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Authors: Anita Diamant

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The Last Days of Dogtown

BOOK: The Last Days of Dogtown
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Also by Anita Diamant

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SCRIBNER
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020

This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Copyright © 2005 by Anita Diamant

All rights reserved, including the right of
reproduction in whole or in part in any form.

SCRIBNER
and design are trademarks of
Macmillan Library Reference USA, Inc., used under license
by Simon & Schuster, the publisher of this work.

D
ESIGNED BY
K
YOKO
W
ATANABE

Map copyright © 2005 by David Cain

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Diamant, Anita.
The last days of Dogtown: a novel /Anita Diamant.
p. cm.
1. Dogtown Commons (Gloucester, Mass.) — Fiction.
2. Gloucester (Mass.) — Fiction. I. Title.

PS3554.I227L37 2005
813’.54 — dc22
2005045191

ISBN: 1-4165-5683-4

Frontispiece photo © Francis H. Lee Postcard Collection.
Phillips Library, Peabody Essex Museum.

Visit us on the World Wide Web:
http://www.SimonSays.com

To
A
MY
H
OFFMAN
and
S
TEPHEN
M
C
C
AULEY

dear friends and colleagues

A thousand thanks

W
HALE’S
J
AW

Contents

 

 

Author’s Note

The Death of Abraham Wharf

An Unexpected Visit

Greyling

Tammy Younger’s Toothache

Strange Sightings

Stanwood Reformed

The Lost Girls

Oliver Younger’s Heart

Departure

Cornelius

His Own Man

Easter and Ruth

A Last Wish

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Author’s Note

 

 

This is a work of fiction that rests lightly upon the historical record, which is spotty at best when it comes to the village of Dogtown.

There was once such a hamlet, set on the high ground at the heart of Cape Ann. You can find signs directing you to its ruins on that rocky fist of coastland, the northernmost boundary of Massachusetts Bay. A local pamphlet,
Dogtown: A Village Lost in Time,
may still be available for purchase in the bookshops of Gloucester and Rockport, which was known as Sandy Bay until 1840. This little publication contains a not wholly accurate walking map of the area and some tales about the more vivid characters said to live there long ago.

Most accounts of Dogtown’s last citizens rely heavily upon a volume of thirty-one pages, published in 1906, called
In the Heart of Cape Ann or the Story of Dogtown.
Illustrated by Catherine M. Follansbee, who had a fondness for drawing witches astride their brooms, it was written by Charles E. Mann. In his prefatory note, Mr. Mann revealed that nearly all his material was gleaned from “the memories of Cape Ann’s aged people…sweet-faced old ladies, often with sweeter voices, or men with whitened locks and time-furrowed cheeks, recalling the stories told them by the fireside by other dear old women and noble old men of a past century.” In other words: ancient gossip and hearsay.

I tell you this so that you will not make the mistake of confusing my fancies for facts. And yet, the death of a village, even one as poor and small as Dogtown, is not an altogether trivial thing. Surely there was value in the quiet lives lived among those imposing boulders, under that bright sky. Why not imagine their stories as real, if not true. For the space of this entertainment, where’s the harm?

The Death of
Abraham Wharf

 

 

J
UDY
R
HINES
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 coffee-colored 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.

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