Fair closed the lid over his equipment. “You aren’t the first person to tell me to win back Harry. Mrs. Hogendobber works me over every now and then.”
“Miranda. I can hear her now.” Wesley laughed.
“I’m not saying you’re wrong. Harry was a good wife and I was a fool, but how do you get over that guilt? I don’t want to be with a woman and feel like a heel, even if I was.”
“That’s where love works its miracles. Love’s not about sex, although that’s where we all start. Diana taught me about love. It’s as gossamer as a spiderweb and just as strong. Winds don’t blow down a web. Ever watch ’em?” His hand moved back and forth. “That woman knew me, knew my every fault, and she loved me for me. And I learned to love her for her. The only thing that pleases me about my condition is when I get to the other side, I’m going to see my girl.”
“Wesley, you look better than I’ve seen you look in the last eight months.”
“Remission. Damn grateful for it. I do feel good. Only thing that gets me down is the stock market.” He shivered to make his point. “And Warren. I don’t know if he’s strong enough to take over. He and Ansley don’t pull together. Worries me.”
“Maybe you ought to talk to them like you talked to me.”
Wesley blinked beneath his bushy gray eyebrows. “I try. Warren evades me. Ansley’s polite and listens, but it’s in one ear, out t’other.” He shook his head. “I’ve spent my whole life developing bloodlines, yet I can hardly talk to my own blood.”
Fair leaned against the big truck. “I think a lot of people feel that way . . . and I don’t have any answers.” He checked his watch. “I’m due at Brookhill Farm. You call me about that mare and—and I promise to think about what you said.”
Fair stepped into the truck, turned the ignition, and slowly traveled down the winding drive lined with linden trees. He waved, and Wesley waved back.
4
The old Ford truck chugged up Monticello Mountain. A light drizzle kept Harry alert at the wheel, for this road could be treacherous no matter what the weather. She wondered how the colonists had hauled up and down this mountain using wagons pulled by horses, or perhaps oxen, with no disc brakes. Unpaved during Thomas Jefferson’s time, the road must have turned into a quagmire in the rains and a killer sheet of ice in the winter.
Susan Tucker fastened her seat belt.
“Think my driving’s that bad?”
“No.” Susan ran her thumb under the belt. “I should have done this when we left Crozet.”
“Oh, I forgot to tell you. Mrs. H. pitched a major hissy when she reached into your mailbox and touched that rubber spider that Danny must have stuck in there. Mrs. Murphy pulled it out onto the floor finally.”
“Did she throw her hands in the air?” Susan innocently inquired.
“You bet.”
“A deep, throaty scream.”
“Moderate, I’d say. The dog barked.”
Susan smiled a Cheshire smile. “Wish I’d been there.”
Harry turned to glance at her best friend. “Susan—”
“Keep your eyes on the road.”
“Oh, yeah. Susan, did you put that spider in the mailbox?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Now, why would you want to go and do a thing like that?”
“Devil made me do it.”
Harry laughed. Every now and then Susan would do something, disrupt something, and you never knew when or where. She’d been that way since they first met in kindergarten. Harry hoped she’d never change.
The parking lot wasn’t as full as usual for a weekend. Harry and Susan rode in the jitney up the mountain, which became more fog-enshrouded with every rising foot. By the time they reached the Big House, as locals called it, they could barely see their hands in front of their faces.
“Think Kimball will be out there?” Susan asked.
“One way to find out.” Harry walked down to the south side of the house, picking up the straight road that was called Mulberry Row. Here the work of the plantation was carried out in a smithy as well as in eighteen other buildings dedicated to the various crafts: carpentry, nail making, weaving, and possibly even harness making and repair. Those buildings vanished over the decades after Jefferson’s death when, a quarter of a million dollars in debt—roughly two and a half million dollars today—his heirs were forced to sell the place he loved.
Slave quarters also were located along Mulberry Row. Like the other buildings, these were usually constructed of logs; sometimes even the chimneys were made of logs, which would occasionally catch fire, so that the whole building was engulfed in flames within minutes. The bucket brigade was the only means of fire-fighting.
As Harry and Susan walked through the fog, their feet squished in the moist earth.
“If you feel a descent, you know we’ve keeled over into the food garden.” Harry stopped for a moment.
“We can stay on the path and go slow. Harry, Kimball isn’t going to be out here in this muck.”
But he was. Wearing a green oilskin Barbour coat, a necessity in this part of the world, big Wellies on his feet, and a water-repellent baseball hat on his head, Kimball resembled any other Virginia gentleman or gentlewoman on a misty day.
“Kimball!” Harry called out.
“A fine, soft day,” he jubilantly replied. “Come closer, I can’t see who’s with you.”
“Me,” Susan answered.
“Ah, I’m in for a double treat.” He walked up to greet them.
“How can you work in this?” Susan wondered.
“I can’t, really, but I can walk around and think. This place had to function independently of the world, in a sense. I mean, it was its own little world, so I try to put myself back in time and imagine what was needed, when and why. It helps me understand why some of these buildings and the gardens were placed as they are. Of course, the people working under the boardwalks—that’s what I call the terraces—had a better deal, I think. Would you two damsels like a stroll?”
“Love it.” Harry beamed.
“Kimball, how did you come to archaeology?” Susan asked. Most men Kimball’s age graduating from an Ivy League college were investment bankers, commodities brokers, stockbrokers, or numbers crunchers.
“I liked to play in the dirt as a child. This seemed a natural progression.” He grinned.
“It wasn’t one of those quirks of fate?” Harry wiped a raindrop off her nose.
“Actually, it was. I was studying history at Brown and I had this glorious professor, Del Kolve, and he kept saying, ‘Go back to the physical reality, go back to the physical reality.’ So I happened to notice a yellow sheet of paper on the department bulletin board—isn’t it odd that I can still see the color of the flyer?—announcing a dig in Colonial Williamsburg. I never imagined that. You see, I always thought that archaeology meant you had to be digging up columns in Rome, that sort of thing. So I came down for the summer and I was hooked. Hooked on the period too. Come on, let me show you something.”
He led them to his office at the back of the attractive gift shop. They shook off the water before entering and hung their coats on the wooden pegs on the wall.
“Cramped,” Susan observed. “Is this temporary?”
He shook his head. “We can’t go about building anything, you know, and some of what has been added over the years—well, the damage has been done. Anyway, I’m in the field most of the time, so this suffices, and I’ve also stashed some books in the second floor of the Big House, so I’ve a bit more room than it appears. Here, look at this.” He reached into a pile of horseshoes on the floor and handed an enormous shoe to Harry.