Chapter 45
CHAPTER 45
Seabrook, New Hampshire
A fter we deciphered the map, we thought about driving directly to the police station in Seabrook to turn it over.
But then we realized they would ask where we got it.
Garrett said he wasn’t ready to unravel that knot.
Not yet.
“Let’s see where the map leads us,” he said.
“Then we can decide.”
The big fat arrow pointing to a location in Seabrook was the obvious part.
It was only an hour’s drive from Boston.
The map was very specific about a particular landmark, but Garrett insisted on waiting until most people would be asleep, then taking a roundabout route to the spot.
We rented a motel room where we could keep the equipment we’d need, then drove to a small feed and grain store—one with no surveillance cameras—and paid cash for two shovels, a couple pairs of heavy-duty work gloves, industrial-strength flashlights, and a forty-foot tape measure.
When we suited up to head out, I thought, I became a lawyer for this?
I decide now the question is not worth answering.
My gloved hands hurt from carrying the shovel along the wooded paths.
I’ve got burrs stuck in my hair.
I’m as far out of my comfort zone as a city girl can possibly get.
I like my nature in small doses and in broad daylight when I can see what’s coming at me, not in the New Hampshire backwoods in darkness.
Garrett puts black tape over the lenses of our flashlights, leaving narrow slits to light our way as we bushwhack through brambles and low branches.
He shines his slit beam onto the map.
Its visual markers are crudely drawn, yet identifiable: Rock.
Picnic tables. Stream.
“We should be there any minute,” Garrett says.
By now, my night vision is pretty sharp.
We push through another tangle of bushes and into a small clearing.
On one side are two beat-up picnic tables.
On the other is a large boulder.
“This is it,” says Garrett.
He leads the way to the boulder and shines the light onto a weathered brass plaque.
I can barely make out the words:
ON THIS SPOT THE REVEREND BONUS WEARE PREACHED HIS FIRST SERMON AFTER THE ARRIVAL OF THE FIRST COLONISTS IN 1638
ERECTED BY SEAbrOOK HISTORICAL SOCIETY 1938
Garrett checks the map and puts down his shovel.
He pulls out the tape measure and places the start of it at the base of the boulder, right under the plaque.
Then he walks backward, letting the tape out as he moves through a tangle of brush at the edge of the clearing.
The foliage closes around him and he’s out of sight.
“Garrett!”
A few seconds later, he calls out in a low voice, “Brea! Over here!”
For a second, I flash back to the video of Suzanne, that gorgeous young woman with her whole life ahead of her.
And I realize that I might be standing on her grave.
After all these years, there’d be little left but bones.
Though we knew that when we came here, I’m overcome with emotion.
My cheeks are suddenly wet with tears.
Suzanne, we’re going to find you.
Garrett extends the forty-foot tape until it’s at its limit, then grabs a stick and jabs it into the ground to mark the spot.
He reels the tape back into its case.
“This is where we dig,” he says.