The black stretch limousine bearing the plates of a U.S. senator eased around the traffic circle at the center of Temperance Hill.
Sen. Helene Falkland picked up the limo's intercom to buzz her chauffeur.
"Use the bank president's parking space," Helene said. "He's expecting me."
The chauffeur nodded, glancing in the rear view mirror. She was beautiful. The clean classic lines of a young Ingrid Bergman. The cool aloofness of a Greta Garbo. He turned off his thoughts. The parking space was just ahead on the right.
Senator Falkland handed the sheaf of papers to her aide.
"Stay by my side, Jeff. I don't want to fumble around for figures when I need them."
Jeff patted his bulging briefcase. "We're all set, senator. Every thing's cross-indexed like you wanted."
"The daughter is here, right?"
"Robyn Dunmore came for her father's funeral," Jeff said. "She thinks this board meeting is just an official condolence from the newspaper corporation."
"The editor's son hasn't shown up?" Senator Falkland glanced at her notes. "He's the one with experience."
Jeff wrinkled his nose. "He won't come. I lost track of him after he was run out of town. Took to the bottle as he bounced from one paper to another."
"Then if the girl's the key to it, I'm ready."
"You're ready, senator," Jeff said with a wink. "After three terms in office, you're ready to give the newspaper it's comeuppance."
Helene Falkland touched Jeff's hand. "Not just my political career," she said. "This is the payoff for three generations of Falklands."
Jeff watched Helene's firm buttocks twist smoothly in the black silk dress as she stepped out of the limo. He noted the way Helen's shapely legs filled out the silk hose.
There was a standing joke among the other senators about the special initial license plate on Helene's limo. "HF" didn't stand for Helene Falkland, the joke said. It really meant Helene Fucks.
Jeff smiled. The joke wasn't just a sexual innuendo. It was a warning. Mess with Senator Helene Falkland and you'll get screwed.
He had followed that fabulous body around every day for twelve years. Yet he still fantasized about his boss. But he knew she would bust the balls of the man who dared to crack that frozen exterior.
Helene leaned back into the limo.
"Get your ass in gear," she barked at Jeff. "I'm finally gonna pluck the feathers off this barnyard newspaper."
Jeff was opening the door of Guaranty Bank when he glanced across the street to the cemetery on the hill. He nudged the senator. They watched Robyn Dunmore take off her dress shoes and walk barefoot to the grave of her father who was editor of the Temperance Hill Journal. Jeff glanced at Helene Falkland. For the first time in months, he saw the senator smile.
Helene turned on her heels, and with Jeff trailing behind her, stalked into the bank.
"That girl," Helene whispered, "doesn't stand a fuckin' chance."
At the cemetery, Robyn Dunmore paused at her father's grave. Just two days ago, she had followed her father one last time to his favorite spot, this emerald green hill above the town. It was a large funeral that surprised the townsfolk. Even the state governor came, bearing official condolences from the speaker of the State House, and even the President of the United States.
"The influence of this small town editor reached even to the White House," the governor had said.
Golden dots of late autumn sunshine sparkled through the trees on the hill, healing the fresh brown wound in the earth. My father has been slipped into this tiny envelope of earth and sealed away forever, Robyn thought.
A warm breeze brought the soothing familiar fragrance of the harbor nestling at the foot of the hill. Now her father would forever keep watch over his beloved town below, just as his newspaper had kept vigil through the good and lean years.
As a barefoot child, her father had brought her up this hill, first on his strong shoulders, then hand-in-hand when her coltish legs grew stronger. He taught her to love this hill which blocked out the northern gales in winter, and replenished the town's wells during the spring runoff.
"This hill stands guard over the town," her father would say with a sweep of his massive ink-stained arms. "And The Journal must always stand guard over its people."
As Robyn's limbs lost their baby fat and curved into adolescence, he taught her to love The Journal. Grudgingly at first, Robyn spent her afternoons in the printing plant. She took delight in learning the mysteries of type fonts and standing spellbound before the clattering Linotype machine that cast the type into metal lines.
While her high school classmates gathered around the jukebox at Spivey's Soda Shop after school, Robyn explored the inky bowls of the Journal's 16-page Goss press as seriously as a surgeon probed the heart.
At the end of a hard day, her father would push her towards the men's room β the only restroom for the all-male press staff β with orders to scrub the ink off her cheeks and comb the lint of newsprint from her golden curls. Then he would send her off to cover a town council meeting. More than one of her teachers looked at her fingers stained yellow by film developing chemicals and accused her of smoking.
"A small town newspaper is the best classroom in the world," her father said. The best classroom in the world. Robyn hoped she would remember the lessons.
Now she was alone. As the sun rose higher in the blue sky, a breeze swirled through her ash blonde hair. She bent down to slip on her dress shoes, then started down the hill. The newspaper board was finally going to honor her father's work. She didn't want to miss it.
In the conference room, a knot well-dressed men opened a path as Senator Helene Falkland entered. They quickly swarmed around her. She turned to the county superintendent of education.
"Be a dear, Jay, and get me a chair."
She settled into the cushioned executive chair as the mayor pulled up his chair beside her. Helene opened a silver case and took out a cigarillo. Mayor Conners fumbled for his gold lighter and cleared his throat.
"How are things on the Hill, senator?" Mayor Conners pushed a massive crystal ashtray toward her.
Helene took a swift puff and put the cigarillo aside. "Not now, mayor. We'll talk politics at lunch. Excuse me a moment, darling. I must get with Huey for a moment."
Helene greeted Huey Lewis, the town banker, with pecks on both cheeks. That always softened him up.
"Huey, dear, we must try to help that poor newspaper out now that the dear editor has passed away. Why, his little girl just won't be able to make a go of it. She's had her head in computer science and all."
The banker raised an eyebrow.
"Why, senator. That's the first kind thing I've ever heard a Falkland say about the Dunmore clan. Don't tell me that old feud is finally over."
"The is not the time for me to seem unkind," Helene said. "That little girl just needs a little help."