"What sort of construction stuff?"

"Cement mixers, scaffolding, that sort of thing. Looks like he's having a lot of work done."

"Good."

Susan pulled up to our house. "I want to get this thing straight with him about the horse trails. Do you want to come along?"

"Not particularly. And I don't think it's good manners to approach a new neighbour with a problem until you've first paid a social call." "That's true. We should follow custom and convention, then he will, too." I wasn't sure about that, but one never knows. Sometimes a neighbourhood, like a culture or civilization, is strong enough to absorb and acculturate any number of newcomers. But I don't know if that's true around here any longer. The outward forms and appearances look the same – like the Iranians and Koreans I see in the village wearing blue blazers, tan slacks, and Top-Siders – but the substance has been altered. Sometimes I have this grotesque mental image of five hundred Orientals, Arabs, and Asian Indians dressed in tweeds and plaids applauding politely at the autumn polo matches. I don't mean to sound racist, but I am curious as to why wealthy foreigners want to buy our houses, wear our clothes, and emulate our manners. I suppose I should be flattered, and I suppose I am. I mean, I never had a desire to sit in a tent and eat camel meat with my fingers.

"John? Are you listening?"

"No."

"Do you want to go with me and pay a social call on Frank Bellarosa?"

"No."

"Why not?"

"Let him come to us."

"But you just said -"

"I don't care what I just said. I'm not going over there, and neither are you."

"Says who?"

"Says Lord Hardwick." I got out of the car and walked toward the house. Susan shut off the car engine and followed. We entered the house, and there was that pregnant silence in the air, the silence between a husband and wife who have just had words, and it is unlike any other silence except perhaps the awful stillness you hear between the flash of an atomic bomb and the blast. Five, four, three, two, one. Susan said, "All right. We'll wait. Would you like a drink?"

"Yes, I would."

Susan walked into the dining room and got a bottle of brandy from the sideboard. She moved into the butler's pantry, and I followed. Susan took two glasses from the cupboard and poured brandy into each. "Neat?"

"A little water."

She turned on the faucet, splashed too much water in the brandy, and handed me the glass. We touched glasses and drank there in the pantry, then moved into the kitchen. She asked, "Is there a Mrs Bellarosa?"

"I don't know."

"Well, was Mr Bellarosa wearing a wedding ring?"

"I don't notice things like that."

"You do when it's an attractive woman."

"Nonsense." But true. If a woman is attractive and I'm in one of my frisky moods, I don't care if she's single, engaged, married, pregnant, divorced, or on her honeymoon. Maybe that's because I never go past the flirting stage. Physically, I'm very loyal. Susan, on the other hand, is not a flirt, and you have to keep an eye on women like that.

She sat at the big round table in our English country-style kitchen.

I opened the refrigerator.

She said, "We're having dinner with the Remsens at the club."

"What time?"

"Three."

"I'll have an apple."

"I fed them to the horses."

"I'll have some oats." I found a bowl of New Zealand cherries and closed the refrigerator door. I ate the cherries standing, spitting the pits into the sink, and drank the brandy. Fresh cherries with brandy are good. Neither of us spoke for a while, and the regulator clock on the wall was tick-tocking. Finally, I said, "Look, Susan, if this guy was an Iranian rug merchant or a Korean importer or whatever, I would be a good neighbour. And if anyone around here didn't like that, the hell with them. But Mr Frank Bellarosa is a gangster and, according to the papers, the top Mafia boss in New York. I am an attorney, not to mention a respected member of this community. Bellarosa's phones are tapped, and his house is watched. I must be very careful of any relationship with that man."

Susan replied, "I understand your position, Mr Sutter. Some people even consider the Stanhopes as respected members of the community." "Don't be sarcastic, Susan. I'm speaking as an attorney, not as a snob. I make about half my living from the people around here, and I have a reputation for honesty and integrity. I want you to promise me you won't go over there to call on him or his wife, if he has one."

"All right, but remember what Tolkien said."

"What did Tolkien say?"

"Tolkien said, 'It doesn't do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations if you live near him.'"

Indeed it does not do at all, which was why I was trying to factor in Mr Frank Bellarosa.

CHAPTER 5

Dinner at The Creek club with the Remsens, Lester and Judy, began well enough. The conversation was mostly about important social issues (a new resident whose property bordered our club had brought suit over the skeet shooting, which he claimed was terrorizing his children and dog), about important world issues (the PGA was going to be held in Southampton again this May), and about pressing ecological issues, to wit: The remaining land of the old Guthrie estate, some one hundred acres, had gone to the developers, who wanted a variance to put up twenty houses in the two-million-dollar price range. "Outrageous," proclaimed Lester Remsen, who like myself is no millionaire, but who does own a very nice converted carriage house and ten acres of the former Guthrie estate. "Outrageous and ecologically unsound," Lester added.

The Guthrie estate was once a three-hundred-acre tract of terraced splendour, and the main house was called Meudon, an eighty-room replica of the Meudon Palace outside Paris. The Guthrie family tore down the palace in the 1950s rather than pay taxes on it as developed property.

Some of the locals considered the tearing down of Meudon Palace a sacrilege, while others considered it poetic justice, because the original Guthrie, William D., an aide to the Rockefeller clan, had purchased and torn down the village of Lattingtown – sixty homes and shops – in 1905. Apparently the structures interfered with his building plans. Thus, Lattingtown has no village centre, which is why we go to neighbouring Locust Valley for shopping, church, and all that. But as I said earlier, that was a time when American money was buying pieces of Europe or trying to replicate it here, and the little village of Lattingtown, a tiny hamlet of a hundred or so souls, could no more resist an offer of triple market value than could the English aristocrat who sold his library to adorn Alhambra.

And perhaps what is happening now is further justice, or irony if you will, as land speculators, foreigners, and gangsters buy up the ruins and the near ruins from a partially bankrupt and heavily taxed American aristocracy. I never came from that kind of money, and so my feelings are somewhat ambivalent. I'm blue blood enough to be nostalgic about the past, without having the guilt that people like Susan have about coming from a family whose money was once used like a bulldozer, flattening everything and everybody who got in its way. Lester Remsen continued, "The builders are promising to save most of the specimen trees and dedicate ten acres of park if we'll offer our expertise for free. Maybe you could meet with these people and tag the trees." I nodded. I'm sort of the local tree guy around here. Actually, there are a group of us, who belong to the Long Island Horticultural Society. All of a sudden I'm in demand as local residents have discovered that raising the ecological banner can hold off the builders. Ironically, that's one of the reasons that Stanhope's two hundred acres can't be sold, which is good for me but not for my father-in-law. That's a messy situation, and I'm caught right in the middle of it. More about that later. I said to Lester, "I'll get the volunteers out, and we'll tag the rare trees with their names and so forth. How long before they break ground?"


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