"You know, Dave," Geoff began. "I"m glad you dropped by just now. It strikes me that your own research is similar to mine in enough aspects that you might have some fresh insight into some problems I"ve run into. If you"d care to take time, I"d like to go over some of my notes with you, and see what you think."

"I don"t think you"ll have time," smiled Froneberger. He reached for Geoff"s empty coffee cup, dropped it into a pocket of his lab coat.

"What do you mean?" asked Geoff thickly, coughing suddenly. There was pain deep, deep in his throat. Another racking cough filled his mouth with blood.

And he knew what Froneberger meant.

Where the Summer Ends.



*I*

Along Grand Avenue they"ve torn the houses down, and left emptiness in their place. On one side a tangle of viaducts, railroad yards and expressways-a scar of concrete and cinder and iron that divides black slum from student ghetto in downtown Knoxville. On the other side, ascending the ridge, shabby relics of Victorian and Edwardian elegance, slowly decaying beneath too many layers of cheap paint and soot and squalor. Most were broken into tawdry apartments-housing for the students at the university that sprawled across the next ridge. Closer to the university, sections had been razed to make room for featureless emplacements of asphalt and imitation used-brick apartments for the wealthier students. But along Grand Avenue they tore the houses down and left only vacant weed-lots in their place.

Shouldered by the encroaching kudzu, the sidewalks still ran along one side of Grand Avenue, pa.s.sing beside the tracks and the decrepit sh.e.l.ls of disused warehouses. Across the street, against the foot of the ridge, the long blocks of empty lots rotted beneath a jungle of rampant vine- the buried house sites marked by ragged stumps of blackened timbers and low depressions of tumbled-in cellars. Discarded refrigerators and gutted hulks of television sets rusted amidst the weeds and omnipresent litter of beer cans and broken bottles. A green pall over the dismal ruin, the relentless tide of kudzu claimed Grand Avenue.

Once it had been a "grand avenue," Mercer reflected, although those years had pa.s.sed long before his time. He paused on the cracked pavement to consider the forlorn row of electroliers with their antique lozenge-paned lamps that still lined this block of Grand Avenue. Only the sidewalk and the forgotten electroliers-curiously spared by vandals-remained as evidence that this kudzu-festooned wasteland had ever been an elegant downtown neighborhood.

Mercer wiped his perspiring face and shifted the half-gallon jug of cheap burgundy to his other hand. Cold beer would go better today, but Gradie liked wine. The late afternoon sun struck a shimmering haze from the expanses of black pavement and riotous weed-lots, reminding Mercer of the whorled distortions viewed through antique windowpanes. The air was heavy with the hot stench of asphalt and decaying refuse and Knoxville"s greasy smog. Like the murmur of fretful surf, afternoon traffic grumbled along the nearby expressway.

As he trudged along the skewed paving, he could smell a breath of magnolia through the urban miasma. That would be the sickly tree in the vacant lot across from Gradie"s-somehow overlooked when the house there had been pulled down and the shrubbery uprooted-now poisoned by smog and strangled beneath the consuming ma.s.ses of kudzu. Increasing his pace as he neared Gradie"s refuge, Mercer reminded himself that he had less than twenty bucks for the rest of this month, and that there was a matter of groceries.

Traffic on the Western Avenue Viaduct snarled overhead, as he pa.s.sed in the gloom beneath-watchful for the winos who often huddled beneath the concrete arches. He kept his free hand stuffed in his jeans pockets over the double-barrelled .357 magnum derringer-carried habitually since a mugging a year ago. The area was deserted at this time of day, and Mercer climbed unchallenged past the rail yards and along the unfrequented street to Gradie"s house. Here, as well, the weeds buried abandoned lots, and the kudzu was denser than he remembered from his previous visit. Trailing vines and smothered trees arcaded the sidewalk, forcing him into the street. Mercer heard a sudden rustle deep beneath the verdant tangle as he crossed to Gradie"s gate, and he thought unpleasantly of the gargantuan rats he had glimpsed lying dead in gutters near here.

Gradie"s house was one of the last few dwellings left standing in this waste-certainly it was the only one to be regularly inhabited. The other sagging sh.e.l.ls of gaping windows and rotting board were almost too dilapidated even to shelter the winos and vagrants who squatted hereabouts.

The gate resisted his hand for an instant-mired over with the fast-growing kudzu that had so overwhelmed the low fence, until Mercer had no impression whether it was of wire or pickets. Chickens flopped and scattered as he shoved past the gate. A brown-and-yellow dog, whose ancestry might once have contained a trace of German shepherd, growled from his post beneath the wooden porch steps. A cl.u.s.ter of silver maples threw a moth-eaten blanket of shade over the yard. Eyes still dazzled from the glare of the pavement, Mercer needed a moment to adjust his vision to the sooty gloom within. By then Gradie was leaning the shotgun back amidst the deeper shadows of the doorway, stepping onto the low porch to greet him.

"G.o.dd.a.m.n winos," Gradie muttered, watching Mercer"s eyes.

"Much trouble with stealing?" the younger man asked.

"Some," Gradie grunted. "And the G.o.dd.a.m.n kids. Hush up that growling, Sheriff!"

He glanced protectively across the enclosed yard and its ramshackle dwelling. Beneath the trees, in crates and barrels, crude stands and disordered heaps, lying against the flimsy walls of the house, stuffed into the outbuildings: the plunder of the junk piles of another era.

It was a private junk yard of the sort found throughout any urban slum, smaller than some, perhaps a fraction more tawdry. Certainly it was as out-of-the-way as any. Mercer, who lived in the nearby student quarter, had stumbled upon it quite by accident only a few months before-during an afternoon"s hike along the railroad tracks. He had gleaned two rather nice blue-green insulators and a brown-gla.s.s c.o.ke bottle by the time he caught sight of Gradie"s patch of stunted vegetables between the tracks and the house that Mercer had never noticed from the street. A closer look had disclosed the yard with its moraine of cast-off salvage, and a badly weathered sign that evidently had once read "Red"s Second Hand" before a later hand had overpainted "Antiques."

A few purchases-very minor, but then Mercer had never seen another customer here-and several afternoons of digging through Gradies"s trove, had spurred that sort of casual friendship that exists between collector and dealer. Mercer"s interest in "collectibles" far outstripped his budget; Gradie seemed lonely, liked to talk, very much liked to drink wine. Mercer had hopes of talking the older man down to a reasonable figure on the mahogany mantel he coveted.

"I"ll get some gla.s.ses," Gradie said, acknowledging the jug of burgundy. He disappeared into the cluttered interior. From the direction of the kitchen came a clatter and sputter of the tap.

Mercer was examining a stand of old bottles, arrayed on their warped and unpainted shelves like a row of targets balanced on a fence for execution by boys, and a new .22. Gradie, two jelly gla.s.ses sloshing with burgundy, reappeared at the murkiness of the doorway, squinting blindly against the sun"s glare. Mercer thought of a greying groundhog, or a narrow-eyed pack rat, crawling out of its burrow-an image tinted grey and green through the shimmering curvatures of the bottles, iridescently filmed with a patina of age and cinder.

He had the thin, worn features that would have been thin and watchful as a child, would only get thinner and more watchful with the years. The limp, sandy hair might have been red before the sun bleached it and the years leeched it to a yellow-grey. Gradie was tall, probably had been taller than Mercer before his stance froze into a slouch and then into a stoop, and had a dirty spa.r.s.eness to his frame that called to mind the scarred mongrel dog that growled from beneath the steps. Mercer guessed he was probably no younger than fifty and probably not much older than eighty.

Reaching between two opalescent-sheened whiskey bottles, Mercer accepted a gla.s.s of wine. Distorted through the rows of bottles, Gradie"s face was watchful. His bright slits of colorless eyes flicked to follow the other"s every motion-this through force of habit: Gradie trusted the student well enough.

"Got some more of those over by the fence." Gradie pointed. "In that box there. Got some good ones. This old boy dug them, some place in Vestal, traded the whole lot to me for that R.C. Cola thermometer you was looking at once before." The last with a slight sly smile, flicked lizard-quick across his thin lips; Mercer had argued that the price on the thermometer was too high.

Mercer grunted noncommittally, dutifully followed Gradie"s gesture. There might be something in the half-collapsed box. It was a mistake to show interest in any item you really wanted, he had learned-as he had learned that Gradie"s eyes were quick to discern the faintest show of interest. The too-quick reach for a certain item, the wrong inflection in a casual "How much?" might make the difference between two bits and two bucks for a dusty book or a rusted skillet. The matter of the mahogany mantelpiece wanted careful handling.

Mercer squatted beside the carton, stirring the bottles gingerly. He was heavy-set, too young and too well-muscled to be called beefy. Sporadic employment on construction jobs and a more or less adhered-to program of workouts kept any beer gut from spilling over his wide belt, and his jeans and tank top fitted him as snugly as the older man"s faded work clothes hung shapelessly Mercer had a neatly trimmed beard and subtly receding hairline to his longish black hair that suggested an older grad student as he walked across campus, although he was still working for his bachelor"s-in a major that had started out in psychology and eventually meandered into fine arts.

The bottles had been hastily washed. Crusts of cinder and dirt obscured the cracked and chipped exteriors, and within were mats of spider web and moldy moss. A cobalt-blue bitters bottle might clean up nicely, catch the sun on the hallway window ledge, if Gradie would take less than a buck.

Mercer nudged a lavender-hued whiskey bottle. "How much for these?"

"I"ll sell you those big ones for two, those little ones for one-fifty."

"I could dig them myself for free," Mercer scoffed. "These weedlots along Grand are full of old junk heaps."

"Take anything in the box for a buck then," Gradie urged him.

"Only don"t go poking around those G.o.dd.a.m.n weedlots. Under that kudzu. I wouldn"t crawl into that G.o.dd.a.m.n vine for any money! "

"Snakes? " Mercer inquired politely.

Gradie shrugged, gulped the rest of his wine. "Snakes or worse. It was in the kudzu they found old Morny."

Mercer tilted his gla.s.s. In the afternoon sun the burgundy had a heady reek of hot alcohol, glinted like bright blood. "The cops ever find out who killed him?"

Gradie spat. "Who gives a d.a.m.n what happens to old winos?"

"When they start slicing each other up like that, the cops had d.a.m.n well better do something."

"s.h.i.t!" Gradie contemplated his empty gla.s.s, glanced toward the bottle on the porch. "What do they know about knives? You cut a man if you"re just fighting; you stab him if you want him dead. You don"t slice a man up so there"s not a whole strip of skin left on him."

*II*

"But it had to have been a gang of winos," Linda decided. She selected another yellow flower from the dried bouquet, inserted it into the bitters bottle.

"I think that red one," Mercer suggested.

"Don"t you remember that poor old man they found last spring? All beaten to death in an abandoned house. And they caught the creeps who did it to him-they were a couple of his old drinking buddies, and they never did find out why."

"That was over in Lonsdale," Mercer told her. "Around here the pigs decided it was the work of hippie dope fiends, ha.s.sled a few street people, forgot the whole deal."

Linda trimmed an inch from the dried stalk, jabbed the red strawflower into the narrow neck. Stretching from her bare toes, she lifted the bitters bottle to the window shelf. The morning sun, spilling into the foyer of the old house, pierced the cobalt-blue gla.s.s in an azure star.

"How much did you say it cost, Jon?" She had spent an hour scrubbing at the bottle with test tube brushes a former roommate had left behind.

"Fifty cents," Mercer lied. "I think what probably happened was that old Morny got mugged, and the rats got to him before they found his body."

"That"s really nice," Linda judged. "I mean the bottle." Freckled arms akimbo, sleeves rolled up on an old blue workshirt, faded blue jeans, morning sun a nimbus through her whiskey-colored close curls, eyes two shades darker than the azure star.

Mercer remembered the half-smoked joint on the hall bal.u.s.trade, struck a match. "G.o.d knows there are rats big enough to do that to a body down under the kudzu. I"m sure it was rats that killed Midnight last spring."

"Poor old tomcat," Linda mourned. She had moved in with Mercer about a month before it happened, remembered his stony grief when their search had turned up the mutilated cat. "The city ought to clear off these weed-lots."

"All they ever do is knock down the houses," Mercer got out, between puffs. "Condemn them so you can"t fix them up again. Tear them down so the winos can"t crash inside."

"Wasn"t that what Morny was doing? Tearing them down, I mean?"

"Sort of." Mercer coughed. "He and Gradie were partners. Gradie used to run a second-hand store back before the neighborhood had rotted much past the edges. He used to buy and sell salvage from the old houses when they started to go to seed. The last ten years or so, after the neighborhood had completely deteriorated, he started working the condemned houses. Once a house is condemned, you pretty well have to pull it down, and that costs a bundle-either to the owner, or, since usually it"s abandoned property, to the city. Gradie would work a deal where they"d pay him something to pull a house down-not very much, but he could have whatever he could salvage.

"Gradie would go over the place with Morny, haul off anything Gradie figured was worth saving-and by the time he got the place, there usually wasn"t much. Then Gradie would pay Morny maybe five or ten bucks a day to pull the place down- taking it out of whatever he"d been paid to do the job. Morny would make a show of it, spend a couple weeks tearing out sc.r.a.p timber and the like.

Then, when they figured they"d done enough, Morny would set fire to the sh.e.l.l. By the time the fire trucks got there, there"d just be a bas.e.m.e.nt full of coals. Firemen would spray some water, blame it on the winos, forget about it. The house would be down, so Gradie was clear of the deal- and the kudzu would spread over the empty lot in another year."

Linda considered the roach, snuffed it out and swallowed it. Waste not, want not. "Lucky they never burned the whole neighborhood down. Is that how Gradie got that mantel you"ve been talking about?"

"Probably." Mercer followed her into the front parlor. The mantel had reminded Linda that she wanted to listen to a record.

The parlor-they used it as a living room-was heavy with stale smoke and flat beer and the pungent odor of Brother Jack"s barbecue. Mercer scowled at the litter of empty Rolling Rock bottles, crumpled napkins and sauce-stained rinds of bread. He ought to clean up the house today, while Linda was in a domestic mood-but that meant they"d have to tackle the kitchen, and that was an all-day job-and he"d wanted to get her to pose while the sun was right in his upstairs studio.

Linda was having problems deciding on a record. It would be one of hers, Mercer knew, and hoped it wouldn"t be Dylan again. She had called his own record library one of the wildest collections of curiosa ever put on vinyl. After half a year of living together, Linda still thought resurrected radio broadcasts of "The Shadow" were a camp joke, Mercer continued to argue that Dylan couldn"t sing a note. Withal, she always paid her half of the rent on time. Mercer reflected that he got along with her better than with any previous roommate, and while the house was subdivided into a three-bedroom apartment, they never advertised for a third party.

The speakers, bunched on either side of the hearth, came to life with a scratchy Fleetwood Mac alb.u.m. It drew Mercer"s attention once more to the ravaged fireplace. Some Philistine landlord, in the process of remodelling the dilapidated Edwardian mansion into student apartments, had ripped out the mantel and boarded over the grate with a panel of cheap plywood. In defiance of landlord and fire laws, Mercer had torn away the panel and unblocked the chimney. The fireplace was small with a grate designed for coal fires, but Mercer found it pleasant on winter nights. The hearth was of chipped ceramic tiles of a blue-and-white pattern-someone had told him they were Dresden. Mercer had sc.r.a.ped away the grime from the tiles, found an ornate bra.s.s grille in a flea market near Seymour. It remained to replace the mantel. Behind the plywood panel, where the original mantel had stood, was an ugly smear of bare brick and lathing. And Gradie had such a mantel.

"We ought to straighten up in here," Linda told him. She was doing a sort of half-dance around the room, scoopingup debris and singing a line to the record every now and then.

"I was wondering if I could get you to pose for me this morning? "

"h.e.l.l, it"s too nice a day to stand around your messy old studio."

"Just for a while. While the sun"s right. If I don"t get my figure studies handed in by the end of the month, I"ll lose my incomplete."

"Christ, you"ve only had all spring to finish them."

"We can run down to Gradie"s afterward. You"ve been wanting to see the place."

"And the famous mantel."

"Perhaps if the two of us work on him?"

The studio-so Mercer dignified it-was an upstairs front room, thrust outward from the face of the house and onto the roof of the veranda, as a sort of cold weather porch. Three-quarter-length cas.e.m.e.nt windows with diamond panes had at one time swung outward on three sides, giving access onto the tiled porch roof. An enterprising landlord had blocked over the windows on either side, converting it into a small bedroom. The front wall remained a latticed expanse through which the morning sun flooded the room. Mercer had adopted it for his studio, and now Linda"s houseplants bunched through his litter of canvases and drawing tables.

"Jesus, it"s a nice day!"

Mercer halted his charcoal, scowled at the sheet. "You moved your shoulder again," he accused her.

"Lord, can"t you hurry it?"

"Genius can never be hurried."

"Genius my a.s.s." Linda resumed her pose. She was lean, high-breasted and thin-hipped, with a suggestion of freckles under her light tan. A bit taller and she would have had a career as a fashion model. She had taken enough dance to pose quite well-did accept an occasional modelling a.s.signment at the art school when cash was short.

"Going to be a good summer." It was that sort of morning.

"Of course." Mercer studied his drawing. Not particularly inspired, but then he never did like to work in charcoal. The sun picked bronze highlights through her helmet of curls, the feathery patches of her mons and axillae. Mercer"s charcoal poked dark blotches at his sketch"s crotch and armpits. He resisted the impulse to crumple it and start over.

Part of the problem was that she persisted in twitching to the beat of the music that echoed lazily from downstairs. She was playing that Fleetwood Mac alb.u.m to death- had left the changer arm askew so that the record would repeat until someone changed it. It didn"t help him concentrate-although he"d memorized the record to the point he no longer needed listen to the words: I been alone All the years So many ways to count the tears I never change I never will I"m so afraid the way I feel Days when the rain and the sun are gone Black as night Agony"s torn at my heart too long So afraid Slip and I fall and I die When he glanced at her again, something was wrong. Linda"s pose was no longer relaxed. Her body was rigid, her expression tense.

"What is it?"

She twisted her face toward the windows, brought one arm across her b.r.e.a.s.t.s. "Someone"s watching me."

With an angry grunt, Mercer tossed aside the charcoal, shouldered through the open cas.e.m.e.nt to glare down at the street.

The sidewalks were deserted. Only the usual trickle of Sat.u.r.day morning traffic drifted past. Mercer continued to scowl balefully as he studied the parked cars, the vacant weed-lot across the street, the tangle of kudzu in his front yard. Nothing.

"There"s nothing out there."

Linda had shrugged into a paint-flecked fatigue jacket. Her eyes were worried as she joined him at the window.

"There"s something. I felt all crawly all of a sudden."

The roof of the veranda cut off view on the windows from the near sidewalk, and from the far sidewalk it was impossible to see into the studio by day. Across the street, the houses directly opposite had been pulled down. The kudzu-covered lots pitched steeply across more kudzu-covered slope, to the roofs of warehouses along the rail yard a block below. If Linda were standing directly at the window, someone on the far sidewalk might look up to see her; otherwise there was no vantage from which a curious eye could peer into the room. It was one of the room"s attractions as a studio.

"See. No one"s out there."

Linda made a squirming motion with her shoulders. "They walked on, then," she insisted.

Mercer snorted, suspected an excuse to cut short the session. "They"d have had to run. Don"t see anyone hiding out there in the weeds, do you?"

She stared out across the tangled heaps of kudzu, waving faintly in the last of the morning"s breeze. "Well, there might be someone hiding under all that tangle." Mercer"s levity annoyed her. "Why can"t the city clear off those d.a.m.n jungles!"

"When enough people raise a stink, they sometimes do-or make the owners clear away the weeds. The trouble is that you can"t kill kudzu once the d.a.m.n vines take over a lot. Gradie and Morny used to try. The stuff grows back as fast as you cut it-impossible to get all the roots and runners. Morny used to try to burn it out-crawl under and set fire to the dead vines and debris underneath the growing surface. But he could never keep a fire going under all that green stuff, and after a few spectacular failures using gasoline on the weed-lots, they made him stick to grubbing it out by hand."

"Awful stuff!" Linda grimaced. "Some of it"s started growing up the back of the house."

"I"ll have to get to it before it gets started. There"s islands in the TVA lakes where nothing grows but kudzu. Stuff ran wild after the reservoir was filled, smothered out everything else."

"I"m surprised it hasn"t covered the whole world."

"Dies down after the frost. Besides it"s not a native vine. It"s from j.a.pan. Some genius came up with the idea of using it as an ornamental ground cover on highway cuts and such. You"ve seen old highway embankments where the stuff has taken over the woods behind. It"s spread all over the Southeast."

"Hmm, yeah? So who"s the genius who plants the c.r.a.p all over the city then?"

"Get dressed, wise-a.s.s."

*III*

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