but the water had lost its smoothness. A small breeze ruffled it in shifting patches. Beneath his window the willows whispered and swayed.
Shoving up the screen, he ducked his head and leaned out.Corned beef hash was frying at Charlieâs. The breeze brought the smell across the street and down to the water. On his left, half a dozen old men fished from the end of the town pier, which jutted from a narrow swath of sandy beach. On his right, yellow-leafed birches angled out over low shrubs that led to rocks and then water. There were houses farther on, year-round homes too stately to be called camps, but most were tucked into coves, hidden around bends, or blocked from view by islands. He could see the tips of a few docks, even a weathered raft still anchored to the floor of the lake. It would be hauled in soon, and the docks taken apart and stored. The lake would be bare.
The phone rang. Letting the screen drop, he waited to see if Jenny would answer it. After three rings, he did it himself. âLake News.â
âJohn, this is Allison Quimby,â said a bold voice. âMy place is falling apart. I need a handyman. Everyone Iâve used before is still working up at Hookâs. Is it too late to put in an ad?â
âNo, but you want the sales desk. Iâll transfer you.â He put her on hold, jogged across the room, and picked up the phone at the sales desk. âOkay.â He slipped into the chair there and began at the computer. âIâm pulling up classified ads. Here we go. Do you have something written?â He suspected she did. Allison Quimby owned the local realty company and was the quintessential professional. Of course she had something written.
âOf course I have something written.â
She read. He typed. He fiddled with the spacing, helped her edit it to make it work better, suggested aheading, quoted her a price, took her credit card number. As soon as he hung up the phone, he made a call of his own.
A tired voice answered. âYeah.â
âItâs me. Allison Quimby needs a handyman. Give her a call?â When he heard a soft swearing, he said, âYouâre sober, Buck, and you need the work.â
âWho are you, my fuckinâ guardian angel?â
John kept his voice low and tight. âIâm your fuckinâ older cousin, the one whoâs worried about the girl you knocked up, the one whoâs thinking you may not be worth the effort but that girl and her baby are. Come on, Buck. Youâre good with your hands, you can do what Allison needs done, she pays well, and sheâs got a big mouth if she likes what you do.â He read the phone number once, then read it again. âCall her,â he said and hung up the phone.
Seconds later he was back at the window by the editorial desk. Seconds after that he had a grip on his patience. All it took was a good long look at the lake and the reminder that people like Buck and Jenny didnât have that. They had the Ridge, where houses were too small, too close, and too dirty to uplift anyone, much less someone battling alcoholism, physical abuse, or chronic unemployment. John knew. He had the Ridge in his blood as well. He would hear it, feel it, smell it until the day he died.
A movement on the lake caught his eye, the flash of red on a distant dock. He focused in on it; then, half smiling, took a pair of binoculars from the bottom drawer of the desk and focused through those. Shelly Cole was stretched out on a lounge chair, all sleek and oiledin the sun. She was a well-made woman, he had to say that. But then, Cole women had been sorely tempting the men of Lake Henry for three generations. For the most part they were kind creatures who grew into fine wives and mothers. Shelly was something else. She was heading back to Florida in a week, when the weather here became too cool for her to flaunt her tan. John wouldnât miss her. He might be as tempted as any man around, but
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