We promised to write to each other, but, life being what it is, we never did. I suppose Olivia felt there was no need to write — it would only confuse the issue. After all, she had only to look across the room and there I’d be, constantly attentive.
Yet even now, years later, I can still see her, that ageless, perennial child-woman, lifting her guileless blue eyes and saying: “Do you think, my dear, that airplanes are quite
Grave on a Hill
by Brendan DuBois
“Did she seem surprised when you called and said we were coming?” Gordon Moore asked from the passenger’s side of the cruiser.
Victor Dumont steered onto the gravel driveway, passing a rusted mailbox that said HANSON in black, stick-on letters. “No, not really,” he said, easing the car up the driveway. It was a late afternoon in September. It had been misting and threatening rain all day, and the windshield of his cruiser, the only car the police department of Norwich, New Hampshire, owned, had been streaked with oil with each sweep of the wipers.
“She seemed resigned, in a way,” he added.
“Doesn’t sound good.”
“Well, she didn’t panic.”
Gordon said, “She should’ve panicked. People up here, cops come visiting, only means trouble.”
“You mean the hill people? I don’t believe that garbage.”
“Maybe you should, Victor,” Gordon said. “You and me and everybody else in a uniform is a valley person. Only time cops come up to the hills is when there’s trouble or heads to be busted. The hill people’d rather starve to death than ask us for help. Or advice. Or directions. They’re proud and religious and do their own things.”
“Maybe she’s got nothing to worry about.”
“Hmmph.” Gordon Moore wore an Anderson-Little topcoat over a grey two-piece suit. His black shoes were covered with black rubber protectors. He looked too well-dressed for this part of New Hampshire, especially with his carefully cut light brown hair and the horn-rimmed glasses that made him look like an investment banker. But Victor had once seen Gordon pick up a two-hundred-pound-plus biker in full leather gear and toss him into the back of a police wagon. And all of that happened in less than a second, it seemed. Gordon hadn’t even lost his glasses.
The gravel driveway curved around a small hill and ended in front of a two-story ranch house, with peeling white paint. There was no porch, just a set of concrete steps. A barn was off to the left, unpainted and sagging. A pickup truck was on blocks and a blue Ford Escort with a cracked windshield was parked at the side of the house. A mongrel dog, its brown fur matted and mud-stained, lifted itself up and started to howl, tugging at its chain.
Victor brought the cruiser up to the steps and then halted and reversed direction until a dozen feet separated the vehicle from the house.
“Good planning,” Gordon observed.
“Thanks.”
The dog continued its half-hearted howling as Victor walked to the steps, Gordon behind him. Just yesterday he’d been looking forward to a quiet weekend with a fishing pole and nothing to disturb him except the possibility of the pager going off. The chance now of a free weekend coming up anytime soon was probably ruined.
He walked up the steps, his orange raincoat flapping in the breeze. His campaign-style police hat with the Chief-Norwich PD pin set in front kept his head dry, and he glanced over at Gordon.
“Going to need your umbrella soon.”
“Don’t worry about me.”
“I’m not. Just worried about your hair.”
He took a deep breath and knocked on the door, and it opened instantly. No doubt she had been waiting, ever since seeing the cruiser roll up.
Victor touched his hand to his cap. “Mrs. Hanson?”