Carla Neggers

Secrets of the Lost Summer


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but she was also running to something. A new life. A new set of challenges.

       “All set,” Jess said, climbing in on the driver’s side. She gave her sister a sideways glance. “Are you sure you don’t want to change your mind?”

       “Positive.”

       “It’s warmer here than at home. We still have snow on the ground.”

       Olivia settled into the passenger seat with her little pots of herb seedlings on her lap. The dill was tall enough to tickle her chin. “I know, Jess. I was just there.”

       “All right, then. Let’s go.” Jess was still obviously unconvinced. “Olivia, are you sure—”

       “I’m sure.”

       “Nothing’s wrong?”

       “Nothing’s wrong.”

       “Liv—”

       “It’s just time to make a change, Jess. That’s all.”

       Her sister gripped the steering wheel. “It’s Marilyn Bryson, isn’t it? She’s done something. Flaming narcissist. Never mind. You’ll tell me if you want to. I’m not going to pry.”

       Olivia said nothing, watching out her window as urban sprawl gave way to rolling hills and fields.

       The Farm at Carriage Hill…

       It was perfect, she thought. Just perfect.

       A winding, off-the-beaten track road led from the main highway to Knights Bridge, often cited as one of the prettiest villages in New England. Situated on the edge of the Quabbin Reservoir and its protected watershed, the village had changed little in the past century, at least in appearance. Olivia watched the familiar landmarks pass by: the white church, the brick library, the town hall, the general store, the school, the pristine town common surrounded by classic houses, the oldest built in 1794, the newest in 1912. When her historic house came onto the market in October, the idea of converting it into a getaway had seemed more like a fantasy than a realistic goal. Regardless, she had expected to keep her job and apartment in Boston for the foreseeable future.

       Jess was silent as she turned onto a narrow road just past the village center and navigated a series of potholes as they came to an intersection with an even narrower road. Olivia grimaced at the run-down house on the corner. The whole place had become an eyesore. The house, built in 1842, was in desperate need of repair, its narrow white clapboards peeling, sections missing from its black shutters, its roof sagging. If possible, the yard was worse, overgrown and littered with junk.

       Its one redeeming feature was its location, one of the most beautiful and desirable in Knights Bridge with its sloping lawn, mature shade trees, lilacs, mountain laurel, surrounding fields and woods—and, peeking in the distance, the crystal-clear waters of the Quabbin Reservoir.

       Jess downshifted as she turned onto the quiet one-lane road. They were only two miles from the village center, but it seemed farther. “Mark says the house should be condemned.”

       “At least someone should clear the junk out of the yard. Grace hasn’t seen it, has she? She’d be devastated.”

       “I don’t think she’s been back here since she moved out.”

       Olivia noticed a rusted refrigerator on its side amid brambles, melting snow and brown, wet leaves. Whoever had bought the house two years ago from Grace Webster, a retired English and Latin teacher, hadn’t done a thing to it.

       “How did a refrigerator end up in the yard?” Olivia asked.

       “I don’t know,” Jess said. “Kids, probably. The house has sat empty for two years. There’s a washing machine, too.”

       Indeed there was.

       Olivia had asked her friend Maggie O’Dunn, a local caterer, to find out what she could about the absentee owner. So far, Maggie had discovered only that it was an older gentleman from out west. California, probably. Maggie, however, was sure that her mother, Elly, who worked at the town offices, could produce a name and address.

       “Why would someone from California buy a house in Knights Bridge and then disappear?” Olivia asked.

       Jess shook her head. “No idea.”

       The Websters had moved to Knights Bridge more than seventy years ago, after they were forced out of their home in one of the Swift River Valley towns that was depopulated and flooded for the reservoir. Grace was a teenager then. She never married and lived in her family home alone until a small assisted living facility opened in town and she finally decided to move.

       Olivia pondered the situation as the truck rattled down the road to her own house, a gem set among open fields, stone walls and traditional, well-established landscaping. When the house was built in 1803, the road wound into a pretty valley village, now under water. These days the road led to a Quabbin gate, then through what was now a wilderness and eventually straight into the reservoir itself, a reminder that, as beautiful as it was, it was a product of both man and nature.

       Jess pulled into the gravel driveway. “Do you want to wait for Dad and Mark to get off work, or shall we unload the truck ourselves?”

       “We loaded it ourselves. We can unload it. Unless you have something else you need to do—”

       “Nope. I’m all yours for the day.”

       “Thanks, Jess.”

       “No problem. It’ll be great having you back in town.”

       Olivia got out of the truck, herb seedlings cuddled in her arms like little babies. The air was cold, clean, smelling faintly of wet leaves. “Home sweet home,” she whispered, even as she felt a stab of panic at the uncertainty of her future.

       Jess joined her on the driveway. “It’s so quiet here. You’re close to the village, but that way…” She paused and gestured down the road, toward Quabbin. “That way, Liv, it’s nothing but wilderness and water for miles and miles.”

       Olivia smiled. “I know. It’s perfect.”

       “So you say now. Wait until it’s two o’clock on a moonless night, and it’s just you out here with the bats, bears, eagles and mountain lions.”

       “There’s been no confirmed sighting of mountain lions yet in Quabbin.”

       “I wouldn’t want you to be the first to see one,” Jess said with a grin.

       They went inside before unloading the truck. The rustic, homey kitchen, in an ell off the original 1803 structure, was washed in the bright midday light. Her friend Maggie had left a lunch basket and a milk-glass pitcher of forced forsythia on the table, a square, battered piece of junk Olivia had discovered at a yard sale and repaired and painted a warm, cheerful white.

       She felt some of her tension ease. It was almost as if the forsythia were smiling at her. Suddenly she couldn’t wait to get her stuff from Boston into the house and make it feel like home.

       Jess lifted chocolate chip cookies, apples and cloth napkins out of the basket. “Lunch first, or unload the truck first?”

       Olivia opened the refrigerator and found sandwiches and a mason jar of tea. She grinned at her sister. “I’m starving. My question is whether we have the cookies first or the sandwiches first.”

       Jess handed her an index card she found in the basket. “Maggie left you a note.”

       Olivia glanced at her friend’s messy handwriting: Mom came through with info on the owner of Grace Webster’s old house.

       Maggie had jotted down a name and address.

       “Dylan McCaffrey,” Olivia said, not recognizing the name. “Ever hear of him, Jess?”

       Her sister bit into an apple. “Uh-uh.”

       It was a San Diego address. Far away for the owner of a wreck of a house in Knights Bridge to be