There is a smell that comes before she does. Frangipani. The graveyard flower of the Malay world, white petals planted among headstones because the living thought the dead deserved something beautiful. The scent drifts through the dark, sweet and thick, and then it shifts. The sweetness curdles. What you smell now is rot. She is close. The Malay peoples of Southeast Asia call her a Pontianak. The word is a contraction of perempuan mati beranak: "woman who died in childbirth." She is the ghost of a mother who bled out on a birthing mat, or was killed by a lover, or simply died in a world where women died bringing life into it with devastating regularity. She wears white. Her hair falls past her waist, covering the back of her neck where the hole is. Her nails are long enough to open a man from throat to belly. She is beautiful. She is always beautiful first. In this episode, we trace the Pontianak from the ancient hantu taxonomy of the Malay Archipelago, through the ethnographic records of Walter William Skeat and R.O. Winstedt, to the 1957 Cathay Keris film that made her the most recognized ghost in Southeast Asian cinema. She belongs to a constellation of female spirits born from the violence of childbirth: the Langsuir with the hole in her neck, the Penanggalan with her trailing viscera, and the Pontianak herself, the dead mother returned with claws and hunger and a face that makes you lean closer before it changes. The legend carries a detail that cuts deeper than any claw. A nail driven into the cavity at the back of her neck transforms the Pontianak into a beautiful, obedient wife. She forgets her rage. She becomes everything the culture wants a woman to be. The nail suppresses her. The nail domesticates her. The act of driving iron into her body to make her compliant is the same dynamic that killed her in the first place, wearing a different face. The solution is the problem. The legend knows this. It has always known. This is a story about the women who died badly and came back hungry. About the smell of flowers shifting to the smell of what was buried under them. And about the sound she makes when she is hunting: a baby's cry, loud when she is far away, soft when she is close enough to touch. If the crying gets quieter, do not follow it. She is already behind you. Folklore Reborn turns real legends from around the world into stories worth hearing and tabletop adventures worth playing. Follow us wherever you get your podcasts. The old stories were warnings. LINKS Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Artaxios Our Website: https://artaxios.com ## Tags folklore, mythology, horror, storytelling, Malaysia, Perak, Pontianak, Malay, hantu, vampire, childbirth, frangipani, dark folklore, TTRPG, Folklore Reborn