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Louis considered Phillip’s face now. The network of lines had deepened and there was something else in his foster father’s face he had never ever seen before-a deep, aching sadness.

Phillip felt his gaze and looked up. Louis looked away, picking up his beer and swinging his stool around on the pretense of looking around the basement.

“Nothing’s changed. Place looks good,” Louis said.

“Well, there’s a lot of stuff that needs fixing, but one of the benefits of getting old is your eyes start going, so I don’t notice it as much.”

The trickle of memories continued. The basement was musty and outdated, but it was the best room in the house. This was where everything happened. Louis could almost see the heaps of crumpled holiday wrapping paper. See Phillip leading the Cub Scout meetings that he used to watch from under the steps, too shy, too scared, to join in. He could remember the indoor camp-outs in winter, a half dozen boys in ragged sleeping bags, Phil sitting cross-legged whispering ghost stories.

“You seem different, Louis,” Phillip said.

“Different how?”

“Different as in. . calm. Maybe even happy.”

“Things are good right now.”

“Good. You’ve waited a long time.”

Louis turned back to Phillip. He wanted to tell him that he seemed different, too. But instinct was telling him he had to leave it up to Phillip to bring up his friend and the empty grave.

The furnace kicked on, and hot air puffed down from the ceiling vents. From the kitchen above came the sound of clattering plates and Frances humming quietly. Louis reached for a cracker and spread some cheese on it. He heard Phillip take a deep breath and he figured he was about to tell him why he had asked him to come up.

But Phillip was quiet, cracking the walnuts.

Louis realized he would have to do the prodding. All those countless times when Phillip had been the one to urge him out of his shell. It felt odd to have the roles reversed.

“Phillip, why did you want me to come here?” Louis asked. “What exactly is going on?”

Phillip glanced at him, then went back to the walnut, carefully picking the bits out of the shell.

“I don’t know where to start,” he said quietly.

“Try the beginning.”

Phillip set the nutcracker down and turned to face Louis. “I’ve been visiting the grave of my friend for sixteen years. Last month, I went out there and there was a sign saying the place had been sold and that families could claim the remains for relocation.”

“You said that in your letter,” Louis said.

Phillip nodded. “When they found out I wasn’t a relative, they wouldn’t tell me anything. But there was this woman there, I guess she felt sorry for me or something. She told me that my friend’s family. .” Phillip paused. “They didn’t want the remains.”

Phillip brushed his hands together to get rid of the walnut shells. “I asked if I could do it and she said yes. So I signed a paper and made the arrangements for a new plot at Riverside back here in Plymouth. I even bought a new casket. But when they went to transfer the body, that’s when they found out. .”

Phillip stopped. His hands encircled the beer bottle, but he didn’t move to take a drink.

“You said in your letter the coffin was empty,” Louis prodded.

“No, it wasn’t empty. It was filled with rocks. That’s what they found when they opened it.”

Phillip was sitting there, like if he let go of the bottle it would fall apart in his hands.

“So,” Louis went on, “you think your friend could be alive?”

Phillip shook his head slowly. “No, no. I know that isn’t possible.”

“You said in your letter you didn’t tell Frances. Why not?”

Phillip was very still, his voice low. “Because my friend is a woman I knew before Frances. I don’t think Frances would understand.”

Louis took a drink of his beer, his mind already forming questions, some too personal to ask. “Phil, I can’t lie to Frances.”

“I know, I know.” Phillip looked at Louis. “I just want to find out what happened. Maybe there was just a mix-up at the cemetery, a bookkeeping error or something. Things like that happen, don’t they?”

Louis nodded.

“I just want to see my friend reburied.” Phillip’s expression was beseeching. “Can you maybe just look into things? Can you help with that at least?”

“All right,” Louis said.

There was a sudden noise above and they both looked up to see Frances standing at the top of the stairs, craning her head to look down.

“What are you two up to down here?” she asked.

“Just reminiscing a little, Fran,” Phillip said.

“Well, dinner’s ready and I want to hear everything that is going on in Louis’s life. So get your butts up here now.”

“We’re coming up right now,” Phillip said.

Frances went back to the kitchen. Louis could hear her footsteps above their heads, hear her humming again.

“I need to go to the cemetery,” Louis said.

“We can go first thing in the morning.” Phillip paused. “Thank you, Louis.”

His voice had changed, like he was relieved the hardest part was over. But the sadness did not leave his eyes. Phillip slid off the stool and started up the stairs. He looked back and for an instant Louis had the feeling that Phillip Lawrence was a stranger all over to him again. This was a man with shadows in his soul.

Louis picked up his beer and followed Phillip upstairs.

CHAPTER 3

Louis hadn’t been back to Plymouth in more than six years. After he graduated from University of Michigan in 1981, he had stayed in Ann Arbor to work on the police force there. He felt comfortable in the college town, comfortable in its rich stew of races, religions, and ways of thinking. Every time he had gone back to visit Phillip and Frances during the past few years, it had been while they were up North on vacation, sort of neutral territory. Never here, in Plymouth.

“So how’s the old hometown look to you?”

Louis glanced over at Phillip, who was driving. “About the same,” he answered.

Louis’s eyes drifted back out the cold-fogged window. The Lawrences lived out on the edge of town, and Phillip had to drive through the small downtown to get to the freeway. Louis’s eyes lingered on the square with its white band shell fully exposed by the bare trees. He could see the old columned bank and the marquee of the Penn Theater: FIELD OF DREAMS. And there, on the corner, the old hotel.

“They’ve remodeled the Mayflower,” Louis said absently.

“Yeah. But they kept that old wallpaper in the dining room.”

Louis had a sudden memory of a sixth grade field trip. It was a slate-gray November day, just like today, and he remembered feeling alone and small as the bus let him and the other kids off in front of the Mayflower Hotel for their lunch.

He knew now that the Mayflower wasn’t a fancy place. But it seemed like it then, with its dark green carpeting and shining wood desk and the sour-looking woman in a black uniform who handed them menus in the restaurant. The menu was huge in his hands and he didn’t know anything. What to order. What to do with the heavy white cloth napkin. Where to go if he had to pee.

The teacher was standing up and talking about the Pilgrims, pointing to the wallpaper with its pictures of the Nina, Pinta, and Santa Maria. She was saying that they should all be thankful for the sacrifices of their forefathers who came here in ships to make their lives here possible. He had sat there listening to her, thinking, well, they sure the heck weren’t my forefathers.