Written by: Suhani Gupta (DLDAV, India)
written by: Anamika sharma(DLDAV, india)
Lisa's mother warned Lisa to never enter the basement, but Lisa was very curious to find out the creature who used to make sounds of different monsters and dead animals. The basement was nearly closed for about 50 years. there was a thick layer of dust on the door with spiders and lizards crawling. one day Lisa's mother was off to the market so Lisa just opened the door and tiptoed inside a bit. Lisa didn't see anything as Lisa's mother pulled her outside and shut the door and burst in anger like a volcano and started yelling at her. After sometime Lisa's mother gave her some candies and said in her sweetest tone 'not to open the door again' it made Lisa feel better and didn't ask her about what was the boy doing in the basement with no legs and hand ; covered in blood.
Made by-:
Sidhi Mandoliya
Mary is said to be a witch who was executed a hundred years ago for plying the black arts, or a woman of more modern times who died in a local car accident in which her face was hideously mutilated.
Some confuse the mirror witch with Mary I of England, whom history remembers as “Bloody Mary.” An expanded version of that confusion has it that this murdering British queen killed young girls so she could bathe in their blood to preserve her youthful appearance. (That legend more properly attaches to Elizabeth Bathory, a Hungarian countess who lived from 1560 to 1614.)
Mary I of England (1553-1558) was anything but a famed beauty terrified of losing her looks — she was a matronly, fortyish woman who had about as much sense of style as a dust mop. The idea of her bathing in the blood of slaughtered virgins to preserve her loveliness is ludicrous. She came by the moniker “Bloody Mary” because she had a number of Protestants put to death during her reign, as she tried to re-establish Catholicism as the religion of the land after the reigns of her father (Henry VIII, he who married six wives over the course of his lifetime and established himself as the head of a new religion rather than tolerate the Pope’s saying he couldn’t divorce wife #1 to marry wife #2) and her brother (Edward VI, who ruled after Henry died but passed away himself at the age of 16). Mary was a devoutly religious woman who saw what she was doing as the saving of her subjects’ souls from eternal damnation, and in those times — as crazy as this sounds now — the eternal wellbeing of a soul was deemed far more important than the comparatively fleeting life of a person. That bringing the country back to Catholicism would also safeguard her throne was also a major consideration.
Mary I was the half sister of Elizabeth I (1558-1603). Both were daughters of Henry VIII, but Mary’s mother was Katherine of Aragon and Elizabeth’s mother was Anne Boleyn. Elizabeth I became Queen upon Mary’s death. During her reign, Elizabeth returned the country to Protestantism and in the process ordered the deaths of at least as many of her subjects as her half-sister did during her time on the throne, yet she earned the sobriquet “The Virgin Queen” (she never married) rather than any version of “Bloody Elizabeth.”
Some muddling of this “murdering queen” variant claim that Mary, Queen of Scots (1542-1567) is the “bloody Mary” of mirror summonings. Though this Mary was indeed a vain and foolish woman, history does not know her as a murderous one. (Well, she did have a hand in doing away with a husband. But she didn’t go after her subjects en masses, as did Mary I of England.)
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CREDITS
https://www.dhakagram.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/madkill.jpg
https://www.deviantart.com/midorinemurase/art/Hide-and-Seek-SF-A2-Miki-Special-Halloween-410562490