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.

When the Moon Turned Red ©️

It was one of those warm Los Angeles nights where the heat doesn’t settle — it breathes. We’d left the windows open, not because we needed air, but because it made everything feel freer, looser, less confined. Roman was away in London. I was eight and a half months pregnant, swollen and exhausted, but glowing in a way only new mothers understand. I had friends over — Jay, Abigail, Voytek. People I trusted, people I loved. That house on Cielo Drive, for all its oddities, felt like a cradle suspended between earth and sky.

I had just finished brushing my hair in the dim mirror when I heard something strange — a crunching noise in the gravel drive, not urgent, but deliberate. I remember freezing, my hand halfway through the motion. You know how sometimes your instincts tap you on the shoulder before your brain catches up? That was the moment. A presence, like static in the air.

Jay was talking in the other room. Laughter, muffled music. Then silence.

Then the scream.

Not mine — not yet. His.

It was short. Cut off. I walked into the hall and looked toward the front room, and suddenly there she was.

A girl — young, wild-eyed, filthy, barefoot — standing inside my home like she’d grown out of the floorboards. She held a knife, but it wasn’t the blade that terrified me. It was the smile. The kind of grin children draw on cartoon monsters — wide, thrilled, absolutely vacant.

Behind her, more came. A tall man with dead eyes. A wiry boy muttering under his breath, face twitching like a broken marionette. Another girl — darker, heavier, chanting something I couldn’t make out.

Time unraveled then. What happened wasn’t a scene — it was a flood. I remember voices, commands that made no sense. “Pig.” “Rise.” “Kill the pigs.” They weren’t talking to us — they were talking through us. Like we were props in their theater of apocalypse.

I begged.

I wasn’t ashamed of it. I begged them to let me live, not for me — but for the baby. “Please. You can kill me after he’s born,” I said. I remember the way my voice cracked — not with weakness, but with conviction. I thought a mother’s plea would mean something.

The girl smiled.

She told me, “You’re gonna die, and that’s all there is to it.”

Then the knives came down. Again. Again. Again.

There’s a moment when pain becomes static — not because you stop feeling it, but because your mind splits. I remember seeing Jay on the floor, lifeless, face-down. I remember Abigail trying to crawl. Voytek screaming in Polish. The floor slippery. The air thick.

And through it all, I felt this — presence. He wasn’t there, but he was. Charles Manson. The conductor. The myth. The void in human shape.

He sent them. Told them to do something “witchy.” And they obeyed. Not because they were hypnotized — but because they believed him. That’s the horror people misunderstand. It wasn’t mind control. It was faith — the kind that grows in poisoned soil.

My final thought wasn’t about death. It was about the baby. About how I’d never hold him. About how Roman would come home to silence.

And then it was over.

They made headlines. They made cult lore. They made nightmares.

But I was a person. Not a symbol. Not a scream in someone else’s story. My name was Sharon. I was 26. I had dreams. I had love. I had a child growing inside me.

And that night, madness walked through my door — wearing the faces of children who thought they were angels of some twisted revelation.

But let it be known: I did not go quietly.

I fought with everything I had — because love does that.

Because mothers do that.

Because I was real.

And I still am.