Daddy inherited the Curl residence when my grandfather, John Curl, passed away. Facing the shoreline from the boat, our house was situated on a small plateau to the right of the cove. Compared to the tiny log cabin in Roaches Brook, it was a mansion — a two-storey house, roomy, and comfortable. We entered through a small porch that led into a large kitchen with a wooden floor. At the back there was a bedroom. Instead of a ladder through a hole in the ceiling, this house had stairs. Upstairs there was one large room, divided by a curtain.
Directly behind our house, tall pink flowers swaying in the breeze stood out against a white picket fence that enclosed the graveyard. To the left of the cemetery was the focal point of the community — the nursing station. It was a large white building once used by itinerant doctors and nurses who travelled the coast and cared for the sick. By the time I was six years old, though, it had ceased to operate. A community building called the club was beside the nursing station.
Some of the boats that had been hauled out in the fall sat stately and tall in their winter cradles, revealing their full bulk, undisturbed by fierce winter winds. Others were upside down. Looming mounds of wood dotted the shoreline. Soon the boats would be right side up and filled to the gunwales with fish.
When we reached Spotted Island that summer, Daddy eased the boat into the stage and tied it to a post. People who had arrived before us ran to help. As I clambered onto the stagehead, I was so delighted to be home. All I wanted to do was run and play. But I knew better.
“Now, maids,” warned my mother, “don’t go empty-handed.”
“I’m too small,” I protested. “What’ll I carry?”
“Ya better carry sometin!” Sammy hollered.
Reluctantly, I grabbed what I could lift and headed for the house. Staggering up the road and grunting under the weight of a pile of blankets, I wished I was bigger. Everybody was lugging, hauling, and carrying. It went on for what seemed like hours.
The dogs were let loose from the boat and allowed to roam freely among the houses. They ran here and there, and when they were tired, they crawled under the houses to keep cool. I loved the puppies that were born each spring.
“Weers me puppy to?” I cried, running around in circles. “Weers Blackie?”
“Dunno, Jos,” Mommy answered. “Havn’t got time ta be bothered wit yer puppy.”
“I’m not goin anywhere till I finds him den,” I said.
Daddy was busy taking the boards off the windows. Then he had to set up the stove, while Sammy lit the fire for Mommy.
“Sam, ya gotta go get some water from de brook,” Mom ordered just as he started running off to see his buddies. “Yer not gonna get away wit dat.”
“Awright, Ma.” He flung the carrying hoop over his shoulder, dug out the water buckets from the pile on the floor, and headed for the brook.
“I wanna go, too, Sammy,” I said.
My brother was happy to have company. “Awright den.”
Daddy had made us little water carriers out of tin cans with a string threaded through holes at the top. Searching through our stuff, I found two, and Sammy and I bounded for the brook, just up the hill past the graveyard. I placed my little can under a galvanized pipe protruding from the rocks. It was anchored in the brook with stones. My little bucket filled quickly with cold, clear water.
“Who put de pipe der, Sammy?” I asked.
“Dunno, maid. Tis been here a long time is all I know.”
Sammy filled his buckets and placed them in the carrying hoop. The hoop made the arduous job of water carrying much easier and kept the buckets away from his legs. I grunted and groaned as I struggled back to the house and emptied what was left in my containers into the water barrel on the porch. Then we returned to the brook for another turn — not that my tiny cans made much of a difference in the huge 45-gallon drum. But I was helping. Getting water was a daily task we couldn’t escape. Once the water barrel was filled, we had to bring in wood for the fire. We all had to do our share.
After a few days, we were settled in, and I was happy to be released from the seemingly endless chores Mommy had laid out for us.
“Okay, Mommy,” I said, grinning, “gonna make me playhouse now.”
“Awright, Josie, go on outdoors outta me way.” She sounded exasperated.
I liked Aunt Lucy next door and sauntered in and out of her house at will. In those days we didn’t knock before entering a home. Aunt Lucy was a jolly, little old lady who always wore a dress with her pinny tied neatly around her well-padded body. I was sure to get a slice of lassie bread from her.
Many of our neighbours were related. As was the custom then, several relatives lived in the same house. At Aunt Lucy’s place lived her sister and her sister’s little girl, Mary Jane. A pretty girl with fair hair and blue eyes, Mary Jane was a few years younger than I was. I thought she was rich because she had a swing on her porch. It was just a long piece of rope tied to a high beam, but it seemed wonderful to me because I had never seen a swing before. One day I gathered the courage to ask her for a turn. I was enthralled at the sensation of moving freely through the air.
On the other side of our house lived Sis (Violet) and Esau Dyson and their four children. Sis was my father’s niece. Esau had a large bell that hung on their house, which could be heard throughout the community. It rang at mug-up time, dinnertime, and suppertime to call the fishermen up from the stages. Many years later Sis told me that Esau had acquired the bell from a fishing schooner he’d worked on. She let me ring the big bell sometimes. When the bell tolled, all the dogs in the community howled in unison. It was the strangest thing.
Our neighbours were a mixture of friends, adopted family, and blood relatives. Uncle Ken and Aunt Winnie Webber were our true aunt and uncle. Aunt Winnie was Daddy’s sister. They lived close by with their five children. One neighbour I hated was Hayward Holwell. He would pop in almost every day just to tease Mommy. And he teased us constantly, as well, which made me angry and fearful. But I was much too little to do anything about it.
One day Hayward barged into our house and yelled at Mommy, “Flossie, how can such an ugly blood-of-a-bitch like ya have such good-lookin youngsters?”
Mommy wasn’t fazed. “Dunno, boy,” she snapped. “I know one thing’s fer sure. You never had nuttin ta do wit em.”
Aunt Tamer Rose, a kindly lady, short in stature, with grey wispy hair and soft brown eyes, lived just across the brook in the big house. One of the rooms contained a small store. She had a little white dog. Almost every day my sister and I meandered over to the shop, drooling at the sight and smell of candy and chocolate. Of course, there was never money to buy any, but I loved their fragrance. I enjoyed petting the dog and hoped I’d get a penny candy or two.
“Can I have some candy?” I asked as I stepped inside.
“Have ya got money?”
“Gotta copper. What can I buy fer a copper?”
“I can give ya a few candies fer a copper,” she said, scooping a few jellybeans into a tiny brown bag. Elated, I skipped along the rocky path, popping the delicious sweets into my mouth. But most of the time I just gawked and drooled at peppermint knobs, candy kisses, and gumdrops lined up behind the counter.
Sunday was a sacred day. No matter how plentiful the fish, how busy the men,