Hulk that hurt. Qwilleran was asked to write a special Qwill Pen columnâconsoling, philosophizing, encouraging. At Loisâs Luncheonette, the customers were angry and vengeful.
While the public grieved or raged about the arsonâas well they mightâQwilleran looked for a constructive approach.
One day while cashing a check at the bank downtown, he stood in line just ahead of Burgess Campbell, lecturer at the local college and revered leader of the Scottish community. Blind from birth, Burgess was always accompanied by his guide dog, Alexander.
Qwilleran said, âBurgess, do you have a minute to talk? I have a constructive suggestion.â
When their transactions were completed, they met in one of the bankâs small conference rooms, and Qwilleran said: âThe K Fund could publish a small book on the Old Hulk, if your students would do some research. They could interview family members, neighbors, public leaders. It would be good experience. They could borrow snapshots and check the photo file at the newspaper. Then a postscript could put a positive slant on the subject by introducing the Senior Health Club.â
Alexander whimpered, and the two men considered that approval. He was a very smart dog.
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Qwilleran had a bad habit of writing a news story before the news broke, or describing a building before it was built. Polly said he should be writing fiction. The products of his imagination always surpassed the actual thing.
As for the Old Manse at Purple Point, Qwilleran wanted to design it to match Hawthorneâs book.
And the approach to the mansion signified he might be rightâ¦. There was the iron gate between two rough stone gatepostsâ¦. Then a long, straight driveway between two rows of poplar trees, with beds of daffodils here and thereâ¦ending at a large building with a prisonlike look: gray brick, plain windows, and a severe entrance door.
The make-believe script ended when he clanged the heavy brass door knocker.
He expected to be admitted by a butler with silver buckles on his shoes, but Daisy Babcock opened the door in a pink pantsuit and a flurry of excitement.
Merrily she said, âYouâre Mr. Q! Welcome to the Old Manse. Did you bring Cool Koko?â
Only devoted Qwill Pen readers talked nonsense like that. He liked her instantly.
He remembered meeting her at Linguiniâs Party Store when ordering Squunk water, but her informality came as a shock in a two-story foyer with marble floor, tall mirrors, brocaded walls, a mammoth crystal chandelier, and a stairway as big as the Bridge over the River Kwai.
Soberly, Qwilleran replied, âKoko regrets that he had a previous appointment with his publisher. He hopes youâll call on him at the barn.â
âIâd love to,â she said. âAlfredo has told me about it. He makes deliveries of Squunk water, he says.â
âItâs a far cry from this little palace. Do you give guided tours?â
âWhere would you like to begin?â
âAs the King of Hearts said to the White Rabbit, begin at the beginning and keep going till you come to the end. Then stop.â
The loaf-shaped building with modest architecture was one of four wings surrounding a great hall with skylight and a fortune in large oil paintings importantly framed.
There was a music salon with two grand pianos, a dining room that would seat sixteen, and an extensive library upstairs. Every suite had a four-poster bed and an eight-foot highboy.
There was Mrs. Ledfieldâs pride and joyâa large cutting garden that supplied freshly cut flowers for the silver and crystal vases throughout the houseâ¦and there was Nathan Ledfieldâs specialty: a formal garden of daylilies comprising five varieties compatible with a northern climate.
It was almost as if the Ledfields were still living there. In the music salon there was sheet music open on the racks, as if waiting for the pianist and violinist to