The gurgling pipes, the creaking floorboards, the squeaking hinges I
could
deal
with. But the door that would not stay closed was another matter.
When I
was upstairs
working alone on our remodeling project, I put a full gallon paint can
against it to hold it
shut. Even that didn't work. I would look up from painting the
baseboards
to find it
slowly opening, scooting the paint can across the hardwood floor. When
my
tools
mysteriously moved from one place to another, my husband called me
absent-minded.
When a bird flew down the hallway, he said I had dozed and dreamed it.
But
the door
opening by itself--he just laughed at what he called my vivid
imagination.
The best he
could be persuaded to do was to check the latch, which he said worked
perfectly.
"It's just that the house has settled unevenly. After all, it's
almost a
hundred years
old. Everything in it is a little out of plumb," he said.
The first night we spent in our newly painted upstairs bedroom, our
German
shepherd kept leaving his rug to circle the room, whining; his ruff
stood
up stiffly, and he
growled deep in his throat as he stared down the hall. When we
followed
his gaze, we
saw the door of the tiny room at the other end of the hall slowly
opening.
My husband
sighed in exasperation.
"OK, I'll nail the damn door shut tomorrow!" he exclaimed.
The next day , as I was putting the finishing touches on the dark wood
of the
staircase, a handsome, neatly dressed man in his seventies came to the
front door, swept
off his Stetson in a courtly bow, and introduced himself as John
Malone.
He asked
permission to bring his elderly mother for a visit. He said he had
grown
up in our house,
and she wanted to see the old home place again. I invited them in.
"My husband, Patrick Malone, God rest his soul, built this house, my
dear,
for his
first bride, in 1897. I was his second wife, you see . . ." She
twittered
and chattered as
she hobbled through the house with her walker, exclaiming over
everything
we had done
to restore the house to its original beauty, until we came to the
kitchen.
At last she was
speechless. Finally she said, "I never thought to see the day this
kitchen
would have an
automatic dishwasher." Her son John laughed.
"Why, mother, you had a genuine imported Irish dishwasher, didn't
you?"
They
laughed together as they told me story after story of the young Irish
maid
Molly who had
come to help when John was born, and just stayed on and on.
A shadow fell over her crumpled-rose-petal face when she looked at the
pantry
door. "Did you know, my dear, that there used to be another staircase
there? Molly's
little room was at the top of those stairs." John opened the pantry
door
and pulled the
string to turn on the light. I had never noticed the dark shadows on
the
wall and ceiling
before, mute evidence of a stairway no longer there.
"Molly always used that staircase. She was afraid of burglars, and
even
though
she locked herself into her room at night, she ran up and down the
stairs
all night long,
checking to make sure that the back door was locked," he said. "One
night
she dropped
her kerosene lamp, and set the house on fire."
Mrs. Malone took up the story. "Yes, Mr. Malone finally had to tear
out that
stairway to stop her going up and down the stairs all night. Then she
started constantly
opening and shutting her door; I guess she was always afraid of being
trapped again."
I thought it would have been easier to just tell Molly to stop running
up
and down
all night, than to tear out the staircase.
"Well, yes, my dear, of course it would have been. But how could we
tell her
anything? She died in the fire, you see, locked up in her little
bedroom
upstairs."The song on this page is:"The Twelth of Never"(Johny Mathis)
Send E-mail to: thatblond@hotmail.com
Home Page