died a week before. A massive
“I’m sorry to hear that,” Fanshawe said for lack of anything else, but now he saw that she was merely using her previous trick, daring him to test the palm-reader’s authenticity. “But I don’t think having my fortune told is on my to-do list today, Mrs. Anstruther.” Nevertheless, he enjoyed the old woman’s lively candor; and the accent was a hoot. “What do
“Well, sir, if’n you’re in want of some exercise, you can always rent a bystickle down at Mr. Worby’s shop, and if that ain’t to your likin’, sir, you might find it pleasin’ to ’ave an amble ‘bout the scenic walkaways.”
The idea immediately appealed to him.
“Just cross the cobbles out front of the Travelodge, sir, and you’ll gander the signs hard by. Next door to impossible to miss ’em”—she smiled—”unless you’re in your cups.”
“Thanks very much—” A tip jar with several dollar bills in it sat on her booth shelf. Fanshawe put in a ten.
“Why
“The pleasure’s been mine,” and Fanshawe headed away.
He scanned the map some more, then passed the Travelodge, the two-story structure forming an L-shape. A splash turned his gaze. Bright beneath the summer sun extended an outdoor swimming pool. It was mostly older children wading around with their parents, tipping over rafts or volleying inflatable balls. A tanned, muscular lifeguard sat bored up in his chair: The Thinker in swim trunks with a whistle around his neck. Fanshawe noticed a fair number of attractive women in hats and sunglasses, stretched out on lounge chairs, all agleam in suntan oil. He gave them a bland glance, but then caught himself looking much more intently at the rows of sliding-glass doors facing the pool. He barely heard the sound of frolic from the water.
He winced and pulled his gaze away.
He stalked off fast, crossed the cobble road as the British woman had instructed, then loosened in relief. SCENIC NATURE PATH, the sign read with an arrow pointing.
He followed the arrow.
He tried to ignore the guilt that came along with him, like another stroller several steps behind. The Travelodge had bothered him, and so had the immediacy with which he’d scanned all the tempting windows. In New York, after a year of therapy, he never succumbed to the same temptation.
But he felt better the more he walked, through winding gravel paths up into low hills. It was a smorgasbord of natural beauty for as far as he could see. Butterflies floated over the high, sweeping grass. Wild flowers of every color seemed to shift with some manner of sentience, begging his eyes to appreciate them. Fanshawe walked for some time, each step loosening another tight stitch in his malformed mood…
The paths, he saw, comprised a web-work about the hillocks, and would’ve served as a tricky maze had there not been wooden, plaqued maps at every fork. When he glanced over his shoulder, he was taken aback by how high he’d ascended, and when he strode atop a risen nob, the view of the countryside pilfered his breath. The hills seemed to extend to endlessness, loomed over by the ghost of a distant mountain. There was a baby-blue sky and blazing sun; sparse clouds seemed to exist in a
But…where was he?
He stepped down off the nob to discover a rest stop with an ornate bench and another map on a plaque. One dotted guide-mark read THE WITCHES PATH, then after a few more steps, another sign announced that he’d reached it.
The more the hill rose, the higher the grasses on either side seemed to grow. Fanshawe followed the path, intrigued without knowing why.
But as he approached what seemed to be the most elevated of the hills, he stopped. Facing him now was a sign larger than the others, as well as a clearing in the grasses, leaving only bald dirt. Engraved letters on the sign began: WITCHES HILL: IN JULY, 1671, THIRTEEN WITCHES WERE…
Fanshawe, eyes intent, read the words aloud. “Witches Hill. In July, 1671, thirteen witches were executed here, including Evanore Wraxall, the notorious coven leader. Dozens more practitioners of the Black Arts would be executed on this very hill for another fifty years…” Fanshawe chuckled without much mirth.
But he tried to contemplate the gravity of the words.
He shuddered at the cruelty of it all, and the madness, then turned to leave. But at a break in the grasses which rimmed the clearing, his eyes widened. This hill was, as he’d thought, the highest around, and through the break he could see the entire town down below.
The faintest breeze brushed over his face, and hidden within it, he heard, or thought he heard, a sound just as faint. Just a drift of something, like a word spoken by someone too close to a rushing surf. Yet, a word it had seemed to be, in a feminine tenor. The word was this: “…lovely.”
Fanshawe paused to identify the direction from which it had arrived: just off from the break in the grasses, where a lone tree stood entwined by leafy vines.
Then two more words, even fainter: “…love you…”
Before Fanshawe had stuck his head fully out from the tree, he saw with a jolt that he was not alone. Just below the immediate rise of the hill lay a lower elevation surrounded by flanks of unkempt bushes, while two t- shirts draped over a bush left a clue: HARVARD and YALE.
Their age could not be determined, though he suspected they were well out of the groves of higher learning. One, Harvard, lay flat on her back, eyes closed, with a tiny grin touching her face, while Yale lay on her side, on one elbow, to gaze down in apparent adoration. “I love you,” came another drift-like whisper, and Harvard replied, “I know,” and grinned with more obviousness. They kissed daintily, then Yale ran a hand up her companion’s belly and across her breasts in a single, fluid motion. Harvard’s nipples erected, at once, to dark pink plugs of sensitive flesh. Then Yale assumed her friend’s supine pose. There they both lay now like a passionate secret, smiling, basking in brilliant sun, their hands joined.
It was only when they both lay still that Fanshawe’s emotions began to simmer. He gulped, his mouth going