Vampires of Tucson — An Elder’s Origin
Desert Horror-Noir
The Constant
Born Salem, 1676 — Changed 1697 — Her story lives only here
She was Sarah Bishop once — a Puritan girl born in Salem in 1676, daughter of a mother hanged as a witch, whose one true friend was a Naumkeag girl named Sings-In-Woods. She fled to the woods and learned to hunt, fell to the oldest trade in Portsmouth, and on her twenty-first birthday, watching the ships ride at anchor in the harbor, she said yes to the Change.
She took the name Betsy Bishop and never set it down. A pirate on the open seas and then a pirate of the rail lines; a Creole plantation mistress, a robber of stagecoaches and trains, the Elder who built Tucson out of Spanish doubloons. Twenty notes across three centuries, from Salem to the Sonoran desert. She is the constant; America is the variable.
The Constant tells Betsy Bishop’s complete origin across twenty Substack Notes — first person, retrospective, in her own voice. From a Salem girl whose mother was hanged, through a century of piracy and a century of westward grift, to the Tucson empire she built and the doubloon that remembers every name she has taken. Posts on the Vampires of Tucson Substack.
Week 1 — Mortal: Salem to Portsmouth (1676–1697)

0.2 — Mon
The Hidden Friendship
Sep 8

0.3 — Tue
The Burning
Sep 9

0.4 — Wed
The Feral Years
Sep 10

0.5 — Thu
Portsmouth
Sep 11

0.6 — Fri
The Offer
Sep 12
Week 2 — Pirate: Nassau to New Orleans (1697–1775)

0.7 — Mon
The Stowaway
Sep 15

0.8 — Tue
Nassau
Sep 16

0.9 — Wed
Boom-Boom Bishop
Sep 17

0.10 — Thu
The Dignified Southern Woman
Sep 18

0.11 — Fri
Sold
Sep 19
Week 3 — Revolution to Rails (1775–1854)

0.12 — Mon
The Reunion
Sep 22

0.13 — Tue
The Redcoat
Sep 23

0.14 — Wed
St. Louis, Quiet
Sep 24

0.15 — Thu
The False-Bottom Wagon
Sep 25

0.16 — Fri
The Doubloon Trade
Sep 26
Week 4 — Loss and After (1861–1880s)

0.17 — Mon
The Goodbye
Sep 29

0.18 — Tue
Word of Death
Sep 30

0.19 — Wed
Portia
Oct 1

0.20 — Thu
1877
Oct 2

0.21 — Fri
The Coin
Oct 3