Shadow Valley. Michael R. Collings

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Shadow Valley - Michael R. Collings страница 2

Автор:
Жанр:
Серия:
Издательство:
Shadow Valley - Michael R. Collings

Скачать книгу

governor—or at least by the governor’s automated signature machine; even Lila couldn’t tell the difference any more and she doubted if the governor herself could—and a second sheet, its message shorter, more clipped, signed by the ranking local state police officer, adorned by a stamped gold seal, and lacking only Abraham Tuttle’s signature to fulfill its purpose on earth.

      Tuttle didn’t even look at the papers. Time for that was long past. He simply took them, his face as stone-faced as the Staties’ had been when they stared down his more rebellious neighbors, walked over to a wall, and, using it as a one-time desk, scribbled his signature.

      Still without speaking, he turned and held them out to her.

      “That all?”

      Lila nodded.

      He strode to the doorway and stepped through, formally relinquishing his farm, his history, his dreams, his life. He disappeared from the porch. From Lila’s sight.

      She stood there for a long time.

      The house already smelled differently than it had a few moments before. Then, it had been owned, even if it was empty.

      Now it was abandoned, slated to be leveled tomorrow by an onslaught of bulldozers and backhoes. The remains would be carried away and deposited in a landfill—actually, a nearby canyon that boasted neither arable soil nor slopes suitable for winter skiing or summer hiking. Or, if the surveyor gave his approval, what was left of the house might simply be left there for the water to bury, assuming that would be at a sufficient depth not to interfere with the projected influx of boaters and water-skiers that would turn the dead valley into a recreational paradise.

      Supposedly.

      Lila listened.

      Nothing.

      Not a creak or groan from an ancient joint. Not a rattle of time-worn panes in weathered frames. Not even the scurrying of mice in the sudden emptiness.

      Probably they had all moved out by now also, Lila decided.

      “Oh well,” she said, abruptly aware of how loud her voice sounded. Then, more quietly, “Oh, well.”

      She walked out of the house, being perversely careful to close the front door softly but firmly. That much she had learned from her grandmother, dead over a decade now, who—she had always said—learned it from her own grandmother, who had once lived somewhere on the far side of Shadow Valley. Beyond that, Lila realized, she knew remarkably little about her family. Neither her mother nor her grandmother had been very forthcoming on the subject.

      She might even have relatives—or have had relatives—in the valley, she thought for the dozenth...or perhaps the hundredth time. She didn’t know. If so, they had long since dropped out of touch with her branch of the family.

      The city branch.

      The branch that had split and wound its way through time, through time, until finally she had bloomed at the furthermost tip of one small limb, city-bred, university-educated, official spokesperson and—truth be told—lackey for a government that had decided in its great wisdom that nearly two centuries of farming families, with all of their traditions, were of less value than one more reservoir to carry water to...the city.

      She turned, made certain once again that the door was closed, then headed toward her car.

      CHAPTER TWO

      Lunch was a sandwich in the shade of the single standing wall of the old stone church at the crest of the rise. As always when she stopped there, Lila wondered what vagaries of the state planning officials had decreed that that one wall should remain upright. She could think of no good reason for it but, again as always, she was grateful for the relative coolness and the break from the sun beating down on the rest of the valley.

      She had made the sandwich herself—tuna with pickles and Miracle Whip. She had never been able to develop a taste for mayonnaise, not after so many years of her mother’s cooking with nothing but the creamy, tangy salad dressing.

      Oh, well.

      It had remained cold in the small ice chest that she had gotten into the habit of taking with her every time she had to come out to Shadow Valley. Once there had been a store of sorts where the main road split just to the north of the small settlement, a kind of poor-man’s general store that carried a little bit of everything, not much of anything.

      It had been out of business for nearly twenty years, she had been told by one of the long-time residents, who still used the blackened quarter acre where it had stood before fire had destroyed it as a point of reference: Just stop a hundred yards before you get to Aames’s Store and you’ll find them blackberries right along the roadway.

      There had never been a Mickey-D’s in Shadow Valley.

      Never would be now.

      Unless you counted the possibility that the Marina, scheduled to be build about a half-mile up the hillside, might someday merit its own fast-food haven.

      But night now, all that Lila could count on was her small ice chest and its reserves of bottled water, four more sandwiches, and a bag of cookies from the Albertson’s a block or so from her one-bedroom apartment.

      Just in case.

      She finished the sandwich, folded the empty plastic bag in half—waste not, want not, as her grandmother would have said—and stowed it inside the ice chest.

      She fiddled with the controls on the driver’s side of the rental until the seat reclined in just the right position, and settled back for a short nap.

      The car was warm. The sun through the side window was warm.

      All was well.

      For the moment.

      She did not dream.

      When she woke, she was startled to find that she had not slept for the usual few moments.

      Instead, the sun was well on its way toward the crest of mountains to the west. It wasn’t twilight yet, not by a long ways, but there was a hint of golden brilliance to the light that suggested late afternoon.

      “Oh no.” Her plan had been to take care of the last pieces of business and be home long before sunset.

      So much for planning.

      She had one final stop to make. Ideally it would take even less time than she had spent at the Tuttle place, which itself had set a personal-best time for in-and-out.

      Abraham Tuttle had barely spoken to Lila.

      At the final stop, there would be no one to speak to her at all.

      Probably.

      She sighed again at the thought of the last house, checked her hand-drawn map of Shadow Valley, started the car, and pulled out of the shadow of the single, barren wall.

      Main Street of Shadow Valley was a narrow gravel road, barely wide enough for two small cars to pass, certainly not wide enough for a car and a tractor or combine at the same time. That accounted for the wide borrow pits that separated the dusty roadway from the straggling remains of crumbling picket

Скачать книгу