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The House Fire
by David Robert
Crews
Prologue
During 1969, the year after I graduated from high school
in Dundalk, Maryland, was when I first worked as a bear
hunting guide for my Aunt Martha and Uncle Finley Clarke
up in Maine. Fin owned and he and Marty ran Katahdin
Lodge and Camps in Patten, Maine.
Working at the Lodge was my vocation, riding around the
vast, wild and wonderful Maine countryside while having
a really good time with the local Mainer teenagers and
being a country girl’s delight was my avocation.
This short story below is the very first one that I
wrote, back in around 1999, when I began to finally
write out my Northern Maine adventures—I have wanted to
do so ever since back when I was living them.
I sent copies of this story, and all of my other stories
about my times in Maine, to Fin and Marty.
Unfortunately, they refused to acknowledge my writings;
just as they always refused to acknowledge that I am the
person who is in these stories and who can write it all
out.
This first story here is a nice little wholesome tale
about a young man from an East Coast American suburb
having a very exciting time getting to know the local
Mainers way up in the deep, wide woods of Northern
Maine. I just fit right in up there. I hope that you
enjoy this.
The Story Begins
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During the summer of
1968, just after I had graduated from high school in
Dundalk, Maryland, I was on a two-week vacation up
to my Uncle Finley’s hunting lodge, Katahdin Lodge
and Camps, in Patten, Maine, when I was called upon
to help at a house fire. That was during the summer
when I turned eighteen years old. The day of the
house fire, I discovered some fairly good and useful
things about myself that neither I nor anyone who
knew me had known are such a substantial part of me.
One afternoon,
about a week and a half into my two week vacation at
the Lodge, Gary Glidden, who was working for my
Uncle Finley as a hunting guide, was driving one of
the Lodge’s pickup trucks out the Lodge's driveway
with me in the passenger seat when Finley came
running out from the main building of the Lodge and
frantically waving his arms and hands up over his
head while yelling, "There's a house on fire up the
North Road!" |
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It was obvious that someone had telephoned to the Lodge
for help.
Gary had originally been going to turn right, south, out
of the driveway, but in response to the emergency call
he made a quick left, and we took off lickety-split
flying along at high speed heading north bound up the
North Road.
That road, which is Rural Route 11, meanders up and down
the low hills that run along the eastern side of the
northern end of the Appalachian Mountains. The first six
miles of the road had houses scattered on either side of
it at about one or two houses per mile. Then there were
thirty-five miles, on the odometer, of deep woods on
both sides of it until the road reaches the tiny town of
Masardis, Maine. So, when my uncle yelled to Gary and I
that the house on fire was "up the North Road," that was
all the information that we needed to head to the
rescue.
A little old widowed grandmother owned the house that
was on fire. Granny’s house was a large sized, two-story
country cottage, white with pretty yellow trim, well
maintained, old and made of solid wood. She had raised
her family on that property there. Built next to the
cottage, but about thirty feet away, was a wooden shed,
and then about fifty feet away from the large cottage
was a smaller, extra, rectangular shaped wooden house.
The shed and smaller house were all painted up nice and
neatly the same as the large house was.
The yard was well kept,
with lots of healthy bushes and pretty flowers planted
all around the place. On the three sides of the home
that weren’t road front property there was a great,
deep, wide, tall treed forest. Across the road from
there the forest was much deeper—as much as eighty to a
hundred miles deep, till it reached into Quebec, Canada.
On several previous rides up that way earlier during
that week, while out bear baiting with Gary, I had taken
full notice of Granny’s two houses sitting there
alongside the only north-south tar road in that part of
the Maine woods. Granny’s place was about twelve miles
away from the nearest tiny town—Smyrna Mills, Maine,
which was over to the east of Granny’s. I had taken full
notice of the place because Granny had her cute little
teenage granddaughter staying there for the summer. The
girl was there during her high school vacation time, and
she had attracted my attention in a similar way as to
how a hungry bear strollin’ through the woods detects
wild berries ripening on the bush—the most delicious
looking ones just seem to pop right out at ya’ from the
lush green background and catch yer’ eye. Each of those
several times that I had seen the granddaughter and her
granny they were out there working together in the yard,
prettying up the place even more. And I clearly saw that
they were always smiling warmly to each other and were
obviously very happy and contented to be in each other’s
company.
Due to the fact that I was about the same age as the
attractive teenage granddaughter I had an immediate
crush on her.
The granddaughter wore her hair in little pigtails. In
1968, that hairstyle was a sure-fired mark of immature
teenage-uncool-ness down in around the Baltimore City
suburbs where I was from. At the time, it was not a
popular hairdo at all for the in style teen girls in my
neighborhood. But even though that hairstyle was uncool
for 1968 era citified high school aged girls, them
pigtails made that granddaughter look really good and
country girl cute to me.
I said something to Gary about how attractive that girl
looked. But Gary told me that the girl never socialized
with any of the other teens around there at all, she
showed no interest in boys yet, she was perfectly
contented to spend all of her time with her beloved
grandmother, so I’d best forget about wanting to spend
any time in the close company of that sweet little
cutie.
During the week before that, Gary had introduced me into
the wholesome, healthy, fun and adventurous social life
of the teenagers who lived in and around the Town Of
Patten. Read my story “The Day I Fell In Love With
Patten, Maine”, and you’ll see how that all began. So I
knew that the advice he had given me about not bothering
with the granddaughter there was the spawn of honest and
sincere wisdom from a mature, worldly wise, twenty-eight
year old lifelong local Mainer, and newly found friend.
When Gary and I flew onto the scene of the house fire,
smoke and flames were eating up that nice old house at a
rapid pace. There were already eight or ten people there
helping out, which seemed strange because there usually
isn't enough traffic on Rt. 11 to draw such a crowd so
quickly. In that part of the country no local person
would pass by without stopping to help.
Pete Gerow, the only neighbor who lived within easy
sight of the fire, had been first to the rescue. Pete
had tried valiantly, with a garden hose, to stop the
fire at its source in the chimney, but there were many
years worth of extremely flammable creosote caked up
inside of that chimney and it was burning far too
intensely for some measly little bit of water squirting
from a garden hose to have any extinguishing effect on.
Granny was an intelligent and wise old country woman who
must have known better than to let too much creosote
build up like that, but she probably had a very low
income and bank account to live on and may have been
putting off paying someone to come clean out her
chimney. Or maybe she had done that job herself most of
her adult life, but then in her old age it had slipped
from her mind to attend to that most necessary task.
Pete Gerow and the passersby had grabbed all of the
small furnishings that they could save from burning and
had carried those things out into the dooryard (Mainer
lingo for front yard). As Gary and I jumped from the
truck to run over and on into the house to help them,
the last savable piece of furniture was being carried
out of the burning house by one of the passersby who was
stumbling out through a side door there being
mercilessly choked and chased by deadly-dangerous, thick
black smoke and by just as deadly, aggressive, ravenous,
large, terrifying, blue edged, tongues of orange tinged
flames. The women and men there on the scene turned
towards Gary and I, quickly told us that it was now too
dangerous to go back in there, then they moved away from
the fire, in our direction, to get safely away from the
intensifying heat and danger.
The closest fire station was seventeen miles south in
downtown Patten, a little town of less than 2,000
residents. The fire alarm had been called in, but by the
time that the firemen could have gathered up the two or
three available volunteers and gotten to the scene of
the fire, it would have been too late for them to help.
So we were on our own.
The fire was raging and Granny was about out of her mind
from traumatic anxiety. She kept trying to charge back
into the fire after her cats. At least a half a dozen of
us there on the scene had to form a shoulder-to-shoulder
human wall to be able to gently restrain the unfortunate
old widow from running in there after her cats. "My
babies, my babies," she muttered, all the while
attempting to get around us.
Granny was nearly bonkers now; her nerves were frying
fast. She was going into shock, so someone said to take
her into the extra house. In that smaller house there
she would be out of site of the ravenous fire, which was
eating up her cherished home, and most likely she’d be
easier to calm down in there. At that point, I believed
that we all feared that Granny would go completely out
of her mind permanently or die from the stress of the
overpowering awfulness of it all.
Two middle-aged women rescuers along with Gary and I
took firm, gentile hold of unfortunate old Granny’s
scrawny little arms and sparse shoulders then led her
into the small, extra house. All that I ever perceived
about the inside of that structure was that it seemed to
be one large room, was clean and tidy, and that there
was a bed in it that we steered Granny to. My entire
mental focus had become locked onto the deeply
distressed Granny, whom I feared was possibly about to
die from the shock that was brought on by her traumatic
anxiety.
We sat our little wide-eyed bundle of sizzling nerves on
the bed, but she kept popping back up and attempting to
go after her "babies". Granny’s granddaughter came in
and said that all of the cats were accounted for, but
that didn't calm poor ol’ Granny down a bit.
The teenage granddaughter went right back out so as not
to be rude to her and Granny’s unexpected ‘guests’ out
there. The folks out there now included my father, my
mother, a couple of paying sportsmen bear hunters from
the Lodge, my uncle and other local Mainers who had
arrived in response to phone calls that they had
received informing them of the fire. My father and
another man or two were taking turns in the intense heat
near the house fire squirting hot spots on the shed and
extra house with the garden hose in order to make sure
that the fire didn’t spread onto those structures.
Everyone there felt sad inside as they watched the fire
consume someone else’s house, while all that they could
possibly do was to wish that they could do more to help.
Gary and the two older women and I acted as a
psychological tag team trying to communicate to Granny
that everything was going to be all right, but she
couldn't respond to us. The emotional shock from her
ongoing trauma had her dazed and confused.
I don’t know why, but I seemed to have begun to receive
small responses from Granny. Maybe I was trying harder
than the other three. I had never experienced such a
traumatic event before, and the three other people
there, who definitely were much more mature then I was
at the time, had most likely lived through their own
traumas of similar magnitude. Quite likely, they had
felt that Granny was probably capable of surviving this
trauma. Maybe it didn’t seem to be as intense a
situation to them as it was to me—I believed that the
old gal was about to either completely loose her mind
and/or her life.
The two middle-aged women got fed up with not being able
to get any responses out of Granny, so they sidled on
out the door. Although Gary was a twenty-eight year old,
intelligent, mature, young woodsman, it became obvious
that I was the only one beginning to get through to
Granny.
Then Gary walked outside.
Me being only eighteen years old at the time, I was
quite surprised by all this.
I glanced around and saw that there was no one else to
help me with this situation, so I zeroed in on Granny
with every bit of my maturing “people skills” that I
could muster.
Granny sat on the side of the bed with her feet placed
flatly, but sort of weightlessly, on the floor; her
sparse little old shoulders drooped downwards under the
heavy mass of her anxiety; her dwindling, aged arms
dangled limply at her sides; and her mouth and old
yellowed eyes involuntarily gaped open wide. Eyes that
were nearly worn out from decades of watching her family
survive, live well and grow in such a secluded location
that was in a harsher than average natural environment,
which is only suited to be home for the heartiest of
individuals.
Granny appeared to come out of her shock a little bit
and then she commenced to quietly moanin' n' groanin’
about losing her house. What else could a body do at a
time like that?
I was standing over her, continuing to console her, when
all of the sudden she bolted upright into a partially
standing position, then wumpf! She had flopped backward
onto the bed with her scrawny old arms outstretched and
those well-worn, old woman eyes staring straight upwards
in a fixed position—wide, yellowish-white eyeballs with
dark pupils that were contracted down to the about the
size of sharp pinpoints. Piercing pinpoints that made it
look as if the light of life was quickly, mercilessly,
painfully being squeezed out of the poor old gal. Her
eyelids did not flutter a bit.
For a short eternity, I stood there somewhat shakin’ and
shuddering at the sight of the old woman's apparent
demise. I was sort of hovering over her, with my arms
involuntarily sticking out at about forty-five degree
angles from my body and my hands fluttering ever so
slightly. I was floating up off of my heels as if I was
about to sprout wings, liftoff and fly up to the
ceiling.
Looking down on her I thought, "Oh my God! I just
watched someone die!"
Then she came out of her intense shock, and to my
surprise she sprang back upright again into a sitting
position—with perfect, straight-backed, true lady-like
posture. I settled back down on my heels and let out a
solid sigh of relief, for my breathing had stopped
temporarily during those ten or fifteen seconds when it
had appeared to me that Granny's breathing was all over
and done.
Granny was solidly back here with us in the land of the
living now. She began to shake it all off and come to
herself once more. Right on time, the cute, young
granddaughter came in with a wonderful little smile on
her face. Granny responded to her right away with the
deep, affectionate love that they clearly felt for each
other.
That was my cue to leave.
You may now be wondering if this story is going to end
with me getting to spend time in the close company of
that sweet, young, attractive teenage granddaughter. I
certainly had made some kind of a good introduction of
myself to her, and her grandmother who would have had to
have approved of me visiting her granddaughter, but the
idea of dating the girl never crossed my mind again.
In retrospect, I seriously doubt that Granny would have
recognized me if we had crossed paths again in someplace
like Putt Gerow’s, Pete’s dad’s, tiny little country
store at Knowles Corner just down the road a short ways
from Granny’s house.
I sure enough could have stopped by Granny’s house
latter and reintroduced myself, while on one of my
drives around the beautiful Maine countryside that I
enjoyed taking in my father’s car. But, it was all too
soul satisfying for me to go mess it up by having to be
told by Gary or my aunt and uncle or my parents or
Granny herself to quit bothering that girl and her
grandma. If the girl simply wasn’t ready for dating yet,
then why ask? Those two gals were quite contented to be
living somewhat secluded up there in the woods together
for the summer. And Granny was OK with living there by
herself most of the time.
The events surrounding the house fire were far and above
way too intensely and deeply gratifying for me to want
to spoil it all by going after a girl who was not yet
ready to be with any guy. It was very gratifying to be
able to help them, and also to learn that I could help
out in such a tragic, traumatic situation.
I could not have told you at the time, but the events of
that day at the house fire had raised me to a slightly
higher, solid based, level of maturity and feeling of
self worth. Those good feelings were what I needed at
the time, not the grateful, polite attentions of a shy,
slowly maturing girl who wanted to only be with her
grandma for a while.
Another thing is, Gary was my newly found good friend,
and I was mature and intelligent enough to accept his
original advice to allow that girl to be her happy,
contented self and leave her be.
But don’t worry about, or scoff at, me. I had some real
good times with a few of the local Maine country girls
during those two weeks that summer.
Later on during the evening of the day of the fire,
after Granny’s cherished house had burned to the ground,
and everyone from the Lodge was back at the Lodge eating
supper, my Uncle Finley jovially informed us all that
there were two houses built there at Granny’s place
because a decade or two before that summer Granny’s
husband had divorced her and he had then built the
smaller house for Granny to live in and he had married a
second woman and had moved her into the larger house to
live with him. In 1968 though, the only one left living
there was Granny.
I have no idea how that all was worked out amongst
themselves or how old their children were at the time,
but it seemed to have worked just fine. That sure as
hell does leave a person with a few interpersonal
relationship aspects of the situation to speculate upon.
Not just the multi-sexual partner possibilities, but did
the husband have two completely compliant women there at
his “beck and call” when it came to cooking scrumptious,
hearty homemade meals and all that other good country
woman wifely stuff too. Yeah! Maybe one was good with
cooking up the best meats and potatoes and vegetables,
and the other baked big batches of the best
homemade-from-scratch desserts and breads. Or did the
two women tell that man in no uncertain terms that the
divorce decree was final and that the new marriage
vowels were set in stone?
Two days after the house fire, Gary and I drove by the
fire scene. The house was reduced to a pile of light,
whitish ashes, which lay in its still intact fieldstone
cellar walls.
But there were Grandmother and Granddaughter placing
brightly blooming potted flowers all around those cellar
walls and smiling from that powerful love they shared.
Gary's and my faces lit right up.
One of us said, "Look at that!"
The other said, "Isn't that beautiful."
The End
Epilogue
If you also read or have read my other stories about
Maine, you will see that when I went to work for my
Uncle Finley and Aunt Martha, a few months after this
first story took place, that they had decided that I was
to work for them for nearly nothing for the bulk of my
adult life and be their much abused quasi-slave; or, as
far as they were concerned, I was to go straight to
Hell.
That unnecessary bullcrap of theirs has caused my family
and me a lot of problems. Most of what happened
concerning these facts is all written out in my stories.
Fortunately, there’s a lot of wild fun and good times in
my stories too. Plus, you will learn some of what I
learned about all kinds of things back then.
Between November 1968, when I began working at Katahdin
Lodge, and November 1969, when I entered the U.S. Army,
I learned more while working at the Lodge and living
amongst the local Mainers then I ever could have in four
years of college.
ursusdave@yahoo.com
www.ursusdave.blogspot.com
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