âNo, thank you. I have to be somewhere.' She rubbed her lips together, freshening her lipstick. âIt's nice to have some young neighbors. Not that I had anything against Mrs Gardiner, you understand. I never saw her much. But sometimes it feels lonely out here. Everybody keeps to themselves.'
âYou know Mr Stokes, don't you?'
âI don't see him much either.' Her keys jangled in her hand. âI'm sorry again for the trouble the other day.'
âIt wasn't any trouble,' Vivian said.
As Mrs Brodie turned towards the door, her gaze fell on the blue suit where it lay on the floor. She walked over and picked it up, her hands lingering as she draped it over the garment bag. âGood-bye for now.'
The fruity smell trailed after her, persisted in the yellow kitchen until it turned acrid in the warm air. They watched as she walked down the driveway to her car. Her clothing, almost the same bright orange as the vests worn by the road crew, seemed even more vivid in the sunlight.
Vivian had just finished telling Dot everything she knew about Mrs Brodie when they heard another car pull up the driveway. âI can't believe it. No one comes to visit us for weeks, and now that you're here, everyone comes.'
Dot peered around her shoulder. âWho is it?'
âIt's Katherine.' Vivian met her on the porch. âWhat are you doing out here?'
Katherine carried a Tupperware container and her bracelets bounced loudly against it as she walked. âJust came to bring you some cookies. You know me, Little Miss Homemaker.'
âThey're homemade?'
âSure they are. Some of the mothers brought them for a little show the kids had at the school. There were so many left over, and I sure don't want them at my house. Being around you has made me decide to finally go on a diet. Believe me, it's long overdue.'
They stepped into the kitchen and Vivian introduced Dot.
âI was just telling Vivian that her tiny figure has depressed me, and here you are, just as thin as her!'
âGreat to meet you,' Dot said.
âI wanted to see if I could take you both into town for lunch.'
âGuess who was just here?' Vivian said.
âWho?'
âMrs Brodie.'
âThat's not what I thought you'd say.' Katherine's eyes gleamed.
âDo you know her, Katherine?' Dot asked.
âDidn't Vivian tell you? All of us in this town went to the same high school.' She laughed. âLots of people knew Kitty. She was very popular.'
âShe said she was sorry for coming over the other day,' Vivian said. âShe thought she made a scene.'
âDid she?'
Vivian looked at Katherine, surprised by her sharp tone. âIt's understandable, don't you think?'
Katherine nodded half-heartedly.
âYou don't like her much, do you?' Vivian asked.
âNo. But I should be more considerate of her during this time. Sorry.'
âDid Mrs Gardiner ever say anything about her?' Vivian asked. âMrs Brodie said she never saw her.'
âNot that I remember.'
âDid she have many friends in the community? Mrs Gardiner, I mean.'
âI think so,' Katherine said. âShe attended the Methodist church in town, and she knew some families down there. I think she knew Jesper Stokes, before he died of course.'
âShe did?' Vivian said.
âThey were neighbors a long time. Way back when, Abe Stokes's grandfather, Manusâ¦'
âManus?' Dot said.
Katherine nodded. âManus used to hunt with Betty's husband. So Betty knew Jesper Stokes when he was young, and the current Mr Stokes too.' She looked over. âVivian's friend.'
Vivian tilted her head in warning. âDidn't Mrs Gardiner tell you that Sherman used to visit often?'
âAt least three or four times a year,' Katherine said. âSometimes more in the summer.'
âHe left some clothing here,' Vivian said. âThat suit was his.'
Katherine peered over, raising her eyebrows. âNice.'
âWhere would he wear it around
here
?' Vivian asked.
âPlenty of places,' she said. âTo church, for one. There are two very good restaurants, Cecil Clement's Italian place and a steak and seafood over in the next town. And they put on formal dances at the community center. Last fall, Max and I finally went to one. It had the feel of a high school reunion, but we had a good time. You wouldn't know by looking at him, but Max can really dance.'
Vivian laughed. âNowell tries hard, but he always hunches over, like tall people do sometimes.'
âLonnie doesn't,' Dot said. âHe sticks his head right in the air and looks everyone over. He loves being in the middle of everything, you know. He wouldn't like it so much if he were my size, and felt like everyone was going to squash you.'
âIt wasn't very crowded at the community center,' Katherine said, âso we didn't have to worry about that.'
âDo they have a dance every fall?' Vivian asked.
âA couple of times a year. Usually it's put on by churches or different clubs.'
âDid Mrs Gardiner ever go to one of the dances?'
âGoodness, no! I can't even imagine that.'
âBut you think Sherman went?'
Katherine held up her hand in protest, her bracelets clinking together. âI didn't say that. I said that someone
could
dress up to go to one of those things. Why are you asking me all these questions about Sherman?'
âI don't know,' Vivian said. âI guess when you're going through people's things, you get curious. You know, I never got to meet him.'
Katherine crossed her arms. âYou should have asked Kitty Brodie about Sherman.'
âWhat do you mean?' Vivian asked.
âI heard that Sherman helped Kitty out with things around her house now and then, repairs and what-not, her being on her own and everything.'
âReally?'
âJust being neighborly, I guess. Lord knows she couldn't ask that Mr Stokes for anything. He's got a high horse, that one, and I don't think he cares much for Kitty.'
Vivian wondered why Mrs Brodie had said that she hardly knew Betty Gardiner. Did Mrs Gardiner exaggerate or had Sherman hidden the frequency of his visits for some reason? Maybe Sherman was embarrassed by the way his mother needed him, she thought, much like Nowell's mother continued to ask so much of him. Maybe he disguised his visits as business trips, keeping them from his wife and family in order to appease everyone involved. Or maybe it was more complicated; perhaps Sherman had more to hide than a strong attachment to his mother. Vivian felt sure there was something else.
âI've got two containers of casserole getting cold in the car,' Katherine said.
Vivian leaned against the kitchen table. âWhat for?'
âOh, I help take food to people who are feeling poorly or can't get out much anymore. Today, I'm headed to Mrs Grossmont's â she's out here by you â then I've got another run further up in the hills to Mr Miller's.' She moved towards the door. âHow about I stop back by after I'm finished and we'll see if you two are up for lunch?'
Vivian followed her gaze, down to the wrinkled tee shirt she had worn to bed. Her hair must be a mess. âThanks, Katherine. That would be great.'
âWe'll be ready,' Dot added.
They watched Katherine's green car turn onto the main road.
Dot turned to her with wide eyes. âWe need tools,' she said.
âI don't think we have time,' Vivian said. âShe's coming backâ¦'
âLet's just start. We need a scraper thing.'
The warm feeling from Dot's hangover remedy still coursed through Vivian. She remembered Nowell's directives, to finish sorting things before they started doing anything about the painting or décor. âI'll go out to the shed and look.'
The shed was a bountiful source. Vivian found hammers, rusty screwdrivers, a mallet with a cracked wood handle, a dust-choked electric sander, a box-cutter, even a scraper. When she brought the items to the kitchen and set them down, Dot handed her a tall green thermos.
âWhat's this?'
âMore motivation.' Dot's eyes were gleaming, and she reached over and picked up another thermos, maroon and black.
âWhere did you get these?' Vivian asked, lifting the thermos. It was plastic, with an airtight lid that Dot had removed. Inside, orange liquid swirled within the metallic lining.
âThe cupboards,' Dot said. âI had to dig through all the tea cups. How many tea cups can an old lady use, anyway?'
Vivian sputtered orange liquid at this, then wiped her mouth and laughed some more. As far as she could tell, the concoction was orange juice and vodka only.
âWe have our manly thermoses and our manly tools,' Dot said. âLet's go.'
At first they had no system. Vivian tried cutting the wallpaper with the box-cutter, which left long ridges in the wall. Dot hacked away with a flat screwdriver and the mallet, which left gouges but sometimes provided a corner that they could tear. They set their thermoses on the ground and returned to them often, and they thought of ways to describe the horses.
âThis one has gas,' Dot said. âHe's so uncomfortable.'
âThere's a gray one here,' Vivian said. âHe looks lost, can't find his family. He's going to cry any minute.'
They laughed and drank and worked on the wallpaper until they had developed a system. Vivian used the screwdriver to pry away the paper in the corners, then Dot followed up with the scraper. They had to lean over each other at times, which also led to laughter and once, to Vivian falling onto the carpet.
âThis one is evil,' Dot said between gulps of air. âLook at him.'
Vivian crawled over to see the horse, which was low on a pole half-way down the hall. On the way, she knocked over her thermos, which had been recently emptied.
The horse was brown with a jewel-encrusted headband. His eyes were small, black and decidedly evil. The two girls rolled around on the floor, clutching their stomachs in a giggling fit. Every time they would stop and look again at the horse, they'd start again. Eventually, the laughter subsided.
âWe're doing a good job,' Dot said, sitting up. âI'm going to make another drink.'
âGood idea,' Vivian said. She stood up and surveyed their work. They had done quite a bit, almost half of the hallway on one side. The wallpaper came off more easily than she had imagined it would. Here and there, they had missed little sections, so she took the scraper and went to finish up.
She thought about the house and its small rooms, and the trees brushing against each other with their soothing sound, and the smell of damp grass and wood. Maybe we could live here, she thought. We could paint the walls and get our things out of storage. Nowell would have his own room for writing, and I could get a job in town like
Katherine. She shook her head as she peeled a small square of paper from the wall. I would feel trapped, she reminded herself. And as she stood there, the scrap of wallpaper hanging from her hand as the horses pulsated in front of her eyes, she realized that the house had grown very quiet. What's happened to Dot? she wondered.
Slowly, she walked to the end of the hall. The fresh air in the kitchen hit her face like a cool breeze. The orange juice container, now empty, was on the counter, as was the vodka bottle. The thermoses had been filled, but Dot was missing. Vivian would have seen her if she had headed to the bathroom. She checked in the living room and Nowell's study. She climbed the steps to the attic and peered inside. Finally, she opened and screen door and stepped onto the patio.
Suddenly, a blast of cold water hit her in the chest and trailed down her legs. She crouched down and when she looked up, Dot was laughing hysterically at the side of the house, holding the green garden hose.
Vivian hurried into the house, opening cupboards until she found something: a pitcher they used to make iced tea. She filled it at the sink. Water bubbling over the edges, she carried it onto the porch, went down the steps, around the side of the house, looking for Dot. A streak of red from the back yard, the flapping of bare feet, and Vivian managed to get most of the water onto Dot as she flew by. Then she grabbed the hose and soaked her more, as Dot tried to make it back to the house. Their squeals echoed through the open space and the world became a blurred, frenetic place. Dot filled the pitcher and doused Vivian again; neither of them was really trying to avoid each other. They ended up at the back of the house, each tugging at the extended hose, screaming and laughing, with a spout of water drenching them both. They were having so much fun that they
didn't hear the green car, didn't hear the soft music of the bracelets, didn't hear the footsteps.
âGirls!'
They both froze at the spot, the water gurgling out and over their hands.
âWhat in the world is going on?' Katherine stood at the threshold to the back yard, hands on her hips.
Vivian chuckled and pulled the hose away from Dot. She walked over and shut it off. Dot walked with her, head down, a stifled smile on her face.
âThere's water all over the patio, like a flood,' Katherine said. âWater in the kitchen. Somebody's gonna break their leg.'
Vivian shrugged. âWe were just having some fun.'
Katherine grinned, looking from one to the other as they stood shoulder-to-shoulder before her. âWell, my, my. Are you girls drunk?'
Dot snickered, then covered her mouth. âNo, of course not.'
Katherine shook her head, her hair sending reddish sparkles in the sunlight. âIt's eleven o'clock in the morning, girls.' She turned. âLet's get you cleaned up.'
In the kitchen, Vivian explained their morning's project. They showed Katherine their handiwork and explained how they just couldn't stand the demented horses for one more day.
âThey're awful,' Vivian said. âHow anyone could pick that outâ¦'
âMaybe a circus clown, the kind with the sad face!' Dot laughed again then noticed Katherine's expression.
âEverybody's got their own tastes,' she said. She leaned down and started picking up the scraps of wallpaper they'd left on the floor, her bracelets clinking as she gathered them.
âWe were going to pick that up,' Vivian said. âWe weren't finished.'
âOh, I'm happy to help out,' Katherine said, looking up to smile. âWhy don't you girls get dressed and you can drive with me to Mr Miller's? I didn't make it out there yet because Mrs Grossmont had lots to tell me this morning. Poor lady, all by herself out there.'
Dot and Vivian exchanged a glance then went to their respective bedrooms to change. Soon, they were sitting in the car, with their hair brushed and dry clothes. Dot sat in the front with Katherine.
âWhere are your men, anyway?' Katherine asked.
âThey went fishing,' Vivian said. âLonnie met some of the men who've been paving the road. I guess they have a boat at some river.'
She nodded. âThere's a great fishing river past town, up in the hills. Remember I told you we should take a picnic up there one day? It's very scenic, lots of greenery and rock formations. The roads are curvy and lined with trees. Max and I go up there sometimes.'
Dot turned in her seat and flung her arm over the back. Vivian could see the shiny, amber hairs in the soft hollow of her armpit. Her own hairs were coarse and dark and seemed to grow quickly and conspiratorially, sprouting up like tiny tracking missiles in areas she had momentarily neglected. Vivian considered the constant regeneration of hair one of the great injustices of life.
They drove with the windows down and the air, although rather warm, had a sobering effect. In about thirty minutes, they pulled into a driveway much like the one at Grandma Gardiner's. A small brown house with a tin roof, a black and white dog thumping his tail on the porch.
âWhy don't you come up with me,' Katherine said. She opened the trunk of her car and pulled out a foil-covered dish. Vivian and Dot followed obediently to the door.
They spent about an hour at Mr Miller's house, talking about the weather and Mr Miller's rheumatoid arthritis and his grandchildren and eventually, sharing part of the casserole Katherine had brought for him. As they sat around his table on ancient wooden chairs, passing the sliced bread he had brought from his cupboard, Vivian felt something spread over her. A peace. A sense of being in the presence of something good, something right. Her appreciation for Katherine deepened and she felt ashamed for her own lack of motivation.
On the way back, Katherine took what she called a âscenic detour,' and they passed through areas that were different from the plains and stripes of muted green closer to the house. Here, the land jutted upwards in crags and clumps of reddened earth. The trees remained, stubbornly reaching from the uncertain levels, crowding together at times and sometimes, going it alone. The road was a series of languid turns, slow climbs and gentle descents. Vivian leaned her head against the car window and looked up to the scattering of puffy clouds. She thought about possibilities, about appearances. The sky was three-dimensional, a vivid, jaw-dropping blue with the depth of stained glass and the luminescence of candlelight. It was a sky that seemed, at first, impossible to replicate on a flat surface. Soon, she began to recognize patterns: swirls and ridges, curves and
textures, in the consistent blueness of that sky, a blue expanse that was impenetrable at first glance. Vivian remembered staring at her desktop in grammar school, during rainy-day, heads-down games or boring lessons, and noticing the variety within the wood, the scant pencil remains from the students before her, the distinct markings of the grain. Like a fingerprint, each section unique to itself and to the seer. Eyes can become discerning, she thought, if you look long enough. The sky, the qualities of wood. She wondered who invented the microscope, what made them think there was anything to see. Dr Lightfoot said that the motivation driving the scientist and the artist was the same: to create. Vivian thought about pictures she had seen of early autopsies, fifteenth-century artists monitoring dissections in order to paint the body more faithfully. She thought about Da Vinci's notebooks, the embryo in the womb and his precise sketches. If you look long enough, close enough. Is that what artists do? The sky, the qualities of wood. Dr Lightfoot was wrong. Scientists seek to improve, while artists merely represent, reflect, interpret. Vivian stared through the smudged glass of the car window, wondering how she would describe or paint the sky. She leaned back in the seat, breeze ruffling her long dark hair and, for a moment, perfectly content.
In time, they sailed over the newly asphalted hill before the descent to the house.
âWhat's that?' Katherine pointed out the window, her bracelets clanking like an alarm.
Over the fields of high grass dotted with pastel late-summer blooms, dark smoke curdled in a narrow cyclone toward the sky. Vivian scooted over and peered at the smoke, trying to estimate its source. Dot leaned over as well, and as the car slowed in front of the driveway, they all swiveled to look through the windshield.
Beside the white house in the dirt clearing next to the driveway, several figures circled a large, black object. From its center, huge flames blazed up and whipped at the air. Katherine parked behind a dusty blue-and-white van that was behind Lonnie's jeep. As they got out of the car, Vivian heard a reverberating crack, which she immediately recognized as the sound of an ax on wood. They walked around the van and approached the jeep. Lonnie and another man took turns chopping at a wide tree several yards back.
The men around the fire, one of whom was Nowell, talked loudly, each holding a can of beer. They all looked sunburned and jovial.
âI think it's a tribal feast,' Katherine said in a low voice. âLike on National Geographic.'
Dot snickered. âYou don't see a wild boar roasting on a stick anywhere, do you?'
âHello!' Vivian called.
The men looked over. The fire was issuing from an old barbecue grill; the domed lid sat on the ground. Vivian recognized one of the county road workers, a tall, thin, copper-haired man with a friendly smile. The man next to him was unfamiliar, and next to him was Nowell. The fourth man turned around and it was Mr Stokes.
âHello, Mrs Gardiner,' he said. âMrs Wilton.'
I thought we had agreed on first names, Vivian thought.
Dot had walked toward the two working on the tree, and when Lonnie saw her he called out. âStand back, honey! This tree's coming down!' The other man was the road crew worker who had come to the house. Lonnie had said that his name was Jerry.