One Jaunary day in 1939 seventeen-year old Maria Talarico
was walking with her grandmother through her hometown of Catanzaro, in southern
Italy. As the two passed a bridge, Maria
suddenly southern Italy. As the two passed a bridge, Maria suddenly stopped,
started at the riverbank, and collapsed. Only after being taken home did she
recover consciousness and then astonished her family by addressing her mother
in a gruff male voice.
Pepe Veraldi had drowned himself nearly three years
previously, on February 13, 1936. His body had been found under the bridge
where Maria had collapsed. Had his spirit taken over Maria’s body?
Maria asked for a piece of paper and wrote a few words in
Veraldi’s handwriting. She then demanded wine and cigarettes, and began to play
cards with the people gathered around her, calling them Toto, Rosario, Elio,
and Damiano, names of the dead man’s friends.
Matters took an even more suprising turn when Veraldi’s
mother arrived. Still speaking in Veraldi’s voice, Maria declared: “My friends
murdered me; they threw me into the river. Then , as I lay there, they beat me
with a piece of iron and tried to make the whole thing look like suicide.”
Maria then fled from the house, ran to the bridge, and threw
herself off of it, shouting “Leave me alone! Why are you beating me?”
On the ground below, she lay in precisely the same position
as had Veraldi when he had been found. The dead man’s mother approached Maria
and commanded that her son leave the girl’s body. Maria opened her eyes, looked
about, and stood up. She had returned to normal; Veraldi was gone.
No one knew what to make of the bizarre incident at first.
The police report on Veraldi’s death suggested that he might have died in the
way the possessed girl had described. But the friends she had named could not,
or would not, cast further light on the mystery. Besides, Toto had immigrated
to South America; Elio was dead.
Then in 1951, Toto, otherwise known as Luigi Marchete, wrote
to Veraldi’s mother from Tucuman, Argentina; he confessed to the murder of her
son. In the letter, Marchete told of the attention Veraldi had been giving to
Lillina, Marchete’s wife. Marchete had beaten Veraldi with an iron bar, with
fatal results. After he and his three friends had tried to make the death look
like suicide, Marchete had fled to Argentina. To ease his conscience, he was
now leaving the fortune he had made to the victim’s mother.
The letter confirmed Maria’s extraordinary episode twelve
years before. The spirit of Pepe Veraldi had, it seems, briefly taken
possession of the body of Maria Talarico in order to reveal the true
circumstances of his death.
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