Update 10/09/25 - There's a new version of the story available below! It's the October only Dark Mode version with a new custom cover.
Thanks for waiting, my pretties. This one is a jumbo-sized Halloween story. 10,000 words, 36 pages, and five chapters of candy-gorging, belly-stuffing bliss.
If you're a member of Imp Tier, I highly recommend upgrading to get access to this story this month!
This story contains the following: stuffing, weight gain, light hypnosis, force-feeding, belly-expansion, lesbian belly play, and of course...bellygasms.
Here's a little sample for all of you~
Phantasm
(fanˌtazəm)
A figment of the imagination; an illusion, apparition, or ghost.
Bellygasm
(behl lee gazəm)
Slang. A sexual act associated with feederism; stimulation to an overly sensitive and stuffed belly, resulting in orgasm.
Published Oct 2, 2013
The vast arboreal wilderness that is now the state of Vermont was not admitted into the Union until 1791, a long contested land once claimed by the French, the British, and other colonial settlers.
It would not see the religious hysteria fearmongering around witches that swept through the colonies until 1809, well over a hundred years after the initial witch trials. Its bout of mass hysteria around witchcraft was isolated to the newly established village of Switchfield (Seven miles southeast of modern day Middlebury, bordering the Pembrose Forest).
At the time of the Switchfield Witch Trial, the village was a mere 15 years old. Its houses were newly built, its roads still made from packed dirt, and its population made up of French families fleeing New France to the north in search of a better life, or pious Virginians seeking ‘God’s Country’ out in the arboreal splendor of the northwest.
It’s historically noteworthy that the primary woman accused of being a witch in the Switchfield Trial was also one of the village’s most respected and monied people at the time: Lady Marjory Mumford.
Lady Mumford was a widow who inherited both her father’s and her husband’s fortunes, putting her in a position of power and influence that was unusual for a woman to hold at the time: She financed the village’s cider mill, as well as its town hall, enabling Switchfield to grow from an isolated village to a prosperous town in a short amount of time.
However, money and influence often leads to corruption and sordid acts, which Lady Mumford was not immune to.
While she never remarried, Lady Mumford called upon many eligible young ladies in town, doting on them often. Though very little can be verified, it is widely believed that Lady Mumford was a lesbian who flaunted the traditional values of patriarchal society. She also was seemingly an admirer of bigger women; with one bit of historical correspondence saying “Ol’ Marjory Mumford was a bodice buster. She was never seen quite as joyous and gay as the night of the harvest festival, where she engaged in a hall game of funneling women full of apple cider til their bellies burst their bodice strings. I aint never seen a group of lasses so willing to get big and bloated as those girls were for Lady Marjory.”
Another quote from school marm Constance Millner was “Lady Marjory has bewitched the young women of Switchfield into lives of indolence and gluttony! She hosts lavish tea parties and socials up in her manor on the hill, and I swear the girls who leave that place are fit to burst! It’s downright indecent! Worse…sometimes I watch some of the fatter girls waddle into that manor…but I don’t recall seeing them waddle out!”
The exact details of the Switchfield Witch Trial have been lost to time, but what is known is that in the autumn of 1809, Lady Marjory and five other women were publicly accused of witchcraft. Through force of violence, these women were taken from their homes and made to stand trial before the town, where they were declared guilty of being a coven of witches, seeking to drag all of Switchfield down into the depths of Hell.
Accounts of these witches’ executions vary. Some say they were drowned, others say they were burned at the stake, while some historians believe all six women died in prison. One colorful story states that Lady Marjory’s execution was a very public affair in Switchfield, and that she was strapped to a table and force fed by the townspeople until her stomach burst.
A punishment fitting her supposed crimes.
Lady Marjory and the women in her coven were all buried in an isolated plot in the Switchfield Cemetery. To this day, legend of their lurid meetings in the Lady’s manor persist, and Switchfield has earned a spot on many Witch Trial tours of the Eastern United States, dubbing it ‘Witchfield’ and a spot for ‘Fat Lesbian Lovers’ to show their respects.
Today, Switchfield has a population of 33,000 people, and is the home to one of Vermont’s more specialized places of higher learning; Switchfield University, which still draws in a large number of out of state students every year.
Elorahn
2025-10-04 18:19:45 +0000 UTC