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ng polite. "Live in Portland, born in New York. Family came over in the famine." "Well, then." The world divides into people who have been hungry and those who haven't. Charlie felt himself grandfathered into the right camp. It was strange how some people you got along with and some you didn't. "I'll tell you one thing," Tucker said, "there weren't nobody smarter than Margery Sewell ever come out of here. She got prizes, awards--some kind of thing from the governor, even. Whoever he was. Can't recall." Charlie nodded. "She's a professor--classics--Latin and Greek." "It don't surprise me," Tucker said. They talked, from time to time glancing into the graveyard. Tucker was waiting for Margery, Charlie realized. When she appeared, she was walking slowly. Her head was up but her attention was dragging, as though she were pulling part of herself left behind. She was nearly to them before she focused. "Hello, Tucker." "Hello, Margery." "Good to see you," she said. "It's been a while." "Yep. Since the service, I guess." Tucker straightened. He seemed younger. "Tucker lived up the road from us," she said to Charlie. "He made me the most marvelous rocking horse. I think that was the nicest present I ever got. When William--" She swallowed. "When--I'm sorry." She turned away. "William loved it too," she said in a low voice. There wasn't anything to say. Margery gathered herself and turned back to them. Tucker cleared his throat. "I was--thinking you might come over for a bite to eat, for old times sake." Charlie expected Margery to decline, but something in the old man's tone had caught her attention. "Well, that's nice of you. You have time, don't you, Charlie?" "Plenty of time." A few years earlier, she had shown him where she lived, not far from the cemetery. "Ride or walk?" "Ride," Tucker said. "I'll just put this shovel in the shed." Tucker's house was a weathered collection of gray boxes that were settling away from each other. A reddish dog got down from a couch on the porch and came to meet them. There was white around her muzzle. "Company, Sally. Margery Sewall and her friend, Charlie." The dog received Tucker's hand on her head and greeted them, sniffing each in turn. "Sally don't see as well as she used to--do you girl?" Her tail wagged and she led them to the house. "You've got bees." Charlie pointed at four hives that stood on 2x4's at the end of a narrow garden. "Yep. Good year
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