top of page

Subscribe to our blog!

Thanks for subscribing!

Search
  • Writer: Robert Giron
    Robert Giron
  • Jan 12, 2021

Void

by Karenmary Penn


Iris returned from work to discover her husband Cropper, still dressed in his brown uniform, sitting in the recliner, holding a grenade. It was round and muddy green in color, with a metal loop hanging from the pin.


“Bad day?” Iris said, keeping her voice light.


He lifted an eyebrow.


Iris sat on the sofa. “Where did you even get that?” She straightened her dress and looked around the room, for what, she couldn’t have said. Bare walls. Secondhand furniture. “So I had this client today, this little old lady named Millicent. She died at the dinner table. Her sister said she looked over and there was Millicent, fork in hand, staring off into eternity.”


Cropper leaned forward to put two fingers on top of the grenade, like a man deciding where to move a chess piece. Iris imagined picture frames and cushion stuffing and stereo components all exploding in a big unholy bang. Pieces of their life together, blown to kingdom come.


Iris said, “The sister brought in this raggedy red fox stole for Millicent to be buried in.”


She’d always been grateful he didn’t own a gun. Guns created a lot of work for funeral home aestheticians. Suicide was such an unsightly way out of life. The body tried to rid itself of whatever poison a person put into it—gas, pills, poison, lead. It shoved foaming, reeking pollutants out of every available opening. If people only knew that, maybe they’d reconsider their exit strategies. (Mr. Schmidt, while suturing the jaw of a decedent one day, had told her about bacterial decay and cells despoiled by enzymes to explain that type of “purge”, but she felt sure the body had its own wisdom and did not care to spend eternity full of toxins.)


Of course, old age was no picnic either: bodies rotted from within, brains eaten by dementia moths, bones transformed into chalk. If she could, she’d choose incineration, be one of those who vanished in the World Trade Center; everything about them reduced to blowing ash, to be vacuumed off untold carpets and bookshelves. Or perhaps she’d be one of those women in India who threw themselves on their husbands’ funeral pyres, disposing of both sorrow and carcass so efficiently, the embers of their lives becoming tiny orange stars, floating heavenward.


Cropper’s cheek twitched. He stared at the dark television screen.


“Did you watch something that upset you, sweetie?” Iris said. He was so exquisitely sensitive to betrayal that he couldn’t watch a movie in which one person deceived another. To him, it was the most cardinal of all sins, punishable by death, his own if necessary. His eyes were just this side of murderous when he looked up at her. She knew the look.


“Perhaps you’d rather be alone.” Iris thought she might have walked into an invisible storm of explosions and tracers, bleeding bodies and moaning. A company of ghosts followed Cropper into the bedroom every night. She occasionally awakened to see him sitting on the corner of the bed, slump shouldered, speaking with one of the phantoms who lived on his side of the room: Souza, Wartowski, Beaner, Old Man, Hassan, and Jojo. (Her side of the bedroom housed only one ghost. He wore starchy blue jeans and smelled of sawdust.)


“Drop your cocks and grab your socks!” Cropper would growl.


“I swear to fucking God I just swallowed some of the Wart’s brains.” He’d spit.


“Put that fucking cigarette out,” he’d hiss.


“Stand up!” “Lie down!” “Arms up!” he’d bark.


“Shh,” he’d whisper.


When he was fully awake, like now, she could look in his face and know he’d gone away, back to someplace hot and dry, a place filled with booby traps and death. She understood because she disappeared inside herself sometimes, crossed a frozen river to a place filled with squawking chickens. Fleas. A secret as big as a barn.


When Iris took his free hand between two of hers, she felt the burden of him, the sucking weight of his despair dragging her down, pulling her apart. She imagined herself skidding away from him, like a bug in a toilet, trying not to get flushed.


What she knew of his history amounted to stories that occasionally rose up out of him, unbidden. Just recently, as he squatted on the lawn digging up dandelions with a steak knife, he told her about the James Souza, how he hopped off the back of a Humvee and landed on a mine buried in the dirt. “His mom used to send him Playboys that she’d stapled Road & Track covers over,” Cropper said. Then: “He landed right on my boot print. Pow.” And then James Souza, like some dark Leviathan, sunk down again. Iris knew some of his stories and he knew some of hers but they seldom pressed one another to fill the empty spaces in between. And yet they understood each other better than most married couples.


“Are you having an affair?” he said, pulling his hand free.


She sighed. “Why would you ask me something like that?”


He said he’d seen her car, three Wednesday nights in a row now, in the parking lot of Mackenzie’s Wine Bar, late at night, when she claimed to have been at home. She told him her sister Rose asked her to go to MacKenzie’s, which was technically true. Iris asked, without emotion or indignation or even surprise, if he’d been following her. He didn’t reply. She wondered how she’d driven so far, on three occasions, oblivious to a boxy brown van lumbering along behind her. She pictured his pale face peering through a window, watching her sitting at the bar.


He asked questions and she answered them truthfully. She wasn’t in love with another man; she swore on her parents’ Ohio graves that she’d not made love to another man since the day they met; she loved him as much today as she did on their wedding night.


She knew Cropper wanted to believe her. At times like this, she resented the burden of being the one reliably decent person in his life. Eventually, he wrapped the grenade in a beach towel, and put the bundle in a Justin boot box on a high shelf in the linen closet. Iris felt tired watching him. Lately, her bones did not seem up to the task of carrying her through each day. They seemed more like balsa wood.


“I think I might need a bone marrow transplant,” she said.


He gave her a puzzled look, then smiled his sad smile and said he loved her. She knew it was true, even though what he called love was not the fragile, tender, eternal stuff that people wrote about in poems. Cropper’s version wasn’t so much eternal as it was bottomless and icy in places, with barbed, stinging things winging past.


They spent the evening on the roof, gazing through his telescope at the stars above. Cropper explained neutrinos and proton accelerators to her. He pointed out constellations and she pretended to see them, enjoying the feel of his rough cheek against hers. He could be so tender when he broke free of his own gloominess. As he put the telescope back in its case, he told her that sometimes a star couldn’t stand the pressure of its own gravity. It didn’t have enough energy to continue, and eventually it would collapse, crushed by its own weight.


“The end,” Iris said.


Cropper shrugged. “Not really. That’s how black holes are born.”


She shut her eyes to try and imagine the size of a billion galaxies but he interrupted her thoughts by saying something about a quasar having a “huge black hole spurting infinite streams of matter”, making them both laugh. Cropper could squeeze a sexual joke out of any topic. Sailing. Economics. He could have been one of those morning disc jockeys, if he had a more natural inclination toward lightness.


***


Iris avoided Mackenzie’s Wine Bar after that. She discovered a quieter place, a three block walk from work, called the Blackhawk Lounge. There she sat on a stool near the curved end of a grand piano, nursing a Perrier, listening to black man in tuxedo play jazz. A group of men wearing suits stared at a baseball game on a muted TV hung high in a corner. Two couples sat talking and nuzzling in leather booths. She treasured this small, secret life away from her husband.


Iris had long, wavy black hair and blue eyes. On this night, she wore a satiny, crimson dress that felt like breath on her fair skin.


A man stood on the other side of the piano, looking at the backs of his hands, which lay flat against the piano. He was thick-bodied and rugged in a fireman kind of way, with chapped skin and thick, graying hair. Iris loved men. She loved their musky scents and rough faces. She loved the way their broad shoulders tapered down into small waists and narrow, round buttocks. Most of the time, she admired the way men held emotion dammed up behind their skin. They were so much tidier than women that way.


After making love with a man, she used to love to lie with her head on his chest, so she could listen to the burbling stew of his insides and wonder about the gurgles and thrums as she drifted off to sleep. (Cropper kept everything locked up so tight he sounded like a snare drum.)


The day she married Cropper—nearly six years ago, before a justice of the peace—she resolved to end any flirtation at the first display of lust. As time wore on, though, she felt herself opening up to strange men, almost involuntarily, in the manner of a flower unfurling under a store-bought grow light.


The man caught her looking at him and smiled. He had a hangdog face, and eyes the color of bourbon. “I’m Frank.” His deep voice caught in his throat. He moved his gaze to his drink.


“I’m married,” she said.


“Join the club.”


“I didn’t come here to pick up men,” Iris said.


“That makes two of us.”


After a minute, he said, “You look like that actress who played that blind gal in the movie with what’s his name. The dude who’s in rehab all the time. Did you see that one?”


Iris gave him an exasperated look. He held up both hands, as if in surrender, but he moved closer. She felt him probing behind her eyes, feeling for something to hold onto. She let him. Her eyes were colored glass, reflecting everything, absorbing nothing. When loneliness swelled up inside her and threatened to spill out, she looked away. He got on the subject of football helmets and then moved on to dog racing and polar ice caps and fuel made from corn and finally some soccer stadium in Afghanistan. He seemed lonely.


“You get this little vein that pops up on your temple.” Frank touched his finger to her temple, traced a lazy S. Iris felt a pleasant ruffling of nerve endings beside her left eye.


She pulled her head away and looked up at the television in the corner.


Lately, Iris experienced surges of resentment toward her mother, and her sister, for not letting her in on the substance of marriage, its relentless routines and mutated truths. They never told her that she’d wake up day after day for weeks with a certainty like a pile rammed through her that she could not live one more day as somebody’s wife, not even Cropper, who loved her, albeit in a way that bordered on frightening.


Frank reached up, pushed a lock of hair up behind Iris’s ear, then lowered his hand slowly, running his thumb along her jaw line. He tilted her head back and she closed her eyes, savoring the sugary anticipation of a come-on. Something frayed in his voice when he said, “Great dress.”


He said nothing for a while. She stared at the television without really watching it. When he spoke to her again, he put his hand on her knee to get her attention, and then left it there, lifting it away when he got himself worked up about Iraq, or maybe Afghanistan; one of the war countries. She kept her expression bland when she removed his hand and placed it on his own knee. She sat quietly beside him, listening to the music and to his chatter, until her watch beeped in her purse. Cropper would be home soon.


“I have to go,” she said.


Frank trailed her to the parking lot. She stood in the cool air, unable to recall where she’d left her car. “Do you need a ride?” he said. She told him she’d left her car up the street. He unlocked a dark sedan and opened the back door. His face looked suddenly and desperately needy. He might as well have led her to his bed and pulled back the covers. She felt like a person rushing to a plane knowing that she’d forgotten something.


“Do you love your wife?” she said.


“Can’t imagine being married to anybody else.”


“I’m not really this person. This dressy” She looked down, shook her head. “I’m...”


His voice sunk low and uneven. “I know what you are.”


She didn’t stick around to hear what she was. She was lonely, but she was not a whore.


***


That night, Iris sat on the couch next to Cropper, watching a nature program about a drying- up Botswana watering hole. A baby elephant trapped in mud up to its shoulders thrashed and struggled. His mother and aunts tried to pull him free with their trunks but the mud wouldn’t let go. Iris thought she wouldn’t fight it if she stopped at a drinking fountain one day and Mother Earth decided to reclaim her, to fold her up in great gray arms for a never-ending hug.


When that narrator mentioned the great herds that once roamed those over-baked savannas, and how they’d been whittled down to nothing by poachers and farmers and war, Iris unmoored her consciousness. The grander problems of the world, their causes and solutions, were all too unmanageable, too far beyond her ability to help. Occasionally a news story blew untidily into her awareness, like dirt under the door. She usually swept it back out again with a check made out to some outfit that could help. She wrote checks to Oxfam any time she saw photos of fly-covered people starving somewhere, to the Red Cross whenever earthquakes rattled a city into rubble. She helped other people do things about cancer, AIDS, muscular dystrophy, cystic fibrosis, homeless pets, cleft palates, Bengal tigers. In return, she got a lot of personalized address labels. They were currency, buying her freedom from deeper involvement.


She said, “Why doesn’t the cameraman quit filming and dig that little elephant out?”


Cropper just lay there on the couch with tears shining in his eyes. The nature shows really got to him sometimes. Not that he was particularly protective of God’s creatures. He was as likely as anyone else she knew to smash a moth with the bottom of his slipper.


She tried to stroke his cheek, but he turned his head. Cropper’s face was more interesting than handsome. He had slightly hooded eyes, a strong jaw, and big, white teeth.


He was kind to her, almost always. Occasionally, the best parts of him burrowed deep inside, and she’d find herself sharing a bed with a person who hadn’t spoken for three days straight. One minute he’d be sitting across the table from her at the Trattoria, going on about internal combustion engines, and the next, he’d go cold, silent as a headstone. Even his skin cooled to the touch. He could have been one of Iris’s refrigerated customers. She’d never have guessed marriage could be so lonely.


He switched the channel to Jeopardy. “What is the Holy See,” he said. Cropper read book after book, all nonfiction, trying to tire his brain so it would sleep when he did, instead of launching nightmares behind his closed eyelids. He was the only adult she knew who owned a library card. “Who is Andrei Gromykyo,” he said. “What is Lapland.”


She only got one answer before Cropper: “Who is Madonna.”


After Jeopardy, Cropper turned off the TV. He unbuttoned his shirt to reveal the long, shiny, Y-shaped mystery scar that covered his chest. He claimed not to remember how it happened. There were gaps in other areas as well; unseen perforations where bits of his humanity had dropped out altogether. The part that let you get over even unintended slights, no matter how small, for example. Or the part that made you love your brother, even if you didn’t like or understand him.


Iris hiked up her skirt, climbed on top of Cropper’s legs, pulled her top over her head. He reached behind her to unhook her bra while she fumbled with his belt. They stroked and moaned and kissed until she began to grind against him, slowly. She still thought he was the perfect man for her, fitting inside her like a puzzle piece.


Before long, Cropper pitched her onto her back and began thrusting away. He hung onto her as though she were something solid, like a jetty, and he were a swimmer, trying not to be dragged out to sea. Iris avoided his eyes because she could see every terrible thing that had ever happened to him there, eddies of despair, sucking her in.


***


On the table at Schmidt’s Funeral Home lay a middle-aged decedent with thick hair, still damp from washing, and a salt and pepper mustache, freshly trimmed by Iris. He had a crooked nose and a deep dimple in the chin. A pale scar bisected one eyebrow.


He looked a lot better than he did a few hours ago. Mr. Schmidt had pumped pink embalming fluid into the man’s carotid artery, cleaned his face with disinfectant, then shaved him, and trimmed his nose hair. He’d packed cotton under his eyelids and in his one dented cheek, to prop everything out where it belonged. The decedent’s biggest problems were below the neck, which wasn’t Iris’s department aside from the hands. Iris wiped them with disinfectant then powdered them. Long ago, Mr. Schmidt had showed her how to arrange them to hide the palms, which were purple and mottled with settled blood.


People left this world with different expressions on their faces. Some looked surprised to have been wrenched out of life; others looked sad or peaceful or indignant. This guy looked tired. The lucky ones, Iris supposed, grew to be withered old apples that dropped off the tree when they couldn’t hang on any more. Assuming somebody found them right away, of course.


When she smoothed his tie against his crisp white shirt, she felt the jagged hardness of staples holding his sternum together. One time, Mr. Schmidt let her feel a decedent’s heart. It was just larger than a baseball and the color of a Japanese maple, with what looked like globs of chicken fat adhered to its cold skin. She would have thought a heart would be tough as an overcooked roast because it spent its whole life working, but it felt hard and slippery, like a lie.


Iris tossed the gloves. She dusted the decedent’s face with powder to match his hands, and then brushed his hair. Squirts of Aramis covered the embalming fluid odor.


Iris heard a knock on the metal door jamb. “They told me I could see my brother, before” It was Frank from the bar, dressed in a blue suit, looking shaky and pale.


“What are you doing here?” Iris said, alarmed and irritated.


Frank’s face registered surprise, briefly, before going flat. His eyes flicked to the person on the table.


“Oh.” Iris looked down at her hands. “I’m sorry. For your loss.”


Frank walked a slow circle around her table. She thought the decedent looked handsome, considering. Bodies bloated and stiffened before loosening up again. Skin stretched. People expected Sleeping Beauties, waiting to be kissed out of their final sleeps. If they saw what some of these bodies did in Mr. Schmidt’s prep room, farting and twitching and blinking their eyes open, they wouldn’t complain about off-colored skin.


He touched his brother’s hand, then recoiled, probably at the coldness. Some men liked to say their goodbyes without a dozen other grievers standing behind them shifting and craning, as though the casket were a concession stand instead of boxed up death.


“I was driving,” Frank said.


Iris touched Frank’s back and murmured again that she was sorry. He sobbed, noiselessly. She squeezed his shoulder. Unexpectedly, he wrapped an arm around her waist, cinched her tight against him, then pulled her around for a full-on hug. She could have stayed that way for a long while, feeling loved.


She wished there was a way to tell him a person could burn up millions of brain cells wondering why he wasn’t the one lying with his muscles loosening from the bone and eye caps holding his lids shut. Why didn’t he look right again before pulling out, or leave the house thirty seconds later, after the van had passed.


A person could exhaust herself wondering why she kept clomping across a frozen river and a stubbly field, Saturday after Saturday, returning to that sagging barn with all its clucking, reeking chickens, when she hated the smell of sawdust and the cold on her bare thighs. The barn seemed to have its own gravity. A person could be propelled by something inexplicable, a force beyond the reach of words.


She knew it was inappropriate to be hugging Frank, but comfort, like happiness, was finite, fleeting. A person had to grab hold of it when it came into reach. Judgment was for those who’d never experienced a thousand fleas crawling all over her innocence. Iris chose the company of sunnier emotions. It was easy to do if she surrounded herself each day with people whose misfortunes so clearly outweighed hers.


Frank cleared his throat. “How can you do this job?”


“Money’s good. And I like the people that I work with.” Iris pulled her hand off the decedent’s foot. “Coworkers, I mean.”


Frank looked at the tile floor. “People keep saying, ‘Give it time.’”


Iris nodded, even though she knew true sorrow never dried up. It could shrink and retreat, but it was always there, ready to reconstitute itself on fresh pain. People said time healed all wounds, but in her experience, time lacked the right tools for the job.


She walked him out to the Oak Room, where the visitation for his brother would take place. It was a muted, pleasant space filled with bland landscape paintings and deep, comfortable couches. The heavy, wooden door closed behind them with a muffled thud. Afternoon sunlight filtered through the drapes, creating a quiet warmth. Two extravagant arrangements of white flowers stood at the front of the room. The cloying scent of lilies hung heavy in the warm air.


“We said no flowers,” Frank said.


“People send them anyway.” Iris fiddled with a seam on her dress.


“Goodbye then.” Frank brushed past Iris on his way to the doors, his hand grazed her hip, leaving a trail of goose bumps in its wake. He paused. Iris waited for his bourbon-colored eyes to be drawn toward her.


Her body seemed at times to have been guided by invisible hands working from within. They pushed hips and breasts out where they’d be noticed, then pinched her waist in and stretched her legs long and her toes straight and pretty. They smoothed her pale skin to where women she didn’t know stopped her to ask what products she used. (“Ivory soap,” she’d say.)


He stood staring at her, his face unreadable. Iris unzipped her dress, armpit to hip, hearing each metal tooth release its partner with a tiny pop. When the dress hit the carpet, she stood in her black bra and panties, pale and goose pimpled. He stepped toward her, then stopped abruptly, like he’d clanged into something.


“I was just trying to make you feel better,” she called, but he was just footsteps by then.


Her dress lay on the floor like something she’d molted.


***


Weeks passed. Iris joined Rose and her husband at a cowboy bar one Friday night. Cropper hated crowds so he stayed home. The walls were covered with rusted spurs and fringy chaps, branding irons and rodeo art.


Iris sat on a cowhide-covered barstool, sipping a wine spritzer. Rose and her husband knew every line dance, sang along to every song. Iris longed to whirl one way and then the other, to knock her heels against the wood floor the way they did, but something solid kept her apart. She imagined all those people with their thumbs through their belt loops, spinning one by one into her invisible shell, crumpling like stunned birds to the floor.


A man dressed in black jeans and a pearl-buttoned shirt moved around the outside of the floor, dancing the two-step with a woman in a flowy, blue dress. Both wore black cowboy hats pulled low on their heads. He had a paunch but somehow glided. When the music stopped he kept right on moving, twirling and dipping his partner, pulling her along as though she had no more heft than a silk scarf. They could have been on skates. When he removed his hat to smooth his hair back, Iris realized it was Frank, looking heavier and older. He’d grown a mustache. He danced with two other women, both of whom he flew like kites around the dance hall.


She should have called Cropper for a ride. She stayed, though, watching Frank dance. Eventually, he strode off the dance floor, sat at the bar and ordered a beer. Iris approached him, walking on wooden feet. He dabbed his damp forehead with a cocktail napkin and ate a peanut from a bowl on the bar without removing the shell.


“I’d like to apologize,” Iris said.


He looked at her for a long moment, then raked his eyes over the dance floor. She didn’t remember his skin being so red.


Frank said, “Is he here?”


Iris shook her head. She thought of Cropper, sitting in his recliner with his eyes half closed, murmuring, What is hemoglobin? Who is Akihito? He suffered from perpetual restlessness, as well as tiredness. If her heart were intact, it would surely ache for him.


Frank took her by the wrist and led her onto the dance floor. He arranged Iris’s arms the way he wanted them and said, “Relax. Look up.” At first she felt uncomfortable holding her chin so high and her arms so stiffly in position, but that melted away as he maneuvered her around the dance floor.


Iris watched Frank’s face so intently that everything else blurred into color and noise. She felt like a flame atop a moving candle, swaying up and down, side to side, more color and heat than body. He could have put his hand right through her without causing more than a flicker.


She experienced something warm and rich expanding inside her. She squeezed his meaty shoulder and enjoyed the sensation of fullness. When the second song ended and Frank let go of her, though, the feeling collapsed.


Iris tried to call the feeling back but what emerged instead was the image of her mother in a turquoise parka, standing on the bridge that spanned the river near their home. Iris stood below, on the frozen river, watching exhaust curl up from the tailpipe of the station wagon and disappear into the wintry air. Wind lifted and twisted her mother’s dark hair. She held it back with one hand and yelled, “If you fall through that ice, they won’t find you until spring.”


Trudging home after that, Iris believed her mother was more everywhere than God, with an infinitely bigger pull.


After a quick look for Rose and her husband, who were again on the dance floor, Iris took Frank’s hand and led him past the restroom and the storeroom, out the metal door into the alley. She didn’t wonder why she did what she did. Interior exploration blotted out all the pleasure in life. She was drawn to men, even when she didn’t find them particularly attractive, even when they were indifferent to her. Sex never filled her with regret or self-loathing. It made her feel solid. For a little while at least, she wasn’t a glass Christmas ornament, a shiny bauble that a careless squeeze could shatter into glittering dust.


Frank kissed her. She enjoyed the unfamiliar mouth and the feel his hands roaming all over her body. Iris unbuttoned her silk top, slowly, with him watching her hungrily. He inched up her long, dark skirt while she unbuckled his belt, unbuttoned his jeans, unzipped his fly, and stroked his waiting hardness. Frank moaned. He reached around her backside and slid a hand down her buttocks and pressed it against the heat gathering between her legs. He rubbed and teased; he kissed and groped and squeezed. Over and over, he told her she was beautiful. Everything in his face gave way to desire. He leaned her up against the front door of a pick-up truck, and pulled her legs up around him. The heels of her red boots knocked together at the small of his back. He pushed himself into her waiting loneliness with a gasp.


The elegance he’d displayed on the dance floor seemed to disappear all at once. She used to find reassurance in sex, a quenching of some unnamable need, but all she could feel right then was cold against her back, and a stranger sawing away at the tenderest part of her.


A few minutes later, he was zipping up, tucking in, kissing her on the mouth, saying, You really are beautiful. She felt wholly drained, infinitely void. The heavy door hissed its way closed, and then shut with a soft click that sounded exactly like a pin coming out of a grenade.




© 2012 by Karenmary Penn

 
  • Writer: Robert Giron
    Robert Giron
  • Jan 11, 2021

The Music She Will Never Hear

by Kristin FitzPatrick


On the way to the mine, the historian lets Jace control the radio, if there are any stations out here at all. After listening to some fuzz, the historian says he wishes he had some tapes, some of his son’s tapes, lying around. He laughs. “What is it that they say? ‘Not your father’s music’?”


Then he asks about Jace’s music. Jace reaches down into his backpack, pulls out a pirated album. He tells the historian that the band isn’t on the radio much, that they are called Phish, a concert group, a live phenomenon, how they played at Red Rocks and you just wouldn’t believe the sound. How the beats and chords blasted out from the stage in the half shell, that orange-pink cave. Then he stops himself.


“Guitars and drums and keyboards, but it’s not rock?” the historian says.


“More like fusion. Jazz, rock, bluegrass, maybe, a lot of improvising. I guess it sounds like rock to people who don’t know it or it looks like it from the long hair and the clothes.”


“Sounds a bit like that Garcia fellow and his tribe. Hell’s Angels and all that business.”


Jace chooses his words carefully. “It’s not exactly like that, Dr. Sims.”


“Go on, let’s have a listen,” the historian says. “I like it already.”


Jace pops the tape in. While it plays, the historian glances at the tape deck. On this field trip, the historian wants to know about more than just heavy metals. He has called in Jace to tell him about the harder stuff. Carbons. Mites, tites, rites. Complex bonds. School me, kid. Give the teacher a lesson in rock.


After a few songs, he turns the volume down and smiles at Jace. “How about your outfit? What do you play?”


“My band’s not playing now. I’m drums. Brad, my uncle, he’s upfront, sings and plays lead. Keiko, his girlfriend, she got bored and picked up tambourines, then took over for the keyboard player when he split. We lost our bass player too, so maybe she’ll learn that.” He laughs.


“What’s so funny?”


“Girls can’t play bass.”


“What about those all-girl groups?”


“That’s different. She doesn’t get along with girls. Besides, she likes to hide on the platform, only show the top of her. Thinks she’s fat.”


“Ah,” the historian says. “Yes. You’re behind your instrument, too. All of you are.”


“Didn’t think of it that way.”


The historian’s hands shake as he drives west. They enter a tunnel. Jace imagines that a stone door closes over the entrance behind them, and then an animated bird pumps TNT ahead, to force a rockslide over the only way out.


Now the historian’s face scrunches up. “Keiko? One of those in my world survey course.”


“One of what?”


“A Keiko. She came to my office last week. Falling behind, she said. Otherwise I wouldn’t remember the name. It’s hard to pick out a face in a class of hundreds.”


“Sounds like her. But she’ll get there. Holed herself up all weekend to cram for midterms.”


“Right. So, Keiko and your uncle?”


“He’s only a few years older than us. My grandma said they needed extra time to recover from raising my mom before they could have another kid.” He laughs, and the burst of air from the back of his throat surprises him, and then he has no air left.


“Your mum. Where does she live?”


“She doesn’t.”


After they stop for breakfast, once the historian’s stomach is full and the coffee kicks in, he taps his thumbs on the steering wheel. A pebble hits the windshield. Clink. Then the shush of light rain and the swish that wipes it away. Jace twirls a pencil, a stick of soft graphite he uses to sketch impenetrable carbon bonds of diamonds, those bastards that last through the worst heat and pressure. That was how it started, the twirling and spinning, the drum stick tricks, over his muffled snare and in front of heavy metal videos, to imitate the stunts those drummers could do, the way they nailed not just the skin, but the rim and hi hat. With the whole body, all the force they had. That’ll kill your ears, Grandma always said. He didn’t care about damaging his hearing, but he couldn’t lose it completely. The silence that followed the final crash would hurt more than the loudest pound.


Jace tries to make getting to the mine fun. “You said you have children, right, Dr. Sims?” he says.


“Sure, though sometimes I forget. My son is good at making himself scarce.”


Jace has no answer.


“You know,” the historian says, “my mates at the School of Mines said you’re quite a whip in the geology lab and I should request you as my guide. Lucky for me, isn’t it?”


“I don’t know. Guiding’s a job. It’s not bad.”


“So, Jace is an unusual name. What does it mean in Japanese? You must be half or—?”


“My name means moon, and I’m not Japanese. I’m white, and Ute.” He mumbles this last part, because it’s none of the historian’s business, and because Jace is not used to the topic. His association with Keiko confuses people, but at least the historian won’t ask any more dumbass questions about names and groups and who came from where.


The historian nods. Origins are his business. “My wife and I, we look different, too. She’s what you call black Irish. White skin, black hair, dark eyes. Her family wasn’t too thrilled when I came along. You know, another English invasion.”


“Yeah, I know what you mean.” This is a bullshit comparison, but the old guy is backpedaling. He is really trying.


“But before long, the differences fade away. Life will get easier for the two of you.”


“You mean for my uncle and Keiko.”


“Right. For them.” He checks the rear view mirror. “It will get easier for you, too.”


The tape has reached its end. The historian punches the power button. Tell me some mine legends, he says. So Jace indulges him. This is the true work of the guide, and it’s harder this time because this client is not the tax lawyer or the curious senior citizen tourists, trying to escape through a cave, to be kids again, in the dark. Jace asks if the historian knows the one about John Henry’s hammer versus the steam engine, if he knows how the tunnels were made. Of course he knows that one. The historian says his head has been in the Old West for years now, and he’s touched a lot of the remains, but this mine, the one they’re about to reach and one of precious few that isn’t closed off, is a first for him. How many times has Jace been through this one? Twenty-seven. Will it look like the historian imagines, like the books say? Darker. Sound like? Twenty-seven leaky faucets. No, as many second hands, Jace tells him. Tick. Tick.


The historian’s specialty is the mining era—the magnetism of the gold and silver rushes—what brought whom to the Rockies and why. Hunger, greed. And what kept them panning. Starvation, pride. So Jace wants to tell him not about wet caves and what grows within, but about other phantoms in tales he has learned outside of the School of Mines, echoes in a darkness for which the historian’s research money isn’t meant. The historian will think this myth is passed down from Jace’s elders, that Jace actually knows his elders, rather than from old smelly books he dug up in the library.


“You ever hear the one about the moon versus the coyote?” Jace says.


“Can’t say I have.”


“The moon wanted the living to bury their dead, but his enemy, the coyote, was for cremation. Since the coyote was right on the ground, it was hard to stop him from swaying the living. Eventually the moon gave in.”


The historian responds, but Jace doesn’t listen. Out the window, below the interstate, in a valley town where even the trees are trucked in, the taller pines lean down, shelter the new growth as best they can, and their highest eaves rest on the halt of power lines.


Sometimes you can learn everything you need to know just by checking a window, looking through it, past your reflection, into what you can’t see from any other angle at any other time. If you leave the blinds open just a crack, a moving object, say it’s a rock, or a snowflake, or a man, a stranger, might come at you from the south, from the bus station. Or maybe he hitched. Maybe he walked, just wandered off. Maybe he parked, sat, waited. Just around the corner.


On a day in eleventh grade, when Jace stayed home from school, the man had walked the way only a messenger can, or a guilty child awaiting punishment. His hands were full, which made his steps slower, made his concentration more a part of the movement. His face poked up to check address numbers, and as he came closer, he appeared taller, the curves of his hat more defined, the thing in his hands more baglike than box shaped. Jace knew where the man was headed. He grew larger on the sidewalk until he cut a right angle, proceeded up the cement path that split the front yard. If Jace opened the window he would hear the man’s boots: Click, tap, click, tap, click. No scuffs or drags. The bag lay flat over the man’s palms, and Jace imagined him presenting it to Grandma. It’s a beautiful covering for the box, she might say. A nice way to wrap up my daughter, but we prefer urns. Have you people kept her in a box all this time?


After the man disappeared under the cover of the porch, Jace dressed without making a sound. He wanted to hear Grandma say it. But what do you wear to accept your mother’s ashes from your distant cousin, or would-be neighbor, or uncle? How do you prepare for a moment you’ll have to remember and retell for the rest of your life? It was a Thursday in 1993, he’d say, eleventh grade, when I was out sick from school, so sick I’d lost my voice, and I was wearing my Rockies jersey, or my red t-shirt, or Brad’s flannel. Not boxers. That wouldn’t do.


At first all he heard from downstairs was a Do you need a ride to the station? But then, through the storm door, came the man’s voice, the upward pull on the middles and ends of words, so that each statement sounded a dozen questions. It was that intonation, that tongue which to Grandma sounded foreign enough to wince at, lean forward into, that put Jacy at ease. Perhaps the women on the reservation, women besides his mother, sang baby Jace to sleep with that very pattern of rise and fall. Perhaps Grandma had to change his tune when he found his voice.


Jace threw on the best shirt and pants he could find. As he zipped up, he raised his head. A figure moved in the corner of his eye, through a crack in the blinds, down on the street, away.


Even with his hands free of the bag or box, the man constricted his movement. He shoved his hands into his pockets, he still hunched over. His hat hung by its string around his neck and onto his back. Jace could see the hairline now, just a slight receding, nothing like Grandpa’s low tide, and a black crew cut. And then he saw the ears: tiny coils of brown.


Jace opened the window and heard the man’s steps. They were not clicks or taps at all but thuds. Hey, he wanted to say. I know you can hear me.


At the kitchen table, once Grandma couldn’t stand it anymore, she made Jace open what the man delivered. He untied the bag, pulled out the box.


“What is it?” she said. “Feathers? Beads? Turquoise?”


He opened the latch and held up the treasure: a rose quartz. Its mount had severed from the chain. The crystal was chipped and soiled, but still shined pink.


Grandma brought a hand to her mouth, backed her chair away from the table.


Once she had made it to the driveway, Grandpa said, “It was the last thing they argued about. Grandma didn’t want her wearing it. She didn’t want your mother doing a lot of things.”


Jace knew this, knew how it all must have sounded to the neighbors: a good girl, a nice Arrowhead Academy girl, trying to civilize those people. And if that isn’t enough, she goes and lets one of them work his charms on her.


***


Brad is Keiko’s official boyfriend, and he is, officially, Jace’s uncle. It’s October now, and neither of them have seen Brad since July, since Jerry Garcia reached his deathbed. Brad called Keiko last week to announce his visit. If she hasn’t failed out yet, Keiko is still on the historian’s official roster of students. The historian is Jace’s client this weekend, who pays to have someone with a permit, someone who knows rocks inside and out, to take him underground. Jace is the guide. But these labels are all coincidence, and fail to explain the actual roles each of them plays.


When Jace and the historian check into the motel at the end of the first day, the historian stares at the key in his hand and looks toward the east wing, where a bed waits. “I’m knackered.”


“Okay. I’ll get settled in my room, see what’s on TV.”


“Sure. Do as you please. It’s your holiday, too.” The historian reaches for his wallet, pulls out three new bills, and rubs them together until they squirm apart. He stretches his arm out, toward Jace. “Get yourself something to eat. This should be enough for a haircut as well.”


While the historian sleeps, Jace dreams. All of last summer was a dream. Every day he spent with Keiko glimmered, even in the pouring rain. Pitter patter, rat-a-tat. Besides counting beats, and pounding them out of course, this is what Jace can do: judge a stone by its color, cleavage, hardness, and by its specific gravity. Sometimes you can find two stones in one. That’s what his rock guidebooks say. Hold a purple stone up to the light and you’ll notice the golden glow of citrine inside. One day on the Phish tour, a day when clouds threatened, when Keiko was asleep, he opened her bottle of thyroid medication. No capsules inside. Not two, not one. Without them anything could happen, any expansion or contraction of cells, tissues. It would show in her middle, and in the glow of her skin. Her hormones need a special transmitter, a daily call, to send messages—stay where you are—to those eggs stalled out on the sides of their roads, their pathways into the dark tunnel, and then outside. By October the signals sit stagnant with three months’ worth of blood. Wash me. She keeps saying it’s just her thyroid messing with her cycle, but Jace wonders if a new life is starting to grow.


But that’s now. This was then: the summer Phish tour, the stolen moments alone with her. Like the day when Brad was off trying to score concert tickets in the parking lot of Red Rocks theater, when Jace and Keiko snuck into the cave on the side of the pavilion. The going rate was getting higher, and in there they could climb and pull and crouch and enjoy the show for free. No one would know. It was harmless. They just sat there, enraptured by the music, and stared into the golden-coral-pink-blue-everything-is-possible sky when Brad was nothing and nowhere, like everyone else but they two.


That’s what it was like last summer when Phish played at Red Rocks, or Mud Island, or Finger Lakes. Once the music starts and you grease up and all your cylinders kick in and the pistons are really pumping, and you sweat and pulsate and start dancing around, you’re not just one pathetic little engine anymore, you’re on the superhighway: thousands of individual bodies moving as one amoeba.


One night in Vermont, at the end of the tour, when it was late but no one was tired and gone was the novelty of card games or Hacky Sack, Brad grabbed his flannel. “Going beer hunting,” he said. But Keiko knew better.


“Hope your weapon backfires,” she said. She did not look up from her knitting.


Just before sun-up, in that slice of night too late for activity and too early to start the new day, Jace heard a hum from the edge of the parking lot. It was the engine of whoever dropped Brad off, some floozy he met last week maybe, when he ditched Jace and Keiko to go to some nearby Grateful Dead shows. Jace bolted upright, slithered out of Keiko’s s sleeping bag and into his own on the bench seat. It was a cold night, so he was already back into his clothes. Keiko did not stir when he peeled away from her.


Brad rolled open the door and grabbed Jace’s foot. “Dude, wake up. Jerry’s tweakin’.”


Jace lifted his head, rubbed his eyes longer than necessary. It was a good act.


“It doesn’t look good,” Brad said. “The rest of the Dead tour’s canceled. They’re talking Betty Ford Clinic.” He squeezed Jace’s toes on that last part, then he leaned onto the feet, rested his chin over the ankles. “I should have seen it coming. The way he kept the volume down at Giants Stadium, and how all those chicks cried and clapped when he was barely making any noise at all. Just leaned onto the guitar pedals, like they kept him upright.” Brad straightened up, let go of the feet. “If things don’t get better, they’ll send him back to California. A bunch of us are gonna meet there no matter what. So we gotta get going. I gotta get you guys home and be on my way.”


Jace climbed into the front passenger seat as Brad started the engine and pulled out.


“I might need to take the semester off,” Brad said, and Jace could hear it in his voice then: ten years of an older sister’s records fading out, another chorus lost, another groove scratched. “I can graduate next year. School seems like such a joke now, compared to this.”


It’s not like it was a member of Phish on that hospital bed. Their band will still go on. It was just the old guy from the Dead, and old guys croak all the time. But Brad couldn’t go on without the music’s front man, the voice inside all that vinyl.


On the tour, sometimes Jace drove. Sometimes he navigated. That morning, on the way home, a somber morning because they’d just gotten word of Jerry Garcia’s hospitalization, Brad just needed Jace close by. Once Keiko was up and in position, Jace sat on the floor between the front bucket seats, listened for the tempo changes or never ending drum solos on the tapes. At this spot, Brad could elbow Jace’s shoulder when they reached a bridge, as the strings rose in pitch and speed, and the vocals held onto a note. And Keiko could cup the back of his head as he nodded on the accentuated beats. Sometimes she thumbed the edge of his ear, circled around toward the center until it tickled and he jolted away. On the floor he felt the bumps in the road.


It was during the return trip, the don’t-worry-everything-will-be-fine movement west, that the pounding slowed to a thud at the right front. Brad pulled over. No cussing. No words at all. No kicking, and very little sound as he walked to the back. Then the click of the tailgate.


Keiko whipped out of her seat, opened her door, and followed Brad.


Jace took his spot on his bench seat and faced the back. He set his chin on the headrest, curled his fingers over it. He watched Brad shove blankets and duffels aside, and pull up the trap door. No jack. No spare tire.


“Where is it?” Keiko said. One hand dug into her hip, the other flailed.


No answer from the driver. The spare tire pit held only a quilt, the old pink one Grandma had threatened to burn. It protected something square. Brad looked up at Jace as he lifted it. It was heavy enough to strain his face and neck muscles, but Brad made the bundle look weightless. All that time it had been there, in the van’s belly, and through a steel sheet felt every splash, every bouncing rock, the wind below. Brad let Keiko unwrap it: a stack of early Dead records, imprints of half-planned riffs and spontaneous jams. Anthem of the Sun, American Beauty, Skeletons From the Closet. Tracks useless to moving forward in a cassette and CD era, but necessary to remind them of their precursor, their source, their uncle father sister mother of sound.


When Grandma had finally cleaned out her daughter’s room, Jace was old enough to get out of the way. It was a curse, she said, for anyone to wear a dead girl’s clothing or shoes or earrings. Grandpa boxed and carried and dumped all of Jace’s mother’s things, but when Grandma wasn’t looking, he placed one stack of records under each boy’s bed, with a set of headphones to the hi-fi in the basement. There they could sift through what she had left behind.


Keiko didn’t touch the records. She didn’t whine. She set the bundle down and held Brad.


Jace shoved his hands into his pockets and hit the road. Eventually there were signs. Not just the green of this route or that, the white of watch your speed, the blue of filling station or rest area ahead, or the red of you’d better stop, but brown signs indicating an interesting turn off.


It was a cold and quiet walk at that hour, as blue-black gave way to lavender. Glass shards twinkled on the shoulder. A stray dog zigged and zagged, then rushed toward and behind a rock wall with watermarks at its base. Water was here, then one day it fell away, down chutes of dirt and stone, into pools, through valleys, and eventually released into the sea. Gone. And it left dried remains, sediment lines to help us remember a time we never knew.


With thumb pointed up, he trotted backwards on the shoulder. He stopped, jumped, blew on his hands. A car pulled over. Behind the wheel was a fat man in a beige jacket. The passenger window was down. Jace leaned in. The man offered a price, and stroked Jace’s hand.


He walked another mile, maybe two. Head down, the chill burning him now. Lights poured over him, passed him by. Just ahead a station wagon sputtered onto the shoulder, crunched rocks, flashed one taillight. An arm appeared out the driver’s window, waved him forward. It was chubby, a white blob against black pavement and sky, with dark fingernails.


When he told the driver how many miles he and his uncle had covered and how far west they were headed, she let out a low whistle and picked up the CB receiver. “You’re gonna need a good tire. Up here’s an honest mechanic, sells quality parts. Normally on a reservation, they’d bleed you dry, but not these people. Got the fear of the Lord in ’em.” She made the call, woke up the man in charge. He would leave the door open. “Ten miles ahead,” she told Jace.


“Thanks.” He scanned the interior. A bumper sticker on the glove box said On the eighth day, He listened. No radio. No tape deck. The back seats were folded down, with boxes on them.


“What’s in the back?” he says.


“The Good Word. That’s what I got to give, or sell, sometimes. On my way to Burning Man now. Those kids frying in the desert, they need some inspiration. They’re a tough crowd.” She raised a finger, wagged it twice, then held it still. “But at every concert I hit, I always catch a few before they enter, reel them back out. Return to sender.”


When they reached the gas station/garage/general store, Jace carried in a soiled and tattered sheet of paper with the tire’s diameter written on it. The door creaked open and then slammed shut behind him. The lights buzzed. Two employees, husband and wife probably, spoke in chains of inflections until it was settled. A price. Behind the counter, the wife rubbed her eyes and said, “It must be quite a trip, to drive through the night like this.”


When he stepped outside and loaded the tire into the back of the car, the sky was more purple than blue. The driver was pleased. She honked and waved goodbye to her friends, peeled out of the lot. “It’s going to be a fine day,” she said. “Like the days when I sell my lucky Bible, you know, the last in a box.”


Jace bought her last three Bibles for ten dollars. She dropped him off a few exits from the van, where Brad and Keiko waited.


“Good luck at the next show,” he said. Now, as dawn broke, he noticed the amulet that clutched at her throat. It was round and white and it stole the light from her skin.


***


Jace can’t sleep. If he’s going to try to win Keiko back, he should use the historian’s money to buy her a gift. Across the street from the motel is a shop in a long barn, shined up and ready for traveler’s checks. On its roof a billboard sized sign shouts up to the interstate: PRECIOUS GEMS. He enters the store and unzips his jacket, a heavy jacket that makes him worth watching. His hands stay in his pockets as his eyes scan the merchandise. He does not enter the shopkeeper’s blind spots.


He peeks out the window, through the blank space between signs. The last slice of sun sinks behind a peak to the west. On the other side of it is the resort town where Keiko studies now, in her parents’ ski lodge, where she begs her cycle to end, or to begin again. She is waiting for something to crack, to break down and pour out.


He passes over the dross and toward the shiny rocks. And then he sees a stone that looks just like the one in the driver’s amulet: pearly, opaque, but too clear to call white. The shopkeeper tells him it’s a moonstone, a gem whose main element is wind, and whose known to transmit magnified emotions, lunar energy, psychic perception. “It’s a third eye,” she says.


Once the shopkeeper unlocks the case, Jace holds the moonstone up to the light and tests its weight with a dip of his arm. Solid and full of complex bonds. Impossible to break. He sets it on the counter, and it clanks against the glass, as if to tell the stones below, Hey, up here, look at me. I’m free. Jace removes his billfold and separates two notes from the third.


The shopkeeper wraps up the moonstone and hands it to him. “Lucky girl,” she says.


As Jace and the historian return to the mine the second day, the historian hands Jace a stray branch. It is pointed on top. “Here. You’re the guide.”


They walk for a while, crunching dried leaves until their feet fall into step. It takes a while for the bird noises to find his ear. There is a quiet that follows the tour, even months later.


Above them, the moon hangs low with a blue blanket tucked over its middle. Pines keep their arms down, but near the bottom, some reach straight out and curl up. They stretch wider down low, away from the trunk and its waterways. They brown and crisp easily this close to the dirt, and the roots below.


The soil hardens as they climb. Slate chips away and slides around. Their toes break it off, and their heels skate back a little on tiny sleds of it.


A hawk blinks, casts one eye down on Jace. He wonders what it sees from its perch, if it can make out the whole mountain range, or see what’s ahead.


“Jace, over here,” the historian says. He waves a hand and points to something important on a rock wall, a scrub tree sprouting out of a crack where stone meets dirt. What Jace notices is a carving off to the left, above the sediment lines: “100 years come around, 100 years underground, 1988 and where’s my mother lode?”


The historian says he wishes his wife were here to name this sprout. “She really knows plants. So the soil, that’s not completely foreign to me.”


Up top, there’s never enough traction underfoot. But below, in the mine, that’s the world Jace can sink into. He knows it by feel, and by ready-made notions of what the underground world should be. Caves, holes, mines. Stalagmites, biotites. Lights on helmets. Chisels and scythes. Tracks, trains, engines. John Henry tried to beat the machine with his hammer underground. That’s what they tell you in school. What Jace knows are tough rocks, knows what makes them burst, give way, tumble, hide under their neighbors. The historian wants to find out what’s inside, what’s bubbling, spitting, what’s pulling them down.


Before they go in, Jace scans their surroundings, imprints the image: white aspen branches cast out what gold leaves they have left. Below them lies a wash of dirt slopes punctured by slouching telephone poles: crosses falling over tracks. Jace knows the wires they carry, how they hug the old trunk lines that lead the interstate along and then swizzle away. But they always veer back, always return to parallel the streets. They are, as the historian told him over poached eggs yesterday, the same routes to the same destination, but they stop now for shopping centers and resorts instead of bridges and county seats. Still, they follow the same rivers. These lines guided Eisenhower’s construction and now his roads have made them obsolete. But they stay as Western flavor: an attraction, a reminder of how far we’ve come.


The historian stops Jace. He is short of breath from the altitude and the excitement. He can’t wait to start a day of time travel, to fill the gaps in history books. Maybe Jace will get a thank you in the fine print of the historian’s next book.


He pats Jace on the back and motions toward the mine. “Artifact is history where there is no memory,” he says. “All that ever happened or might have been lives inside of something we can touch. It must, or else it never was.”


Maybe it’s the coffee pulsing through him, but Jace wraps his head around this. Yeah, he thinks, we feel a surface, judge its heat, blame its simplicity, praise its usefulness, its place in the evolution toward what we want need gotta have can’t live without today. Right on, old guy.


Jace pats the historian’s back and leads him in. He is ready to move Dr. Sims beyond the basics of rock. Igneous, volcanic, metamorphic. Mites, tites, rites. Those are easy. Jace is here to tell him about what else is down there, what can distract or obstruct, what can console. And he does. He leads, listens, and nods at every question, even if it’s too dark for the historian to see him. In here Jace does important work.


When the historian asks him to pound, Jace says, “We’re not supposed to, Dr. Sims. Mine access permits are pretty strict.”


“I’ll take the heat. Just find a spot and nail it.” He pauses as he hands over the instrument. He does not have to show Jace how to use it. It is the guide’s tool. Jace has been here before.


Jace finds a target and taps. The historian steps away and finds his own spot. They pound in unison for a while, and then their paces stagger, like a gang of hammers forcing spikes through railroad ties and into dirt, or slate, or impossible rock below. Clink clink. Clink clink. For a long time nothing breaks, but they make a rhythm, tap out a pattern. Veins bulge above the historian’s brow, sweat slides down his neck. His breathing offers a loud wind accompaniment, but it can’t keep tempo with the percussion.


“I’ll try over there,” he says, and points around a bend. The words barely come out. He smiles and grips Jace’s arm. “Feels good, doesn’t it?”


Jace stares at the wall in front of him. They are supposed to be taking samples, photographing the site, getting a sense of the everyday reality of the prospectors’ search, like they did yesterday. His boss told him that’s what the historian is known for: sniffing out the real story behind the mining myths, getting into character. Jace is just paid to identify stones, explain formations, point out hiding places of gems that may have been passed over. He is here to demonstrate the safe spelunking practices he absorbed from expert geologists. Some guide.


When it happens, Jace is just around the corner, pounding the daylights out of a certain groove, as the historian instructed. Then he stops, doubles over, and hears only silence. The dripping has stopped, and the steady beat of the historian’s hammer is gone. No echo. Done. Over. This is what Jace will tell the paramedics when they arrive.


In the darkness, he reaches for the historian. He kneels next to the old guy’s body, and he takes the moonstone from his own pocket. He presses it to the historian’s pulse points at the left wrist, then the right, moves it over his torso, over the cavity of organs to upper chest, holds it over the place where he thinks the pounding happens, where the blood landed once it reversed its flow, where the force begins and, if he doesn’t do something quick, where the force might end. He knows he should press hard, should lean onto the historian and smother him with a chance at resurrection, bounce him back to life. And so he removes the stone, pushes and pumps, covers the Dr. Sims’s lips with his. Puff times three. Jesus. They made it look so easy on St. Elsewhere.


He runs away. Through the tunnel, down the slope, wet and muddy sorry excuse for an exit, and then he’s back on the trail, where he hurdles erupted roots and ducks under branches and shrubs sprouting from rock. He hears only feet and breath, feels the downward pull of the historian’s wallet and keys in his pocket. Each step stays on the ground too long, each stride too short, wasting time, wasting air, losing another minute, second, instant. He is not supposed to hear the slap of feet and breath, not supposed to concentrate on his own sound at a time like this.


He stays upright, no tripping or wheezing, all the way to the parking spot, where he finds a cellular phone in the historian’s glove box. He punches the buttons, gasps under the beeps. “Come on, motherfuckers,” he says. “Answer.”


The paramedics appear like a hologram. They work their magic—one two three one two three, listen, again—and they blow used air into the mouth from which the history flows, oxygenate the blood that stills in blue trails beneath graying skin. They beg life from this stranger, give him breath, help him draw in and expel the stuff on his own. But the heart takes its time in responding. It slows as it comes down from the fight, the return of blood to its sender.


They say Jace was right to let the historian lie, to resist the urge to drive him away, that a miracle kept him alive. That it’s not every day you see a cardiac down in the hole. Not anymore.


The ambulance shrinks as it rushes toward the nearest hospital, a hospital that fixes a lot of heart problems, in the closest of Colorado’s resort towns. Lots of old guys feel the pressure on the chair lift, or in the hot tub, or by the fire, where the blood starts to boil, hits obstacles, bottlenecks between build up on the walls of its paths, its closing tunnels, and rushes back home, overflows. So they keep specialists close by to clean up the mess.


Before the paramedics left, they told Jace to call the patient’s family, to follow the ambulance in the historian’s vehicle. He knows the way, right? But instead he stays, lets his feet sink into the mud as he watches the ambulance shrink away, and as the rain pastes his hair over his face. It feels slimy, and it narrows his view. In the distance a train gives warning. Here I come. Fear me. Jace is supposed to move faster, to hurry up and follow the historian to the place where he will heal, where he will come out a better man.


The moonstone. Before Jace gets in the car, he has to go back down into the mine, to find what he left. It is a slow walk—no hurry now that the life is saved—slow enough for him to notice that out here the aspens have dropped most of their yellow leaves and that the chill carries a warning of impending first snow.


In the mine, the darkness swallows him and the air thins exponentially. He wheezes and searches. Fingers travel walls, then ground. Beams of headlamp and flashlight bounce and swing. They catch the usual debris: shreds of rope, pencils, loose pennies. Too dark in here to retrieve any object that might slip out of hands or pockets, especially if it’s brown, yellow, or copper.


He stands where he stood just minutes ago as he pounded the wall. It was foolish and illegal to follow the historian’s whimsical orders. He walks around the curve, into this alcove the historian found, where his heart stopped. Jace kneels down into the mold his knees made earlier, beside the indentation that the historian’s back left in the dirt.


This is where he set the moonstone down. It was a silent release, softer than you’d expect at a time when your heart is an Allman Brothers drum solo at a million decibels, to compensate for the other guy, who’s lost his volume, his treble, his bass. Jace holds it up now, and his headlamp draws out the gem’s pearly coloring, that shade between clear and white that’s so hard to name, even in full light.


Keiko will hold the moonstone under a lamp, too, once he gives it to her. She’ll either say what the hell kind of gift is this or she will say Oh, Jacy, you know me so well. She will embrace him and stroke his ear with her right hand and rub the stone with her left. Together they will hold it, test the weight of all it offers: lunar energy, a third eye. But it will still feel light after all, because, as they will remember without saying, the moonstone’s main element is wind.


Right now, he thinks, she must be sitting by the window, watching the last of the aspens’ gold eddy down, away. Maybe the altitude will affect her cycle, apply some pressure to her stubborn female organs.


Outside again, Jace dials the people in the historian’s address book. No answer from the wife. The son is at work, working on a Saturday at a place where they play classical music to pacify callers on hold. Jace waits. The music does not calm him. Frantic violins and cellos burst above the kettledrum’s thunder. It is a tune to be performed live, so that the musicians in the pit can strum and strike with the appropriate violence in the neck and fingers, and on stage a ballerina can dart here and there in a fury. Keiko would know this tune. After all the running around, she would finish with a slow, soothing flourish. He is sure.


Over the phone, the historian’s son stays composed. Just a low Jesus Christ and a Shoulda known this was coming, then a sigh. He gives thanks to Jace, the witness and rescuer, the messenger of this not shocking news. It’s lucky, he says, because the hospital is close to his workplace, to the restaurant in a hotel Jace has seen in glossy advertisements. The son will be there in no time. “Drive yourself home in my dad’s car. Call us at the hospital and tell us where to pick it up. Might not get there for a few days, but don’t worry, we’ll pay you for your trouble.”


As he starts the engine, Jace pictures the historian’s son behind the wheel instead, a miniature version of the father: short and wiry with curls more gold than silver. He is driving his father home. A small, dark-haired woman stares out the passenger side window, knitting and crying small diamonds. They fall into her lap, shine up to her face. She turns around to check on her sleeping husband until they approach their house at the end of a dirt road. Maybe it rests on a hill, sits apart from the others. Maybe it is humble, or dripping with ornate artifacts as proof of the historian’s life spent sifting through forgotten days. It is a bi-level with an entrance down below, or a colonial, with two shuttered bedroom windows for eyes in its face, and blinds open just a crack.


When you’re on the road, like Jace is now, alone in the historian’s car, you think about other travelers. Those who’ve gone before you, those who’ve turned off here or at that exit back there, and you wonder whether they strayed from their routes, or continued over the pass, and where they ended up, if they made it, and who they thought about along the way, on this road or that. The last thing Brad said to Jace was a hook. He wanted to fight. “What can I learn at school that I can’t pick up out here?” It’s been a while since Brad has played. He must be ready to burst.


In order for Brad to visit Keiko, he has to skip the Phoenix show between the northwest and southern legs of Phish’s fall tour, where things are really blowing up now, because since Jerry’s death Baby Dead has really struck gold. Brad stays close to see what’s inside, but he has a day or two to spare for Keiko. He probably can’t wait to tell her all about how the band has changed, bigger and more popular, but still better, to assure her the sound hasn’t lost its magic, that it was okay for the band to sell themselves out to MTV just once, that it was worth it for a song like “Down with Disease.”


Brad travels light. That much Jace knows. Some practical and some useless items sag in his pack, with the photo of Keiko, taken when they met, when she still danced, in her thinner days. In costume, in position, under lights that ignore the fleshier parts that shine up the muscles and bones. She looks away from the camera, to something higher, out of reach. Since the doctors committed Jerry and Deadheads called Brad in for support, the moon has cycled three times, but Keiko’s cycle has stilled, frozen up. Without regular cues, you lose your rhythm. Jace thinks that tonight, on his way back from Oregon Washington British Columbia, Brad drives with the photo propped on the dash. He taps a beat on the wheel and serenades the photo as he drives, tells it that he’s almost home, that he’s okay, that everything will be different now. The photo stares back and says I’m dead. It’s a new me that awaits your return, that swells with new life. Maybe.


The historian’s glove box vibrates, and a high-pitched ring shakes Jace back to right here, to this road. He answers the call.


“Hey,” the son says. “The old man’s still ticking. My mom wants to repay you. If—”


“No, it’s nothing, really.”


“Oh, well, okay. Hey, which class are you in? Nineteenth Century American?”


“I go to a different school, in Golden, for geology and chemistry.” But I take the bus to Boulder every weekend, he wants to say, and sometimes I help Keiko with history.


“Chemistry. That was my thing.” He pauses. “Don’t drop out like I did. I predict you should get hell from the old man if you do, and I sure don’t want to hear about that.”


The son grew up here, after his father left home, migrated west. Jace heard the difference when they spoke earlier, but something in the intonation, in the way a guy not much older than him could sound like an old English historian, put so many years between them. Something protective and concerned and underscoring the shoulds and sures sounded a rhythm learned early on, through regular listening. Repetition and imitation. It was a natural pattern, an imprint.


From the south, the mountain moves closer. So tall and official and useful now. It still blocks Jace’s view, hides the town of heated sidewalks and patient lovers. Respect me, it says. Snow blankets not just the mountain top but its face, too: white and opaque and silent. The cover is highly anticipated, and around here it falls harder and faster and earlier than anyone can predict. It is the impromptu high, the call to action, the moneymaker. The sounding: come forth and conquer the Rockies. They’re all yours, the ads say. Name a star for your sweetheart up there, or here, name a peak or a ski run, or just one little mogul, after yourself.




© 2011 Kristin FitzPatrick


 
  • Writer: Robert Giron
    Robert Giron
  • Jan 10, 2021

Fat Tails

by Daniel Degnan


One by one I grab the salmon as they wriggle, spit, hiss – some with fins ripped off from their struggle in the net, some disemboweled by crabs. I stick the knife behind their gills, pull it forward through their throats, toss them to the other side of the hull. I’m calf-deep in salmon when I start, but have only bled forty fish when I slip and fall against the edge of the skiff, still clutching a creature in its death throes. Its blood pours over my gloved hands. Its mouth opens and closes mechanically. Its cold eye stares out to sea.


“It’s much easier with three people,” Meg says. She releases the last length of net and it splashes overboard. “We tried putting a lawn chair in the boat so Dad could help, but it slowed us down even more.”


With its hull covered in salmon, the vessel barely has room for the oar, machete, and two gas tanks.


“When will your brother get back from hunting?”


“Soon, I hope,” Meg says, taking the knife from me. She slices and tosses the fish as methodically as she dealt poker hands the day we met at Stanford. I played perfectly – crunched probabilities, measured bets, redirected risk. “Better lucky than smart,” I grumbled when she flipped her winning pocket pair. She bet me dinner on one more hand.


The skiff bobs in the blue sea while Meg bleeds the fish. I sit back on the bow platform to catch my breath. The sheer granite cliffs and lush green hills slide past the distant gray-and-white peaks of the mainland. Meg starts the engine with a pull of the cord. We push our way towards the refrigeration boat across the bay, weighed down by our catch. Fish flop across each other at our shins.


“Not a bad first pick,” she yells over the engine’s groan. “What do you think of Kodiak?”


Meg’s rolled the sleeves and pants of her orange rain gear, but the fabric still drapes over her slender body. She pulls back her hood and unbuttons her jacket, which blows behind her like a cape. The sun glistens off her yellow hair, pink cheeks, moist skin. She’s vibrant against the backdrop of sapphire sea and emerald hills.


“Gorgeous,” I say with a wink. “Though more effort than I imagined.”


She plows into a wave, splashing me. Saltwater drips down my face.


“We’re just getting started,” she says with a wink.


I smile, remembering she used that same phrase at the outset of several of the adventures she convinced me to join: biking Death Valley, kayaking Half Moon Bay, snow-shoeing Alta Peak.


The skiff rises and falls as we approach a cove surrounded by soaring rock cliffs stained white and yellow with seagull excrement. Hundreds of the screeching birds perch in every available nook, scores more circle or hang in the wind drifts. Meg cuts the engine and we float towards the refrigeration barge. She rushes to the bow and ties us to it. Then she hops into the vessel, checks the console, and removes the plywood coverings of three large bins still half-full from a recent pick.


“Doctor,” she jokes, “use that big brain of yours to keep the reds in the left bin, silvers in the center, pinks in the right.” The fish are all silver with dark gray backs. Other than their various sizes, they might as well be identical.


“How did your father react when you told him about your job in San Francisco,” I say, keeping my stance wide to compensate for the rocking of the boat. “About moving in together.”


Meg hops back into the stern of our skiff. She squats down, grabs a salmon in each hand, and lifts with her legs to launch them, two at a time, occasionally crossing them in midair. Each precise toss, timed to the rocking of both boats, just clears the rim of the appropriate bin.


“You haven’t told him,” I say.


She tosses a salmon at my chest. I catch it, dropping the one I’m holding.


“It’s not that easy,” she says. “My father depends on me out here. He and Matt can’t afford to winter in Homer without a strong season.”


“I thought we agreed Matt would get a winter job so they could hire one or two hands next summer. Hell, once I graduate we could even help them out with a little money.”


“That’s a silver,” she says, nodding to the fish in my arms. I toss it into the bin and grab another.


“You think your Dad will have a problem with us moving in together, don’t you?” My forearm and back muscles already ache. “Or maybe you have a problem with it.”


“You’ve never depended on anyone, anything,” she says. “And you’ve never had anyone depend on you.”


She hurls the fish double-time now, briefly clearing a bloody circle around her feet before more fish slide into it. The wind blows her hood back onto her head, masking her eyes, but it hardly matters - she barely looks where she’s throwing. Mechanical movements, concealed features, curves lost in the blanket of wet-weather gear – I could forget that this is the same woman who ran naked into the Santa Cruz Bay to get me to brave its icy waters. She removes her hood, wipes the sweat from her forehead, matted with blond hair, and I’m reminded.


“I’m depending on you,” I say. “Besides, you know me. When I want something, I solve for it. And what I want is for you, this one time, to get what you want.”


What I really want is Meg’s spontaneity in my life: the off-trail hikes, midnight excursions, impromptu costume parties.


“Hold that,” Meg says stepping towards me. She points to the giant striped salmon at my chest – it’s easily twice the size of even the larger salmon, maybe fifteen pounds. Its silver scales shine iridescent. She’s careful to place her feet firmly on the hull as she paces through the fish. “It’s a king salmon, and a nice looking one at that.” She pulls the knife from her belt. “I must have missed it.”


I hold the fish as she slices its throat and spreads the wound apart. She wipes the initial gush of blood aside and peers at the meat within. “It’s a white meat king,” she says. “A delicacy!”


A large wave strikes the boat from the side, causing it to rock violently. I drop the fish into the pile and in an effort to steady myself grab the nearest object – her knife.


“Shit!” I say. A pulse of adrenaline surges through me. With two sets of gloves between the blade and my hand, I suspect it wouldn’t have broken the skin. But the pain lingers.


“Did it get you bad?” Meg says, putting the knife back into her belt.


She helps me remove my jacket then the armband. I yank off the wool and rubber gloves. My palm fills with blood. Meg rips off her own gloves and throws them to the hull.


“Let me see,” she says, grabbing my hand.


The cut is about two inches long but doesn’t appear very deep. She wipes the blood away, careful not to touch the wound.


“Is it a white meat?” I ask.


She lifts my hand to her face for a kiss.


“A delicacy,” she says.


I grab her hood with my other hand and pull her to me. I taste my blood on her lips. We kick the fish from between us and press our bodies together. She pulls open my jacket, the buttons snapping in quick succession. We undo the clasps of each other’s orange overalls and they drop into the salmon. We unbutton each other’s shirts. Cool air blows across my chest, sensitizing my skin to the warmth of her hands. With one hand bloodied and another covered in fish and jellyfish goo, I’m forced to trace her body, salty from sweat and sea, only with my mouth. Her hand slips to my pants and I shift to make it easier, but it’s clumsy with a hull slippery in fish-guts, our overalls at our knees, the rocking of the boat. She falls backward into the salmon, with me on top of her.


“Gross!” she yells, and we laugh.


***


We walk up the grey crescent beach littered with tangled piles of nets, oil drums, small creatures’ bleached skeletons. We pass a ramshackle greenhouse and a tottering swing set manufactured from tall logs. Beyond the beach, stairs made of split tree trunks lead up to the deck of a simple plywood cabin with only two sides covered in shingles. Beyond that there is nothing but green and yellow hills rolling up to a white-capped mountain.


The crack of a gunshot from deep in those hills echoes off the mountains across the bay. A bald eagle launches from its perch atop an evergreen.


“Matt,” Meg says, more to herself. She scans the hills, as if out of concern.


“Is he OK?”


Meg shakes her head. “He’s fine.”


We climb the stairs onto the deck. The floorboards, where they are still intact, warp under our weight. Meg steps indirectly towards a screen door at the side of the house. I wait, then tread quickly in her footsteps. In the center of the main room, two beat-up couches are positioned around an oil-drum stove that sits in a bed of beach rocks. Above it hang sweatshirts stained with salt and blood. A propane-powered kitchen lines one wall, with mismatched dishware and cooking supplies. Above a door in the back of the room, a long loft holds a pile of blankets and two sets of couch cushions duct-taped together.


Meg’s father, Jack, ducks under the doorway. Beneath a thick orange and white beard, his skin is red and wrinkled, especially near his eyes, which seem locked in a permanent squint. He limps to the couch, falling forward into each step as if hoping the next footfall will catch him. The whole cabin creaks and shifts under his heavy gait.


“We had a pretty good pick,” I say, guessing Meg won’t mention the knife incident. Jack thought we weren’t arriving until next week, so when the seaplane reached the beach this morning, he wasn’t sure who it could be. He saw me step off the pontoon in my synthetic sleeveless fleece, the price tag still on my boots, and assumed I was with the Fish and Game Commission. Meg told me that when I was out of earshot, he joked, “Let’s hope you don’t need him to lift an anchor.”


“Four-hundred fifty pinks, forty silvers, twenty reds, and one white-meat king,” Meg says, holding up the prize. “Billy wasn’t half bad.” She nods at me and even though I know she’s lying, a feel a tinge of self-satisfaction when Jack nods his approval.


Meg kicks off her boots and slides on her makeshift slippers – older boots cut down to fronts and soles. She grabs a frying pan and spices from the shelves.


“Ugly weather’s coming. Fog. Maybe rain.” Jack drops onto the couch and massages his knees.


“Summers in San Francisco the fog rolls in thick as smoke,” I say, nodding to the thin aluminum chimney rising from the oil-drum stove. “It’s one of the reasons I was happy to get away.” I collapse on the couch opposite Jack. The cushions sink beneath me and a puff of dust rises into the sunlight. I smell fish and sweat and men. A spider so big I can see fangs scampers from the armrest. I shift away, pull my back off the cushions.


Around the room, boards hammered unevenly into the exposed wall beams support whalebones, eagle feathers, a rack of rifles and shotguns. Above the entranceway, a page from a magazine hangs loosely from a nail: “If you shoot the wolves to save the moose, and then you shoot the moose, you’re either out of your mind or in Alaska.”


“Your legs bothering you?” Meg says. She mixes brown sugar into honey.


“They’re fine,” Jacks says, but he grimaces with each rub.


“Can I ask what happened?” I say. Meg pauses her mixing. Jack stops rubbing his knees. “I mean with your legs.”


“They’re fine,” he repeats. He stands up, towering over me in my sunken seat. Hidden beneath his scraggly beard, a scar extends from his left ear to chin. I don’t ask about that.


***


The screen door slams like a gunshot, jolting me from my sleep. A man about my age storms into the room. He has a rifle on one shoulder and a knapsack on the other. He wears a skullcap and fingerless gloves, and his clothes are caked in mud. Each step leaves a wet imprint on the floor. With a shift of his shoulder he swings the gun into his hands in front of me.


“Who’s this?” he asks.


“Dammit, Matt,” Meg says. “Take off your boots.”


“This is Billy,” Jack says. “Remember? Your sister’s boyfriend is spending the summer.”


Matt places his rifle in the rack. He puts his hand in mine. There is no eye contact, no grip, no shake: a dead fish. His fingers are brownish-yellow – filth, cigarette stains, or both. He’s missing at least three teeth and the others barely hang on. He bears no resemblance to the great hunter Meg often described, the boy who protected her by wrestling away a sled dog when he was eight, who cleared twice as many salmon as any other set-netter in ’99, who shot a grizzly twice in the skull as it stormed this cabin.


“So you’re the boss,” I say. I slap him on the shoulder and he flinches.


“What’s for dinner?” he says, retreating to the other couch.


“Rosemary-rubbed venison with green apple mustard,” Meg says. “Assuming you shot something.”


“No deer,” he says, then chuckles.


“King salmon sounds great,” Jack says.


Meg prepares it in the honey glaze, but it doesn’t need it. The creamy white flesh is soft as butter. I even gobble down the skin when she tells me it’s healthy. I eat white rice with soy sauce and banana bread still hot and corn that, even though it’s from a can, tastes like it was harvested out back.


Matt doesn’t touch the fish. He walks to a table in the far corner of the room with a plateful of rice and corn and a giant mug of black coffee.


“For dessert, I’ll have the tiramisu,” I joke. I resist the urge to stretch.


“Once you clean up these dishes, the three of us will head out for the late pick,” Meg says. “Then we’ll set up our beds.”


“Billy stays in the guesthouse,” Jack says.


“Not my room,” Matt says.


“I’m happy to sleep on the couch,” I say. I don’t plan to sleep with the spiders. A celibate summer was not what I had in mind, and with boat sex seemingly out of the question, the offer affords me my only chance of sneaking up to bunk with Meg.


“You’ll be more comfortable in the guesthouse,” Jack says.


Meg mouths, “Sorry.” She warned me sleeping apart was a possibility, not because her father was traditional, just that he had hang-ups. She takes my plate and clears the other dishes as compensation.


“Matt, you share the loft with your sister.”


“God dammit,” Matt yells, ripping the skullcap off his head and crushing it in his fist. “You always take his side.”


His outburst doesn’t faze Meg, who concentrates on the plates in the soapy sink.


“Whose side?” Jack says, straining against the arms of the chair to rise to his feet. “The guesthouse is for guests. Maybe if you spent a bit more time in the cabin I’d know what you were up to for a change.”


Matt tosses his skullcap towards the gun rack. “You two will have to do the pick yourselves. I need to clear my room.”


***


Meg and I push out to sea for the second time that night, a wet wind in our faces. Fog has rolled in, turning the bright greens and blues to subdued grays. The sun is merely a milky-white swathe in the western sky. Behind us, the cabin disappears into the fading hillside.


Meg drops the engine into neutral and we glide towards the basketball-sized red buoy. The strain of lifting it and the attached lines into the boat spreads pain like tiny needles across my lower back. I can’t see it beneath the glove, but I’m sure my scab has cracked open. I imagine gangrene, my evacuation by helicopter. The afternoon was grueling enough without fatigue, heavy air, thoughts of amputation.


“Matt’s not what I pictured,” I say. I drag the lines between two vertical aluminum posts fastened a foot apart at the front of the bow. Meg puts the motor back into gear and the boat crawls forward until she stops it to feed the lines through identical vertical posts at the stern. Then she pulls forward again until gold-colored monofilament netting five fathoms deep bunches between these posts and runs the full boat-length. The first fish plops onto the small raised bow platform. It arches its body to one side, then the other. A steady stream of salmon caught within the netting pulls through the front posts. They pound the aluminum platform with metallic thuds.


“He’s my brother.” Meg rifles through the mess of monofilament, arriving where a fish seems hopelessly stuck in a Gordian knot of golden netting. The thin line is wrapped beneath the fish’s gills, around its small beak of a nose; it cuts into the flesh behind its fins. She twists twine and fish, unraveling the mess in seconds, dropping the fish to the hull. Then moves to the next. The easy ones she simply shakes loose. The slightly tangled ones she attacks two at a time. The tough ones she rips free by brute force, often severing a fin or part of a tail.


“You never mentioned shirking work, rudeness. You never mentioned dental hygiene.”


“What am I supposed to say? My brother is dirty? That he can be a dick?”


“If you had, I might have recommended a Caribbean cruise.”


“He’s a great hunter and a better fisherman. He doesn’t like change.”


“This summer was supposed to be a glorified campout, a break before my dissertation. I’m doing the work of two men.”


“I’m doing the work of two men.” She looks at my first salmon, still hopelessly lost in the net. If anything, I’ve entangled it more. “Make that three. What’s the financial term for a drain on productivity? A liability?”


Meg snaps more salmon to the hull, working her way to where six fish convulse in the net beside me. I could correct her definition, tell her the real liabilities are napping in the cabin, but for two months I’ve got only her.


“So productive optimization is why you tried to stab me to death?” I say, holding up my wounded hand in a peace offering.


She untangles the fish I’ve been struggling with. She pulls a hand out of the net and clasps mine. “You grabbed the knife on purpose to get into my Grundens.” She tugs the straps of her overalls.


“You make it sound so sexy.” I kiss her cheek.


She steps back to the engine and drives the boat up another length. “I’ll talk to my dad tomorrow. He’ll make sure Matt doesn’t dodge anymore picks.”


By the third boat-length of net, salmon cover the hull. Permeating the boat, along with the thickening mist, is the ominous stench of dying fish, and worse, jellyfish. They come through the posts thick and slimy as bloody snot and slowly get ripped apart as they fall through the bunched net, dripping their mucous-y poison everywhere.


I shiver, wet with sweat, drizzle, and ocean-spray. I struggle to keep my balance as the boat rocks and the slick sludge of jelly-goo and salmon guts sloshes back and forth across the hull. I break after every two to three fish to breathe in the stagnant air. I search out the horizon, but the dense fog conceals it.


Meg remains fixated on the nets, continuing her methodic search and release. I press on. Releasing a terribly entangled salmon, I splash a small chunk of jellyfish just below my eye. It lodges itself there, stinging me as if a lit match had been pressed to my cheek. My gear is soaked in the same goop that burns my face. My hands especially, have been sloshing through the sickly jelly and the cheap white wool gloves are now pink with the thick slime. Helplessness exacerbates the irritation, intensifies the burn.


We bury ourselves deeper in dead and dying salmon. A difficult case frustrates me and I wrench the poor creature out of the net, ripping one side of his face off. I stare at the skinless head as it gasps for air through exposed gills. A fish out of water, I think, throwing it gasping and bleeding into the pile. I need oxygen. I need orientation. But fresh air and the horizon are nonexistent. I vomit over the boat’s edge.


“I’m OK,” I say before I finish. I want to wipe my mouth, but my gloves are covered in guts, blood, poison. Even the sleeves of my wet-weather jacket are splattered with jellyfish.


Meg makes her way over to me. She pulls a threadbare, discolored rag from inside her jacket and dabs my lips.


“No, you’re not,” she says, seating me against the railing.


I hate being a burden, but I hate being on this boat even more. I don’t stop her when she lifts a post at the bow, then the stern, and the net, still full of fish, drops back into the sea. She puts the engine in gear and turns the boat around.


The swathe of light that was the sun has faded into the drab gray sky by the time we reach shore. My nausea dissipates as soon as my feet touch ground. I reach the guesthouse and collapse onto Matt’s bed without removing my sweatshirt, soaked in spite of the raingear. I pass out to the steady rhythm of someone splitting wood and the distant drone of the skiff’s engine, returning to sea.


***


The sun pierces my Plexi-glass window after only a few hours. I roll around to escape the glare, but light soon fills the guesthouse. I rise out of bed in spite of the cold tightness of my muscles and joints. I probe the room for something to cover the window and stumble into a five-gallon paint bucket filled with cigarette butts. Maps, some hand drawn, are nailed to the walls of the cabin. A detailed topographical one depicting the Kupreanof peninsula with an “X” at our cabin’s location has notes scrawled across it. They categorize the soil in each square mile region by color and the vegetation it supports, but the colors are not earth tones and the plants are not indigenous – pink earth promotes squash and watermelon; yellow, celery and apple.


I find a hammer and nail one of Matt’s dirty sheets across the window, but it does little to block the light. I’m barely asleep again when the door opens.


“Coffee’s ready,” Meg says. She stands in the doorway wearing the same plaid shirt and grey cargo pants as yesterday. “I’m making pancakes.”


“Are we out of salmon?”


We duck under branches and step over mud puddles on our way back to the cabin. Inside the kitchen, Meg’s as at home flipping flapjacks as she is bleeding salmon. When she won that poker bet, I complained about my limited stipend and tried to weasel her into a meal at the cafeteria. She showed up at the grad dorm with two paper bags full of groceries. Even with the limited ingredients and shoddy equipment of the communal kitchen, she prepared the most delicious Cornish hens with thick garlic mashed potatoes, followed by blueberry pie topped with fresh whipped cream. I assumed she learned from a great mentor, but watching her work her way around the broken cabinets, flickering flames, fractured measuring cups, I know it was necessity.


Matt shuffles a deck of cards in the loft. Jack sleeps on the couch, his chest moving heavily. Meg drops a pan in the sink and his head snaps to. He sits up and scans the room, alert.


“Meg tells me you’re a college man, Billy.”


“He’s a doctoral candidate,” Meg says. She hands us each a plate stacked high with pancakes drenched in maple syrup and butter.


“Once I defend my thesis” I say, “I’ll finally get a job.”


“And what’s that,” Jack says.


“One of my teachers runs an investment fund.” I don’t want to brag about the six-figure quant job Professor Rota promised me. It’s not like Jack would understand anyway.


“No, no,” he says. “What’s the thesis?”


I consider giving him my dissertation title: Quantifying Pragmatic Options: A Generalized Approach From a Decision Analytic Perspective. “I use math to help people make choices.”


“Math?” he says, chomping on a heaping bite of pancakes. “Everything you need to decide is right here.” He pats his gut. “Did Meg ever tell you how I ended up here?”


“That’s not a nice story, Dad.”


“This lady told me she was on the pill. Then she tells me she’s not ready for a baby anyway, least of all the bastard child of a mechanic. Next thing I know, the Honorable Judge Red Pumps tells me that even though I had no say in her having the kid, I had every obligation to pay for it. I said, ‘If it’s a portion of my salary you want, take it. A portion of zero is zero. And if it’s fathering you want, good luck trying to find me.’ Don’t put me in a situation where I have no choice. I’ll make one.”


“You did have a choice,” Meg says. “You didn’t need to sleep with her. Besides, that’s not the end of the story.”


Matt rushes down the ladder, jumping halfway. He’s got the deck of cards and a notebook in his hand.


“You’re good with math?” he says. “I look for patterns in the cards.” He opens the notebook. The results of hundreds of card flips are meticulously detailed on each line of graph paper, with symbols and notes besides each toss. “After the three of spades, I always get a queen or a red card.”


Assuming no knowledge of the cards already thrown, I calculate the odds of it happening once at fifty-five percent, twice, thirty percent, three times, less than seventeen. More than three times, the likelihood falls off a cliff. “Let me see your notes.”


The first column begins with numbers and crude symbols that correspond to actual cards. But halfway down the numbers are replaced by random misspelled words: presidents’ names, animals, ingredients. Further down the words and numbers transform to intricate sketches of animals and vegetables. I look for some type of code but guess it’s gibberish.


I point to a string of symbols – spiked images connected around a broken circle. “What’s that mean?”


“Fire,” he says. “You know, when you get cards of the same suit.”


“Flush,” I say. “But what’s the significance of the symbol?”


Matt stammers and Meg puts a hand on his shoulder. She takes the pad from me. “We should do the early pick. Are you up for it?”


I’m not sure which one of us she’s asking but I say, “I think so.”


***


“You know how to bleed?” Matt asks. He giggles as he jokingly thrusts the blade in my direction.


“Sure,” I say with an uncomfortable chuckle. I carefully grasp the knife with my injured hand.


The weather is clear and crisp this morning and I breathe the fresh air deeply. With fewer jellies and three people we make much better time running down the net. Halfway through, Matt tosses a fish overboard. A flash of light glints off its side as it swims away. Meg doesn’t say anything. I wonder if he saw something I didn’t see: a parasite, some other problem. I keep picking and bleeding.


The next time he brings the fish right up to his face, mouths something to it, then throws it overboard.


“What the fuck, Matt,” Meg says.


“It wasn’t right,” he says.


“Don’t start that shit. I’m not busting my ass earning money for you so you can just toss it overboard.”


“Sorry, Meg.” He grabs the rail and faces the open ocean. “That one wasn’t ready.”


Meg’s pained headshake, her exaggerated sigh, are borrowed from me. I’ve given her that reaction a dozen times since we met: that first dinner, when we discussed her plan to get a Master’s in Social Work, and most recently when I argued against her decision to forego the telecommunications marketing job I found her for a low paying psych ward internship. She once told me all the men she met had problems. She liked me because I had solutions. So I was surprised whenever she ignored my advice. But watching Matt look out to sea, helpless and certain, I know now she withheld key information.


Meg won’t look at me. She guides the skiff up another boat-length and idles the motor.


“You run the engine,” she says to Matt, relieving him of his position in the thick of the net.


***


“Matt’s hearing voices again, Dad.”


“I accidentally dropped a fish overboard,” Matt says.


“Dammit, Matt,” Jack says. He sits in front of the barrel drum stove. He places a log inside and stokes the fire. “I thought we were done with that. If you can’t keep your shit together, you can’t run the site.”


“Who says I want to? Let her run it. Let him.”


“If you don’t run the site, what the hell are you going to do?” Jack says. He points a log at Matt’s face. “You barely have teeth in that head of yours.”


Matt grabs a rifle from the rack.


“Put that back,” Jack says.


“What do you think you’re doing?” Meg says.


“I’m going hunting,” Matt says. He holds the weapon by its stock, gesturing at Meg with it as if it’s an extension of his arm.


“Watch where you point that thing,” Jack says. He uses the log to lift himself up.


“Are you kidding me,” Meg says, throwing her hands up.


She’s more concerned about Matt’s leaving than the rifle’s implied threat - accidental or otherwise. I’m not sure what I plan to do with it, but I grab the meat cleaver off the kitchen counter.


“You talk to me as if I’ve never handled a gun,” Matt yells back at Jack. He puts the barrel under his chin and pushes the trigger with his thumb.


“Stop!” Meg screams.


I cover my eyes with the cleaver’s blade.


“Safety,” Matt says, thumbing the trigger again. He storms out the door, slamming it behind him.


Jack launches the log at the door.


Meg grips her face in pain. “I can’t do it, Dad.” But already she pulls pots and pans out of the kitchen cabinets to prepare lunch.


“I’m sorry, honey,” Jack says, calming himself. “Give him an hour to cool off. Then I’ll go talk to him. He’ll be all right.”


“Not without serious help,” I say. “Did you not see that?” I point the cleaver at the gun rack, then at Matt’s notebook and cards. “He writes in code, sees patterns that don’t exist. He talks to fish. He won’t be all right. Not without professional help.”


“No shit, Doctor,” Meg says, taking a break from rinsing a pot to seethe at me. “You don’t think we’ve seen psychiatrists? Tried medications? Dad’s got Homer Medical on speed dial. We sprinkled Zyprexa on his goddamned pancakes for a year when he refused to take it. This isn’t a puzzle you can solve with decision trees, so keep your diagnoses to yourself.”


“Calm down, Meg” Jack says.


“Funny,” I say pointing the cleaver back at the gun rack, “This is the first I’m hearing any of this. I’m thrilled to be stranded in the middle of nowhere with a rifle-wielding madman.” I regret the last word before I finish uttering it.


“Settle down,” Jack yells. He takes a heavy step towards me.


The cleaver feels heavy, clumsy in my grasp, and Jack’s glare makes me realize that all of a sudden, I’m the madman. I step back and bump into the kitchen counter. Jack reaches out his sinewy arm, takes the cleaver from me gently, but firmly, and places it on the top shelf, out of my reach.


“I’ll deal with Matt,” he says.


“He thinks I stole his room,” I say, trying to defend myself.


“He’s not dangerous,” Meg says, drying the pot. Her mouth contorts as she takes heaving breaths. She bats her eyes and her face turns red.


I’d never seen her cry before. Never saw her vulnerable. I used to assume she played strong to impress me. But she is that strong. Forget the rugged winters, the grueling summers. She’s held this family together despite an absent mother, a disabled father, a crazy brother. She’s performed the roles of fisherman, hunter, chef, and medic, captain and crew. It’s her strength, but even more this inevitable chink in the armor that emboldens me to ensure she sees it can all be better, easier.


“Meg’s not coming back next summer,” I say to Jack. “She got a job in San Francisco. We’re moving in together.”


“I can’t believe you!” Meg cries. The tears stop, anguish morphs to rage. She lifts the pot as if to throw it at me, but holds back. “You prick!”


Jack steps between us, holds out his hands as if refereeing a boxing match. “Billy, go to your room,” he says, shoving me towards the door. “Meg, go to mine. Don’t come out until I tell you.”


I slip out to the guesthouse guilty and frightened as a child. The brother who thinks I stole his place has a gun, the girlfriend who thinks I betrayed her has a knife, and the father - who knows what he thinks - has his callused hands. But I’m still exhausted. I look for something to secure the door shut, slide the bucket of cigarette butts beside it, then remember it opens out. I collapse onto Matt’s bed.


***


I return to the cabin. Jack’s passed out with a year-old magazine on his chest. I touch his shoulder and whisper, “Can we talk?”


He stirs, gets up. He grabs a bottle of whiskey and two glasses from a kitchen cabinet and motions me towards the door. The sky is cloudless and the sun has had time to warm the air, though the breeze is still crisp and carries the faint scent of pine. I follow Jack towards the edge of the deck but stay back a step - the boards are rotting and there’s no railing. He holds both glasses in the palm of his hand and fills them to the rim.


“Sometimes fin whales breach just two hundred yards from here.” He hands me a glass and with his own, motions past the skiff, the white mooring buoy, the outcropping of rock. “When they raise their heads near the skiff, you realize how small you are. But you chase them anyway. Cheers!” He clinks my glass and gulps his whiskey.


“She did find me,” he says. “Matt’s mother. She moved here from Seattle. We made it work together in Homer. We had Meg. We got this site license. We had some great years I’ll never regret. But she was already tired of Alaska, and me, the day the bear attacked the cabin. She hid, hysterical, up in the loft. Matt grabbed the rifle and ran out to meet it. Sad thing is, that time of year, with all the food in the hills and streams, that bear had no business bothering us. It was sick.” He taps his temple and takes another sip.


“Matt shot it twice as it charged him. It took off up the rocks there.” He points toward the outcropping jutting into the sea. “Matt tracked it to make sure it wouldn’t come back and found it dead on that cliff. Ma radioed for a seaplane that day.” He downs the rest of his glass.


“Some people need the supermarket, electricity, 9-1-1.” He refills his glass and tops mine off, emptying the bottle, which he tosses over the edge. “Me? I don’t understand…I don’t want to understand tax deductions, resumes, insurance premiums. Give me a fishing rod and a gun and get out of my way. Matt doesn’t fit in either place. Meg’s at home in both.”


“I was out of line,” I say.


“That’s between you and Meg. I want her to not worry about Matt and me. If San Francisco is where she wants be, I’m happy for her. For both of you.”


“But she does worry about you. And she won’t be happy unless she knows you and Matt are OK. Can’t you force Matt into a hospital?”


“Not against his will, not unless he’s an imminent threat.”


“He just pointed a gun…” I can’t seem to say it out loud.


“He knows the rules by now, knows what to say.”


“There must be some other way.”


“I’d beg her to go with you if I thought it would help. Matt’s problem is his head. Meg’s is her heart. I can’t change his mind. I wouldn’t change her one bit.”


“Talking about me?” Meg says. The screen door slams behind her.


Jack hands his glass to Meg. “I’ll get a refill,” he says, leaving us on the deck.


“Sorry I went all crazy back there,” I say.


“Me too,” Meg says. “I had an inkling to throw the fishing knife at you.” She pats the holster at her hip.


“It wouldn’t be the first time,” I say, holding up my palm. “I shouldn’t have broken the news to your Dad like that. I thought San Francisco was a done deal.”


“I hoped everything here would have sorted itself out, or at least gotten better. He’s worse than I’ve ever seen.”


“Stick to the plan,” I say. “All the other sites hire fishermen.”


“Matt scares them away before they’ve learned the ropes. It’s more hassle than help.”


“Bring them to San Francisco.”


“It’s sad, really,” she says, sniffing the whiskey and taking a sip. “Cabin fever keeps people from coming here. Matt’s sickness keeps us coming back. My brother will never move. My father will never leave him. They can’t live without me.”


“And you can’t live with them. If your brother doesn’t get help, he’s going to get himself into trouble. Or all of you. You’re just postponing it.”


“Then postponing is what I have to do.” She says it staring off at the water, so matter of fact.


“And what do I do?” I say.


“You’re the expert decision-maker.”


“Exactly. So trust me.” I turn her towards me and hold her tight by the shoulders. “You can’t help here. Even your Dad will tell you that. There’s often not a perfect solution, but there’s always a best decision.”


“Well, whatever that is, it doesn’t need to be made this minute.” She turns from me and I can see she’s holding back tears again. “I brought you here to see a different world.”


“You’ve certainly delivered,” I say.


Meg pulls me to her and hugs me. “Let’s try to enjoy the rest of the summer.”


Jack returns with another bottle and glass and three foldout chairs.


“The fish can wait until tomorrow,” he says. He unscrews the cap and pours.


We sit and drink and watch the skiff rock in the gentle waves as they roll towards shore. The sunlight flickers off each crest like a million brilliant sparks.


***


I wake to Meg lying in bed next to me. I’d been sleeping so soundly, I have no idea how long she’s been here. She stares at me with a sinister smile. I put my arm around her, nuzzle closer, but she has a different idea. She grabs my arm and slides off the bed. She’s fully dressed in a thick sweatshirt, jeans, and boots. She pulls me after her.


“What?” I say, resisting her efforts. “I’m exhausted.”


“Let's go,” she says. She yanks my arm hard, dragging me off the mattress. She tosses me a sweatshirt. “There’s a hat and gloves in the pocket.”


The night is clear and the sea, flat. I push the skiff back from the rocks and hop in while Meg starts the engine. We glide out into the deep blue darkness, past the cliffs, and on to the sea. The fresh chill air, the drone of the engine, the rhythmic splash of the water soothe me. I close my eyes and forget myself, half-sleeping – we may have cruised for minutes or hours.


Finally the boat turns and Meg cuts the engine. She hops on the bow platform and sits cross-legged, facing forward. I follow her lead. The sea opens up in this direction and its nothing but water for miles. The deep violet overhead gradually brightens to the dipping red sun in the northwest sky. But already that same sun casts its first rays across the northeast.


Meg puts her hands in mine and we snuggle close for warmth. The slow rotation of the skiff reveals sunset, twilight, a purple sky interrupted by the faintest stars, then sunset again. We float until the sun rises and everything shines bright blue-green.


***


The Fish and Game Commission radios in a three-day fishing hiatus while it assesses quotas. Once the nets are up and we’ve caught a nap, twenty hours of daylight seems like eight too many. We straighten up the grounds. It takes all four of us to roll a tree trunk, worn white and smooth as bone by the sun and surf, to the back edge of the beach. We do some old-fashioned rod-and-reel fishing without success. We read decade old news magazines. I even have time to review my dissertation. I’m editing a section on perceived value when Jack returns from the freshwater spring with a six-pack of cold beer. He hands me one. “What are you working on?”


“My professor surveyed a group of people to determine the dollar value they put on their own life,” I explain. “He asked questions like, ‘Assume that you were about to take a car ride that had a one in ten thousand chance of ending in your death if you didn’t wear your seatbelt, and I offered you one hundred dollars not to wear it, would you take the money?’”


“I’d take that bet,” Matt says from the loft.


“Well in that particular case, the person who takes the money values their life at one million dollars.” I don’t finish with the necessary caveat, “At most.”


“That’s a lot of money,” Matt says.


“I once got a ticket for not wearing my seatbelt,” Jack says. “I took the skiff to Kodiak City – two hours through cold rough seas. Driving my truck from the dock, I got pulled over for swerving. I must have been hypothermic. I’m shivering like crazy and the cop assumes its DTs. He asks me to walk the line – you can imagine how that went.” He smacks his leg and we all laugh. “Anyway, he thought he let me off easy.”


“Do you like to gamble?” Matt asks. He hops down the ladder. He’s got a competitive spark in his eyes. “Let’s play Texas hold em.”


It’s suddenly clear how Meg got so good at cards – during weather delays and Commission enforced downtime, there’s not a whole lot else to do. I put down the thesis and brace myself for some tough competition.


“Winner skips the next three picks,” Matt says, pulling a bucket of beach pebbles from a crossbeam in the wall.


“Have fun fishing without me,” Meg says, dropping a pan into the sink. “But while we’re betting, first one out does the dishes.”


Jack hands out more beers. Meg offers fresh-baked banana bread. Matt distributes the beach rocks. I sit next to him at the corner of the table, keeping Meg across from me. Matt deals. Jack picks up the first hand, but I ascertain little about his and Matt’s playing style. On the next hand I draw pocket kings. Meg and Jack fold after the flop, but I’m able to draw Matt in. The river card gives no possible help, which means he needs pocket aces to beat me – less than half a percent probability. I go all in, pushing my pile of pebbles to the center of the table, feeling a slight surge of adrenaline. I snicker when Matt pushes his pile forward, and cackle when he flips an Ace and a Joker.


“For real?” I say.


“Pair of Aces,” Matt says, scooping up the rocks.


I look around to see if I’m crazy. “You play with Jokers?”


“Why not?” Meg says. “It’s more fun, more unpredictable.”


“Especially when you don’t know they’re in the deck,” I say. “That’s a regular Black Swan, right there.” I point to Matt’s hand. “I’m adding that to my thesis.”


“Black Swan?” Jack says.


“Can I borrow this?” I say to Matt, grabbing his notebook. I flip to a clean page of graph paper. “Most events in life fall into what’s called a normal distribution.” I draw a tall bell curve.


“It looks like a fish in a net,” Matt says.


He seemed so normal a minute ago, I’m surprised at how quickly this new delusion manifests. Matt picks up on my concern. He looks me in the eyes for the first time. He takes the pen from me, turns the page so I see it from his angle, and draws a small circle within the peak of the curve, off-center - the fish’s eye. The gridlines are the net.


I hold the pad up so I can see it better. “Look at that,” I say. “I always thought they called them fat tails because it’s where the curve trailed off. But it’s also the tail of the fish.” I show the diagram to Jack. “Ninety-nine point nine percent of living is experienced here.” I point the pen at the gut of the fish. Then I circle the tips of its tail. “But life happens here: bank runs, sovereign debt crises.”


“Jokers wild,” Meg adds.


“Those don’t sound like life,” Jack says.


“They are if you have a sound investment strategy,” I say, tapping on the fish.


“Too bad you’re out of rocks,” Matt says, laughing.


“Yeah,” Meg says, ganging up on me. “Go scrub the dishes. We have a game to finish.”


I slink off to the sink.


***


The long days flow together in a rush of activity, broken only by brief nights of sound, but never fully satisfying sleep. We wake, we eat, we pick, we eat, we pick, we eat, we pick, we sleep. By the time the cut on my hand is lost among scrapes, rope burns, and calluses, I’m able to keep up with Meg in the nets. I captain the skiff and pitch salmon into the bins with ninety-five percent accuracy. I’m even put in charge of the weekly rendezvous with the cannery’s barge – Matt’s old job – to unload the refrigeration boat and pick up supplies. They toss me a fifth of tequila the day our haul sets a record.


Matt still dodges the picks and I’m happy for it. Meg and Jack treat him as if nothing is wrong, which is to say they ignore his outbursts, his delusions, his insistence on sleeping with his pistol. But I can’t. I study him as if he’s one of Professor Rota’s term projects. I note his frustration as he clears the beach of clutter: rusted barrels, frayed lines, tattered nets. I time the frequency and duration of his disappearances into the hillside. I analyze his moods when he returns for his vegetarian dinners, muddied and giddy. And while Meg insists he’s safe, I sense desperation, recklessness, violence.


“Have you thought about the patterns in the cards?” he asks one evening.


I’m mixing a cocktail I concocted to celebrate our award-winning haul – salmonberry margaritas.


“Not particularly,” I say. “I’ve been busy fishing.”


Matt laughs uncomfortably.


“You should get back out there and protect your record,” Jack says, clinking my margarita with his. He ruffles my hair, and I’m strangely proud. Meg smiles at the gesture. Matt bristles. He returns to flipping cards for a moment, then tosses them to the floor.


“I’m going hunting,” he says. He grabs the shotgun off the rack.


“In the dark?” Meg says.


“With a shotgun?” Jack says.


“You don’t need me here,” Matt says.


Meg places a hand on his shoulder, calming him.


“We do need you here. We just can’t wait forever.”


“It’s not working anymore.” He glances at me as if to signal I’m the reason, but then looks ashamed for suggesting it.


“What’s not working?” Meg asks. But Matt’s already halfway to the door.


“I’ll show you,” he says, “I’ll bring back a deer.”


***


The sun is warm and the breeze cool. We race through the morning pick in record time and Jack has lunch waiting when we arrive back at the cabin. We eat on the deck as the bald eagle hovers on the wind currents and a fox scampers across the beach. It’s been three days without a sign of Matt, save the occasional echo of a shotgun blast.


Jack takes our dishes and returns carrying two rifles. He places one against the cabin and slides his lawn chair to the edge of the deck. He gestures for me to take a seat.


“Here’s the scope. Here’s the safety. Here’s the cartridge,” he says. He places the butt in the crook of his shoulder. There are two cracks as the shot’s echo reflects crisp and clear across the water. The mooring buoy a hundred yards out dips briefly underwater and pops back up.


I have to brace my left arm on my knee to steady the rifle’s muzzle. I center the crosshairs on the buoy. Another two thunderous cracks and the scope kicks back, catching me above my eye.


“Did I hit it?”


“Were you aiming at the water?” he says with a chuckle.


Meg loads another cartridge and places the rifle back into my hands. She stands behind me, places her hands on my shoulders and whispers in my ear.


“We’re on the beach in Santa Cruz. Remember?”


I remember her naked in the waves, calling me to her. My heart picks up its pace.


“Not that part,” she says, guessing my thoughts. She smacks my head playfully. “The warm sun, the light breeze, the soft sand. We weren’t sure if we were awake or asleep.”


Her soothing words relax me. Her fragrant hair refreshes me. Her gentle touch reassures me. The buoy looks fat in my sight. I pull back on the trigger and watch it sink beneath the water.


***


Across the green and yellow hills, purple lilacs sway like waves in the breeze, always out of reach. The terrain is tight with brush and thorny thickets. We try to stay on the ridgelines and under the evergreens where the ground is soft and mossy. But it’s slow going, especially with Jack.


“If we see a bear, don’t startle it,” he says. “And don’t run.”


“We’re going to see a bear?” I say.


“Probably not,” Meg says.


“‘Probably’ doesn’t put limbs back on.”


“Bears have poor depth perception,” Jack says, stopping to rub his thighs. “They only see through one eye at a time.” He turns his head from side to side, demonstrating the motion. “The trick is to back away slowly.”


“The real trick,” Meg says, “is to file down the front sight on your rifle. That, and bring along someone slower than you.”


Jack catches me sneaking a glance at his leg. “Why do you file down the sight?” I ask.


“So it won’t hurt as much when the bear shoves it up your ass,” Meg says. “Dad, why don’t you wait for us at the cabin? We’ll be OK.”


***


We smell the carcasses long before we see them. Two full sized deer, three foxes, a few smaller rodents piled together. Maggots, worms, and all sorts of other critters writhe in the rancid flesh. The fresh body of a fox has the skin torn free from its face where the shotgun blast struck. The larger deer has a strategically shot rifle hole through its neck. Its purple tongue hangs in the dirt.


Meg rushes ahead, pushing her way through the brush. I find her squatting in front of a camouflaged tent.


“He’s not in there,” she says. She pulls out a filthy sleeping bag, a machete, and the cores of some green peppers. I wait until she moves ahead before switching off my rifle’s safety.


The brush opens to reveal a large flat field. The earth has been turned and roughly ploughed. Stretches of fishing net section off and protect neat rows of various types of vegetation. A deer lifts its head above some tomato plants, red juices hanging from its chin as it chews. Meg’s rifle instinctively rises to her shoulder. I place the beast in my sights too.


The deer’s magnified skull collapses in an explosion of tomato, blood, and brain matter. It vanishes from my sight before I register the sound of the blast, which comes from in front of me, not beside me. Matt lifts himself from a prone position within the field. He stands directly in my line of fire, his chest in my crosshairs. He holds his shotgun above his head in a victory stance, his tongue flicking through the hole in his smile. His head is monstrous compared to the buoy I shot earlier. The trigger is cold on my finger.


“It’s time to go home, Matt,” Meg says. She slowly lowers my rifle’s barrel with her hand.


We take turns dragging the buck back to the cabin. Matt grabs his deck of cards and climbs the ladder to his bunk. I join Meg on the deck to help her prepare the deer. She sticks her knife between the bones of the forelegs and twists it, creating two holes. She rams the end of a broomstick through them, lassos a rope around it, and throws the line over an overhanging beam. I help her lift the deer into the air, tying the rope off against the cabin. She places a large blue bucket under it.


“You’re going to stay with them,” I say.


Meg plunges the knife into the deer’s chest, just under the neck, and pulls it down with both hands. The bones of the ribcage snap in succession. She presses the knife down all the way to the deer’s crotch. As the chest cavity opens, blood pours into the bucket. The deer’s entrails push through and hang below its torso, and again the smell of death hits me like a stiff wind.


“I can’t leave them. I’ll go back with them to Homer after the summer.”


“I worry after the summer will be too late. And Homer will be inadequate. It’s a bad decision.”


She clears the insides with the knife. She places the deer’s heart and liver into a frying pan. She cuts the skin around its neck, and uses the knife to pull at its hide.


“Are you breaking up with me?” she says.


“If you really plan to move to Homer I think you’re breaking up with me.” I pull at the deer’s skin while she cuts it from the flesh with her blade, until the prey hangs without an outside or an inside, its decimated head rolled to one side, its guts stinking in a bucket beneath it.


“You could wait for me. You could come with us.”


“Meg,” I say, grabbing her arm to make sure I have her full attention, “why did you bring me here this summer? What did you expect to happen?”


“I wanted you to meet my family, to see my life. I told you. I thought he would be better.” She puts the organs and a large chunk of flesh in a pan.


“Going to Homer doesn’t solve the problem. It enables it. And in the process it will ruin your life. My life. Our life. I won’t let him drag me down, too.”


“That’s up to you,” she says. She turns towards the kitchen.


I turn her back to me. “Did you bring me here to chase me off?”


“This isn’t about you!” She shakes free and storms into the cabin.


Jack joins me on the deck. We each grab a side of the bucket of guts. Jack stumbles across the beach rocks. We step out into the water and the waves lap against our boots. We put the bucket down next to a large boulder. Jack tosses the entrails and skin fragments on top of it. “For our eagle friend,” he says, nodding toward the evergreen. “Or a nimble fox.” He rinses his hands in the water. Rivulets of blood twist among the stones.


I squat down and dip my own hands, feeling the water’s icy chill. I raise the salty liquid to my lips and feel the scruff on my face. I look down at my reflection, my full beard, and hardly recognize myself. I look worn but strong. I look like a man I would be frightened of.


“The herring run off Anchorage in the winter,” Jack says. “An icy, snowy night a few years back, with visibility less than a few yards, I fell off the boat retrieving the net. I managed to climb back in before anyone noticed, then finished the job. I refused seeing a doctor until it was too late. I lost three toes and suffered nerve damage in my legs. The kids get their stubbornness from me.”


“I can be stubborn too,” I say, stroking the ragged hair on my face.


***


The cabin fills with the smoke and smells of broiling meat and steaming vegetables. Matt shuffles his cards in the loft. Meg puts the finishing touches on the meal.


I lean on the kitchen counter and speak softly to her. “I need to know something.”


She spoons glaze onto the ribs.


“If things were better here, like you hoped, would you still be moving in with me?”


Matt stops shuffling. Meg nods.


“Do you love me?” I say.


She nods.


We eat tender chunks of venison steaks marinated in a garlic sauce, broiled ribs in a brown sugar glaze, rice pilaf, corn, peas, salad. Matt takes a healthy heaping of vegetables, a mug of coffee, and isolates himself in the corner. In between bites, he flips his cards and takes notes.


I slice off half of the fried fist-sized heart and sit beside him. He shifts away from me, further into the corner. I shift closer, blocking his escape.


“Some heart?” I say, offering him a bite-sized chunk.


“I don’t eat meat,” he says, focusing on his dealing.


“Why is that?” I say, popping it in my mouth. “It’s not like you love animals.”


“Billy,” Meg says, “leave him alone.”


“We’re just talking,” I say. “How’s your three of spades theory working?”


“It never fails,” he says. “A queen or red card always follows.”


“I’ll bet you it does fail,” I say. “In three tries it will fail. If you win, you get your cabin back for the rest of the summer.”


Jack gets up to get another serving, though his plate is nearly full.


“Sure,” Matt says, shuffling the cards.


“But if I win, you have to agree to fly out of here tomorrow to see a doctor in Homer.”


Meg glares at me. “What do you think you’re doing?”


“It’s a fair bet,” I say. “He says he has a hundred percent chance of winning. I say it’s one in six. Russian Roulette. For all of us. Because if Matt wins, each of us - especially Matt - loses.”


Matt puts down the cards and gets up to leave. I don’t budge.


Jack sits at our table, meat stacked so high on his plate it nearly topples. I make eye contact only briefly and it’s enough to cause a shiver. But he doesn’t stop me.


“You don’t have to take that bet if you don’t want to,” Meg says to Matt. She stands over the table.


“Even if your theory is wrong,” I say to Matt, “which I’m sure it isn’t, you only have to talk to the doctor.” I hold his deck of cards up to him.


Matt grabs the deck from me and sits down.


“What makes you think you’ll have better luck now?” Meg says to me, her tone easing. She pulls a chair up next to Jack.


Matt throws out cards until the three of spades appears on the fifth toss. Matt takes a deep breath and tosses out the queen of clubs. He licks his lips and reshuffles. The second attempt, he flips a joker.


“That counts,” he says. “Jokers are wild.”


“They sure are,” I say, dropping my head in my hands, furious with myself for not remembering. With two jokers in the deck and only one round to go, my odds drop to forty three percent. Better than a fifty-fifty chance of sleeping with the spiders for the next three weeks.


When the three of spades arrives in the last hand, Matt stands to deal the final card. A three of clubs. He collapses into his seat. I pop a chunk of venison into my mouth, vindicated. Jack studies Matt’s reaction.


I pat his shoulder. “You only have to talk to the doctor.”


“It will be OK,” Meg says, reaching across the table to hold his hand. “I’ll go with you.”


“Are you OK?” Jack asks Matt. When Matt nods, Jack walks to the radio. He sets the dial and speaks into the microphone, “Outlet Cape requesting two passenger pick-up at oh-seven-hundred hours.”


“Sleep in your room tonight,” I say. “I’ll take the couch.”


***


Late that night, with the blood of the deer pulsing in my veins, I climb the ladder into Meg’s loft. The smell of the night’s feast hangs in the air. It mingles with the odor of a generation of summer meals, of fish and game. It mingles with the scent of Meg. Her body is taut from the summer’s efforts. I’m surprised by my own body’s strength, of muscles tightening in unexpected places. I take her in spite of, because of, the grit and grime that cover us.


***


We wake to the sound of the seaplane’s engine. Meg holds me tight, then climbs down the ladder. Before I make it down, she has stoked the fire and placed a kettle on the stove. I hug her again. She hands me a cup of tea and I feel its warmth pulse through my hands. While Meg prepares breakfast I pull out my dissertation and review it. I’m jotting down some notes when Jack arrives and pours himself some coffee.


“What’s that?” he says, pointing to the corner table.


A tower of cards rests on top of a page from Matt’s notes. In front of the tower five cards are facedown. I flip them: the three of clubs and each of the four queens. I slide the paper out and the tower crumbles. On it, Matt has written, “I meant the three of clubs. Gone hunting. Love, Matt.”


“Good for him,” I say, crumpling the paper and tossing it into the stove’s fire. “Me? I’m done hunting. He can garden all week for all I care.”


“I don’t know what you expected,” Meg says. She puts the fourth dish back on the shelf.


“I expected him to keep his end of the bargain,” I say, pointing out the door with my rolled up dissertation. “He lost fair and square.”


“There’s nothing fair about it,” Jack says.


The double-crack of a rifle shot startles us. Meg drops a plate to the floor.


“He’s too close,” she says.


“On the water,” Jack says, stepping towards the door. I follow Meg as she rushes past him.


***


I chase Meg down the beach, across a mountain stream, and up the rocky outcropping towards the cliff where Matt had tracked the grizzly. Jack lags behind us, maneuvering up the incline with the strength of his arms when he can’t trust his foothold. Above us the bald eagle circles, screeching. Further out, the seaplane approaches, the sound of its engine amplified as it descends towards the water.


Meg’s scream is bestial, primal, full of raw panic and pain. She yells, “Why?” and the response that echoes back across the water is her own twisted shriek. She squats on a grassy mound in a clearing, beside Matt’s body. She places his bloody, broken head in her lap, bends her face to his.


Faceless fish, piles of prey, disemboweled deer. So much wasted flesh. I want Meg to stop screaming but I’m paralyzed in place, my eyes shifting from her rocking body to the approaching plane. I drop my dissertation copy, caked in mud from the climb, into the dirt.


Jack stumbles past me, rushing to Matt’s side. He falls heavily to his knees and administers CPR, but it’s useless. There are no paramedics, no emergency rooms. Meg lifts her head to face me. Her blond hair is matted with blood. Her eyes are blank.


She doesn’t say, “You couldn’t leave him alone?” But it’s in there. I squat down next to her and pull her to me. She pushes away from me, pulls her father up, and they hold each other.


I step to the edge of the cliff. The air is clear and the water is flat and deep crystal blue. The seaplane lands with a splash. My bowels tremble and I remember Jack’s words: it’s not math, it’s gut. I don’t have the stomach for this. The plane glides towards the beach. The pilot steps onto the pontoon and waves to me. The world I came from is a half-hour flight over the ice-capped hills.


Jack grabs the spent cartridge from the grass beside Matt and turns it over in his fingers before slipping it into his pocket. He runs his hands over Matt, tenderly frisking him. He finds a stale biscuit, a knife with a broken tip, and a box of bullets. He tosses the biscuit towards the eagle’s nest, attaches the knife to his belt, and loads a new cartridge into Matt’s rifle. He stands and looks at me but I can’t meet his gaze. I look over the cliff edge to the crashing waves below and am overcome by vertigo. I crouch to the ground, clutch the earth until a fingernail cracks.


“There’s a shovel in the greenhouse,” Jack says to me. “Tell the pilot there’s been a change of plans.”


***


We take turns digging in silence. I shovel furiously, distracting myself from thoughts that Jack, holding the gun, waits for me to finish digging my own grave. Distracting myself from the sight of Meg, pacing between the cliff, where she walks too close to the edge, and Matt’s corpse, where she scatters flies. Distracting myself from the dreadful fears of isolation, responsibility.


Just as there is no doctor, pronouncement, or certificate, there is no priest, eulogy, or ceremony. Jack lifts Matt’s body as if carrying him to bed and places it into the hole. We refill it. When we’re done, Jack gives us our orders. I collect and chop wood and prepare a bonfire at the far end of shore beside the giant white tree trunk. Meg cooks a feast: salmon and venison with tomatoes and peppers picked from Matt’s garden. There’s even melon for dessert. Jack returns in the skiff with a bucket-full of snowcrabs, the span of their claws longer than my arm. We stab sticks through their shells and hold them in the bonfire like marshmallows. Their legs and claws stretch out, grasping at the turbulent air above the fire. We drink whiskey and when that runs out, beer.


Jack turns Matt’s hunting knife over in his hands.


“You were barely walking when I gave this to Matt,” he says. He speaks to Meg as if I’m not there. “Your mother worried the point was too sharp for her little boy. So he could keep it, he wedged it between the floorboards and snapped off the tip.”


Meg laughs and I follow her lead.


“I remember one of my first fishing excursions with just him, after you bought him his first gun,” Meg says. “He caught a halibut bigger than me. We couldn’t lift it into the boat, so he shot it dead with his pistol and dragged it behind the boat all the way back to the beach.”


“It was delicious.”


They continue telling stories while I continue drinking beer, feeling out of place and unwelcome, as if I’ve invaded some personal religious ritual. They talk about Matt before he got sick – about his fearlessness, his selflessness.


Jack kisses and hugs Meg goodnight. He stumbles off to bed without a word to me. I inch closer to Meg, press my leg against hers softly. She loops her arm through mine and snuggles close. I feel slight, but enormous relief.


“I’m sorry,” I say.


“It’s not your fault,” she says.


I meant it as a condolence, not apology, but I crave the warmth of her body next to mine. I want to pull it into me, but I’m afraid if I squeeze too tight I’ll lose it forever.


“It’s my fault for bringing you here,” she says. “I should have known he’d be too fragile.”


“You were only trying to live your life.”


“I didn’t need to throw it in his face.”


“You did everything you could to protect him. You’re the one who’s selfless and fearless.”


The sun dips below the hills across the bay and the landscape begins to lose its color.


“What now?” I say.


“It’s up to Dad,” she responds too quickly. “But I think we’ll return to Homer to clean up Matt’s things. Then go from there.”


I guess I’m not part of the “we.”


“What about your internship?”


“It can wait.”


“What about us?” Her grasp loosens the slightest bit.


The northwest sky turns gray. The fire crackles as the logs settle into hot embers. They cast shadows across the rocky beach that give the illusion of motion.


“Do you want to come to Homer?” She knows I have to complete my dissertation. But I’m desperate. I call her bluff.


“If it will make you happy.”


I think I see a fox sneaking towards the boulder offshore, but I can’t be certain.


She let’s go of my arm, shakes her head.


“I’m sorry,” she says. She kisses me deeply and I try to hold it, save it, remember it like it’s our first. “Dad radioed for the seaplane to return first thing tomorrow morning.” She pulls away and walks to the cabin.


***


One by one the stars appear in the south, filling the indigo sky with faint white constellations. The bonfire’s embers are searing hot and glow red and yellow in the gentle breeze. Past their light, little is visible. There’s a splash in the water. Leaves rustle in the breeze. Preceding each lapping wave is the rhythmic metallic clang of the skiff, always out of place.


Returning to Matt’s bed would be sacrilege and Meg’s loft, off limits. There’s the couch, but the spent shells of the snowcrabs, bleached white in the fire, haunt me, making the spiders seem even more vicious, threatening.


The night air is comfortable and already the hidden sun faintly cuts the darkness in the northeast sky. I slide off the tree trunk and lay in the warm rocks beside the fire.


I wake to a sharp biting pinch on my neck. I smack it and feel the hard writhing flesh of an insect between my fingers. A bug the size of my thumbnail – a sand flea or some sort of beetle – squirms in my hand. I toss it into the fire. Three more cling to my shirt. I jump up, swat them to the rocks. I ruffle my hair, yank off my shirt, wipe down my pants. Hundreds more emerge from the rocks. Like tiny jumping crabs, they crawl and leap past my boots. I swat one that wriggles on my thigh and scrape my boots together to clear some others. I circle the fire and watch as they close the perimeter around the embers. And always more and more emerge within the bonfire’s radiant reach, continuing their mad march toward the light, where they bake themselves upon the scorching rocks.



© 2010 Daniel Degnan

 
bottom of page