The story of Mrs. Mary Reeser
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The
last time 67-year-old widow Mrs. Mary Reeser was seen alive was on July
1, 1951. Her son, Dr. Richard Reeser, and her landlady, Mrs. Pansy M.
Carpenter, who had been visiting said goodnight at about 9:00 pm and left
Mrs. Reeser sitting in her easy chair in her apartment in St. Petersburg,
Florida. The first sign of
trouble was at 5:00 am. Mrs. Carpenter was awakened by the smell of smoke
and, assuming it was a water pump in the garage that had been overheating,
she turned the pump off and went back to sleep.
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Mrs.
Reeser's 170 pounds had been reduced to less than ten pounds of charred
material. Only her left foot remained intact, still wearing a slipper,
burnt off at the ankle but otherwise undamaged. Also found were her liver,
now fused to a lump of vertebrae, and, stranger still, her skull... shrunk
to the size of a baseball by the intense heat. What could have burned
Mrs. Reeser so fiercely without causeing more damage to her surroundings?
Experts pointed out that a temperature of 2500 degrees is necessary for
such a thorough cremation. A cigarette igniting her cloathing would never
have produced that temperature. The electrical outlet had melted only
after the fire had begun, so couldn't be the source. An FBI pathologist
tested for gasoline and other accelerants; there were none. Even lighting
had been concidered, but there had been none in St. Petersburg that night.
Months after the occurence, the Chief of Police and the Chief of Detectives signed a statement attributing the fiery death of Mary Reeser to falling asleep with a cigarette in her hand. Although already shown to be an impossibility, the declaration served to publically close the investigation. The true cause of Mary Reeser's impossible immolation is still unknown... and, possibly, unknowable.
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Ancient Whispers |