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ALICE SPILLS THE TEA

Alice Spills The Tea

The Bone Orchard Bargain. Alice Spills the Tea:Short Story

You're about to get a story brewed with extra sass, a splash of eerie intrigue, and a twist of cheeky mischief that only I, your Mad Mad Queen of Ink & Lore can serve. Let’s dive into the next original legend from the ink-splotched pages of my mind…

♤ 
The Bone Orchard Bargain. Alice Spills the Tea:Short Story

☕️ Alice’s Mad Tea Party Presents:

Alice Spills the Tea: The Bone Orchard Bargain

Darlings, you ever hear the one about the Bone Orchard? No? Oh, buckle your corsets and lace up your boots - because this tale doesn’t come with a warning label, just a whispered invitation and a strong suggestion you don’t wander off the path. You’ve been warned.

It all started in a charming little hamlet on the far edge of Nowhere (which, for those unfamiliar with Otherworld geography, is very close to Somewhere You Shouldn’t Be). 

The locals were quiet folks, the sort who wouldn’t say boo to a banshee, mostly because they’d learned long ago not to attract attention. Especially not from her.

They called her Lady Witherwillow.

Of course they did. All ancient, mysterious women living in creepy forests have names like that. It’s practically a union rule.

Now Lady Witherwillow wasn’t technically a witch. She’d tell you that herself - right before offering you tea steeped in nightmare petals and making a casual remark about your future looking awfully flammable. No one really knew where she came from, but the orchard she kept? Oh, that was infamous.

No leaves. No fruit. Just bone-white trees that whispered in the wind and rattled when no breeze blew. They say she grew them herself - from promises never kept, secrets never told, and bones never buried properly. Which, honestly, is an excellent soil mix if you’re into necromantic horticulture.

One evening, just after the blood moon dipped low and the shadows got a bit too friendly, a young man named Tamsen came knocking. Foolish, desperate, and heartbreak-handsome. You know the type.

He’d lost his beloved. Classic setup, tragic violin music playing softly in the background, you get the idea. But rather than cry into his soup like a sensible person, he decided to go asking for miracles from a woman whose apron was literally embroidered with the phrase “What doesn’t kill you, better run.”

Tamsen begged. Bargained. Promised things no mortal should promise. And Lady Witherwillow? Oh, she smiled like all the world was made of broken hearts and her teacup was brimming.

She said yes.

But she didn’t bring his beloved back, oh no. That would be predictable, and Lady Witherwillow loathes being predictable. Instead, she gave him a lantern. Small, silver, glowing softly with a flickering green flame.

“She’s in there,” she whispered, “in pieces. Carry her with care, darling. Don’t spill.”

Now, did she mean literally? Metaphorically? Emotionally? Who knows. Tamsen, poor lamb, never thought to ask. He just took the lantern and ran.

And that, my sweet reckless mortals, is when the bone trees started blooming.

Not fruit - eyes. Hundreds of them. Watching. Blinking. Following him. Judging his haircut.

The orchard changed that night. Roads shifted. Time twisted. And the villagers? They woke to find every single house circled with bone blossoms. Petals shaped like teeth. Smelled like grief.

And Tamsen?

He walks the orchard still. Lantern in hand. Whispering to it. Sometimes laughing. Sometimes weeping. And every so often, someone new wanders in - just to take a peek. Just to see if the legend’s real.

Spoiler: it is.

Moral of the story? Never bargain with a woman who names her trees after your ancestors. And if someone offers you a soul in a lantern? Politely decline and run the other way. Or don’t. Honestly, I’m not your mother.

But if you do go, at least wear fabulous boots. It’s muddy out there - and madness deserves a dramatic entrance.

Yours wickedly, 

Alice, Queen of Ink & Lore


✒ Pip’s Editorial Note

Editorial Desk, Alice’s Mad Tea Party

Before anyone starts googling maps to Nowhere or packing lanterns with emotional baggage, a clarification is due.

The Bone Orchard Bargain is an original legend, born entirely from Alice’s ink-stained imagination. While it borrows familiar bones from folklore anatomy - witch bargains, cursed groves, soul-containment objects, and the timeless “you should have read the fine print” problem - there is no recorded myth, medieval source, or regional tradition that places Lady Witherwillow or her orchard in historical folklore.

A few grounding notes for the lore-conscious:

  • Bone orchards, soul-lanterns, and necromantic horticulture are symbolic constructs, not elements drawn from Celtic, Slavic, or British folk records.
  • Lady Witherwillow is not a folklore witch archetype but an original mythic figure, intentionally designed to feel familiar while remaining untraceable.
  • The tale follows classic fairy-warning structure: desperation, bargain, partial fulfillment, irreversible consequence.
  • Alice leans hard into dark humor and theatrical menace here by design. The sass does not soften the curse. It sharpens it.

Think of this story not as rediscovered lore, but as new mythmaking in the old style - a cautionary tale meant to linger, unsettle, and make you hesitate the next time a charming stranger offers tea and solutions in equal measure.

In short: this is not a legend pulled from the past.
It is one being planted.

And judging by the bones… it’s already growing.

-  Pip
Editorial Desk, Alice’s Mad Tea Party