Daddy's Christmas Angel

Monday, March 1, 2021

A Ghostly Vision at Rose Hall Plantation

When I first visited Rose Hall Great House, the scenic beauty of the grounds captivated my imagination. Although there were others in the gardens, a somber quiet surrounded me. This adventuresome trip to Jamaica was one of more than a dozen that would follow in the next few years.

The air that January day was like perfumed velvet, and the lush foliage was like nothing I had seen before. Everything around me reminded me of a little reading book from my childhood, Visits Far and Near. I longed to travel. I longed to experience the adventure of the tropics.

I knew as I stood in the garden that someday I would write about Jamaica, about Rose Hall, about the visions growing in my imagination. Or was it my imagination?

A ghostly quality surrounded me that beautiful warm day. Somehow, I was surrounded in fog. The people around me disappeared into a far-off gray shroud. Their voices faded into nothingness.

Then I saw her, Annie Palmer, the mistress of Rose Hall, the woman who tortured her slaves, the woman who killed her lovers. There were blood-stained floors. I’d read about them.

 Annie Palmer was a woman of mystery. She lived for a while in Haiti where she learned the ways of voodoo, ways to control the slaves who worked her land and cared for the spacious Caribbean mansion.

 Her dark hair glowed and sparkled through the mysterious fog. Annie Palmer would be part of my book. She would be the reason for my heroine’s confused connection to the past and to Rose Hall Great House.

 Was she real? I wondered as her face grew more obscure in the dim morning light.

 Perhaps not, I thought, as her form blended with and was lost in the fog. Perhaps not, but I will make her real in my story.

 

Read more about Annie Palmer in my novel Hearts Across Forever. See how good overcomes evil. Read the prologue (with horses that remind me of Heartland) on Amazon.

 

4 comments:

Alex J. Cavanaugh said...

It's amazing where our imagination takes us, isn't it?

Notes Along the Way with Mary Montague Sikes said...

Alex, yes!

L. Diane Wolfe said...

And now she's immortalized forever in your story.

Notes Along the Way with Mary Montague Sikes said...

Diane, yes, so true!