I had been in the backyard no
more than two minutes when Roger Telford’s bald
head popped up above the boundary fence. It was
hardly a surprise. Very little that goes on in
my neighborhood escapes notice by Telford and
his wife Aileen. To merely call them nosy
neighbors would be to do them an injustice. They
are the quintessential, prototypical poster
children for nosy neighbors—sly, sneaky,
suspicious, intrusive, rude, and annoying in the
extreme.
"I thought I heard snuffling
and growling noises over there," he said. "Don’t
tell me Suzanne has let you buy a dog."
"All right," I said, "I
won’t."
"Is that mutt yours?"
"He’s not a mutt. He’s a
Rottweiler mix. He belongs to the Lindemans,
next block over."
"Well, it’s a good thing he
doesn’t belong to you. Aileen and I don’t like
dogs, especially big dogs. Messy. Always digging
things up. Bark all the damn time."
"George doesn’t bark much."
"George? How do you know his
name?"
"It’s on his collar tag."
"Well, it’s a stupid name for a
mutt. What’s he doing in your yard?"
"Visiting," I said. "There’s a
loose board in our back fence that I haven’t
gotten around to fixing yet."
"What’s that he’s chewing
on?"
"Well, it looks like a bone . .
. yes, by golly, that’s what it is all right. A
bone."
"Damn big one. I don’t think
I’ve ever seen a bone quite like that. He carry
it in with him?"
"No. I gave it to him."
"You did? Where’d you get a
bone like that?"
"Out of our freezer."
His face wrinkled into an
expression resembling a contemplative basset
hound’s. Telford likes to believe he is a deep
thinker. His wife likes to believe she is too.
They labor under this self-deception because
they’re both writers of a sort. He concocts
texts on how to fix this or that around the
house and she writes cookbooks, her magnum opus
being The Sublime Purple Vegetable: Eggplant
Delicacies from Around the World. They both work
at home, giving them ample opportunity to pursue
their alternate joint career of meddling in
other people’s business.
"Is that where all those
packages came from, too?" he asked at
length.
"What packages?"
"Jammed into your trash can
this morning."
"Roger, I’m surprised at you.
You usually employ more subtle means of snooping
than pawing through garbage cans."
"It wasn’t me doing the
pawing," he said indignantly. "It was one of
those other damn neighborhood mutts. Caught it
dragging one of the packages out when I rolled
my own can out for pick up. I chased it off and
put the package back into your can. That’s when
I happened to notice all the others."
"Very good," I said. "Very
inventive. You ought to give fiction writing a
try."
"It happens to be the truth. So
why did you throw out all that good meat?"
"It wasn’t good. Not anymore.
Venison, mostly, that one of my coworkers gave
us last year."
"What was wrong with it?"
"Freezer burn," I said.
"What?"
"It’s a phenomenon that takes
place when you leave things in the freezer too
long. Surely you’ve come across references to it
while researching those books you write."
"I know what freezer burn is.
But the packages I saw were mostly thawed."
"Well, of course they were. I
took them out of the freezer and put them into
the trash can last night. All except the bone
for George. Freezer burn doesn’t bother
him."
Telford did his basset hound
impression again. To avoid watching him at his
mental labors, I looked up at the sky. It was a
nice evening, clear but a little too crisp to
sit out on the porch and read. I sighed. Autumn
was almost here. The leaves on the maple tree
were already starting to turn.
"What was all that noise coming
from your place last night?" Telford demanded.
He never asks; he always demands. "You don’t
make noise like that cleaning out a freezer.
Late, too—went on until after eleven. Sounded
like power tools."
"It was," I said. "I was
working in the basement."
"Doing what?"
"Completing a project."
"What kind of project?"
"A private kind."
"Big secret," Telford said
peevishly. "You had the shades closed over the
basement windows. Matter of fact, you’ve had
most of your curtains and shades drawn the past
couple of days."
"Must have been frustrating for
you, not being able to look in with your
binoculars."
"You think I’d spy on you with
binoculars?"
"I know you would. I’ve seen
you doing it."
He made a noise in his throat
not unlike the one George had made when I had
given him the bone. "Damn late to be using power
tools," he said. "Kept Aileen and me awake.
Must’ve kept Suzanne awake, too."
"I doubt it."
"Oh? Why not?"
"She wasn’t here."
"What do you mean, she wasn’t
here?"
George seemed to have grown as
bored with the conversation as I had. He’d been
lying on the grass with the bone propped between
his forepaws, gnawing on it. Now he stood up,
took a firmer grip with his teeth, shook
himself, and trotted off toward the back
fence.
"Well, Howard?"
"Well what?"
"What’d you mean, Suzanne
wasn’t here last night?"
"Just what I said. She’s not
here today, either. That’s why George was
allowed to visit and why I felt free to give him
the bone, in case you’re wondering."
"Where is she? Where’d she
go?"
"Away," I said.
"Away? When? Where?"
"Two days ago. On a trip."
"The hell you say. I was home
all day Sunday. Aileen and I were both home, and
we didn’t see either of you leave."
"I know you try to keep tabs on
everything that goes on over here, Roger, but
now and then you do miss something. Now if you
don’t mind, I have things to do in the
house."
He called something after me,
but I closed my ears to it. Silence and privacy,
in my neighborhood and on my property, are rare
and precious states to be retreated into with
all dispatch whenever possible.
I was in Suzanne’s bedroom
closet, taking articles of her clothing off
hangers and folding them into Teflon bags, when
the telephone rang. Aileen Telford, predictably
enough.
"Howard," she said in her nasal
voice, "where’s Suzanne?"
"Suzanne is away. As Roger has
no doubt told you by now."
"Well, I need to talk to her. A
question for my new book of parsnip recipes.
Where did she go?"
"She’s visiting."
"Visiting who? Where?"
"Her sister, if you must know.
She’s been ill."
"Suzanne is ill?"
I sighed. "Not Suzanne. Her
sister."
"I didn’t know Suzanne had a
sister. She never mentioned her to me."
"She seldom speaks of her.
They’ve never been close."
"Then why did she go visit
her?"
"I just explained why. Her
sister is ill. Family duty."
"When will she be back?"
"I don’t know. It might be a
while. A long while."
There was a deep-thinking pause
before Aileen said, "Where does her sister
live?"
"Duluth. That’s in
Minnesota."
"I know where Duluth is. What’s
her sister’s name and phone number?"
"I can’t tell you that."
"What? Why can’t you?"
"Suzanne doesn’t want to be
disturbed. She doesn’t want her sister
disturbed. You calling her up would qualify as a
disturbance."
Another pause. At length she
said in sepulchral tones, "Howard, I don’t mind
saying that Roger and I are a little
concerned."
"About Suzanne’s sister?"
"About Suzanne."
"Why should you be concerned
about Suzanne?"
"All sorts of funny things seem
to have been going on over there the past few
days. That’s why."
"You think so? Define
funny."
"You know what I mean. You
can’t blame us for wondering—"
"Can’t I?" I said, and hung up
on her.
When I came out through the
front door with another cardboard carton,
Telford was standing at the base of the porch
steps. More accurately, he was hopping at the
base of the steps from one foot to the other as
if he had to go to the bathroom. I had witnessed
this behavior many times before. Coupled with
the gaudy yellow sweatsuit he was wearing, it
meant that he was about to head off on his
morning jog-and-snoop around the
neighborhood.
"What’s all this, Howard?" He
waved a hand at my car in the driveway, the back
seat and trunk of which I had already filled
with other cartons and plastic bags. "You’re not
moving out, are you?"
"And deprive you of a prime
surveillance object? No such luck."
"What’s in all those boxes and
bags?"
"What do you suppose is in
them?"
"Looks like it might be
clothing and stuff."
"Brilliant deduction," I said.
"Clothing and stuff is what it is."
"What’re you planning to do
with it?"
"What I usually do with
rummage. Take it to Goodwill."
"Rummage, eh? Seems like a
lot."
"It is a lot. Obviously."
I carried the last carton to
the car and put it on the passenger seat.
Telford followed, still hopping.
"Mostly your stuff?" he asked
then.
"No. As a matter of fact, it’s
mostly Suzanne’s."
That produced a frown. "How
come?"
"How come what?"
"How come it’s mostly her
things you’re getting rid of?"
"She doesn’t have any use for
them any longer."
"What does that mean?"
"It means she no longer has any
use for them."
"Why doesn’t she?"
"You’ll have to ask her when
she gets home."
"I’m asking you."
"You’ll be leaving frustrated,
then. My answer is that it’s none of your
business."
Telford showed up again that
afternoon, shortly after I returned home. I’d
left Howard J. Bennett & Associates, Income
Tax Specialists—i.e., one hardworking CPA and
two junior partners—early to do some shopping. I
was unloading the trunk of the car, with the
garage door still open, when all of a sudden
there he was breathing down my neck. Quick and
silent, like a sneaky ghost.
"What’s that you’ve got there?"
he said. "Is that paint?"
"Your ratiocinative powers are
amazing. Did you deduce the contents from the
words ‘White Latex Paint’ on the can, or was it
some other clue?"
"What’re you going to
paint?"
"My workshop, if you must
know."
"Didn’t look like it needed
painting, the last time I saw it."
"Well, it does now. There are
marks on two of the walls."
"Marks?"
"You know—nicks, scrapes,
stains."
His eyes narrowed. "What kind
of stains?"
"Now what kind of stains would
there be on workroom walls?"
"You tell me."
"Splatters of wood sealant,
varnish, that sort of thing. You can’t do
woodworking without splattering now and
then."
"Splattering," he repeated, as
if it were a nasty word.
I took the other item I’d
purchased out of the trunk and closed the
lid.
"What’s that?" Telford
said.
"Well, now, let’s see. It’s
shaped like a bowling bag, it’s the size of a
bowling bag, and it even resembles a bowling
bag. Could it be a bowling bag?"
"You don’t bowl."
"How do you know I don’t?"
"You’ve never said anything
about it. And I’ve never seen you with any
bowling equipment before."
"I used to bowl regularly
before I met Suzanne. She thinks it’s a silly
game."
"So do I. Where are your ball
and shoes?"
"I haven’t bought those
yet."
"Then how come you bought a
bag?"
"I liked the looks of this
one."
"Seems ordinary to me. How come
you decided to start bowling again?"
"For the exercise."
"In spite of what Suzanne
thinks, is that it?"
"She doesn’t have a say in the
matter."
"Why doesn’t she?"
"Because she doesn’t," I
said.
At a few minutes past midnight,
I switched off the living room lights and went
to peer around a corner of the side window
curtain. The Telford house, as much of it as I
could see looming above the boundary fence, was
completely dark.
I gathered up the parcel I’d
prepared, made my way through the kitchen to the
utility porch, and let myself out into the
backyard. The night was clear. There was no
moon, but the stars were bright enough to enable
me to navigate. I crossed to the gardening shed,
removed a spade, and carried it into the rose
garden. In the shadows between two of the larger
bushes—a pure white damascena and an orange
floribunda, two of Suzanne’s favorites—I dug a
hole in the soft earth, fairly deep, and buried
the parcel. Then I replaced the spade and
hurried back to the house.
I wasn’t absolutely sure, but
when I glanced at the Telford house I thought I
detected movement behind the open window to
their upstairs bedroom.
The next day was Telford-free,
miraculously enough, until six o’clock. I was
out front then, watering the lawn, when Aileen
appeared, out for her daily constitutional.
Roger had his morning jog-and-snoop around the
neighborhood, she had her evening
walk-and-snoop. You had to admire their methods,
the well-coordinated way in which they covered
their territory, marching off at different times
of the day in different directions to bother
people, like a crack stealth commando team.
She came my way in her quick,
choppy gait and stopped on the sidewalk a few
feet from where I stood. If her husband
resembled a basset hound, Aileen’s breed was fox
terrier—small and wiry with angular features and
a long, quivery nose that always seemed moist
and shiny, perfect for poking into places it
didn’t belong.
"Well, Howard," she said, "I
don’t suppose you’ve heard from Suzanne."
"But I have. She called last
night."
"Did she? And how is her
sister’s health?"
"Improving."
"So then she’ll be coming home
soon."
"Possibly not," I said.
The long nose twitched. "Why
not, if she isn’t needed in Duluth?"
"She may be staying on there
just the same."
"For how long?"
"Indefinitely."
"What’s that? She’s never
coming back?"
"Indefinitely doesn’t mean
never, Aileen."
"Why would she stay in
Duluth?"
"She likes it there. More than
she likes me, I’m sorry to say."
"Are you trying to tell me
she’s left you?"
"I’m not trying to tell you
anything."
Another twitch. A scowl. "I
don’t believe Suzanne would give up her home,
everything she owns, on a sudden whim. That’s
not like her."
"I didn’t say it was
sudden."
"I still don’t believe it."
"You don’t know her as well as
you think you do. Or me, either."
"Well, in your case, that’s for
sure."
She turned and strode off,
muttering, "I knew it. I knew it!" just loud
enough for me to hear.
I finished watering, then sat
on the porch steps to bask in the evening quiet.
I hadn’t been there five minutes when the other
Telford came marching up my front walk. Direct
assault mission, it turned out—an unusual tactic
for him.
"Up late again last night,
weren’t you, Bennett?" he said without
preamble.
"So it’s Bennett instead of
Howard now, is it?"
"Very late. Long after
midnight."
"If I was," I said, "you and
Aileen must’ve been, too. Just a couple of night
owls."
"What were you up to, digging
in your rose garden so damn late?"
I raised an eyebrow.
"Binoculars weren’t enough for you, is that it?
Now you’ve gone high tech and bought an infrared
scope for better night spying?"
"You didn’t answer my
question."
"No, and I’m not going to. What
I do on my own property day or night is no one’s
business but my own."
He sputtered noisily, like a
faulty gas-powered lawnmower. "You won’t get
away with it, Bennett."
"Get away with what?"
"We’ll see to that, one way or
another. We’ll get to the bottom of this."
"Will you?" I smiled at him. "I
like puzzles myself. Great time-passers."
"Puzzles?"
"Sifting through all the many
possibilities, looking for pieces that fit
together to form the true picture. Very
stimulating, mentally."
"I don’t know what you’re
talking about."
"No," I said, "of course you
don’t."
"More rummage for
Goodwill?"
Morning. My open garage. And
the Telford fox terrier at it again.
"That’s right, Aileen." I said.
"More rummage for Goodwill."
"All of it Suzanne’s, I
suppose."
"You can suppose anything you
like."
"Getting rid of everything of
hers. Because you claim she’s not coming
back."
"I made no such claim."
"I don’t believe she went to
Duluth. I’ll bet she doesn’t even have a
sister."
"A bet you’d lose. She did and
she does."
"So you say."
"And what do you say,
Aileen?"
She jabbed an accusatory finger
at me. "I say she never left. I say you did
something to her."
"Such as what?"
"Something unspeakable. You
won’t get away with it."
"Roger implied the same thing
last night."
I placed the last of the Teflon
sacks in the trunk of the car. That left only
the bowling bag. Aileen seemed to notice it for
the first time. Her nose twitched and her teeth
snapped together.
"That bag," she said. "What
have you got in there?"
"It’s a bowling bag. So there
must be a bowling ball inside."
"You told Roger you didn’t own
a ball."
"Did I? He must have
misunderstood."
I picked up the bag by its
handles, hefting it.
Aileen gasped and drew back.
"That stain on the side. It looks . . .
wet."
I said, "You’re imagining
things," and swung the bag inside the trunk.
Another gasp, louder.
"Now what’s the matter?"
"It didn’t thump when you put
it down. It . . . it . . th.."
"It what?"
"Squished!"
"Bowling balls don’t squish,
Aileen."
"I know what I heard!" She was
backing away now, her hands up as if to ward off
an attack. Her face had assumed the color of the
flesh of her favorite sublime vegetable. Her
eyes literally bulged.
"Now what could I have in a
bowling bag," I said, "that would make a
squishing sound?"
She said something that sounded
like "Gaahh!" and fled.
The doorbell rang at seven that
evening. Two men in business suits stood on the
porch outside, one dark and heavyset, the other
fair and loose-coupled. The dark one said, "Mr.
Howard Bennett?"
"Yes? What can I do for
you?"
"Police officers." They held up
badges in leather cases. "My name is Pilofsky.
This is Detective Jenkins. We’d like a few words
with you, if you don’t mind."
"Not at all," I said, "though I
can’t imagine why."
"All right if we come
inside?"
I led them into the living
room. Jenkins said, "We’ll get right to the
point, Mr. Bennett. We’ve had a report of
suspicious activity concerning you and your
wife."
"Ah," I said. "Now I
understand. The Telfords. I should have known
they would call you."
"Why is that?"
"They’re the people for whom
the phrase ‘neighbors from hell’ was coined.
Sneaks and snoops of the worst sort, and
melodramatic to boot. They’ve been insufferable
since Suzanne was called away unexpectedly
several days ago."
"Where is your wife, Mr.
Bennett?" Pilofsky asked.
"Visiting her bedridden sister
in Duluth. I told the Telfords that more than
once."
"Is she coming back?"
"Of course. As soon as her
sister’s condition improves."
"Mrs. Telford claims you told
her your wife was leaving you and staying in
Duluth permanently."
"Then she misunderstood me.
Just as both of them have persisted in
misunderstanding a series of perfectly innocent
incidents."
"Suppose you give us your
version of those incidents."
I obliged at some length.
Jenkins took notes.
Pilofsky said, "You didn’t
address the issue of the ‘wet and squishy’
bowling bag."
"Oh, that. Aileen Telford has a
hyperactive imagination—she’s a writer, you
know. The bag wasn’t wet. It was merely stained.
And there was nothing in it except an old
bowling ball of mine. She heard what she wanted
to hear when I set it down."
"Where are the bag and ball
now?"
"They went to Goodwill with the
other rummage," I lied. Actually I had pitched
the bag into an industrial dumpster not far from
my office when no one was looking.
Both of them nodded and Jenkins
made another note.
"So you see," I said, "it’s all
just a tempest in a teapot."
"So it would seem," Pilofsky
said.
"Be all right if we had a look
around?" Jenkins asked. "It’s your privilege to
say no, naturally. We don’t have a search
warrant." The implication here, of course, was
that they could just go get one if they felt it
necessary.
"More than all right," I said.
"Be my guests. I have nothing to hide."
I conducted them through the
house, top to bottom. They were polite and
respectful, but quite thorough in their
probings. They exhibited particular interest in
my newly painted workshop and the rest of the
basement, examining my tools and even looking
inside the big Amana freezer. Naturally they
found nothing incriminating. There was nothing
for them to find.
From the basement I took them
outside, where I unearthed the hideous ceramic
bird sculpture I had buried in the rose garden.
"I did it on a whim," I said. "I’ve always hated
that sculpture, and with Suzanne away . . .
well, I just couldn’t stand to look at it any
longer."
"Why bury it?" Pilofsky asked.
"Why not just chuck it in the trash?"
I said sheepishly, "To be
frank, I was covering my backside. I thought
that if Suzanne noticed the sculpture was
missing and became upset, I could always dig it
up and pretend it had been misplaced." I sighed.
"Now that I have dug it up, I suppose I might as
well put it back where it belongs. It was a
foolish notion to begin with."
Before they left, Jenkins asked
for the name, address, and phone number of
Suzanne’s sister in Duluth. I provided the
information, saying, "Please don’t call her
there unless it’s absolutely necessary. I’m sure
you understand."
"We just need it for our
report, Mr. Bennett."
"Then you’re satisfied that
this has all been a misunderstanding?"
"Not to mention a waste of the
taxpayers’ time and money."
"I suppose it’s too much to
hope that the Telfords will be satisfied
too."
"If we are," Pilofsky said
meaningfully, "they’d better be."
Neither member of the Snoop
Couple bothered me the next day or the morning
of the one following. I saw neither hide nor
hair of either of them, in fact. But that only
meant that they had changed their tactics from
overt to covert. They wouldn’t be satisfied, no
matter what the police had said to them, until
they saw Suzanne, hale and hearty, with their
own eyes.
Which is why, on the following
morning, I drove off whistling.
The three p.m. flight from
Duluth was on time. Suzanne was waiting with her
bag when I pulled up to the curb at Arrivals,
scowling at her watch even though I wasn’t even
a minute late.
On the way out of the airport I
said, "It’s good to have you home, dear."
"Horse apples," she said. Her
favorite epithet, and one I’ve always loathed.
"You were probably wishing I’d stayed away a lot
longer."
"That’s not true."
"Of course it’s true. Well, you
may get your wish. If my sister’s condition
doesn’t improve over the next week or so, I’ll
probably have to go back there again."
"I’m sorry to hear that," I
said.
"Horse apples. Don’t try to
deny you’ve liked living alone. All that freedom
to stick your nose in a book and neglect your
chores."
"I’ve never neglected my
chores."
"Not when I’m around to prod
you into doing them. I don’t suppose you did
everything on the list I gave you?"
"Ah, but I did."
"Finished building the new
table for my sewing room?"
"In one evening."
"Took everything on my rummage
list to Goodwill?"
"Yes, dear. Plus some odds and
ends from the basement."
"Painted that ugly workshop of
yours?"
"All four walls."
"Cleaned out the pantry and the
freezer?"
"And the refrigerator. A good
thing I did, too. There was a honeydew melon
hidden in back that we bought weeks ago and
forgot about."
"It must’ve been rotten."
"It was," I said. "Squishy, in
fact."
"Mmm," she said. "Did you do
anything else besides loaf?"
"Oh, I had some fun with the
Telfords."
"Fun? With those
busybodies?"
"We played a game."
"What kind of game?"
"Actually, it was one they made
up. I never would have thought of it myself. But
I learned the rules quickly and even invented a
few of my own."
"Mmm. Who won?"
"I did."
"How nice for you," she said,
and let the subject drop. She never has had any
interest in my small triumphs.
When we arrived home, I made a
point of parking prominently in the middle of
the driveway and helping Suzanne out of the car.
The Telfords had been sitting on their porch.
They both scrambled to their feet when they saw
her, their necks craning, looking like a pair of
ungainly, agitated geese. I waved at them
cheerfully. They ducked into their house without
even waving back.
After I finished the dinner
dishes, I sat on the front porch to watch dusk
settle over the neighborhood. The evening was
warmish and dusk is my favorite part of the
day—quiet, peaceful, a contemplative time.
Lights showed in the Telford house, but there
was no sign of either Roger or Aileen. For the
first time in as long as I could remember, all
their window curtains were drawn and none of
them were fluttering at the corners. It would be
a good long while, if ever, I thought, before
they resumed their spying on the Bennett
household. After years of abuse, the prospect of
protracted peace and privacy was a heady
one.
The screen door banged after
awhile and Suzanne came out to plop down next to
me. "Why are you grinning?" she demanded.
"Was I grinning? I didn’t
realize it."
"What were you thinking
about?"
"Oh, this and that.
Possibilities."
"I don’t understand you,
Howard. Sometimes I wonder what possessed me to
marry you in the first place."
Before I could frame a
response, George, the Lindemans’ Rottweiler mix,
came trotting around the corner of the house.
Suzanne let out a little screech that caused the
dog to stop and flatten slightly with his ears
back.
"Howard!"
"Don’t worry." I said. "He’s
harmless."
"Harmless? An ugly brute like
that? How did he get into our yard?"
"There’s a loose board in the
back fence—"
"Loose board? Why haven’t you
fixed it? What’s the matter with you? A beast
like that, running loose. There’s no telling
what kind of damage he’ll do. Get rid of him!
This instant!"
I got up and went down the
porch steps. George’s tail began to wag. He came
over and licked my hand.
"And don’t come back until
you’ve fixed that board. You hear me?"
"Yes, dear. You don’t need to
shout."
"Horse apples," she said. She
went back inside and slammed the door behind
her.
I said, "Come on, George," and
led the dog around back and across the yard. He
didn’t want to leave. He stood looking up at me
with round, eager eyes, his tongue lolling. I
leaned down and patted his head.
"I don’t have anything for you
tonight, boy," I told him. "But I might have
something in the foreseeable future. You never
know. Life is full of possibilities."
Then I shooed him out and went to get my
tools so I could pretend to fix the loose board
in the fence.