the woman. Really turned.
She was smiling.
Her lips stretched too wide, and her eyes... her eyes were nothing but black, endless pools that swallowed any light.
Edwin's chest tightened. His hands locked around the wheel. Terror held him so completely that he couldn’t even scream. He folded forward, hands gripping the wheel and closed his eyes. Instinct dragged the familiar words of Psalm twenty-three out of his throat.
“I started to say it loud,” He said, now looking straight at me, "But when I reach 'For thou art with me' somethin' slap me!”
A hard, solid blow to the crown of his head, sharp enough to daze him. For an instant his world blurred.
"When I catch myself an' spin around, de girl not in de car... p**f, just like that... gone. I remember feelin' sick, wanted to vomit, I couldn't understand what de ass was happenin', but I needed to get out of there fast."
The car, unsuprisingly, moved freely again, as though whatever gripped it had let go. Edwin drove hurriedly, back toward the reception. His hands shook on the wheel. His body felt weak.
"When I reach there now, I almost drop-down dead!" Edwin claimed, as he leaned forward on his chair, "Jacob... Jacob sit down playin' cards!"
Edwin had stammered in tears about the woman, and Jacob only blinked.
"You know Jacob never leave de reception, and nobody did know what girl I was talkin' about."
He did not sleep that night. He could not. For years afterward, the memory clung to him. That smile, those black eyes, the utter confusion in his head that followed.
He would come to believe it was no woman at all, but some devil that had tried to claim him. What saved him, he swore, was not his own strength, but by the hand of God. That slap to his head, he believed, was no malice... but mercy, shaking him awake, breaking the spell.
From then on, he surrendered himself wholly to God, leaving behind parties, drink, and the pursuit of women. Yet even as he told me this, with a voice fierce and unwavering, his hand drifted unconsciously to the crown of his head, rubbing the very spot where that unseen blow had landed.
In my opinion, the evidence was telling. It seemed clear, that while devils may be driven out in a day, uprooting a memory is a struggle that endures a lifetime.
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