
Santa Claus Easter Bunny Tooth Fairy ©️



It was sometime around supper, the Alabama sun finally bleeding out over the pines, painting the road in that syrupy, honeyed kind of light that makes you forget just how mean the world can be. We were riding in that beat-up side-by-side behind the cotton fields, wheels kicking up dust like red ghosts in the rearview.
She sat up front with her husband, her hair pinned neat like Sunday morning, even if it was only Friday. He was a Yankee—God help him—all tight shoulders and Indiana jaw, gripping the wheel like it might betray him. He didn’t fit in the seat or the silence. Didn’t know how to let the heat speak. His shirt was too clean, his mouth too closed, and Lord, did he drive like a man waiting to be punished.
She didn’t say much. Just looked out toward the tree line, where the light makes things look farther away than they are. She wasn’t angry. No, it was something quieter than that. Like maybe she’d made peace with something awful, or maybe she’d just grown too tired to pick the fight.
Their boy was in the middle, covered in dust and grinning like a possum. Laughing, wild, free. He didn’t know about inheritance yet. Didn’t know blood could bend time. He just liked the speed and the wind and being between them.
I sat in the back, out of the way, watching like I always do. I wasn’t there for the ride. I was there for the reveal.
And sure enough, it came.
I blinked. Just once. Nothing dramatic.
And when I opened my eyes, it wasn’t her and that Yankee at all. It was my paternal grandparents. My grandfather with his thundercloud eyes and rough hands, and my grandmother, stiff and sugar-laced, the kind of woman who could apologize and wound you in the same breath. They were sitting there, plain as day, but wearing different skin.
It was the way he held the wheel—like he wanted to win at driving. And the way she turned her head slightly away, not out of fear but survival. I saw it all—the old fights, the unsaid things, the long silences filled with obligation. I saw the dirt that never left the bloodline.
And that Yankee—poor fool—he didn’t even know he was wearing a ghost.
Because that’s the trick in the South: we don’t pass down heirlooms. We pass down wounds. And they ride with us, talk through us, love through us. Even when the voice has a northern accent and no idea what it’s inherited.
I sat there, just breathing, just listening to the wheels grind over the land my people never left. And I thought—Lord, she married a Yankee. But the curse? The curse stayed Southern.

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.
