rummage around in sometimes. Billy loved to go with her. In one of the shadowy, dusty back rooms, stuffed owls
with gold-ringed eyes spread their wings forever as their feet endlessly grasped varnished logs; stuffed raccoons
stood in a trio around a "stream" that was a long fragment of dusty mirror; and one moth-eaten wolf, which was
foaming sawdust instead of saliva around his muzzle, snarled a creepy eternal snarl. Mrs. Carmody claimed the
wolf was shot by her father as it came to drink from Stevens Brook one September afternoon in 1901.
The expeditions to Mrs. Carmody's Antiquary shop worked well for my wife and son. She was into carnival glass
and he was into death in the name of taxidermy. But I thought that the old woman exercised a rather unpleasant
hold over Steff's mind, which was in all other ways practical and hardheaded. She had found Steff's vulnerable
spot, a mental Achilles' heel. Nor was Steff the only one in town who was fascinated by Mrs. . Carmody's gothic
pronouncements and folk remedies (which were always prescribed in God's name).
Stump-water would take off bruises if your husband was the sort who got a bit too free with his fists after three
drinks. You could tell what kind of a winter was coming by counting the rings on the caterpillars in June or by
measuring the thickness of August honeycomb. And now, good God protect and preserve us, THE BLACK
SPRING OF 1888 (add your own exclamation points, as many as you think it deserves). I had also heard the
story. it's one they like to pass around up here-if the spring is cold enough, the ice on the lakes will eventually
turn as black as a rotted tooth. It's rare, but hardly a once-in-a-century occurrence. They like to pass it around, but
I doubt that many could pass it around with as much conviction as Mrs. Carmody.
"We had a hard winter and a late spring," I said. "Now we're having a hot summer. And we had a storm but it's
over. You're not acting like yourself, Stephanie."
"That wasn't an ordinary storm," she said in that same husky voice.
"No," I said. "I'll go along with you there."
I had heard the Black Spring story from Bill Giosti, who owned and operated-after a fashion-Giosti's Mobil in
Casco Village. Bill ran the place with his three tosspot sons (with occasional help from his four tosspot
grandsons ... when they could take time off from tinkering with their snowmobiles and dirtbikes). Bill was
seventy, looked eighty, and could still drink like twenty-three when the mood was on him. Billy and I had taken
the Scout in for a fill-up the day after a surprise mid-May storm dropped nearly a foot of wet, heavy snow on the
region, covering the new grass and flowers. Giosti had been in his cups for fair, and happy to pass along the
Black Spring story, along with his own original twist. But we get snow in May sometimes; it comes and it's gone
two days later. It's no big deal.
Steff was glancing doubtfully at the downed wires again. "When will the power company come?"
"Just as soon as they can. It won't be long. I just don't want you to worry about Billy. His head's on pretty
straight. He forgets to pick up his clothes, but he isn't going to go and step on a bunch of live lines. He's got a
good, healthy dose of self-interest." I touched a corner of her mouth and it obliged by turning up in the beginning
of a smile. "Better?"
"You always make it seem better," she said, and that made me feel good.
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