Harry ran out of the house and back to Susan, who was now sitting on the ground next to her grandfather.
“The sheriff’s department will be here in a few moments.” Harry sat next to her childhood friend. “I’m sorry.”
Owen, wedged next to Susan’s leg, gazed up at her with soft brown eyes.
Tucker joined her brother.
Mrs. Murphy and Pewter sat next to Harry.
“I wonder why he came out here?” Mrs. Murphy asked.
Intently studying the freshly mown grass, Pewter said, “Looks like he crawled for part of it.”
“Poor man. How painful it must have been. He had to have known he was dying.” Mrs. Murphy hated to see Susan cry.
Harry put one arm around her dear friend. What could she say?
Susan finally gasped. “He had a good life, didn’t he?”
“Yes.”
“Sometimes I think of G-Pop in the war, jumping off that sinking ship, staying in the water until he got everyone onto a life raft or anything to hang on to.”
“He had incredible courage.”
A siren lifted their heads and the animals’, too.
Susan wiped her eyes. “That was fast.”
“He was our governor. It should be,” Harry soothingly said.
“Can you imagine being governor?” Pewter asked, whiskers swept forward, as she noticed the rooster-tail plume of dust from the squad car, an ambulance right behind.
“No,” Mrs. Murphy replied.
“You two aren’t pack animals, you don’t understand.” Owen nuzzled Susan. “Pack animals need a leader.”
“I always thought it was because humans don’t have much sense. If someone is your leader you can blame it all on him,” Pewter thoughtfully replied.
“And I suppose they always can, because the leader won’t have any more sense than the rest of them,” Mrs. Murphy responded.
Tucker stood up as the squad car parked in front of the house. “You all are too independent.”
They left off the subject as Sheriff Shaw and Cooper walked toward the cemetery. Two people from the ambulance unloaded a gurney. The driver stepped out of the vehicle, too. Everyone made their way toward the fallen governor.
Harry called out, “Go into the house first. Miss Skipworth is the third door on the right.”
Susan wiped her eyes again. “What’s wrong with Mignon?”
“I’m not sure. I think she was hit on the head.”
“Harry, why didn’t you tell me?”
“There’s nothing you could have done and you deserved a quiet moment with your grandfather. I thought it best to leave her. If I’d moved her I might have harmed her more.”
“What’s wrong?”
“I think she was knocked out.” Harry said this loud enough for Rick and Cooper to hear.
Rick left her. “Coop, you stay here. I’ll be right back.”
Cooper expressed her sympathy to Susan even as she studied the ground with a practiced eye. She noted, as did the animals, the marks on the turf for the last fifteen yards. The governor had struggled with what little strength he had.
“Coop, we walked up from the creek and found him,” Harry informed her. “Maybe a half hour ago now. I think he had just passed.”
Cooper knelt down, touched his throat where the jugular is, then touched the inside of his wrist. “Yes, I think you’re right.” She pulled out her cellphone with the camera, expertly taking pictures, including the turf. Then she told the ambulance boys to take his body to the ambulance.
If Susan had thought about it, she would have understood why. The day was hot. Best to take the body to the morgue, wait for Penny’s orders on whether to perform an autopsy or take the remains directly to the funeral parlor.
The ambulance driver had gone into the house with Sheriff Shaw, come back out, and pulled another gurney from the back of the ambulance.
As he waited in the house for the other two to join him, Cooper asked a few questions.
“Susan, do you know where your grandmother or your mother are?”
“It’s Monday. Mom has been coming over daily to help G-Mom with shopping, little things like that. G-Mom’s usual day is Tuesday for shopping, but with G-Pop’s increased needs, she goes out more often now. She usually takes Wendell Holmes, the dog, as he has his own special fan in the car. G-Mom doesn’t like to be without the dog. I haven’t called her. I thought I would wait for you all.”
“Would you like me to call her?” Cooper offered.
“No. I’ll do it. I’d like to call her now.”
“Of course. Let’s go into the house or in the shade.” Cooper put her hand under Susan’s elbow to walk with her while Harry walked on the other side.
Tears ran down Harry’s cheeks. She loved Susan and hated to see her in sorrow, and she also loved G-Pop. She’d known the ex-governor all her life as Susan’s grandfather, which was how she would always regard him. Fame and success meant little to Harry. Friendship meant everything.
Once in the house, Harry and Cooper walked Susan to the kitchen. She sat down and called her grandmother while Harry opened the fridge to fetch everyone an iced tea.
“Tuna?” Pewter stood on her hind legs, patting Harry’s knee with her paw.
“Not now.” Mrs. Murphy swatted at her.
“This is a terrible time. I need to keep my strength up.” Pewter did, however, drop to her four paws.
“G-Mom, is Mother with you?” Susan, hearing an affirmative answer, said, “Come home. G-Pop has passed. Harry and I found him. There’s nothing you can do. The ambulance is here and so is the Sheriff and Cooper. But come home.”
“Where are they?” Harry asked, when Susan ended the call.
“Down at Barracks Road.” Susan named the shopping center.
“I’ll wait with you. Let me go out to Rick for a minute.”
As Cooper left them, Susan slumped in her chair. “It’s not like we didn’t expect it, but”—she paused—“I guess you’re never ready.”
“No. No. Especially for him. He was a force of nature,” Harry consoled her.
Susan nodded, then added in a small voice, “That’s why it was so hard to see him go down. He fought it hard. He faced death with courage.”
Harry reached across the table, taking her hand. “He’d faced death before. He’d seen a lot of it.”
—
Later, back at the farm, Harry jumped when her cell rang. Fair jumped, too.
“Is she all right?” Harry asked Susan.
“They think Mignon suffered a mild concussion. Her sight is blurry in one eye, but she seems clear in her mind. She remembers nothing, doesn’t think she heard anything. I wonder if G-Pop heard her get hit over the head, got up and tried to follow whoever did it?”
“I don’t know. How’s your mother and grandmother?”
“Philosophical. Accepting. They don’t know why he went outside, but pretty much G-Pop did what he wanted.”
“Do you need anything? Fair and I will zip right over.”
“Thank you. Ned’s here. The kids will be here tomorrow. If I had to find my grandfather, I’m glad it was with you.”
Susan’s son and daughter, adults working in big cities, would bolster her. Anytime she saw them, her spirits lifted.
After ending the call, Harry relayed the message to Fair. “I have a funny feeling.”
“It doesn’t appear simple, does it? And where is the computer?” He wondered at this as well.
Harry called Cooper, home from work now. “Coop, it sure was good to see you today.”
“Mignon will be okay. It will take time. Sometimes a person’s memory returns.”
“Susan called me. I’m calling you because there are four things which don’t add up. I’m sure you’ve thought of them, too. First off, Mignon being hit over the head. Second, her computer is missing. Third, the governor struggling to the graveyard, and four, the marks on the mown grass. He grabbed grass to pull himself along and I fear died in pain.”