Street, Ray Brower had gone out with one of his mother’s pots to pick blueberries.
When dark came and he still wasn’t back, the Browers called the county sheriff and a
search started–first just around the kid’s house and then spreading to the surrounding towns of Motton and Durham and Pownal. Everybody got into the act–cops, deputies,
game wardens, volunteers. But three days later the kid was still missing. You could
tell, hearing about it on the radio, that they were never going to find that poor sucker alive; eventually the search would just peter away into nothing. He might have gotten
smothered in a gravel pit slide or drowned in a brook, and ten years from now some
hunter would find his bones. They were already dragging the ponds in Chamberlain,
and the Motton Reservoir. Nothing like that could happen in south-western Maine
today; most of the area has become suburbanized, and the bedroom communities
surrounding Portland and Lewiston have spread out like the tentacles of a giant squid.
The woods are still there, and they get heavier as you work your way west towards the
White Mountains, but these days if you can keep your head long enough to walk five
miles in one consistent direction, you’re certain to cross two-lane blacktop. But in
1960 the whole area between Chamberlain and Castle Rock was undeveloped, and
there were places that hadn’t even been logged since before World War II. In those
days it was still possible to walk into the woods and lose your direction there and die there.
4
Vern Tessio had been under his porch that morning, digging.
We all understood that right away, but maybe I should take just a minute to
explain it to you. Teddy Duchamp was only about half-bright, but Vern Tessio would
never be spending any of his spare time on Quiz Kids either. Still, his brother Billy
was even dumber, as you will see. But first I have to tell you why Vern was digging
under the porch.
Four years ago, when he was eight, Vern buried a quart jar of pennies under
the long Tessio front porch. Vern called the dark space under the porch his ‘cave’. He was playing a pirate sort of game, and the pennies were buried treasure -only if you
were playing pirate with Vern, you couldn’t call it buried treasure, you had to call it
‘booty’. So he buried the jar of pennies deep, filled in the hole, and covered the fresh dirt with some of the old leaves that had drifted under there over the years. He drew a treasure map which he put up in his room with the rest of his junk. He forgot all about it for a month or so. Then, being low on cash for a movie or something, he
remembered the pennies and went to get his map. But his mom had been in to clean
two or three times since then, and had collected all the old homework papers and
candy wrappers and comic magazines and joke books. She burned them in the stove
to start the cook-fire one morning, and Vern’s treasure map went right up the kitchen
chimney. Or so he figured it.
He tried to find the spot from memory and dug there. No luck. To the right and
the left of that spot. Still no luck. He gave up for the day but had tried off and on ever since. Four years, man. Four years. Isn’t that a pisser? You didn’t know whether to
laugh or cry. It had gotten to be sort of an obsession with him. The Tessio front porch ran the length of the house, probably forty feet long and seven feet wide. He had dug
through damn near every inch of that area two, maybe three times and no pennies.
The number of pennies began to grow in his mind. When it first happened he told
Chris and me that there had been maybe three dollars’ worth. A year later he was up to five and just lately it was running around ten, more or less, depending on how broke
he was. Every so often we tried to tell him what was so clear to us–that Billy had