Bodies in the Lowcountry ©️

It was never just about murder, not really. Down in the lowcountry, where the oaks hang low like secret keepers and the humidity wraps around your neck like a soft noose, the Murdaugh name was more than a name—it was a spell. A charm passed from man to man, whispered in courtrooms and golf courses, murmured at barbecues like a family hymn. You didn’t win cases in Hampton County. The Murdaughs decided who won. For nearly a hundred years, they held the gavel and the gun, sometimes at the same time.

But something had turned inside that bloodline, a rot that smelled sweet like bourbon gone bad. You could see it in the boy’s eyes—Paul, they called him Timmy when the drink took over, and that wasn’t just a nickname. That was possession. And Maggie, oh Maggie, a pretty wife in pearls who smiled too long, like she’d read the ending of the story but didn’t know how to rewrite it. She’d begun to drift. Not far, just enough to make Alex feel the old panic—that someone else might own the last piece of him he still respected.

They say Alex snapped. They say opioids, debt, lawsuits. But snapping implies a break. This wasn’t a break. This was a slow pour, like molasses off a blade. It had been coming for years.

See, when men like Alex lose control, they don’t run. They perform. They write a final chapter with sweat on the brow and blood on the soil. If he was going down, he would go down the way Murdaughs were raised to: with narrative. And so, he placed the bodies like punctuation marks. One at the kennel. One a few feet over. A quiet period. A louder exclamation.

But the real tragedy isn’t in the act—it’s in the motive no one wants to say aloud. What if the murders weren’t about escape, but about sacrifice? What if, deep inside that man’s southern-twisted soul, he believed that in order to save the Murdaugh name from the shame of ruin, it had to be baptized in fire? That by removing the son who wrecked boats and futures and the wife who was slipping out of orbit, he could freeze the Murdaugh myth in place before it collapsed under the weight of its own lies?

And maybe he thought he could hold the center. That Buster, the quiet one, the last son standing, could rise from the ashes with a new face and the old name polished clean. They always save one in these family operas. One boy to walk the wreckage and pretend the house wasn’t built on bones.

Now Alex sits in prison, but the lowcountry still trembles with his ghost. And if you drive through Moselle in the blue hours, you’ll feel it. The hush. The heaviness. Like the dirt remembers. Like the air is holding its breath.

Because when old Southern dynasties fall, they don’t go quietly. They go operatic. They go tragic. They go Murdaugh.

Low-Heat, Slow-Burn ©️

The room is thick with something you can’t name. A lazy ceiling fan moves in slow, uneven circles, stirring the warmth but not cooling it. The scent of something foreign lingers—spiced, unfamiliar, maybe perfume, maybe smoke, maybe both. A record spins somewhere in the background, crackling like it’s been played too many times but still hasn’t lost its charm. And then there’s her.

She sits across from you, draped, loose-limbed, unconcerned. A leg crossed over the other, her heel tapping against the air to the rhythm of a song neither of you are really listening to. Her glass of whiskey is half-empty. Yours is untouched. It’s always like this. The dance before the fall.

TEMPTATION (smiling slow, head tilted, watching you through heavy lids, fingers lazily trailing the edge of her glass)

“You’re always so tense when you look at me. Makes me wonder what you’re thinking.”

YOU (exhaling, shifting in your seat, studying the way she moves, the way she doesn’t have to try—she just exists and the room bends around her)

“I’m thinking about leaving.”

TEMPTATION (laughs, low and effortless, like smoke curling in the air, like she already knows the ending to this story)

“You always think about leaving. And yet.”

YOU (eyes flicker to the door, then back to her, pulse slow but deep, the rhythm off just enough to be dangerous)

“And yet.”

TEMPTATION (leans forward, elbows on the table, her skin catching the light, a glint of something gold at her wrist, maybe a bracelet, maybe a handcuff, maybe something else entirely)

“Tell me, why do you come back if all you want is to walk away?”

YOU (rolling the unspoken answer across your tongue like a cigarette unlit, something dangerous, something waiting to burn)

“Maybe I just like testing myself.”

TEMPTATION (smiles like she’s heard it before, like she’s tasted every version of that excuse and found them all sweet, but not quite satisfying)

“Oh, honey. That’s not it.”

YOU (inhales slow, watching her watching you, waiting for her to tell you what she already knows, because she always does, and you always let her.)

TEMPTATION (leans back, stretching like a cat that’s full but still wants to hunt, voice lazy, like a song dripping through the speakers at half-speed.)

“You come back because you like the way it feels. The chase. The almost. The maybe. You like the way I make you forget that you were ever sure about anything.”

YOU (clenching your jaw, but not hard enough to crack, just enough to feel it, just enough to know that she’s right.)

“And what if I want to remember?”

TEMPTATION (a pause, then a smirk, then a slow, slow shake of her head.)

“That’s cute.”

YOU (laughs under your breath, shaking your head too, but for different reasons.)

“You think I’ll give in first.”

TEMPTATION (shrugs, one shoulder slipping bare, but she doesn’t fix it, doesn’t care, doesn’t need to.)

“I don’t think, baby. I know.”

YOU (reaches for the whiskey, finally, because your hands need something to do, because her eyes are waiting, because she’s already made her move, and now it’s yours.)

“What if this time, you’re wrong?”

TEMPTATION (leans forward again, elbows back on the table, hands folded, her chin resting lightly on them, lazy, knowing, devastating.)

“Then I guess we’ll both have a new story to tell.”

The fan hums. The record crackles. The whiskey burns. She is still watching, and you are still here.

And yet.