Chapter 1
The Map in Her Head
Chapter 1: The Map in Her Head
At 6:45 on a Thursday morning, Harrowfield was still dark enough to pass for honest.
Main Street lay empty under a low grey sky. Kessler's windows were black. The white clapboard of the town offices held the last of the night. In the property management office across from the green, a single lamp burned behind the front window, turning the glass into a dim mirror.
Nora Pruitt sat at her desk with a county property record open on one screen and a leather-bound notebook open beside her left hand.
The notebook had no label. The cover was worn smooth at the corners. Inside, the pages were filled in a compressed hand that moved by symbols as much as words—names reduced to strokes, years to marks, obligations linked by arrows and small circles that meant different things depending on where they appeared. To anyone else it would have looked like the private method of a difficult mind. To Nora it was only backup. The real map was elsewhere.
She read the county record once for the filing data, once for the parcel history, once for the thing that mattered: the easement renewal date on the southern section of the Aldrich ridge trust. November 14.
Too close.
She turned one page in the notebook. Aldrich. Water access. Southern parcel tied by use to Carson north lot, Proulx dairy extension, maintenance run last logged in April. Diane secondary rights? unresolved.
Nora reached for the phone.
Diane Aldrich answered on the fourth ring with the wary flatness of someone who recognized the number but not the reason for the hour.
“Diane. It’s Nora Pruitt.”
A pause, then: “You’re up early.”
“So are you.”
“I’m in Montpelier. Early is mandatory here.” The rustle of paper. “What do you need?”
Nora leaned back in her chair and looked at nothing. “I was reviewing some older property files. Wanted to make sure the mailing address on the trust adjunct documents is current.”
“Trust adjunct documents,” Diane repeated. “That sounds like your version of small talk.”
“It is.”
Diane gave one short laugh. They had never been friends, exactly. But Diane had once been married to Henry Aldrich, and marriages left paper behind. Paper mattered.
“You still have the State Street address?” Diane asked.
“I do.”
“Then it’s current.”
Nora let the silence sit one beat. “Anyone else been asking about those documents?”
Another pause. Different this time. Alert now.
“No,” Diane said. “Should they be?”
“If they are, I’d rather know before they call you.”
“Is this Henry?”
“Not directly.”
“Which means yes.”
Nora picked up a pen and set it down again without writing. “If anyone contacts you about secondary rights attached to the ridge parcels, call me before you answer.”
“That specific.”
“Yes.”
Diane exhaled through her nose. “Fine. Nora?”
“Yes.”
“Is something wrong?”
Nora looked at the record on her screen. Parcel lines. Acreage. Filings. The visible shape of a deeper thing.
“Not yet,” she said.
She ended the call and sat for a moment with the phone in her hand. Diane had not been contacted. That mattered. It bought time. Not much, but enough to alter the order of moves.
She wrote nothing. She did not need to.
At seven-thirteen she closed the notebook, slid it into the bottom drawer of her desk, and turned the key.
By eight, the office had become what it appeared to be.
A printed sign on the front door listed business hours and emergency contact numbers. A rack by the entrance held rental applications and maintenance request forms. The smell of old paper and coffee settled into the walls. At eight-oh-five Kevin Marsh came in carrying a breakfast sandwich and a folder he had forgotten to finish the night before.
Kevin was twenty-six, broad-shouldered, clean-faced, and competent in the way competent young men in small towns often were: not brilliant, but reliable, which was rarer and usually more useful. Nora had hired him two years ago after his father’s back gave out and the family needed someone’s paycheck to stay regular. Kevin believed he worked for a demanding property manager with unreasonable recall for detail. He was not wrong.
“Morning,” he said around the sandwich.
“Morning. Roof estimate from Bartlett?”
“On your desk. Furnace call from Maple Street came in at seven-thirty. I told them Pete could get there by ten.”
“Not Pete. Send Alvaro.”
Kevin stopped halfway to his own desk. “Pete’s closer.”
“Alvaro’s daughter started at Kessler’s this week. He needs the hours.”
Kevin nodded once. “Right.”
He did not ask how she knew. Kevin had already learned that if Nora changed an assignment, there was a reason. He usually saw the reason later.
The day started coming at them in parts. A tenant on Elm complaining that the upstairs neighbor’s dog barked through the night. A contractor asking whether he could move a bathroom remodel up by two days. A call from the bank about a closing packet missing one signature. Nora handled each one with the same measured economy.
The barking dog became, after six minutes on speakerphone and one return call to a landlord who owed her a favor from last winter, an agreement to move the upstairs tenant into a vacant duplex on County Road—adjacent to the Proulx family’s back field, which would solve the fence access issue the Proulxes had been circling for months without naming.
The contractor got his schedule changed, but not to the house he wanted. She sent him to a porch repair on the west side because the owner there had just taken her sister’s grandson in after a relapse and would need the stairs safe before the first frost.
The missing signature turned out not to be missing. It was in the wrong packet because the attorney’s assistant in Brattleboro was new and tired and handling three closings at once. Nora called, walked her through the file structure, and had the problem corrected in under four minutes.
Nothing dramatic happened. Harrowfield simply continued to function.
At ten-forty, Kevin appeared in her doorway with a clipboard.
“Also,” he said, “there’s been a state vehicle parked up by the ridge access road all morning.”
Nora’s hand stopped on her coffee cup.
Not long. Half a second. Long enough for the body to register before the mind finished arranging the response.
She lifted the cup and drank.
“Highway department?” she asked.
“Maybe. White SUV with the green stripe. Guy in field gear.” Kevin looked down at the clipboard. “Mrs. Bell said he was digging near the ditch line.”
Nora set the cup down on a coaster she aligned with the desk grain before taking her hand away. “Did she talk to him?”
“She tried. Said he was polite.”
Of course he was.
Nora looked past Kevin to the office window, where Main Street had brightened into its usual Thursday rhythm. A delivery truck at the bakery. Two teachers crossing toward the school. A man from the highway garage buying cigarettes at Kessler’s. The town moved on the surface exactly as it should.
Underneath, a pressure point had shifted.
“I’ll drive out there after lunch,” she said.
Kevin nodded and went back to his desk.
Nora picked up the roof estimate from Bartlett and read it. Numbers. Materials. Labor hours. She marked one correction in the margin. Her face did not change. But in the part of her mind that never stopped, the shape of the morning had altered.
State vehicle on the ridge meant the highway proposal had moved from rumor to activity.
Activity meant records.
Records meant land.
Land meant Aldrich.
She turned to her computer and opened a different county page than the one Kevin could see from the hall. Parcel map overlay. Eastern ridge. Trust boundaries. Southern easement. Watershed line. Three generations of filings. She moved through the records quickly, not searching now but confirming the order in which problems would arrive if no one interrupted them.
If the state was surveying before November, then someone in Montpelier had advanced the review calendar. If the review calendar had advanced, then the ridge parcels mattered sooner than they should. If they mattered sooner, then whatever Douglas Aldrich was doing in Boston or Manhattan or from the back seat of some borrowed car had likely stopped being theoretical.
The phone rang again. Nora answered on the second ring.
“Pruitt Property.”
A woman’s voice launched immediately into a complaint about a leak under a sink.
Nora listened, asked three questions, and wrote a maintenance number on a yellow pad.
By the time she hung up, her tone was the same as it had been at eight-thirteen, at nine-forty-two, at ten-oh-seven. Exact. Level. Useful.
At noon she took her lunch at the desk: half a turkey sandwich wrapped in wax paper and an apple she did not finish. She reviewed the week’s maintenance schedule, moved two names, made one note for Kevin, and checked the county filings one more time.
Nothing new had appeared.
That did not reassure her. It only meant the new thing had not reached paper yet.
At one-fifteen she stood, put on her canvas jacket, took the truck keys from the hook inside the closet, and told Kevin she was heading up to inspect a drainage complaint.
“There one?” he asked.
“There is now,” she said.
He smiled faintly, used to this. Nora managed properties. Properties always had something wrong with them. It was a reasonable explanation for almost any movement she made in town.
Outside, the air had the first thin edge of autumn. The trees along the green were only beginning to turn, a little rust at the tips. Children’s voices carried from the schoolyard two blocks over. A town this small had no business feeling this steady. That was what outsiders noticed first, though they usually phrased it badly. Charming. Intact. Lucky.
Nora unlocked the truck and got in.
Before starting the engine, she sat with both hands on the wheel and looked through the windshield at Main Street. Kessler’s awning. The church steeple beyond it. The hardware store. The bench outside the pharmacy where old men would be sitting by three o’clock if the weather held.
Everything in its place.
Because someone had spent years making sure it stayed there.
She started the truck and pulled away from the curb, heading east toward the ridge road, where a man from the state was digging into land that did not belong to him and might, before the leaves were fully down, belong to someone worse.