20 years later, the girl talks about the statue, which was declared non-existent, despite the fact that many, but not all, saw it.
“All my childhood, my grandmother and I were close,” begins Julie Brit. “I remember we drove to Salem, Massachusetts, just before Thanksgiving in 1998. Throughout the bus ride, we chatted, telling each other different funny and not very stories, but then my grandmother abruptly interrupted, turned to me, looked at me in a strange way and said: "Look, this is a statue of a Salem witch!"
And then I saw her: she was standing to her full enormous height, on her head was wearing a pointed hat, in a long dress, in a raincoat of an incomprehensible color, with an ugly face and an angry expression on it. But the people on the bus didn't seem to see the same thing, even though the statue was actually huge.
Later, when we arrived home, we told Dad about this monument, but he assured us that there is only one statue in Salem, and that is a statue of a pilgrim.
Many years later, with this in mind, I searched the Internet for information. Some people claimed that in this town there is a phantom statue of a witch, which for some reason not everyone sees. After that, I was more than once in this place, where a statue of a witch seemed to me, but there was no trace of it."