Or should I say the legend of the bride's corps? It is a legend of La Pascualita.
It is a story about young woman, who was very pretty. She was living in Mexico, in a family of the owner of bridal dresses saloon. On the day of her wedding she was bitten by the spider, in some versions it is not a spider, it is a scoprio.
Her parents loved he so much, and because of that they rejected to bury her, instead of that, they made the doll out of her, and they have put her in the store. She is there since 1930. The original store owners died, but the manequin is still there.
She looks like she is real.
Many scientist say that if she was a balsamed body, she would change color, her eveys would get dry, and as the time is passing, her eyes would disappear.
Many people from the small town where this store is located, can swear that they have seen her eyes following them, while they were in the store, also many people said that they have seen her moving.
There is one more legend that says that during the night, she is waling around the town, and every single morning, she is in the store, in new dress, waiting for new visitors to come to see her.
Even some workers from the store said that they have seen some veird things. One of the workers said that her hads are worm, and another said that vains on her legs are visible.
Maybe,she is made out of silicone, but in 1930, silicone was not one of the materals that were used for making dolls for the stores. Maybe, she is made out of wax, maybe she is even a real body, under the wax, like those figures from the House of Wax . But, even if she is, what about her eyes? What are they made from?
What do you think about La Pascualita?
Local legend holds that La Pascualita is the preserved corpse of the original shop owner's daughter, who died tragically on her wedding day.Embalmed corpses are not an unheard-of tourist attraction. Several popes are on view at the Vatican and visitors still flock to see Lenin’s preserved body in Moscow’s Red Square. Yet however macabre, these corpses serve something of a historical purpose. But that’s not quite the case with La Pascualita, a Mexican tourist attraction that has long had people wondering whether it’s a mannequin — or a corpse being used as one.