Acknowledgement: I'd like to express my gratitude to Snooper for taking the time to critique the original draft of this story. I want to thank this editor for their advice and guidance, both that which I took, and that I didn't.
Chapter 1
Matthew Moore completed the house around midyear 1870. He had begun construction of the home he was building for his future wife, Clara DeRose, nearly four years earlier when he sectioned off a two acre site on the east side of his farm. Wanting the home to be something special, Matthew took his time and except for the frame raising, all the work, including all the finely detailed woodwork, molding, and cabinetry used throughout the house was built and finished with his own hands. Matthew also made many of the fine pieces of furniture that filled the new house. Doing so much of the work on his own explained not only the amount of time it took to build the house, but also reflected the love and care he put into it. When finished the home would be the finest in the area, and would include some of the most recent new fangled developments such as indoor plumbing with running water, fed by a wind driven well pump. The house also held finely appointed bathrooms, which meant they had tubs, basins, and thanks to the invention of the septic system by a Frenchman a decade earlier, inside toilets. Matthew went to such extremes not because of pride or conceit, but because he wanted his efforts to reflect his respect, love, and devotion to Clara. Luckily, he had the time and the wherewithal for this project since his was one of the largest and most profitable farms in the fledgling community of Palm Grove, Florida.
In Matthew's mind, the home needed to be a big, fine house for several reasons, not the least of which was he wanted Clara to have only the best. Matthew also had a dream of seeing the city develop into something more than the farming community it was. His opportunity to realize that dream came when town planners asked local land owners to sell off parcels of land so the city could expand, helping to make it a southern attraction for those rich northerners who came to sunny Florida each year to escape their harsh winters. Matthew Moore decided he would sell, on condition, a considerable section of his farm adjacent to the site of his new home. The conditions he set were the city street that fronted his property would be residential in nature, had to be named Moore Street, and this section of town would be the most exclusive area set aside for those rich Yankees to build their fine new homes upon. To make sure certain building standards were met, the house he was putting up for Clara and he would set the tone for this section of town, one sure to set off a 'one better' competition among the new residents as each new house was built.
Another reason Matthew needed a big house was Clara's cousin, Margaret, would also be living with them. Margaret was a few years younger than Clara but the two women were very close. When he and Clara first started courting, he thought when they stepped out Margaret accompanied them as a chaperone, as was common for the time, but came to quickly recognize his lady friend and her cousin were an inseparable pair. Later when he asked for her hand in marriage, before she accepted, Clara made it unmistakably clear to him Margaret would also be living with them. Matthew had been seeing Clara for nearly a year and half before proposing and was not at all surprised by Clara's demand. Fortunately, throughout the courtship, they had such fun together as a threesome Matthew came to look forward to his visits with the two women, and thought the three of them living together was not an unreasonable request.
Ten days after he finished the house Clara and Matthew were married and, along with Margaret, moved into their new home. As was the custom Matthew carried Clara over the threshold, but was taken aback when she insisted he do the same with Margaret. Bewildered he nonetheless complied, not wanting to upset his new wife on her big day.
In short order, because of the Moore's philanthropy, they became important social and political leaders in the small but growing community, and as the town grew so did their influence and standing. In not so many years, just as Matthew had foreseen, having a home on Moore Street in Palm Grove was akin to having a Park Avenue address in New York City.
The trio led a long, healthy, loving, and prosperous life, living happily for sixty years in the house Matthew built. During all that time Margaret never dated much less married, but given the familiarity and intense devotion the three of them shared, neither did she miss having a man of her own. Some of the town folk thought it a shame a fine looking woman such as Margaret lived her life as a spinster, her whole life revolving around that of her cousin and husband. What they never realized though was how much a part of Clara and Matthew's life Margaret really was.
From time to time for five, six months at a stretch during the first seven of the sixty years they lived together, Margaret would not participate in the many social gatherings held at the Moore house, nor be seen outside the house. During Margaret's absences, Clara would appear to be pregnant and half the time she really was.
Some gossips mistakenly thought the reason the younger woman disappeared during Clara's pregnancies was that she was heartbroken at the thought of never having a child of her own. Other folks said Margaret disappeared because she was a recluse, the less kind said it was because she was a mad woman. Had the truth been known, there would have been a real scandal for the nosy parkers to chatter about. Given the moral standards of the era, during the times of her disappearances Margaret was protecting her cousins and husband's, as well as her own reputation. In that day and age reputation, image, and stature were everything. Yet, in spite of that, Margaret felt no shame and had no regret, then or ever at how she chose to live her life.
Six children were born in the home, four boys, and two girls. The boys went away to college and the girls to finishing school. All of the children married and raised fine families of their own and remained living in the area. Although none of the children had the political influence their parents and aunt had enjoyed, they nonetheless led successful and fulfilled lives.
During one summer late in life, Clara gathered at the home on Moore Street her granddaughters and nieces so she could talk with them one by one. Although she never mentioned anything about it to her husband or cousin, a few weeks before the 'gathering' she'd been visited by a presence, one she couldn't explain or define, but neither did she fear it. To Clara, the presence was almost like a living being, not at all like a ghost or some other sort of unpleasant apparition, but something, someone she felt comfortable having around her.
Without Clara being conscious of it, it had been the Presence who had compelled her to call her granddaughters and nieces together. At first, Clara wasn't sure why she needed to talk with them, and why only the females, but that is what she did. The conversations she had with each of the girls, who ranged in age from seven to nineteen was not specific, but just about this and that. As they spoke, Clara studied each young lady, looked into her eyes, listened to how she spoke, and took in her mannerisms. Only one of the girls struck a note in Clara and that was her thirteen-year-old granddaughter Mamie. There was something about the way the girl talked and carried herself, something Clara had seen in Mamie's eyes that made her understand instantly and with incontrovertible clarity why she'd had these conversations.
Within a heartbeat or two of selecting Mamie the Presence said, seemingly inside Clara's head, "You have chosen well Clara. Mamie is the one who will follow." After that day, Clara never again heard or felt the Presence even though it would always be by her side.
The next day Clara told Matthew what she wanted when she died, and he never questioned her as to why. Somehow, tacitly he understood.
After that whenever they were together, Clara asked Mamie to sit or walk with her and they talked for hours on end. Clara taught Mamie about the house her grandfather had built, about the family, their history, the part they played in the city's development and about love and relationships. The one thing she never mentioned though, fearful Mamie would think her insane, was anything about the Presence that had visited her that summer.
Two and a half years later Margaret died, followed four months after by Clara. Matthew was heartbroken, some said devastated by each woman's passing. He received sympathy and well wishes from the town folk, but nothing could make him forget the two women with which he'd spent his life. After they were gone, Matthew felt lost, empty, and had no zest left for living, becoming almost a hermit in his own home. If it weren't for his children and grandchildren, especially Mamie, Matthew would have become a total shut-in never seeing anyone.
Never quite the same after they died, Matthew outlived both women by half a decade. Then, according to Clara's wishes, he left the property he'd so lovingly built, maintained, and shared with his two loves to his granddaughter Mamie.
Chapter 2