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All God's Creatures

Page 40

by Carolyn McSparren


  Most of all, thanks to the animals that enrich our lives. May we always be worthy of their affection and their trust.

  Carolyn McSparren

  Carolyn's grandfather held her on a horse when she was two. That moment began a love affair with horses that has continued all her life, even when she lived in cities where the only horses she saw were either pulling carriages through the park or maintaining crowd control.

  Although she longed for her own horse when she was a teenager, her parents couldn't afford to buy or keep one, so she set her dream aside. She decided to become an English professor at some obscure college and write murder mysteries. Surely then she'd be able to afford her own horse.

  Instead, Carolyn went to graduate school and earned her master's degree from the University of Memphis, then became a developer of continuing education programs in business. She wrote technical manuals and marketing pieces on such stirring subject as Statistical Quality Control, about which she knew as much as she did about quantum physics. Those years of writing on demand, however, honed her skills as a fiction writer and self-editor.

  During that time, her daughter fell as much in love with horses as Carolyn had. Carolyn bit the bullet and bought Megan her first horse-not a very fancy horse but a good guy nonetheless. Ayear later she owned three horses, including a mare in foal. She finally came back to riding.

  Over the years she's known many veterinarians, farriers, trainers, riders, dog and cat fanciers, and general animal people, all of whom love to tell stories.

  The editors of BelleBooks heard some of the stories and decided they deserved to be shared. Thus All God's Creatures was born.

  Excerpt from Carolyn McSparren's story in SUMMER AT MOSSY CREEK

  LOUISE and JACK

  by Carolyn McSparren

  Ida Hamilton Walker stuck her head around the kitchen door and said in a frazzled voice, "Louise, we're running out of potato salad."

  "Here." My daughter Margaret handed her a Tupperware bowl straight out of the refrigerator. I would have dumped the salad into a crystal bowl, but didn't suggest that. This was Margaret's first foray into the world of Southern post-funeral feasts, so I refrained from correcting her. I doubted those Visigoths eating me out of house and home in the living and dining rooms of Aunt Catherine's little cottage would notice.

  I'd only bought the ham and the turkey, of course. Half the town had descended on Aunt's house with food the minute they heard she had breathed her last. They brought everything from sweet potato casseroles to homemade coconut cakes. They filled Aunt's refrigerator and mine as well.

  Good thing, too. Unlike Moses, I couldn't call down manna from heaven, and after Aunt's funeral, practically the whole town of Mossy Creek came back to her house to chat and eat.

  And eat some more. I swan, you'd think it was a church picnic instead of the aftermath of a funeral for a ninety-two-yearold woman. But she had wanted a great big party, and I was glad to help her get her wish.

  She was actually my great aunt, and one of my few remaining relatives. I'd been run off my feet arranging the viewing at the funeral home, picking what she was going to wear into eternity, and organizing folks to meet and greet during the viewing at the funeral home before they moved her to the church for the service.

  Her old lady friends had demanded an open coffin, and I wasn't prepared to put up with their complaints if I closed it. Lying in state, Aunt looked like a generic "aged crone" from Madame Tussaud's gallery of waxworks, but that was unimportant. She was long gone from that body. She would have been the first to agree that if the empty husk that was left gave pleasure to her friends, it was fine with her.

  I also had to get folks to stay at both her house and mine during the actual service and the trek out to the graveside. According to Amos, the Police Chief, thieves actually read the obituaries. Then while the family is away burying old Uncle Victor or whoever, the thieves break into the empty house and steal everything in sight. Talk about tacky.

  Despite being the chief mourner, I'd spent most of the last three days in Aunt's kitchen and on the telephone. Thank heaven for my Garden Club. They'd pitched right in with flowers and food, made sure the house stayed presentable, and saw to it that every dish and bowl was labeled and entered so that it could be returned to the right person with a thank-you note. Plus somebody was always available to greet folks who came by either the house or the funeral home.

  I've heard men boast that a girl only becomes a woman when she loses her virginity. Typical. As though that frequently uncomfortable and bloody encounter with a male is the defining moment in the female life.

  A girl truly becomes a woman when she is first initiated into that cadre of women who keep every sort of ceremony humming from behind the scenes. They are seldom appreciated, except by one another. They are the Marthas who spend most of any event around the kitchen stove and the sink.

  Read more of this and other stories in...

  The MOSSY CREEK HOMETOWN SERIES is available at www.BelleBooks.com

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  Chapter 40

  Chapter 41

  Chapter 42

  Chapter 43

  Chapter 44

  Chapter 45

  Chapter 46

  Chapter 47

  Chapter 48

  Chapter 49

  Chapter 50

  Chapter 51

  Chapter 52

 

 

 


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