Angie in college and was happy to find a familiar face on the street when Iâd finally moved in. Every few months weâd get together and sheâd regale me with stories about her travels.
Jason was the son of Angieâs older brother. âItâs taking him a bit of time to find himself,â sheâd confided recently to Rose and me over tea and biscotti. Iâd nodded and said nothing, looking pointedly at Rose as a hint to do the same. Rose had reached for her cup and kept her opinions to herself, although later when Angie had gone home, sheâd tartly commented that it might be a little easier for Jason to find his missing âselfâ if he got out of bed before noon.
âAngie will be out of the hospital in a few days,â Rose said then, laying a hand on Tomâs arm for a moment. âThen things will get back to normal.â
âI donât think things are going to get back to normal until that young man is gone,â he grumbled. Two furrows had formed between his bushy white eyebrows.
Jason Bates came out of the house then. Like his aunt, he was tall and lean, but that was where the similarities ended. Where Angie was fair, Jason was dark: deep-set dark eyes, spiked dark hair, navy shirt, black jeans. I noticed his eyes flick in our direction but he gave no other sign that heâd seen us. He jumped in Angieâs blue Mini Cooper, backed out of the driveway and sped out of the court.
I glanced toward the backyard again. Elvis had put down the burden he had been carrying in his mouth and was looking back toward Tomâs house, head tipped to one side, almost as if he, too, had questions about Jason Bates. He turned to look at me for a moment, then picked up whatever heâd caught in Tomâs yard and disappeared over the rock wall.
Rose and I walked with Tom back to his house. Standing at the bottom of the driveway, I could see what a mess Jason had made when heâd mowed the strip of lawn between the two houses. The ground had been gouged in a couple of places, and in others the grass was more than a couple of inches high. âDonât worry,â I said. âItâs grass. Itâll grow.â
Tom didnât seem the slightest bit comforted by my words. I remembered feeling much the same way when my mother had said those same wordsââItâll growââafter Iâd tried to cut my bangs with a pair of kitchen scissors when I was thirteen.
The old man had been mowing the small piece of lawn between his house and Angieâs for years, even though technically it was her property. Angie had always thanked Tom for what she called the courtesy. I suspected the courtesy was more Angieâs. Tom was finicky about his house and his property, and since the strip of grass was next to his driveway, I had a feeling he felt a bit of ownership, even if the lawn didnât actually belong to him.
A couple of days previous, Tom had gotten out his push mower, clippers and broom to begin his lawn-mowing routine. He always started with the section of grass between the two houses, working from left to right across the front of the house and then repeating the process in the back. Iâd been hanging quilts on the backyard clothesline. It was a slow, awkward process one-handed. Iâd just gotten the second quilt in place when I heard raised voices and the sound of Tomâs little corgi Matildaâs agitated barking. I rounded the side of my house in time to see Jason shake his fist at the old man and then shove the lawn mower out into the street before storming back into Angieâs house.
I had hurried over to Tom. He was trembling, his face pale. The front door to his house was open, and I could see Matilda on her hind legs, paws on the screen, barking furiously. She was as protective of the old man as if she were a German shepherd or a Great Dane.
âWhatâs wrong?â Iâd asked, putting a hand on Tomâs