Hacer’s Jinn Wedding | True Horror Story
True Horror Story | The life of Hacer, envied for her beauty, turns into a nightmare due to jinn infestation caused by her friend’s magic, leading to her tragic end. A forgotten village tragedy and the horrific consequences of jealousy.
I heard this from the village elders, who were told by their elders. Long ago, when the village was newly established, there was a girl named Hacer. This girl was one of the most beautiful girls in the village. All the young men in the village wanted to marry her, but her father wouldn’t give her to anyone.
Hacer also had a close friend. This friend was in love with a boy from the village. However, she learned that this boy was also in love with Hacer. Even though they were close friends, she began to envy Hacer’s beauty immensely. So much so that she slowly started harboring hatred towards her.
Time passed, and that young man took his family to ask for Hacer’s hand in marriage. The families agreed, and wedding preparations began. Unable to accept this, her friend devised a sinister plan and sought help from a notorious sorcerer in the neighboring village to cast a spell on the girl. As a result of this spell, two male jinn became attached to the girl. One of the jinn fell in love with the girl and married her.
In the early days, the events started with minor illusions. Hacer began waking up screaming from nightmares at night. Later, she would constantly stand in front of the mirror, talking and laughing to herself. Her family couldn’t make sense of it. In the following days, when they woke their daughter in the morning, they started noticing her nightgown was covered in mud. Although they asked her what this meant, they couldn’t get a clear answer. Hacer couldn’t remember anything about what happened at night.
Suspicious, the father began to monitor his daughter’s every move. One night, as the girl got out of bed and went outside, her father noticed and immediately followed her. Hacer walked strangely, barefoot, swaying back and forth, towards the Reed Creek (Sazlık Deresi) and started making movements as if hugging someone. Seeing his daughter acting nonsensically, the father intervened, grabbed her by the arm, and took her home. As soon as the girl entered her room, she had a fit of madness, throwing and breaking everything in the room.
When similar incidents recurred in the following days, her father decided he couldn’t deal with it anymore, saying, “Let her husband deal with it from now on,” and sped up the wedding preparations. The girl had lost weight, her face pale. Her face was white as a sheet, and the circles under her eyes were dark purple from lack of sleep. Although the groom was a bit scared by the girl’s condition, he didn’t dwell on it much, thinking, “She’ll get better over time.”
The wedding day arrived. Tables were set, food prepared. The father went upstairs to get his daughter, who was in her room to put on her wedding dress. He called out to her room several times but got no response. Finally, he shoulder-barged the door open and couldn’t find Hacer in the room. Strangely, the wedding dress was on the bed, covered in mud. The father immediately ran outside, called out to the crowd gathered to fetch the bride, and told them his daughter was missing. The crowd started searching everywhere for the girl. The father searched the entire village, starting with Reed Creek, but couldn’t find his daughter.
As the search continued, news came from the neighboring village at night: They had found Hacer dead in the middle of a barn in the mountains. Her appearance was so horrific that those who saw her were stunned. Hacer lay on her back with her hands and feet twisted backward. Her neck was covered in marks resembling the claws of a wild animal. Her eyes had been gouged out and were dangling from her temples. Her mouth was wide open, reflecting the coldness of death. Writing in a language they didn’t understand was scrawled on the barn walls with the girl’s blood. According to a later translation by someone who knew the language, the sentence on the wall read: “She belongs only to me!”
According to the old woman who owned the barn, her cows made unusual noises during the night. Curious about what was happening, she entered the barn and encountered the horrific scene. She witnessed a black cat licking the blood that had pooled on the floor from Hacer’s body. The moment the cat made eye contact with the woman, it jumped out through the window left open to throw out manure (teşekkür) and fled. The woman gathered the villagers in a state of panic. The father was devastated upon seeing his daughter in that condition. The next day, they buried Hacer. The entire village talked about how the jinn had kidnapped and killed the girl.
After that day, people reported seeing a girl in a wedding dress at Reed Creek. Those who saw that girl would start having hallucinations after some time and lose their minds. That’s why, cousin, I hesitated. Nobody around here approaches Reed Creek at night. Forget night, they hesitate even to go during the day.
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