A Creative World Bible · Draft I
& The Twelve Witches
A world of cozy magic, ancient forests, and twelve young witches finding their place in a Salem that was never cursed — only kept secret.
The world of Wickhallow is our world, but differently remembered. It is 1600s Salem, Massachusetts — but here, history bent another way. There were no witch trials. There was no burning season, no hangings, no hysteria written into law. Instead, Salem holds a secret that is not quite a secret: a parallel town exists beside the mundane one, known to every witch and to a careful handful of trusted humans. Everyone in the magical world knows of it.
Magic is ancient, diverse, and real. Different cultures across the world have developed their own distinct traditions, their own languages of power, their own relationships with spirits and the natural world. No tradition is superior. They simply speak different dialects of the same vast tongue. Wickhallow is the place where all of those dialects meet.
This world is cozy and folkloric at its heart — warm candlelight, forest paths, herbalist shops, mugs of something steaming. But folklore has always carried darkness in its roots, and this world does not shy away from that. Old magic has teeth. Forests remember cruelty. Some debts are older than the school itself.
Wickhallow — from the Old English wic (a dwelling, a village) and hallow (sacred, or hollow ground) — is a town that exists slightly to the side of Salem proper. Not invisible exactly, but overlooked. Humans walking past it tend to find their eyes sliding away to more interesting things. It is school, marketplace, sanctuary, and common ground all at once.
The Candlewick
Tavern & Gathering Place
The warm heart of Wickhallow. Low ceilings, long wooden tables, and a fire that hasn't gone out in two hundred years. The menu changes seasonally, offerings include house witchbrews — hot spiced drinks made with magical botanicals — alongside heavier fare. Rumored to be the place where every important alliance in Wickhallow's history was struck over a mug.
Thornhaven
Bookshop & Curiosity Archive
The oldest bookshop in Wickhallow, stocked with texts that have no mundane editions, hand-copied grimoires, and star charts that update themselves. The current keeper inherited the role from a long line of them. Thornhaven also acts as a quiet mail exchange — students who receive correspondence from the outside world often find it waiting here.
The School
Academy · Name TBD
The central institution of Wickhallow. Students arrive for a period of concentrated study — learning fundamentals that cross all traditions (herbalism, astrology, foundational spellcraft, familiar bonding) while deepening their own inherited practices. Structure is still being developed: classes? Apprenticeships? Seasonal residencies?
The Apothecary
Herbalist & Supply Shop · Name TBD
Where students acquire their working supplies. Bundles of dried herbs hang from every beam. Jars of things line the walls floor to ceiling. The proprietor knows remedies for ailments no mundane healer has heard of, and is a reliable source of quiet advice for students who don't want to bother the faculty.
The Market Green
Open-Air Market
A small cobblestone square that hosts a rotating market. Travelers passing through sell ingredients, tools, texts, and curiosities from their home traditions. This is often where students encounter magic different from anything taught in the school proper — and where the wider world of witchcraft becomes real to them.
The Headmistress's House
Residence · School Leadership
Set slightly apart from the rest of Wickhallow, at the edge nearest Mirrowood. A large, old house with too many windows and lights that are sometimes on at hours they shouldn't be. Students are not forbidden from approaching — but most don't. The Headmistress's daughter lives here too, which comes with its own complicated reputation.
Travel to Wickhallow is made possible through a network of ancient mirrors, predating the town and possibly predating the school by centuries. Who placed them — and why — is a matter of some debate. Each mirror is hidden in a deliberately overlooked or forgotten space. They do not advertise themselves.
Some humans know about the mirrors — not through magical ability, but through inherited agreement. A handshake deal, struck with a witch long ago, passed down through a family line. The bookshop keeper does not look too closely at the attic mirror. In exchange, unusual books arrive. Special edition volumes with no publisher listed. Ingredients for recipes that have no mundane source. This arrangement is old and mostly comfortable. Breaking it would be considered very poor form on both sides.
Mirror Rules (working draft):
Mirrowood is the ancient forest that encircles Wickhallow on all sides. It is the oldest thing in the area — older than the town, older than the school, possibly older than the mirrors. The trees here are vast and close together. The light changes quality once you step beneath the canopy. Students are told the forest has moods.
A human who wanders into Mirrowood will walk for what feels like hours — and emerge at the exact spot they entered, slightly confused about the time. The forest does not harm them. It simply sends them home. This is not cruelty. It is a very old boundary, maintained without anger.
For witches, Mirrowood is a different place entirely. The forest knows them — not by name, but by what they carry inside them. It parts for those it recognizes. It can be walked safely, though students are strongly advised not to go too deep alone until their second year of study.
The school does not forbid the deep forest out of fear. It forbids it because some things in there are older than the school and do not follow its rules. A witch who goes deep enough might emerge changed — not cursed exactly, but carrying something new that takes time to understand. Some faculty members have made this journey. They do not discuss it in mixed company.
Every witch has a familiar — a creature bound to them not by capture but by something older and more mutual than choice. The bond exists before the ritual. The ritual simply opens the door.
The summoning takes place in Mirrowood, near the beginning of a student's time at Wickhallow. Each witch enters the forest alone, at dusk, carrying nothing but themselves. They wait. The familiar finds them. The creature that appears has been connected to that witch since birth, drawn toward them across whatever distance separated them. When the bond is recognized, it is recognized by both.
A familiar is not a pet. It is not a servant. It is something closer to a second self — one that moves through the world differently. Familiars have their own personalities, their own opinions, and their own limits. A witch who treats her familiar poorly will find her magic responding accordingly.
Familiar Rarity:
Wickhallow draws twelve students for its foundational class — one per month of the year, one per magical tradition from across the world. These are the living traditions: practices that exist in the real world, historically documented, and still active in some form today. Each card in the set will carry accurate information about the tradition it represents.
Names and fuller character notes are found in Chapter VII. This table is the tradition reference.
| Month | Tradition | Region / Origin | What It Is |
|---|---|---|---|
| January | Hekate / Chthonic MagicHekatean Witchcraft | Greece / Ancient Mediterranean | Magic of crossroads, moon phases, liminal spaces, keys, and torchlight. Hekate is one of the oldest deities connected to witchcraft; her practitioners work thresholds — dusk, doorways, the space between. A very real and active modern practice. |
| February | SeidrNorse Witchcraft | Scandinavia / Norse | Practiced by the völva — a staff-bearing seeress who wove fate, walked between worlds, and spoke prophecy. Odin himself practiced it, which was considered scandalous. Deeply tied to the concept of fate as something that can be read and potentially altered. |
| March | Brujería / CuranderismoLatin American Folk Magic | Mexico / Latin America | Brujería is the broader tradition; Curanderismo is its healing subdivision — spiritual cleansing (limpia), plant medicine, and working with saints and spirits. A living blend of Indigenous and Spanish Catholic influences. Practical, embodied, and deeply relational. |
| April | Green Witchcraft / Celtic PaganismThe Old Ways | British Isles / Gaul | Nature-based magic rooted in the Wheel of the Year (Samhain, Beltane, Imbolc, etc.), herb craft, the Triple Goddess, and sacred groves. Pre-Christian Celtic and Druidic practice. Seasonal, intuitive, deeply tied to the earth's cycles. The foundation modern Wicca draws most heavily from. |
| May | Hoodoo / RootworkAmerican Folk Magic | American South (West African roots) | American folk magic with deep West African roots, shaped profoundly by the experience of enslaved people. Works with roots, herbs, candles, condition oils, and petition papers. Not a religion — a practice. Intensely practical. Distinct from Voodoo and important to represent accurately. |
| June | Haitian VodouVodou / Lwas | Haiti / West Africa | A living religion with West African Vodun roots. Practitioners work with the Lwa — powerful spirits who serve as intermediaries between the divine and humans. Each Lwa has personality, preferences, colors, and sacred days. Requires relationship and reciprocity. Often misrepresented; deserves careful, respectful handling. |
| July | OnmyōdōWay of Yin and Yang | Japan | Court magic practiced by onmyōji. Draws from yin-yang cosmology, the five elements, celestial divination, and the warding of spirits and demons. Elegant, structured, and rooted in astronomical observation. Abe no Seimei is the most famous historical practitioner. |
| August | HekaKemetic Magic | Ancient Egypt | Heka is both the Egyptian word for magic and a deity who embodies it. Practitioners worked with amulets, sacred geometry, spoken words of power, and the True Names of things — the idea that knowing something's real name grants power over it. Symbol-heavy and language-centric. |
| September | Vedic / Tantric MagicMantra & Yantra | India | Vedic magic works through mantra (sacred sound), yantra (sacred geometry), and ritual rooted in Hindu cosmology. Tantra specifically works with sacred energy — often misunderstood in the West as purely sexual, it is a deeply philosophical and ritualistic tradition. Sound and vibration as the building blocks of reality. |
| October | Slavic WitchcraftThe Hearth & The Wood | Russia / Eastern Europe | Baba Yaga is the most famous icon, but Slavic witchcraft is far broader: domestic hearth magic, forest spirits (leshy, rusalka), working with the dead, and protective charms. Wild and domestic simultaneously — the warmth of the hearth fire and the danger of the deep wood are never far apart. |
| November | Sihr / Djinn MagicArabic Occult Tradition | Middle East / North Africa | Arabic occult tradition working with djinn (beings of smokeless fire — not the genie stereotype), protective talismans, and divination. Pre-Islamic folk practice that persisted in complex relationship with religious life after. The magic itself is treated as neutral; the practitioner's intent is what defines it. |
| December | Shamanism / Spirit WalkingThe First Magic | Siberia / Central Asia (origin) | The oldest shamanic tradition — entering trance states to travel spirit realms, negotiating with spirits on behalf of a community, healing soul-sickness. The word "shaman" itself comes from the Evenki language of Siberia. A December / winter solstice placement feels right for a spirit-walker who crosses between worlds. |
Full character sheets to be developed collaboratively. Below are the established archetypes and story seeds. Names, appearances, and fuller backstories are to be added as decisions are made.
The Headmistress's Daughter
Tradition TBD · Month TBD · Familiar TBD
She has lived in Wickhallow her whole life. She has never had the experience of arriving here for the first time, wide-eyed and uncertain. The school is home. Her mother is the school. This has never been straightforward.
The weight she carries is not expectation exactly — it is the shape of a mold someone has already decided she should fill. She either rises to it, is crushed by it, or more likely: both, depending on the season. Her arc is discovering that her magic belongs to her, not her mother's legacy.
Possible tradition: Hekate / Chthonic — Liminal power passed mother-to-daughter has strong poetic weight. Or perhaps a tradition her mother does not practice, complicating inheritance.
The Twelve · Slots 2–12
All traditions listed in Chapter VI · To be named and developed
Each of the eleven remaining witches arrives at Wickhallow from her home country or region, through her local mirror, carrying her tradition with her. The story of the cohort is partly the story of twelve different magical languages learning to be spoken in the same room — with all the friction, wonder, and unexpected harmony that implies.
Character development to continue in subsequent sessions. This section will expand.
She runs Wickhallow — or at least, she runs the school. The town has been here longer than she has and has its own opinions about who is in charge of what. She is respected, possibly feared by students, and clearly complicated by the fact of her daughter being enrolled in the current cohort. Her magical tradition, full history, and relationship with the older powers in Mirrowood are all to be developed. She is not a villain. Whether she is entirely good is a more interesting question.
Things that need decisions before the world can be fully built. These are not problems — they are where the good story lives. To be answered collaboratively.
Wickhallow World Bible · Draft I · Created with Rosewing & Claude · 2025
Living document — to be expanded as canon is established