On my father’s house three slaves and six horses died when the old stable blazed a century and a half ago, and three union and two confederate soldiers slayed each other in a forgotten skirmish a few years later. Their skeletons were found two years after the war under an uprooted white pine. The county let the field return to forest, except for the old stable.
My father, a nonresident, cut a dirt road through the upper quarter, built a cottage house over the old stable, a gate house fifty yards leeward with a pond in back and a large windowed manor that cut a wing between earth and sky just beyond at the edge of the rocky wrack line to the bay.
Until the houses settled in, the earth screeched its pain and revealed its ossified sorrows. After years this plot finally accepted his tranquility.
My father died and was cremated far away from this adopted place, He returned only because his will demanded his celebration of life take place here.
Except for the family, who undutifully held onto their allotted share of his ashes, the attending mutes, sobers, wailers and criers faithfully flung his cremains in the breeze. They watched, cried, bemoaned and wailed as every speck refused to settle and blew out to the bay.