~April, 1770~
Dear Diary:
It has been four years now. Four years of
Aunt Abigail has been
Aunt Abigail and Father have been holding their
I read in the newspaper that something called the 'Boston
Until next time,
Anne DeCuir
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Abigail felt nearly hopeless. Money was scarce, as ever since she had let Melatiah and Anne live with her, food seemed to become more and more expensive. Not that Abigail wanted her cousin to leave. In fact, she had grown quite close to Anne, instinctively becoming the mother Anne never had; however, Abigail was a tad annoyed that Melatiah had told her that their stay would be temporary when it was evidently not, and the fact that Melatiah was not helping with the finances.
Abigail's stomach growled, and she swallowed hard. The cellar did not hold much more food. All that was left was a dozen tomatoes, four green peppers, a few apples, and a small bag of wheat. Worried, Abigail willed her upset stomach to calm down. She would save any food she had left for little Anne, but the gnawing pain was hard to ignore.
Determined to make a difference, an idea struck her.
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She gazed at the brownish seed, a seed of hope. Abigail prayed that this seed would grow an apple tree many feet taller than herself, tall enough to grow dozens and dozens of apples; apple pie, apple cobbler, applesauce, apple mush, apple-you-name-it. Enough apples to keep the family full.
Abigail dropped the seed into the ground and covered it up with a mound of dirt. She patted it with a encouraging hand.
Abigail spent all morning planting a small garden in the midday heat. Her forehead was beaded with sweat, but Abigail was a woman on a mission to save her family from starvation. And Melatiah would help her or else he would need to find a new home. Abigail would offer to take care of Anne, but Melatiah needed to earn his keep.
When she had finished planting a patch of dirt full of apple seeds, tomato seeds, lettuce seeds, and pepper seeds, Abigail stood up and wiped her dirt covered hands on her apron.
"If only seeds would grow into plants overnight!" Abigail mused.
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It was later that day that Abigail gathered the courage to confront her cousin.
"Dear Melatiah, I urge you to escape your reverie and come to your senses! We are losing money quickly and I am fearing starvation if we cannot earn some soon. You have not been entirely truthful to me, and you need to help me pay off the expenses. This is my house, after all. I hope you still know that I am temporarily providing you a place to live. The problem is that you have not been looking for a new house."
"Well, I feel we have been living comfortably. Whatever do you mean, Abigail?"
Abigail was angered. "Comfortably? COMFORTABLY? I have NOT been living comfortably! Neither has Anne! Your daughter has no shoes, and you call that living comfortably? I have been paying off the expenses of food for you and Anne. How come you have not helped me? You lied to me, said you would find a new place to take yourself and Anne! Not that I do not enjoy your company, but..."
"How dare you!" Melatiah yelled. "Are you saying we cannot live here anymore? Are you asking us to leave?"
Abigail sneered. "No. I am saying you must help me. And, how dare YOU? I am a single woman without a job. I have no higher level status in society, and you expect me to pay for everything! Excuse me, but I don't care that I am a helpless woman in our society -- I don't care that I am not supposed to yell at you or talk back at you!" Her voice softened. "I just want to provide for Anne a childhood that is as normal as possible, given the conditions. Sorry, but, isn't that what you, as the father, are supposed to do?"
"Yes, Abigail, you are correct in each respect. I have been a terrible father and a terrible gentleman. I keep telling myself that I need a little more time to sort things out, and that time keeps piling up. And I never feel any better. I know we, as cousins, have not always gotten along well, but I do apologize for everything I have not done to support you and my daughter. I guess I just never expected my life to turn out the way it has."
"And I can see that my daughter hates me, and that I have failed my late wife's wishes. And now I have failed you."
Abigail's anger disappeared. "Things happen for a reason, my cousin. You haven't failed your daughter yet. And I always thought I would move far, far away from this house. I was a very unhappy person, long ago. But I am still here, and I am happy. Part of that happiness is because of Anne. I love her dearly, and I cannot imagine my life without her. But it hurts me so much to see us struggling to give her what she deserves because of the lack of money. I started a garden, earlier today. I would appreciate it if you would help me garden it. It could turn into a small farm if we work hard. We could sell our produce. And maybe your daughter would smile a little brighter and a little more often."
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Dear Diary:
Aunt Abigail and Father have been working all week on a new garden. I love to sit in the sun and watch them work. Sometimes, if they let me, I like to run to the woods and gather fresh berries from a
Last night, Father said goodnight to me for the first time in a while. He told me to practice smiling. He told me I have a face full of sunshine when I smile.
And so I do smile. I pretend like my smile is the sun in the dark room around me. And for the first time, I'm not afraid of the shadows in my room. I smile myself to sleep because if my smile is like the sun, it scares off the shadows in my room.
I didn't even have a nightmare! I dreamed of eating those tasty berries in the afternoon sun with Father and Aunt Abigail.
Until next time,
Anne DeCuir
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*The Antique Legacy*
Anne DeCuir