still on her back.
âUh, Kate.â
âYeah?â
âAbout the dog. Doesnât exist. I just thought itâd look kinda stupid, me being scared to come out here. Thatâs why I was considerinâ your services, like.â
âWhatâs the problem, Hank? Not ghosts, is it?â
âNow donât think Iâm crazy.â
âI swear.â
âSomethinâ. Donât know if itâs ghosts or what. Seen it along the fence, there. Coupla times.â
âIt?â
âMaybe an animal, but nothing you could name. Not a dog. Or a deer â¦â He laughed. âNot a werewolf either, if thatâs what youâre thinking! Thing is, both times it was getting dark, like. Never got a real good look.â
Kate considered her options. She could come clean and potentially confirm Hankâs worst fears and, when the inevitable gossip came down, be lumped in with the loony camp. Or she could keep her mouth shut and conduct further research.
âYouâre laughinâ at me, arenât you? Inside, like.â
âNo. Definitely not.â
Hank Dixon, a bear of a man, default owner (since Dixon senior had died) of Dixon RV Sales & Storage and New2U Auto, continued to stand like a penitent before her. Now he caught her eye and wouldnât let go.
Kate shifted uncomfortably. âRead my lips, Hank: I do NOT think youâre crazy. I â I just donât know what to think. Really .â
Kate could see Hank was counting on her in a big way. Painfully shy, he wouldnât ask around himself. Not one to hang out at Tim Hortonâs and jaw with the locals, Hank found it trying to consort with his fellow man.
âOkay, okay, Hank. Hereâs the thing. Iâll look into it and if I find out anything, Iâll give you a call.â
Hank nodded.
âOkay?â
âOkay.â Hank headed toward a prehistoric Buick parked out on the road.
Kate continued her walk, this time with a clear goal:
More than once had her dad made it clear to Kate that when the time came there should be nothing but dates on his grave. No sappy poetry, he said. What about good poetry, Kate asked. No, nothing. Her mom had expressed no opinion either way. Still, Kate reasoned, who would be reading it anyway? Kate herself. And she found Donneâs poem comforting, especially the last line of that work: âDeath, thou shalt dieâ â you couldnât get more defiant than that. Into the granite went the famous phrase.
Kate watched the belching Buick roar off and understood in an instant how important this graveyard was to someone like Hank. There was a lot to be said for a garden of the dead. Accepting of the future, yet holding to the past. Offering order and stability, making few demands. A reprieve from relentless change. Above ground, the bereaved rehashed memories again and again; below, the dreaming went on and on just the same. A traditional cemetery, complete with coffins and granite markers, was perhaps not sustainable , environmentally speaking. But it was sustaining . What drew Hank Dixon drew Kate, too: the simple comfort of talking with the dead.
Kate had kept many secrets from her mother, both happy and sad, over the years, and she had sensed a similar withholding on her motherâs part: unsatisfied longings, unfulfilled dreams Molly had never confided to her only child. How else to mend deathâs rift? Kate found a plastic bag in her jacket pocket, laid it on the muddy grass, sat down and began:
Kate: So, Mom, whatâs on your mind lately?
Molly: Not much, as you might guess, dear. Itâs boring as hell down here. Oops, I hope your father didnât hear that.
Kate : Why? Itâs not like he can entertain you.
Molly : I meant the swearing. He never liked me to swear, you remember. Not ladylike.
Kate : Well, I guess I knew, but no one ever said it out loud. And âhellâ doesnât count as swearing
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