CÂ HÂ AÂ PÂ TÂ EÂ RÂ Â 2Â 3
“
B
alls.” Bill leaned back in the leather club chair, putting his feet on the leather hassock. “He's so full of it.”
Amy shrugged, “That's what he said.”
“He's always crying poor. It's a professional hazard.” Bill would have none of it. “There's money in the budget for centrifuges. For Christ's sake, Amy, every school budget has a layer of fat in it. Think of it as high cholesterol.” He glanced down at his own expanding belly, the corners of his mouth turned down. “When did you see him, anyway?”
“I stopped by his office at eight-thirty. Before my first class.”
“I'm sure he was toiling away.” Bill's voice dripped sarcasm.
“He was.”
Alpha Rawnsley opened the door to the teachers' lounge, inhaling the seasoned oak crackling in the fireplace. “Solace!” She closed the door behind her, took in Amy's face. “Perhaps not.”
“Oh, Alpha, I'm just mad at Knute, that's all. He says there isn't money in the budget to replace the four centrifuges that broke.”
“Crying poor.” Bill nestled farther into the comfortable old chair, made so by decades of teacher bottoms.
“He can be strict,” Alpha wryly replied as she poured herself a sherry from the decanter.
As each of them had taught their last class of the day, they repaired to the lounge. It was their version of stopping by the bar to have one with the boys before going home. The difference was the Custis Hall faculty thought of it as collegiality.
“Anal,” Bill said.
“That may be so, but Custis Hall remains in the black. You have to give him and Charlotte credit for that. And once the alumnae fund reaches its target, they'll both relax.”
“If I have to wait that long for four centrifuges, I'd better leave.” Amy decided a spot of sherry would do her a world of good, too.
Outside the paned, leaded-glass windows a few snowflakes announced more to come.
Alpha smiled. “To the first snow.” She handed Bill a sherry.
They toasted the true beginning of winter.
“You know what else he's obsessing about?”
“Amy, he has a laundry list.” Bill giggled, which made the two women laugh.
“Professor Kennedy's bill. He must have droned on and on for a good twenty minutes about all the time she was here because she charges by the hour. He anticipates her report, which, his words, âWill be a pulp novel larger than the Cedars of Lebanon.' He's not exactly sliding into the holiday mood.”
“Wonder why he called it a novel?” Alpha, ever the English teacher, queried.
Amy shrugged but Bill piped up, “She'll make it up.”
“Bill!” Alpha was surprised. “She hardly seemed like that kind of person, and do you think she would have the recommendation she does or her position at Brown if she were a fraud?”
“I don't know.” Bill drained his sherry glass. “I just don't see how anyone can authenticate an iron lock or a pair of dancing pumps. I suppose you can come close, but I know from my work that you wind up with what was most popular. For instance, let's say I'm doing a production of
The Lion in Winter
. Twelfth century and it happened to be a period of clean, quite beautiful designs, especially for women's clothing. But what do I see? Stained-glass windows. A pretty painting in a Book of Hours. There's not a scrap of fabric left. Besides, I'm seeing idealized representations of royalty and nobles. I don't think it's that easy to authenticate certain objects or clothes. It's always an approximation.”
“Carbon dating.” Amy poured another round for Bill and herself. Alpha waved her off.
“Sure. That will really put Knute over the edge. Do you know how expensive that is? Look, we're doing this to pacify a segment of our student body. It's window dressing.”
“I don't think so.” Alpha disagreed without being disagreeable. “Once the administration committed to this, it realized that nothing has been done with those items since the day they were given to Custis Hall. No one knows their value. It may be important for insurance.”
“Sell off one old ribbon and I'd have my centrifuges,” Amy griped.
Bill laughed, “I can see it now, science teacher sentenced to fifteen years for theft of valuable ribbon.”
The three laughed.
Alpha lowered her voice slightly. “This is when we need Al Perez. He could jolly Knute along.”
Amy struggled, then replied, “I try not to miss him, but I do.”
Diplomatically Alpha said, “You were closer to him than we were. He had his faults. Don't we all? However, he worked very hard for Custis Hall and we're close to our alumnae fund goal because of him.”
“Fifteen million dollars.” Bill inhaled. “That sounds like so much money until you realize that two decades ago Stanford University launched a drive to raise one billion dollars in alumnae contributions. Now the other first-flight,” he used the hunting term, “universities have followed suit.”
“Pity poor University of Missouri.” Alpha kept up with educational news. “Kenneth Lay, a graduate, promised beaucoup dollars. They based their budget on that and, well, we know the rest of that story. I can't imagine doing that to people or to one's alma mater. He doesn't seem to have a smidgen of shame.”
“Never steal anything small,” Bill replied. “Remember that movie with James Cagney? Wasn't that the title?”
Amy glared at Bill. “How would I know?”
“That's right, Amy. I forgot. You were still in swaddling clothes.” Bill let out an uproarious laugh and Alpha couldn't help but laugh with him.
“Bill, you went ugly early.” Amy smiled for a change.
“Guess I did.” He finished his sherry. “My wife has promised something new and exciting with the turkey leftovers. My curiosity is rising.”
“Along with your appetite.” Alpha listened to the grandfather clock ticking in the corner. “Snowing a bit harder now. Bill, think you'll foxhunt tomorrow?”
“It's from Beasley Hall. Crawford will have the road plowed out. We'll go unless it's a blizzard. I didn't check the weather this morning. What's the call?”
“Light snow. Not much accumulation, maybe one or two inches. Enough for the highway department to clear the roads,” Alpha said.
“With what we pay in state taxes the highway department could do a better job of snowplowing.” Amy folded her arms across her chest.
“Budget. See. We come back to Knute. Same drama, different theater.” Bill enjoyed his wordplay.
“This is a rich state,” Amy said.
“It's a well-managed state,” Alpha said, amending Amy's response. “We aren't rich compared to New York or California. We're better managed, and because of that, our taxes are lower.”
“We don't have people pouring in across the border using state services and not paying for them.” Bill had strong thoughts about that issue.
“True,” Alpha simply replied.
“It always comes back to money, doesn't it? I don't see why we can't afford more snowplows and I don't see why I can't have four centrifuges.”
“If the state buys more snowplows it's wasteful. Contract out the labor, allow those men who already have the equipment to make some money. The state doesn't have to maintain the equipment, put the gas in the engines, or buy the bulldozer initially. It's a better system. It's up to the contractor to factor in those things when he bids.” Alpha believed passionately in reducing the number of people employed by the state government or any level of government. Let the private sector do it.
“So what do you want me to do? Go write a bid and turn it in to Knute?”
“Try an angora sweater that fits, uh, that shows off your assets.” Bill felt wonderful, the sherry warming him.
“Works on you, not Knute.” Amy knew her compatriots.
Alpha remarked lightly, “You can't blame a man for looking.”
“Alpha, you'd be surprised.” A sour note crept into Bill's voice. “If our society becomes any more politically correct the only people who will teach, run for office, you name it, will be robots. God help anyone with blood in his or her veins.”
“You've got a point there, Bill. I'm glad I'm getting older.” She spoke to Amy, “Bill and I will soon retire. You and your generation are going to bear the brunt of this. And you're also going to endure a wicked recession, so my advice, dear, forget the centrifuges for now. Be as helpful as you can and the best teacher you can be. When the pink slips fly, your name won't be on one. Because by the time this economy hits the skids, Knute will be even more powerful.”
“Hear, hear.” Bill raised his glass and Amy poured him another round.
He was a big man and could absorb it.
“We haven't really talked about this, but Al's murder is certainly going to affect the school. If the person who did it isn't caught soon, parents will get nervous and so will alumnae. Our recession could start before the nation's,” Alpha shrewdly noted.
“They'll catch him,” Amy confidently said.
“Who knows?” Bill's blue eyes were doubtful. “Murder is a very easy crime to commit. Steal something large, they'll track you down sooner or later. Again, Kenneth Lay. But murder? It makes for good movies, but in real life people get away with it every day.”
“That's cynical.” Amy wanted Al's murderer caught even if she did cling to her resentment of the way in which the affair ended.
“Going to be more than two inches if it keeps coming down like this. What is there about the first snow? Pristine. Beautiful.” Alpha changed the subject. “I'll bid you two adieu. I want to get home before the roads are a slushy mess.”
“Sun's setting, too. It'll ice up pretty fast. I guess I'll find out what my dearest has conjured up with the leftovers.”
Amy waited alone in the lounge for a few minutes as she watched Alpha and Bill, walking together in the snow. She loved this old lounge. It was where she began her flirtation with Al that turned into something much more. For the first time since his death, the tears came. Lost loves, always emotionally potent, are even more so when death removes all possibility of resolution. Poor thing didn't even know she needed resolution until this grief overtook her.
CÂ HÂ AÂ PÂ TÂ EÂ RÂ Â 2Â 4
A
light snow, a thin white curtain, continued to fall when the Jefferson hounds cast from Beasley Hall on November 29. Three inches had accumulated overnight as the snowfall abated, then picked up again, but the main roads were easily passable. Crawford plowed the tertiary road to the huge stone pillars announcing the entrance to his estate. The massive, expensive bronze boars atop the pillars had snow on their tusks, in their hackles, which added to their ferocious appearance.
The only dicey part for those braving the weather was the one mile of secondary road before turning off to Crawford's road. Everybody crawled along and arrived to park in front of the hunter stables. Fifteen sturdy souls arose in darkness for the morning's hunt. True foxhunters, they knew today was the kind of day when one could ride on the chase of the season.
And they weren't far wrong, because the hounds cast promptly at nine and by ten minutes after the hour, Asa, wise in his seventh season, caught a whiff of fresh rabbit blood. He flanked the pack, put his nose down, and tracked the scent droplets in the snow to a small covert folded into the land.
“He's in the covert!”
Asa called out and the other hounds honored him.
A big red dog fox, hearing the music, bolted out the other end of the small covert.
Betty, on Magellan, who danced about, saw him shoot northeast so the light wind would be at his tail. No fool, this fellow.
“Tally ho!” Betty called out.
Sister slipped and slid as they cantered down the slope. Going up the slight rise proved easy enough, and by the time they crested it, she and the small field could see the beautiful sight of a red fox against white snow in the distance running flat out, the whole pack as one behind him.
The snowflakes stung as they hit Sister's face, caught in her eyelashes. The cold awakened everyone but most especially the horses, who loved days like today. Snow flew off hooves; some large clumps smacked people's chests like hard snowballs.
A black coop, half white on the bottom now, loomed ahead. Shaker soared over it on Gunpowder, white as the snow himself. Sister and Rickyroo popped over but as successive riders took it, the footing grew ever more treacherous. The last four horses over rode straight to the base and popped way up and over.
Against the snow, everyone could see the red figure diminishing up ahead. The snow impeded him but it slowed the hounds, too. As they were heavier, they sank down into it.
A zigzag fence was ahead and the riders took their own line coming back together on the other side of the lovely old snake fencing. The fox sped over the next large field, dashed into a thick woods. His perfect paw prints announced his progress to human eyes because he was harder to see once in the woods. He ducked into underbrush.
Dragon and Trident, fast, nudged ahead of Cora. Both boys closed on the fox. Dragon lunged for him, jaws snapping, and the red jumped up in the air, turned a ninety-degree angle, and again ducked under thick brush that proved tough going for Dragon and Trident, but they persevered.
A crystal-clear deep creek lay ahead, the banks steep, filled with ice, too. He launched into the creek, swimming downstream, scrambling out on the other side. He gained two minutes on his pursuers with this tactic because they all crashed into the creek, then had to pick up his scent on the other side, which took a few moments since they clambered out higher up than he did.
Sister gave Rickyroo a hard squeeze. He soared over the creek, landing cleanly on the other side. He didn't like the reflections from ice but he was learningâhe was sevenâthat the old girl on his back was trustworthy. She didn't ask him to do anything stupid.
A mass of boulders, jumbled together like a giant's discarded building blocks, marked the edge of the heavy woods. The fox dove into his den at the base of the smooth gray rock.
The hounds dug at the rock. Shaker praised them. As he swung his right leg over he glanced down, noticing to his right fresh bear tracks. He put his right foot back in the stirrup. He blew “gone to ground” very briefly from the saddle, then turned the pack in the opposite direction of the tracks.
Sister rarely questioned her huntsman. His abrupt departure keyed up her already heightened senses. She turned and followed, Walter, Crawford, Marty, Gray, Sam, Tedi, Edward, and others behind her.
No sooner had they moved into the rolling white field on the other side of the woods than the hounds struck again. This scent was older but strong enough to give another ripping twenty-minute run. Miraculously no one slipped and went down. At least going down in snow is better than on hard-baked earth.
By the time they returned to the trailers, wiped down their horses, and threw blankets over them, everyone was exhilarated and exhausted.
Marty had her cook prepare a hot breakfast at the long hunt table. The luxury of sitting at a table instead of balancing a plate on one's lap couldn't have come at a better time.
Sausages, bacon, hot flaky biscuits, eggs, steaming steel-cut oatmeal, pancakes, waffles, pastries as well as the ubiquitous ham biscuits covered the table. Marty even had the cook fill the tureen with bubbling chipped beef gravy.
Crawford sat at the head of the table with Sister at his right. Marty commanded the other end, Walter at her right.
Once the warm food hit everyone's stomach as well as some bracing coffee or tea, a few coffees laced with bourbon, the volume of conversation in the room rose.
Shaker was usually reluctant to join a breakfast for he had many chores, but once he knew the hounds were snuggling down in deep straw and had plenty of fresh water, and Marty had Rory give everyone biscuits, he came to the table. His presence delighted everyone and he was peppered with questions. This hard-core group truly wanted to know about hound work. Even Crawford, not a hound man, feigned interest.
“Let the poor man eat first,” Marty good-naturedly ordered.
As the merriment continued, Crawford addressed Sister. “You know, Saturday, when we rode past St. John's of the Cross, I thought what a good thing, to have a chapel of one's own.”
Knowing him, she replied, “When are you going to start and are you using clapboard, brick, or stone?”
He smiled at her as he nibbled a piece of Canadian bacon. He put it on his plate. “Well, stone is impressive.”
“Your stone pillars certainly are.”
“I was thinking the same type of stone.”
“You know you place the altar facing south.” She ate her oatmeal laced with orange blossom honey. She didn't know what she liked more, oatmeal or honey.
“No.”
“Always.”
Tedi, on Crawford's left, gleefully told him, “Crawford, as you know, my father's family was from Connecticut, so you might say I have double vision. I can see both sides of the Mason-Dixon line. When one is south of the line, the altar is south because no true southerner will worship with his face to the north.”
“Good God,” Crawford exploded genially, “doesn't anyone ever forget?”
“No” was said in unison.
“Gray, Sam, doesn't all this worship of the Confederacy worry you?” Crawford asked.
Sam deferred to his brother.
“Those who do not know their past are doomed to repeat it,” Gray stated.
This set off a lively conversation, which delighted Crawford. He considered himself a Renaissance man even if he appeared nouveau riche to others. Better nouveau riche than nouveau pauvre.
“What shall you name your church?” Sister returned to his building project.
“I was thinking of St. Swithun, a good English saint.”
Tedi wrinkled her brow. “Oh, dear, all I remember is if it rains on St. Swithun's Day it will rain for forty days following. July 15. So much for my catechism studies.”
“We think of you as St. Tedi.” Sister laughed at her old friend.
“Lots of St. Theodores, but they're men.” Crawford read history constantly and since saint days and the ecclesiastical calendar bound Western culture for close to two thousand years, he was a font of information on such subjects, as was Sister.
“We'll make a new saint, then,” Sister said as she ate a second bowl of oatmeal.
“There's a St. Teath, a woman of Cornwall, thirteenth century. Nothing is known of her,” Crawford expounded.
“Why St. Swithun? Is there another reason apart from his being English? I mean, you could have picked St. George. Who's more English than the dragon-slayer?” Tedi was curious.
“Swithun had healing power. He was bishop of Winchester. Died in 862. I admire those people in the so-called Dark Ages. Think of what they accomplished and with so little, with such personal hardship.”
The breakfast broke up after an hour. More snow had fallen, and the drive home took longer.
Sister and Gray crept along in his Land Cruiser. Betty was driving the gooseneck loaded with horses. Sister liked hauling to the meets with Betty but Gray wanted Sister with him so they could talk and he adored showing off what his Land Cruiser could do. At a base price of $55,000 his sold for almost $60,000 since Gray couldn't resist any gadget.
She had to admit, the vehicle could probably double as an armored car and it plowed through everything.
“Wonder how much Crawford will spend on his chapel? St. Swithun. I like that he's naming it that,” she mused.
“He'll use the best stonemason in the county so that's forty dollars a cubic foot right there; he's lucky because that price represents a bargain.”
“My God.”
“Sobering.”
“I keep forgetting how rich he is.”
“You're the only one.” Gray laughed at her. “Hey, have I told you how much I love riding behind you?”
“Tell me again.”
“You're bold, you know what the hounds are doing, but mostly I like seeing your little butt over the fences. Your butt is so little it's like a boy's.”
“More.”
“Your breasts aren't bad either. Of course, I can't see those when you're leading the field.”
“Gray.” She just ate this up. Suddenly she sat upright out of the comfortable seat. “Honey, can I use your cell phone?”
“Sure, it's wired through the car. All you have to do is push these buttons and the phone icon. When you want to hang up, push the icon where the phone is level.” He pointed to a green button, then a red button. “Forget something?”
“No, no, I've had a terrible thought.” She dialed the Widemans. “Henry, hello, we missed you Saturday.”
Sister's voice was distinctive, so he knew immediately who it was. In fact, Sister rarely had to identify herself.
“Wish I could have been there. Heard that fox ran you clean to the old granary at Beveridge Hundred.”
“Did and thumbed his nose at us, too. How was your trip to Baltimore?”
“Good.” He paused. “City's changing. Guess they all are. I worry that all this renewal will throw the baby out with the bathwater.”
“Excuse me for being nosy, but I was wondering if you'd gone out to St. John's before you left for Baltimore.”
“I'll get in there sooner or later.”
“Would you mind if Gray and I drove to it? We're in the Land Cruiser so we'll get in. I think I lost something there,” she half-fibbed.
“No, not at all. Anything I can do to save you the trip?”
“Thank you, no. Letting us come back and hunt Little Dalby is the best thing to happen to our club in years. I can't thank you enough, and you know, we stand ready to make good on gates or if you have a project that takes strong backs, call. In fact, I'm sitting next to Samson here.”
After a few more pleasantries she disconnected.
“What are you up to? What have you gotten me into?” He shook his head.
“Honey, won't take too long. You know the way.”
Gray, a good driver, was particularly alert if another vehicle was on the road. So many people, deluded by technology, would fly down a snowy road only to soar off into a bank, a ditch, or flip over. It was as though two generations of Americans had lost all sense of nature's power.
Within twenty minutes they were at St. John's of the Cross.
Sister stood before the doors. She opened them. Cold. No sign of change since she and Betty were there. A disturbed
“Hoo”
let her know who else was in there.
“What are you searching for?”
“Gray,” she rested her gloved hand on his chest, “Betty and I were here marking jumps and trails. We walked on back here and I guess I took a trip down Memory Lane. Anyway, it was apparent no one had been here in years. But when we hunted Saturday I noticed tire tracks, covered now, obviously, and the hounds went straight to the chapel rear. Shaker called them off. I didn't pay attention. The chase was too good. But I did note somewhere in the back of my mind that the tracks didn't pass over tracks coming from the other direction. Whoever came here came to the chapel. And I smelled rot.”
“It's deer season, Jane. No reason a hunter wouldn't park here and go deeper into the woods. Can't drive into the brush. And you know as well as I that some hunters will leave the carcass or parts of it.”
“Got a flashlight in that tank of yours?”
“I do.”
Within seconds they were walking around the chapel.
“I'm looking for any recent disturbance.”
“Why?”
“Well, I don't rightly know, except that I trust my hounds. Shaker called them from here in short order but they were highly interested. Of course it's below freezing now so I can't smell a thing.”
“Fox under the chapel?”
“Could be and if it is, I need to worm him or her. If I'm lucky maybe I can lure him into a humane trap and get one rabies and distemper shot in.”
They walked around to the back. The old stone foundation had some gaps in it large enough for a hound to crawl in, or a human for that matter.
With the biting cold the decaying leaf smell was not discernible, although a pleasant odor to the human nose.