The Gilly Salt Sisters
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For Edward
And the eye cannot say to the hand, “I have no need of you.”
—1 Corinthians 12:21
Prologue
It was the season again for fire in Prospect, a time of cold and ice but also an occasion for rising heat and smoke. A moment for salt and prophecy, when the future met the past and the old ceded to the new, for better or for worse.
This year, as usual, it had taken the good men of town a full week to make the pyre for the municipal bonfire. For seven days Claire had kept tabs on the rising stack of timber growing in the middle of Tappert’s Green, largest logs on the bottom, spread evenly for air to pass, and more delicate sticks leaned up against those in a giant incendiary tepee. The men eyed her as she drove slowly past them on her way to deliver salt in town, pausing in their toil, red-cheeked and burly in the cold, their eyes suspicious under their hat brims. None of them waved, nor did Claire expect them to. She knew that if it weren’t for her sister and her, no one in town would have any reason to cinder anything at all.
Claire’s family had never really been welcome at the celebration, even if they were the reason behind it. Their role was purely functional. First, the oldest person in town lit the bonfire, and then either Claire or her sister, Jo, stepped forward, a packet of salt in hand, ready to toss it to the flames and see what it said. It was the simplest kind of divination: two elements colliding. If the fire flashed blue, it meant the town would prosper in the coming year. If it flared yellow, some kind of change was on the horizon, and a puff of black was too terrible to contemplate.
The first time Claire ever threw salt to the fire, it did indeed turn black. She was six and so little she had to reach up before she could scatter the salt to the flames. There was a sizzle and a pop, and then came an acrid swirl of undeniable pitch smoke. The townspeople behind her drew in their breaths and clutched their children closer, then shuffled into the shadows, their eyes probing as owls on the hunt. The circle of space around Claire, her mother, and her sister grew larger and colder.
Jo had put her hands on Claire’s shoulders and leaned down to whisper in her ear. “Step away from the logs now. The salt’s spoken. You can’t change what’s been cast. Take my hand and come with Mama and me.”
Claire had frowned. “We don’t get to stay?” she’d asked. All that autumn she’d heard about the festivities from her classmates, how there would be music, and dancing, and boys stealing kisses by the glow of the flames.
Jo shook her head. “Never. I explained that, Claire. We’re just here to show the future, not partake in it.” And before Claire could protest further, Jo had taken her by the arm and started marching her back to the quiet of their marsh, refusing to meet anyone’s eyes, not even Whit Turner’s, the richest, most charming boy in town, and her sweetheart. Claire saw Whit’s mother, Ida, sneer in her direction as they passed, as if they were no better than the ashes beneath her shoes.
Every year after that, walking home down the sandy lane and hearing the rising revelry and the squeals as people threw their own little packets of salt to the fire, Claire used to chafe under the habitual exclusion, protesting to Jo and her mother that they were just the same as anyone else, that in spite of their salt the Gillys should be dancing round the fire, too.
But that was back when she was innocent, before love came along and stroked her heart with one of its sooty fingers. You never really recovered from a touch like that, and maybe, Claire thought, that was as it should be. No one slipped through life perfectly unscarred, after all, and if someone did, how unlucky, for surely there must be a hotter fire waiting in the afterlife when that was the case. And Claire would know. Once she’d been… not free of sin, exactly, but free of its implications. Her past had not yet caught up to her future. But eventually it did, of course. That was what it meant to be human. Oddly enough, it had taken a man of God to make Claire see this mortal truth.
For years she’d wanted nothing to do with the salt. Jo had cast it by herself every December’s Eve and borne the consequences of what it foretold, until Claire had put a stop to the whole pagan nonsense. No bonfire. No salt. She turned her back on the whole tradition. But certain elements would not be ignored. Claire learned that lesson the hard way—that you cannot scorn the ground from whence you came, for the body rises from the earth just as it goes back to it.
But that was years ago. Now she was a woman tipped to the far side of middle age, and the entire town was gathered together like naughty children let out after curfew, and Claire was among them, if not a part of them. Jo, too. Claire could feel Jo’s solid presence behind her, steadying her for her task. The townsfolk stood with their hands clenched under their chins in anticipation as a wizened Timothy Weatherly put the torch to the wood. There was a crackle, and then Claire could smell the smoke: a mixture of alder wood, elm wood, pine, and pitch. At first the scent was scratchy and rough, but as the flames picked up heat, they burned sweeter, pulling oils out of the wood and dispersing them into the stark winter night. The odor rose and built, scorching away the past year’s sins and regrets. Claire inhaled again and caught a whiff of something almost like cinnamon and then, unexpectedly, a clean ozone flare, and she knew that it was time to step forward with her packet of salt.
The night was wondrously clear, Claire saw. The sky was as star-strewn and gaudy as some of the gowns she used to wear in another life. The happy cacophony of the crowd—a child’s shriek, the off-key wail of a flute, a group of teenage boys performing one of their football chants—faltered and died as she took her place and held up the salt for all to see. And then there was a sudden and terrible hush as a glare of yellow burst forth.
Yellow for caution, for possible danger. Claire met Jo’s eyes and shook her head. Maybe a death, maybe ill luck. Something unexpected. Who will it fall upon? Claire wondered as she felt Jo reach for her hand. Mr. Weatherly, with his creaking hips and rusty tools? Pretty Hope Fell, due to begin college in two months’ time? One of the town’s young mothers, still plump and tired from pregnancy? Before Claire could think further, however, the thread of the flute started up again, knitting the night back together, and soon there was a burst of laughter, more shrieks, and another baby’s wail as she and Jo faded into the darkness and began making their way home. Because life went on, even in Prospect, even in spite of what the salt might say.
Just never quite as one imagined.
Chapter One
When all was said and done, Jo supposed, she would simply call hers a story of salt. Parts of it were bitter on the tongue, parts of it were rocky, and over the years parts had even melted clean away. What was left were the concentrated bits, the crystals that cracked and sparkled when crushed between her teeth. “Grit,” the people in Prospect called it, but it was far more than that, Jo knew. It was regret given weight, history made tangible. It was everything she and her sister should have said to each other and then never did.
But fate worked like that. It was sneaky and a little underhanded, wasn’t it—springing something new on you right at the moment you needed everything old in your life to snap into focus. In Jo’s case that something was a letter from Harbor Bank in Boston, the envelope as plain as anything, the words inside it even starker. They went something like this: Long ago, predicting better times, Jo’s mother had taken out a second loan on the family’s salt marsh. Jo knew that much. She’d been paying the loan off for years, and those better times had never come. Instead, to Jo’s surprise, the loan interest was about to increase drastically. If Jo wasn’t good for that difference, the bank wrote, she’d soon be finding herself stranded on dry ground. Why didn’t she give them a call?
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Well.
Judging by the impressive amount of gilt on the bank’s letterhead, listing all its branches up and down the eastern seaboard, Harbor Bank was nothing like Prospect’s humble and friendly Plover Bank, where Jo and everybody else in town did their everyday business. Of course, that also explained why Jo’s mother had gone to Harbor Bank to beg money. No one who knew Salt Creek Farm would willingly sink his hard-earned dollars into the place.
Jo was tempted to pick up the phone and try to share her side of the story, then gave up and left the receiver in the cradle. Whoever had mailed the letter from Boston would neither understand nor care that if Salt Creek Farm vanished from this narrow lip of Cape Cod, the rest of Prospect might follow in short order, for the fates of the two—marsh and town—were intertwined. No one could remember anymore why or how, just that it had always been so, ever since Jo’s ancestors had first shaped the land with hoes, spades, and their own crooked backs.
Jo shoved the letter into the kitchen junk drawer, then thought better of it and took it out and smashed it into the trash. Truthfully, it didn’t much matter what she did with it, she suspected. The bank would just mail another one until the day they decided to quit being polite and sent the sheriff instead.
People in Prospect blamed Jo for her salt’s strange ways, as if she could control a substance that solidified on its own time and dissolved at the slightest opportunity. This attitude didn’t dispose her kindly toward the town in return. After all, they were the ones who’d chosen to put themselves at the mercy of the salt every December’s Eve during Jo’s youth, when she used to have to step up to the town bonfire and toss a packet to the flames to see what the future would bring. Jo didn’t know what kind of science made the salt color the fire, only that it happened and was none of her doing.
She wished she could control the future. She’d work a spell on the anonymous clerks of Harbor Bank and make them cancel out her debt. But the clerks were obviously not interested in the miraculous alchemy of the Gilly salt. What they cared about was arithmetic. As long as there was a plus sign on their side of things, Jo knew, nothing else much mattered. It was a hard logic to argue with.
But they didn’t see what Jo did when she walked out onto her front porch. Their eyes didn’t automatically travel to the rows of collecting basins to see if crystals were forming. They wouldn’t have been able to pick the treasures out of the trash in any of the junk heaps behind the barn, and they certainly wouldn’t have had the faith Jo did in her battered pickup. It didn’t look too pretty, that was true, but it still ran fine. She climbed into it and started the engine. In spite of what the bank was saying, it was her delivery day and she had rounds to make, meager though they were.
As she jostled and bumped down the rutted lane into town, past the tiny church of St. Agnes, she fretted about how much longer she might have on the only land she’d ever known. One month? Four? Maybe a whole year if she were lucky?
“We would prefer a mutually amicable solution to this situation,” the bank’s letter said. “Please contact us.” Jo snorted and jammed the engine into third. She could just imagine their reaction if she dared to stroll into the bank’s headquarters in person with her swath of scars pickling the right side of her face, her glass eye thick as anything, not to mention the sight of her clothes, stiff and pale from years of working the marsh in all kinds of weather. On the other hand, maybe that wasn’t such a bad idea. Maybe the very sight of her would startle the bankers into clemency.
She looked up, surprised that she’d arrived already in town. Misery loved company, and Jo was no exception. She was pleased to note that if Salt Creek Farm had been having a tough decade, so had all the rest of Prospect. The library was open only three days a week now, and the post office only in the mornings. Mr. Friend’s hardware store, dusty and jumbled with rows of outdated tools, still stood on the corner of Bank and Elm right next to the five-and-dime, but the barbershop was shuttered, along with the diner. Three years ago Mr. Hopper, the establishment’s former owner, had died of a stroke, leaving the stools empty and the men in town hungry as all get-out.
Naturally, Prospect blamed the scourge of Jo’s salt for their decline, but Jo wasn’t having that. She knew exactly who was behind the town’s demise: her little sister, Claire. She was the one who’d upped and fled Salt Creek Farm a decade ago—turning nature on its head and leaving Jo short a pair of extra hands. Growing up, Jo had worked the marsh alongside her mother and Claire, and while it wasn’t much, they’d always managed. But when Claire had married and Jo’s mother had died, Jo found out how hard it was for one woman to do the work of three. In fact, as evidenced by her skimpy salt yields, it was proving impossible.
Lately, whatever Jo did around the farm seemed to carry negative consequences. If she chose to scrape the delicate surface crystals off the ponds, for instance, it meant she wasn’t repairing the broken sluice near the weir. And if she then turned around to fix that, it meant she wasn’t dredging the channels that had started to silt up. This year she’d had to let a full third of the evaporating basins fill with mud, leaving them fallow and unproductive, and she was also forced to ignore the attic’s leaking roof, overlook the warped wooden gates in the smallest sluices, and make do when all her metal tools started rusting. Of course her productivity had fallen way off. She needed new equipment, repairs on the truck, and to patch the farmhouse porch, but she had debts to repay. Ones she hadn’t even been aware existed.
There was another lurking problem with the marsh that the bank in Boston didn’t know about, however. The truth was, it didn’t matter how little salt Jo was making, because sales were slim in Prospect. And that was her sister’s fault, too. Claire had frightened almost everyone off from buying it except for the local fishermen, who found it handy for keeping their catch and bait cold. Without the business of men like Chet Stone, the uncle of Claire’s first love, Jo had a bad feeling she’d be sunk deader than the fish stowed in his trawler. When Claire didn’t like a thing, Jo knew, she didn’t like anyone else to like it either. In that regard she was like a bad-tempered child, scattering her toys before anyone else could pick them up and use them, consequences be damned.
Jo remembered how the grocer, Mr. Upton, tried to refuse carrying the salt his first summer in town. She’d been very young, barely at her mother’s knee, when they’d marched into the shop with a sample for him to taste. “No thank you,” he’d said, putting up two palms, and Mama hadn’t fought with him. Instead she’d smiled, sweet as pie. “Fine,” she’d said. “That’s just fine.” And she waltzed Jo out the door. It hadn’t taken very long for the salt to work its magic. By the next week, all Mr. Upton’s meats had turned rancid and there were flyspecks in his fresh butter. A shelf of canned beans collapsed against Mabel Arch’s arthritic hip, the fishmonger suddenly refused to deliver, and the sliced loaves of bread grew mold underneath their clear plastic wrappers. Jo’s mother had waited two more days, then gone back and discovered that Mr. Upton had experienced a sudden change of heart. He would stock the salt after all.
He was one of the few in Prospect who still did stock it now, but he kept it low and behind the counter, on a shelf so dusty and shaded you practically needed mining equipment to find it. And whereas he used to have bags and bags of the stuff readily available, now he kept only one or two at a time—enough not to cross the charm of the salt and bring back the rancid meat and flies, but not so much that it was a regular commodity. Whenever Jo went in to see if Mr. Upton needed more, he’d avoid her eyes and shake his head apologetically. “I really can’t right now,” he’d say, closing his cash register. “Maybe next month.” And Jo would gnash her teeth and want to bury Claire up to her neck in a pile of the salt she hated, leaving her there until all Jo’s old customers came back.
But there was only so much blame Jo could heap on Claire. If their situations were reversed, Jo suspected, if Jo were the one married to Whit and living in that big Turner House, and if Claire were the one stuck all
alone in the marsh’s mud, she no doubt would have found a way to make everyone from Provincetown to Falmouth crave the salt. Jo’s truck was rickety, but it still drove. Jo should have been rattling up and down the Cape, looking for new customers, she knew, but that was easier said than done, what with the way strangers stared at the bouquet of scars fanned across her cheek, and besides, who was supposed to mind the marsh if she went gallivanting all over God’s green earth?
Speaking of, she’d arrived at the end of it. That is, she was at the docks, where Prospect’s last few fishing boats bobbed like dilapidated corks. What with OPEC and the ongoing energy crunch and gasoline getting so expensive, more and more captains were deciding to fold their hands and give up life on the sea. It was a shame, Jo thought, and not just because it meant she was losing business, but also because without the traffic in the wharf the docks looked rattier and more weathered than ever—sagging in dangerous directions, missing crucial planks, rotted away in other spots. Here, more than at any other spot, the town’s recent decline was apparent. Jo stepped with care down the main dock and approached Chet Stone’s boat.
“Hello, sailor,” he called when he saw her coming, his ironic greeting for her due to the fact that no matter how many times the men asked her to come aboard, Jo would never so much as tap a toe on any of their boats. He had a transistor radio going, blaring something about the American hostages held in Iran. Chet frowned and shook his head. “What’s the world coming to?” he asked, reaching his arms out for the bag of salt Jo had brought. “People don’t stay where they ought anymore. Good thing you’re still around.” He grinned and hefted the sack down at his feet. “My fish stays cold, and my boat stays safe. But those poor suckers”—he jerked his thumb at the radio—“well, I’m afraid they might be goners.”