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Excerpt

Excerpt

The Last Days of Dogtown

Chapter One: The Death of Abraham Wharf

Judy Rhines decided to take the footpath through the pasture. It
was half the distance of walking all the way down the Commons Road
and back up Dogtown Road and she wanted to get there early enough
to be of help. But the going was slow. The winter of 1814 had
buckled the field with frost and there was black ice in every
hollow. If she didn't consider every step, she might end up as bad
off as Abraham Wharf, who certainly had no need of her hurry.

The cold seemed to add hours and miles to even the shortest journey
through Dogtown. Gloucester, which was barely an hour's walk for a
healthy man in good weather, could seem as remote as Salem in
February. It was a gloomy landscape even on a fine day, with its
rutted thoroughfares and ruined houses and the odd collection of
souls who had washed up into the rocky hills of Cape Ann. At least
it isn't windy, Judy consoled herself.

She was the first to arrive at Easter Carter's house. "My
right-hand friend," said Easter, holding out a shawl for her. "Come
by the fire."

Judy smiled at the tiny woman, hung up her cold-stiffened cloak,
and took shelter in the warm wrap. After the feeling had returned
to her fingertips and cheeks, she squared her shoulders and went
over to take a look at the body of Abraham Wharf, which lay on the
floor in the far corner of the room.

Judy lifted the faded scrap of yellow gingham that covered his face
and chest. It was a shame and a sorrow. Nobody spoke of suicide
much, but Judy wondered if it might be a far more common escape
than anyone suspected. Then it occurred to her that there was a
curious lack of blood on Wharf: if a man cuts his own throat,
shouldn't his collar be soaked through? Shouldn't his hands be
stained, his sleeves caked? Perhaps the cold had frozen it, she
reasoned. Or maybe Easter had cleaned him up.

Before she could ask any questions, the door opened and Ruth walked
in, her arms full of firewood. Judy marveled at the sight of eight
real logs: the nearby hills had been stripped of trees years ago.
Dogtowners burned mostly peat and dung.

Then again, she thought, Ruth brought mystery wherever she went. A
stranger would be hard-pressed to see that the coffeecolored
African wearing trousers and a cap was a "she" at all. Ruth had
never been seen in a dress and preferred the name "John Woodman,"
though everyone knew her as Black Ruth. A stonemason, of all
things, she lodged in Easter's attic. Judy still hoped that Easter
would one day tell her more of Ruth's story. She was fascinated by
everything having to do with Cape Ann's few Africans.

"Hello, Ruth," said Judy. "What a great treat you bring us." Ruth
nodded, placed the logs by the fire, and retreated upstairs before
the others started to trickle in.

Easter Carter's was the biggest house fit for habitation in the
Commons Settlement, which was Dogtown's real name. With an
eight-foot ceiling and a twenty-foot-long parlor, its fireplace was
large enough for a side of beef, though it had been many years
since anything so rich had sizzled there. The place was large only
by comparison with everything else still standing for miles around,
and it served as a tavern in everything but name and taxes. Young
people and sailors tramped up the old road seeking a good time, and
Easter let them have it. She loved having company, and even a
corpse was welcome if it fetched in a crop of the living.

That day, the first visitors included a few ancient ladies who
arrived, one by one, braving the cold to pay their respects to the
deceased and hoping for a glass of ale in his honor, and perhaps
even a bite to eat.

Among the early arrivals, there was but one unlined face, which
also belonged to the only breathing male in the room. Taking his
turn beside the body, Oliver Younger removed his hat and coughed,
trying to distract attention while he nudged at the cloth with his
foot to get a better look at his first corpse. But Tammy Younger
saw what he was up to and smacked the back of her nephew's head
with the flat of her hand.

"What in hell is wrong with you?" she said. All eyes in the dim
room turned toward them. "What the hell did I ever do to be plagued
with such a nit of a boy? I ask you, Judy Rhines. What merits me
the village idiot here as my punishment?"

Judy placed herself between Tammy's squat form and the skinny
twelve-year-old. She looked down at Abraham's body, and Oliver
Younger saw the sadness in her eyes and wished he had the gumption
to say something kind to her. But Tammy would shame him in front of
God and the devil for showing any feeling toward Judy Rhines. He
gritted his teeth and walked back toward the fire, even though that
took him close to the creaking ladies gathered there, the eldest
being Mary Lurvey, Abraham Wharf's bereaved sister, who stank of
death herself.

Mary's red nose dripped a steady stream as she rocked herself back
and forth on Easter Carter's best chair, blubbering about how he'd
burn in hell for taking his own life.

"My poor, poor brother," she moaned. "I won't be seein' him in
heaven, that's sure. He's going to burn, and it's on my head. It
is, for I should have warned him off." She repeated this refrain
every time the door opened upon another face, chapped and curious
to learn if it was true that Wharf had done himself in.

Each new arrival clucked in sympathy as she settled in, thankful
for the warmth and companionship in what had once been the
community's great showplace. It was the only house ever to have a
second story, even back in the days when the settlement was full of
proud men. That was long before it had turned into a collection of
broken huts and hovels inhabited mostly by spinsters and widows
without children, and few with so much as an extra spoon in their
cupboards. Marooned by poverty, or peculiarity, or plain
mulishness, they foraged a thin livelihood selling berries and
brews made of roots and twigs. For their pains, they were branded
"trash-eaters" and mocked all over Cape Ann.

"No one left up there but witches and whores," said the wastrels in
the taverns. "They dally with their dogs up there," said the
farmers and the fishermen. And all of them traded lies about having
it off with Judy or any other skirt that didn't have one foot in
the grave. With a wink and a grin, they'd say, "A dog can have his
day up there."

It was doubtless a barroom wit who first called the fading village
a dogtown. That the slander had stuck with the force of a
christening had been a bleeding thorn in Abraham Wharf's heart, and
he'd never let the term pass his lips.

Defending the Commons Settlement had been his mission, and anyone
who'd let him talk for more than a minute got an earful of how it
used to be the finest address on the North Shore, indeed, in all
the Commonwealth. According to him, the most respected families had
lived there and raised the finest livestock -- cattle, sheep, and
oxen. Wharf had been their leader -- or at least, that's how he
told it. His Anne was the prettiest wife. His sheep gave the best
wool. His sons had been most likely to take charge of the whole
damned Cape. But that was "once't," as he put it.

"He was bitter," said Easter Carter, and she recalled Wharf's
much-repeated claim that the war for independence had killed off
the best of his neighbors. The ones who returned with all four
limbs attached decided against the thankless work of harvesting
rocks when Gloucester Harbor delivered an easier living. Buying and
selling became the way to making a fortune.

"Remember how he'd say the word 'shopkeeper'?" said Judy. "Like he
was speaking the worst sort of blasphemy."

"My brother didn't set a foot into church for forty years," Mary
said. "Forty years he went without hearing a word of scripture."
Abraham had come to sit by her fire just two nights earlier and
asked if she thought that killing yourself meant sure damnation.
Mary had dismissed his question with a sour warning to stop talking
rubbish, and she spent the rest of their last evening together
complaining about her dyspepsia and her ungrateful children.

The memory of that last conversation was a terrible shame to Mary,
whose shrill sobs reminded Judy of nothing so much as a stuck pig.
The unkindness of that notion caused her to hurry over to the
bereaved woman with another cup of comfort. The smell of boiling
cabbage, wet woolens, and cheap tobacco seemed even stronger in
that corner of the room, and Judy welcomed the clean, icy blast
when the door swung open again.

"Well, if it ain't Granny Day," said Easter, greeting a lady nearly
as wrinkled and bald as one of last year's crab apples.

"Didn't know if I'd make it in this cold," apologized the newcomer.
"But then I thought I owed it to him."

"It's all right, dear," said Easter, steering her over toward
Abraham's body as she retold the story of how Cornelius Finson had
found him early that morning with a long knife in his own hand.
He'd done the deed in the shadow of the Whale's Jaw, two enormous
boulders that together made a perfect replica of a great fish head.
Cornelius, or Black Neal as some called him, had carried the corpse
to Easter, who sent him straight into town to find some ablebodied
relations to carry Wharf back to Gloucester for a Christian
burial.

When Granny Day opened the door, the biggest of the settlement dogs
had padded in behind her. A long-haired brute, nearly six hands
tall, Bear ambled directly over to Easter Carter and nuzzled at her
hand. Finding nothing there to eat, he headed for the chilly
lean-to, which had been tacked onto the house back in the day when
there'd been food enough to require a separate pantry. A shaggy
congregation was already gathered there, huddled jowl by haunch on
a filthy scrap of carpet: Pinknose, Brindle, Spots, Big Brown, and
Greyling. One by one, the dogs had slipped into the house behind a
two-legged guest, lured out of secret burrows by the unusual
commotion and the smell of cooking.

When Bear entered, the others rose so he could take the warmest
spot in the center. He lowered himself in his rightful place with a
sigh while the rest of them circled and scratched and settled
again.

Judy Rhines smiled at the pack, watching as steam rose off the
breathing heap of fur. Let them call us Dogtowners, she thought,
I'm satisfied to be thought of as one of them. She felt less
inclined to claim fellowship with the collection of unhappy
creatures in the parlor, each one wrapped in her own dark shawl.
And poor, broody Oliver, arms crossed over his narrow chest,
slouched against the wall, his chin on his chest.

With his thick black hair, green eyes, and high cheekbones, he
wouldn't be a bad-looking boy if he'd only pick up his head and
stop scowling. Oliver caught her gaze and seemed to glare back,
then took to studying the ceiling. A strange one, she thought, and
wondered if he'd ever make anything of himself. It was too bad that
Oliver had nowhere else to go. Tammy was his blood-kin, but he
might have been better off bound out as an apprentice: maybe some
honest farmer with a softhearted wife. Of course, that was a rough
gamble, too, as Judy well knew.

Oliver's great-aunt was a terror, but there was no changing Tammy
Younger. Her name was often invoked by mothers wishing to keep
their children from straying into the woods. They called her a
witch and warned that her favorite tea included the plump fingers
and toes of heedless boys and girls.

Judy thought of Tammy as a force of nature, unpleasant as a wasp's
nest, but inevitable. Then again, Judy was known as a soft touch,
having once been heard defending skunks and mosquitoes as having a
rightful place and purpose. Abraham Wharf used to scold her about
being so tenderhearted. "You take care of yourself," he'd said to
her, only a month before he died. "You take good care of Judy
Rhines for once't." Remembering his words, Judy Rhines drew her
dark brows together and bowed her head. Oliver watched and wondered
how she could grieve for such a bad-tempered old windbag.

He'd never seen her look so low. Judy usually wore a gentle half
smile that drew people to her. There was a sort of natural
pleasantness, an irresistible goodness to her face. Not that she
was a great beauty. Her eyes were a pale brown, a shade lighter
than the brown of her hair, which she parted in a sharp line over
her right ear. In her homespun dress, unbleached apron,
dust-colored shoes, and bare head, Judy Rhines put Oliver in mind
of a hen. It was not the most flattering picture, he knew, but it
was comfortable enough to let him imagine her caring for him in
return.

Oliver glanced over at Tammy, making sure she hadn't caught him
staring at Judy. She was at least thirty, Oliver guessed, though
she could be forty.

Mary Lurvey's weeping had turned into a desperate coughing fit that
fixed all attention upon her. In September, Tammy had warned that
Mary wouldn't last the winter. Abraham's death would hasten that
likely guess into a mystic prediction and strengthen Tammy's
terrifying effect on the foolish believers who already feared her
reputed powers.

After Mary quieted down, Easter served helpings of boiled cabbage
and potatoes. The ladies huddled by the fire set their little china
pipes on the floor and exclaimed over the plain fare like it was a
wedding feast. Easter spooned more onto their plates even before
they'd finished, knowing it would be their only hot meal that day
and possibly the next.

Easter was one of Judy's favorites. No more than four and a half
feet in her shoes, Easter had a long, beaky nose flanked by small,
squinted eyes. But the face under her old-fashioned cap beamed
whenever people were under her roof, especially when it was younger
folks holding court and calling her "Mother."

It was Easter who'd come up with the name "Judy Rhines," and in her
mouth it sounded like an endearment. Most women were called by
their family name, like Granny Day or Widow Lurvey. Up in the
woods, unmarried women like Easter were sometimes known by their
given names, rather like naughty children. But Easter had taken a
shine to the sound of "Judy Rhines" and it stuck.

It had been so long since Judy had heard "Judith Elizabeth Ryan,"
that if someone had addressed her so, she might not remember to
answer. Judith Elizabeth Ryan sounded like a woman who owned a
Sunday dress, a flowered wool carpet, and a white teapot, not
someone who had often made a supper from berries and roots dug out
of the woods, or who cleaned other people's houses for a length of
cotton, or who kept a half-wild dog at her feet to keep from
freezing on winter nights.

Just as Judy was about to take some of Easter's stew for herself,
the door flew open again, hitting the wall with a bang that caused
the ladies to jump and then coo at the sight of little Sammy
Stanley, borne in like a scrap of driftwood on a wave of three wet
skirts and a peal of laughter. Dark Molly Jacobs and fair Sally
Phipps rushed for the fire, reaching their four red hands to the
glow, while Mrs. Stanley closed the door with a polite flourish and
walked directly to the center of the room. When she was certain
that all eyes were fixed on her, she pulled a bottle from inside a
ragged raccoon muff.

"What a welcome sight you are," said Tammy, addressing herself to
the rum.

"In memory of Master Wharf," said Mrs. Stanley.

"Too bad the poor old fart ain't here to enjoy it," Tammy
said.

Oliver laughed at the rude word, a boyish reflex he tried to
swallow when he saw Judy shake her head. But Mrs. Stanley turned
her famous smile in his direction as she removed her hood. Yellow
curls cascaded out, unbound like a girl's, and spread out in pretty
ringlets over a shirt so white it nearly glowed in the dim
room.

Mrs. Stanley -- no one had ever heard her Christian name -- carried
herself like the great beauty she'd once been. Blue-eyed and
blonde, she triumphed over the wrinkles at her eyes and the slack
line of her chin by batting her lashes, pursing her lips, and
placing a soft hand upon the forearm of any fellow who drew near
enough to catch her nearsighted gaze.

Tammy leered. "Rum, eh? What sailor got lucky?"

"Oh, goodness," Mrs. Stanley replied. "Let's not tread that path,
shall we, lest your own misplaced steps come into question."

"You old whore," Tammy said. "You've got more brass than the whole
of Boston sets on its tables come Election Day."

Mrs. Stanley shrugged and walked over to see the body, pulling the
reluctant child behind her. She placed a hand on her bosom and
bowed her head as she pulled off Sammy's cap, revealing a matching
tumble of blond hair that hung down to the boy's shoulders. Oliver
started to laugh at the girlish locks, but stopped when he saw Judy
Rhines frowning in his direction.

Sammy, who was no more than six years old, blinked in terror and
bit his lip till it bled. He'd never seen a dead man, and the
sudden heat in the room made him swoony. Judy noticed the child's
distress and took his hand, leading him away from the corpse and
toward the back room. Sammy pulled away when he spotted the crew of
dogs, who raised their heads in a single gesture and stared.

"They bite?" he asked.

"Don't fret about them," Judy said, and handed him a cold biscuit
smeared with goose fat.

Sammy took the food in his hand but made no move to eat it.

"Go ahead," Judy smiled. He looked up at her, bewildered.

"Don't tell me you're not hungry."

"Never before the ladies," he said.

"Well, that's very nice manners." Judy Rhines leaned down and said,
"But right now, I think you better eat that bread before one of the
dogs comes over and snaps it up."

The thought horrified Sammy, who opened his mouth as wide as he
could and ate the whole thing in two bites. The salt and sheer
goodness of it brought water to his blue eyes. After he swallowed,
the boy wiped his mouth delicately on the inside of his cuff, took
Judy's hand, and kissed it as he made a brisk little bow. She tried
not to laugh and watched him cross the room to sit beside Granny
Day.

Sammy had arrived two years earlier, a note pinned to his coat. No
one knew what it said, or even who had brought the child. According
to the gossip, when Mrs. Stanley read the message the only words
out of her mouth were, "Damn me." She introduced the boy child as
her daughter's son and said his name was Sam Maskey, though he was
known as Sammy Stanley.

No one knew Mrs. Stanley even had a daughter till that moment.
About Mr. Stanley, she placed a well-tended hand over her heart and
said, "Lost at sea." No one questioned the claim though few
believed it.

Sammy knew his grandmother wasn't fond of him, even though he did
as he was told and kept still, which was all that grown people
seemed to want of children. The first time he sat in Granny Day's
grammar school, she'd had a devil of a time getting him to say his
letters out loud and thought he might be deaf if not stupid. But
then she spied him reading the Bible, and when she coaxed him
discovered that he'd memorized all of Genesis and had started on
Exodus. For that, she'd patted him on the head and given him a
cracker too hard to chew.

Sammy felt Oliver Younger's eyes on him. The older boy curled a
strand of his lank, greasy hair around his finger and pouted his
lips. That didn't bother the boy. Mrs. Stanley had never shown him
anything in the way of affection, but she'd taught him that you
were more likely to get what you wanted if you were polite and
smelled good, and Oliver was plainly filthy and rude.

After a moment, Oliver lost interest in the child and turned his
glance away from that corner of the room. He didn't want to have to
meet Granny Day's eyes; he'd quit her classroom long before Sammy
arrived. He'd left the Gloucester grammar school as well, even
though it had been warm and the girls would sometimes share their
dinners. He just got tired of fighting for the good name of
Dogtown, a place he hated yet felt required to defend.

Besides, Oliver didn't put much stock in schooling. A man could go
to sea or enlist in a war without book learning. A man could come
back covered in glory and with enough pay to claim Judy Rhines as
his own. She'd see him in uniform and recognize him as just the
fellow to take her out of the ruin of Dogtown. She'd cook for him
and keep him warm and smile at him sweeter than she smiled at that
pretty boy. Oliver longed to speak to her, or just to gaze in her
direction without worrying about being caught.

The room grew still as Mrs. Stanley took her seat, and for a moment
the only sound was the hissing of the fire. Judy fancied that the
sizzles and pops were whispering about the fate of poor Abraham's
soul, and she felt a sudden desire to get away from the sorrows and
petty cruelties assembled in Easter's smoky drawing room. There was
no telling how long it would take for Abraham's kin to make it up
to Dogtown. Their cart might get stuck on the road, and February
days ended fast: if an axle broke they might have to turn back
altogether and try again tomorrow.

The sound of stamping feet outside gave Judy a moment's hope that
they had arrived and she would be able to leave. But it turned out
to be John Morgan Stanwood, who surveyed the room as if everyone
had been awaiting his arrival. A cold wind blew in, while his wife
and their three grown daughters shivered behind him.

"Goddamn ye, Stanwood," Tammy shouted. "Shut the goddamn
door."

Stanwood took his time, kicking the frost from his boots while his
wife crept past him and hurried to comfort Widow Lurvey, her
mother. When the old lady caught sight of her daughter, she set up
another wail that startled the dogs in the back room and set off a
chorus of woofs and whines.

"You woke the hounds of hell, Mother Lurvey," scolded Stanwood.
"Too bad you can't wake Father Abraham over there."

He winked at his daughters, who reddened and stared at the floor.
The only one to laugh at the weak joke was Oliver, who reached for
the deepest voice he could muster. With another male in the room,
he held himself straighter and stood wide like Stanwood, who was
bowlegged, which to Oliver looked like a proud announcement of his
manhood.

Oliver scratched his chest and stole a look at the Stanwood girls,
who were among the prettier females on Cape Ann, even without
benefit of fine clothes or face powder. Rachel, the oldest, was
already engaged to a fellow from Annisquam; Lydia and Hannah were
busy seeking husbands to get them out of Dogtown, too, attending
church on Sunday only to smile at everything in pants. Oliver
overheard that bit of gossip from Tammy. But the Stanwood sisters
were known to him in another way.

Oliver ducked his head, remembering the August night last summer
when the air stayed steamy even after sunset and the only relief
from the heat and the bugs was the creek. He had been taking off
his trousers when Hannah's giggle gave them away. He waded silently
to near where they were bathing, and from behind the bushes watched
Lydia Stanwood's plump breasts float on the water. The other
sisters joined her, and four more breasts winked at him. Oliver's
member was instantly hard as stone, and as the girls splashed and
whispered, he put his hand there and answered the urgent, unspoken
questions his body had been putting to him the past year.

After that, Oliver felt a profound respect for John Stanwood as the
sire of so many breasts. Indeed, Oliver was so smitten with his
swaggering presence, he didn't notice how Judy Rhines's lip curled
when Stanwood asked where that damned nigger had got to
anyway.

Stanwood pinched Easter Carter's leg as she brought him a cup of
beer. "You got something nice for me, old girl?" he asked. "I got
the cabbage for you," she said. "I got the cabbage and beer for
everyone in honor of Abraham Wharf. But don't you have a word for
your poor mother-in-law over there?"

Stanwood shrugged and walked over to Mary, who hadn't let go of his
wife's hand. He whispered something in her ear and then stood
behind her chair, where he winked at Molly and Sally and blew a
kiss to Mrs. Stanley, who clucked and wagged a finger in his
direction. Stanwood tried to catch Judy Rhines's eye, too. He was a
black-haired, dark-eyed rake accustomed to having women flutter at
his attentions, but Judy would not even look his way.

By then, Mrs. Stanley's rum had made its way around the room and
the grannies were chewing over their stories about Abraham Wharf:
how he used to brag about a cousin who was a judge in Boston. How
his sheep had been the living envy of every farmer up and down the
Cape.

"Didn't I hear about Wharf killing an Indian for touching one of
his animals?" said Granny Day. Her friends pshawed that tale to
nothing: no one could recall seeing an Indian anywhere near
Dogtown. But they outdid one another in recalling how loud and long
he'd wept at Anne's grave, twenty years ago. Heartbroken, he was,
and angry.

After she died, the four Wharf boys had moved down to the city one
after the other, but the old man wouldn't budge. "As I recollect,
none of them pressed their father to join them," said Easter.

Tammy snorted. "That reeking know-it-all son-of-a-bitch? Where's
the wonder in that?"

Judy was still puzzling over Abraham's death. In his last year,
he'd taken to spending more and more time near Whale's Jaw. "It's
like God Himself put them there" was how he described the rocks to
Judy Rhines. "Like a statue that God Himself had a hand in."

He also told her that, as far as he was concerned, the Whale's Jaw
was the only proof of God that ever made sense to him. The fact
that Cornelius had found Wharf dead beneath those giant stones made
Judy wonder if he had lost even that little shred of faith.

Why had he sharpened the blade and killed himself? Did he suffer
from some hidden illness or awful pain? Was there something she
might have done to lessen his despair? She wasn't sure why Wharf's
death had unsettled her so. He was neither a relation nor really a
friend: a neighbor, an acquaintance at most. Perhaps it was just
the fact of his suicide that gnawed at her. To choose death seemed
a terrible insult to everyone who carried on with the lonely
business of living.

As Judy pondered, the conversation ebbed to a quiet mutter and
mumble. The voices lapped against Easter's walls like water against
a wooden hull. Sammy Stanley dozed, his shining curls against
Granny Day's knee.

The lull came to an abrupt end with an argument between Easter and
Stanwood about money he'd borrowed from her. It wasn't easy to
provoke Easter Carter, but there was no stopping her once she got
riled. Between Stanwood's cussing and Easter's hollering, no one
heard the wagon pull up, and everyone gasped as the door opened on
two of Abraham's grown grandsons, their faces wearing matching
expressions of annoyance and disdain.

"We're come for our grandfather," said the shorter of the
two.

Easter invited them to warm up and take a drop in his memory.
"Nah," said the elder, who favored Abraham in the shape of his eyes
and the way he held his shoulders, one slightly ahead of the other.
"We aim to be home before dark, and our only chance is to leave
now. These damned roads."

"You'll be taking me, too," said Mary Lurvey, rising stiffly.

The Wharf boys stared at her. Stanwood smiled at their confusion
and explained. "This is your great-aunt Mary. Your grandpa was her
brother."

"We don't have room for no old lady," said the shorter Wharf, as
though she wasn't standing right there.

"Two real gentlemen," Tammy smirked.

"Witch," he muttered.

"Now, now," said Mrs. Stanley. "If a person saws a barrel in two
and makes two tubs, they call her a witch."

Hannah Stanwood giggled at the proximity of two potential
grooms.

Stanwood hiked his pants up and announced, "Don't worry, Mother
Lurvey. We'll get you down in plenty of time for the funeral. The
ground is harder'n Tammy Younger's heart, so they can't plant him
too quick. Family has to stick together in times like these."

Judy Rhines waited for Tammy to turn her tongue on Stanwood for
that, but she only threw her head back and laughed, blowing
contempt all over the room. Stanwood's face was a map of murder,
but he held his tongue and led the Wharf boys to the corpse. The
two of them hoisted their grandfather with so little effort, Judy
thought she might weep. In that moment, it seemed as though the
whole of Abraham's life amounted to nothing more weighty or lasting
than a sack of turnips.

This new commotion roused the dogs, who gathered to watch. Bear let
out a sneeze and then commenced a howl that raised hairs on the
back of every neck in the house. The women got to their feet --
slowly and stiffly -- as the body passed from the room with the
dogs following after, padding out in single file like mourners
leaving a church.

It was over. An unfamiliar look of misery stole over Easter's face.
There would be no going to Abraham Wharf's funeral. The winter
roads were too hard to make it there and back in one short winter's
day, and no one but the Wharfs had any relations to stay with in
Gloucester. A gloomy silence settled over the room as they all
listened to the receding chorus of barking and howling that
followed the wagon as it bumped down the road all the way to Fox
Hill, past Tammy Younger's house, and into the world.

It was time for them to return to their crumbling houses, to sleep
off the effects of the drink and revisit the taste of Easter's
cabbage, to mull over the bitter day that Abraham Wharf turned up
dead, and Dogtown turned out to tell him a sorry farewell.

Excerpted from THE LAST DAYS OF DOGTOWN © Copyright 2005
by Anita Diamant. Reprinted with permission by Scribner, an imprint
of Simon and Schuster, Inc. All rights reserved.

The Last Days of Dogtown
by by Anita Diamant