
square city block was filled with a few ratty-looking ranch houses—dark and incongruous amidst the
older, taller homes on each side of the square—and all signs of the former school building and its huge
playground had long since been eradicated.
The tall sentinel elms around the school block were gone, of course, and no trees had been planted in
their place. The tiny houses on the square—all built after 1960—looked exposed and vulnerable under
the black sky.
There were more gaps in the rows of homes facing the former schoolyard. The Somerset place next to
Dale’s old home was just gone, not even its foundation remaining. Across the street from the Somersets’,
Mrs. Moon’s tidy white home had been bulldozed into a gravel lot. His friend Kevin’s family home—a
ranch house that had seemed modern and out of place in 1960—was still there on its slight rise of
ground, but even in the dark Dale could see that it was unpainted and in need of repair. Both of the grand
Victorian homes north of Kevin’s house were gone, replaced by a short dead-end street with a few new
homes—very cheap—crowded where the woods had once started.
Dale continued slowly east past Second Avenue, stopping where Depot Street ended at First. Mike
O’Rourke’s home still stood. The tiny gray-shingled house looked just as it had in 1960, except for the
rear addition that obviously had taken the place of the outhouse. The old chickenhouse where the Bike
Patrol had met was gone, but the large vegetable garden remained. Out front, staring sadly across First
Avenue at the harvested fields, the Virgin Mary still held out her hands, palms outward, watching from
the half-buried bathtub shrine in the front yard.
Dale had seen no trick-or-treaters. All of the homes he had passed had been dark except for the
occasional porch light. Elm Haven had few streetlights in 1960 and now seemed to have none at all. He
had noticed two small bonfires burning in yards along Broad, and now he saw the remains of another
fire—untended, burned down to orange embers, sparks flying in the strong wind—in the O’Rourke side
yard. He did not recall bonfires being lighted for Halloween when he was a boy here.
Dale turned left past the small high school and left Elm Haven behind, turning west on Jubilee College
Road at the water tower and accelerating north on County 6, hurrying the last three miles separating him
from Duane McBride’s farmhouse.
TWO
INEVERleft Illinois during my eleven years of life, but from what I’ve seen of Montana through Dale’s
eyes, it is an incredible place. The mountains and rivers are unlike anything in the Midwest—my uncle Art
and I used to enjoy fishing in the Spoon River not far from Elm Haven, but it hardly qualifies as “river”
compared to the wide, fast, rippling rivers like the Bitterroot and the Flathead and the Missouri and the
Yellowstone. And our lazy sitting on a bank and watching bobbers while we chatted hardly qualifies as
“fishing” compared to the energetic fly-fishing mystique in Montana. I’ve never tried fly-fishing, of course,
but I suspect that I would prefer our quiet, sit-in-the-shade, conversational creekside approach to
catching fish. I’m always suspicious of sports or recreational activities that begin to sound like religion
when you hear their adherents preaching about them. Besides, I doubt if there are any catfish in those
Montana rivers.
Dale’s corner office on the campus of the University of Montana, his former family home in the old
section of Missoula, and his ranch near Flathead Lake are all alien to me but fascinating. Missoula—for a
city of only about 50,000 people—seems cordial to the things I probably would have loved had I lived to
be an adult: bookstores, bakeries, good restaurants, lots of live music, a very decent university, movie
and live drama theaters, a vibrant downtown section.