iron buddha is a work in progress.
copyright © 2000-2006
risa s. bear and stony run press. all rights reserved.
Updated
10/07/06
ISBN
0-9645574-4-4
chapters:
|
iron
buddha
1.
SOME
of us have done major pain; Smitty has been
told that he is one of these. He knows the litany: kidney stones, gall
stones, pancreatitis: the nurse said, "your blood pressure is
one-seventy-five over one ten, sir; why didn't you tell us you were in
so much pain?" In reproach, as though he had broken porcelain. He
barely remembers that pain now, but he remembers the nurse. How sad she
was for the waste he had made of her skills!
He goes walking, walking
in
the
bright sun, with a friend who says, "I hate war." Straight out, and
with no particular war at hand to bring that on; to him it sounds
almost trite, but he knows her, knows her daily and hourly sincerities.
She has seen a man with one arm, and little enough of that one, ending
in silver claws. This man, dressed smartly for sport, is dancing
a soccer ball for his delighted daughter.
"War," Smitty says, "is
no
better or worse than anything else."
"But it kills people!"
She
gets
that insistent look. "Or, well, the killed are all right, I mean all
right now, but the maimed..."
"Oh, him, he looks
happy enough."
I think she's a bit shocked, Smitty. But you're going to stand by
it; you've had a rough day.
Years ago, Smitty was
working in the woods, a trail job up the McKenzie River out of Eugene,
Oregon. The crew was three days away from default, trying to do the
work of ten with four guys. Smitty was cutting a four-foot diameter fir
log that was lying along the slope, doing the downside cuts, the
outward-angled ones that let the round drop out. But hidden under the
bark was a split, and half the round jumped at him, too wide to outrun
on the sidehill and too heavy to argue with. His forearm was pinned
between the log and the muffler of a chainsaw that had been running two
hours solid. But he tied up the mess in a bandanna and finished out the
cuts before calling it a day.
The next morning, he
worked again,
and a miserable viney-maple branch sprung out from under a cut log and
whacked him right over the bandanna. The charred section of arm muscle
fell off, with the bandage, and he looked down at it, kind of bemused,
and said to no one in particular (the others, scattered over the slope,
had troubles of their own): "There oughta be a limit to this kind of
thing." But he knew then, and many of us know, there's no such limit.
You go from here to there (wherever there is) in pretty much a straight
line, and some of it is grim and some of it is not.
Now as to iron Buddhas:
Smitty's daughter's friend has one, he doesn't know how it has got in
his head like it has, but there you are. He could lie here listening to
Mozart adagios till the sun comes up, but there's that Buddha, stuck to
his possessive mind just like all the things Buddhists tell us to leave
alone. He's a pretty good Buddha, almost two feet high, with his nose
down in the sandbox, not thinking of a thing at all, which makes him a
superb Buddha, no way around that.
There's some rust down
his
left
side, which is the rain side, or maybe somebody rolled him over on
their way into the house. If they leave him there long enough, he'll
grow some algae, maybe even moss, and appreciate in value to some art
collector type, such as Smitty is hankering to be right now, not having
sense enough to go read a good poem or have a cup of tea, whatever.
Junk
man, what do you need me
for? he might ask. I've got
this seam starts here by my right
buttock, goes up my right arm, through my right ear, over my head and
down into everything on the left, rust and all; you can see they made
me in a hurry for a buck.
And here you
are, almost picked
me up and stashed me in your truck bed, all set to look innocent
when that kid wants to know where the hell his Buddha went to that he
hasn't looked at in two years, uh-huh. Don't you remember about Monkey,
how he told me he could jump across the universe and back; he did,
too, and pissed on one of the five pillars at the very edge of
everything, and how when he got back he was still in my hand, and me
with a wet finger?
When Smitty
left Georgia for
Oregon in 1975, he built a Conestoga wagon deal on the back of his
pickup truck. A round white camper shell, with "Oregon or Bust" in
black lettering on the back.He's
halfway across the
pines of Alabama when a U-Haul truck passes him doing what seems like
about eighty miles an hour. State trooper right behind it. Trooper,
blue lights bawling, peels out to get around in front of the truck, and
the trucker whips left, kicks the patrol car into the median. Car
fishtails all over the deep South for a moment or two, then settles in
for the chase, whooping. Out of sight they run. Then, one-two-three
troopers and one-two county mounties, zoop-zoop-zoop, zoop-zoop and
over the horizon. Get 'em, fellas! But what Smitty had seen
as the truck went by was a guy grinning at him and his little prairie
schooner. Having a good time. Bless you, brother. Bless you.
2.
Smitty
stops
at the
flower lady's cart to see if she has roses. There are a few, with
struggling leaves, but the blooms are decent still, especially those in
pink. She interrupts her desultory lunch, brushing crumbs from her
sleeve, to slip a long-stemmed pink from among the buds, carries it to
her work table, and deftly wraps the stalk in a yellow paper, tying it,
gentle-fingered, with a thin red ribbon.
He's all of fifty
now, this
old
hippie, brown hair thinning out, face narrowing to a pointed ski nose,
got one of those easy-white-man faces that seems to burn easy in a
wealth of summer sun, but it fades back into a nice tan in a few days,
never peels. His mouth is what you notice, not wide, but full-lipped,
mobile, a woman's mouth. The ladies pay attention when he talks, and
several have remarked to him that he could have been a woman, an
appraisal that thrills him. And he has narrow shoulders, feminine arms,
but his walk has a man's rhythm. He looks much like he did at
twenty-five, except for the beard, which was black then but is greying
fast now.
He watches the
flower lady.
She's
one of those mouse-brown types, brown hair, brown eyes, brown shirt,
collar up to keep back the mean breeze coming down the long street. She
has dwelt upon disappointments. As he turns away, he sees in his mind's
eye, himself turning back to buy for her one of her own roses. He
catches her looking at him warily, as if to say: is there some problem
with the rose? No. Yes. No. His history divides again, at that moment,
as it often has, traveling the fate that follows some kindness thought
of, yet not acted upon.
Rolling toward Oregon,
Rocinante, a yellow Chevy pickup truck with its prairie-schooner
camper, takes the wide wastes of Texas in stride with three pilgrims in
her cab. Smitty's passengers, who are buying the gas, are a young-old
lady with new-age self-assurance, freckles and hoop earrings, with a
brand-new husband, a Guatemalan she has met on a commune south of the
border. They're hitching to Seattle so that Miguel, who knows almost no
English and has never traveled, can meet his his in-laws. Hoops teaches
language and culture classes in the cab day and night, as freeway
America rolls by underneath the wheels, concrete ribbon, gas stations,
concrete ribbon. Smitty enjoys the lectures at first, and so does
Miguel, but by Arizona, they're both schooled out, and each begins to
examine with morose attention the road-killed recaps and armadillos
passing by.
"Now, Miguel. This is a
backpack,
b-a-c-k-p-a-c-k, also called a ruck sack, it's not what backpackers
call a backpack, 'cuz it hasn't got a frame. This is a zipper,
z-i-p-p-e-r, like you have there on your jeans, and in here is a
pocket, like a jeans pocket."
"Pants pocket," says Smitty.
"Excuse me?" goes the
lady.
"Pants pocket. What you have
in jeans isn't called a jeans pocket, it's a pants pocket."
"Never heard of such a
thing," she says.
Miguel asks her something in
Spanish, she rattles off something back at him, they go on a while like
that, but faster. Then Miguel summons immense dignity, jams his hands
in his -- jeans pockets, pants pockets, whatever -- and enunciates,
slowly and emphatically: "You know ... always ... everything." A tear
forms in the corner of his eye, and he turns away to regard the sunset
on the passing, wasted hills.
It's January. Rocinante
pulls
up
onto a bit of unfenced desert. The pilgrims gather dry mesquite
branches, and sit around a fire, close, under a wheel of stars turning
earth-slow, brilliant as only desert stars can be when the night plans
to drop to zero.
Smitty tells about
Georgia
nights. Hoop-ears translates for Miguel from time to time.
"My great-great
grandfather,
the
one who married a Cherokee lady, raised cotton on top of Dugdown
Mountain. Everything he did is gone now -- it's all red oaks, a hundred
years' worth. The road along the ridge was through country without a
single house, so it could get dark, I mean really dark. My mama told me
this story.
"Grandpa was coming home
on
the
buggy, coming along with a lantern, he was just in this pool of yellow
light, oh about twenty foot across. And the horse, which was a good
horse, not one you would think of to get scared a lot, just pulled up
short and wouldn't get, wouldn't gee nor haw. So Grandpa, who was real
tired and not thinking to stay out all night, gets down to go around
front and talk sense into the horse, when right then the horse up and
hauls off the buggy toward home and Grandpa is in the road in pitch
black.
"Well, he can see just one
thing
and that's the light in the window of his house, across the cotton
fields way around the ridge. It's two miles by the road and about a
mile straight down and up through the fields. He's standing there
thinking what in the hell has got into that horse and then he thinks
maybe he hears something. Or, no, he thinks maybe he feels something,
like there's eyes looking at his back. He turns, and he doesn't see
nothin' but he feels like the front of his face sees something, you
know what I mean? Like there's a kind of living headlights out there,
and he's caught in the beam, and he is food.
"So Grandpa, he starts
running
down the road, and he sorta hears something soft and heavy trotting in
the dust of the wagon ruts behind him. So he throws off his hat to give
that thing something to sniff at and jumps down into the cotton field
and cuts across the rows toward that light in his kitchen window. Well,
something thumps and swishes into the cotton behind him, and so he
throws off his shirt and runs on down by the pond. He's running about
as hard as he can go, goes by the pond, and through the willows, and
right behind him something's rustling willow twigs. So he quick somehow
shucks his pants and runs in nothing but his shoes up through the
cotton on the other side of the draw to where he's about at the end of
the farm yard. "He can see Grandma is
working at
the table by the window, rolling dough with her big arms, and hollers:
"MA, OPEN THAT DOOR!" She runs over and pops the door with her floury
hand and he comes through on the jump, slams it behind him and WHAP!!
something hits that door so hard it bends the hinges.
"Next day they saw where
there was
deep scratches all over that door, had to plane it down like it was
new-sawn. The tracks they found in the farm yard was cougar tracks. He
said he could put both his fists side by side like this" -- Smitty
demonstrates -- "and stick them down in a track with room to spare."
Miguel likes the story.
Hoop-ears
does too. Looks like they have made up. She snuggles down deep in her
sleeping bag, tucked under his arm, and Miguel gets out a long wooden
flute. He plays, something startlingly complex, something Central
American and lovely, entirely suited to night in a wild place. If there
were any breeze he couldn't do it; the night is the coldest one each of
them has known. But the air is still as a black sea of glass, and his
notes rise like owls to the mountainside close by.
3.
Smitty
works in a government
office these days, in the Belly of the Beast, and at lunch walks out to
a nearby cemetery to hang about beneath the dark firs, glowering,
trying to remember something of his poetry. He's enroute when waylaid
by an old black man in dreadlocks.
"Uh, hey! Can I TALK to
you a
minute, buddy?" The old-timer's face splits in a grin that shows one
tooth gold among those remaining.
Smitty's good at
avoiding
people,
can spot leaflet do-gooders a block away and panhandlers from two
blocks, navigating the streets in a solitude born of years spent
stalking animals to see what they're up to. He's shocked that this old
man has come up on him out of nowhere, like, and, curious as to the
skill of the enemy, as it were, assents.
"Yeah, I gotta talk to you.
You
come out of that building there like you thought you was GOIN
somewhere, but you ain't been goin NOWHERE. Have I got your full
attention, SIR?" He's not grinning now. Smitty's
fairly shook but
decides
to take it like a man, after all he was raised to have a respect for
prophets. His father once told him a story of having spooked an entire
tent-meeting with a bedsheet and having been nearly killed in the
ensuing bedlam, and he hadn't smiled while telling that story. He had
changed his ways, and Smitty himself, as a child, had been to
tent-meetings, in clean clothes too. If the old man is softening him up
for money, he just might have found Smitty's weak spot.
"Lemme tell ya -- I see ya
walkin
aroun here, you ain't drinkin enough WATER, you gotta get some
ELECTROLYTE in you, you don't have enough RESPECK for y'self."
This doesn't sound like a
handout
speech to Smitty. He starts listening, his breath coming quietly.
"You are an OLD SOUL, you
hadda
lot of LIFETIMES, this is your LAST one, and you had better get it
TOGETHER. You got things to do, and you been HIDIN y'self, you got me?"
The old-timer grabs Smitty's lapel, gently enough but urgently, and
leans into him for total eye contact. "You got things to DO. Now I'm
gonna go this way an you're gonna go that way, an I don't wanna SEE you
lookin down at the GROUN like you been WHIPPED, are you gonna get
STARTED now cuz you got a whole lotta people DEPENDIN on you to
get-through-to-y'self, you GOT me?" And lets go, like that, and walks
away.
This whole time there are
sidewalk
bodies going by, nobody stops to bystand and act worried, and nobody
looks like they're pretending to not notice -- it's like the old man is
not even there. And Smitty never sees him again, either. Angel stuff?
Nahhhh...Smitty works hard at his rationalism. True about the water,
though. A week later they take him in at the hospital to blast apart
yet another kidney stone with ultrasound.
Smitty thinks about telling
the
Iron Buddha about the old man. But the Buddha already knows, neh?
Always. That's why he's smiling, lying there on his side in the rain.
So Smitty tells his friends the story. One by one, all the details. And
they all look at him like they've already heard it, and like, so has he
followed the advice yet about the water?
Rocinante carries him and his
passengers into Los Angeles, and Smitty's not happy with the place.
He's staying at some ashram full of people in turbans, which is cool,
but the streets outside are unremittingly mean, full of men in long
black coats and black glasses that walk into places and everybody gets
quiet. He goes out to the curb to see if Rocinante is still there or
has she got her tires slashed or anything, and there's goo all over the
windshields. "What IS this stuff?" he
asks, sliming his thumb. "That's smog," says one
of
the turbans. I'm gone from here, thinks
Smitty,
and says goodbye to his cross-country passengers. He goes about ten
blocks toward Oregon, but something keeps catching his attention.
There are all these little
shops,
with signs on them like House of Oral Love, in neon. Each has a
storefront window with one or two bored-looking women in it; they're
waving to him as he drives (slowly) by -- no, beckoning. Business must
be painfully slow. He pulls over to the curb. Two of the ladies lean
out of a doorway, framed in high-gloss enamel. They don't look
particularly prostitutish to him, but then he's never met one.
Sheltered life, Mr. Deep South, really
sheltered.
One lady has a kind
of Sixties page-boy hairdo, a string of fake pearls and those
pointy-framed black glasses that women wear in sitcoms when you're not
supposed to think they're pretty.
But she is.
The other has long, long
hair and a fresh face, someone who gets enough sleep. He can see the
book she's been reading, upended on the broken-backed chair behind her.
It's a college sociology textbook, for crying out loud. So, is she
doing her research here? Or, yeah, just earning tuition? Work-study,
hah. If he were less shy he'd like to sit and talk with them awhile,
learn something about them, and about stereotyping, which he realizes
he's been doing as ignorance. These are people. Just like anybody.
But their patter isn't
encouraging
this discovery. They're on the job. "Come on in, come on in, have some
fun, fella." "Well, "says Smitty, "I would
but,
ah, I don't have a whole lot of cash." He has enough for gas to get him
to Oregon, a few groceries, he's not going to spend it here. That's
o.k., they assure him, things are REAL slow, what have you got? "Uh, a few nickels, dime,
three pennies." This gives them the giggles;
they
can see he still thinks himself a virtuous lad, but doesn't want to
offend. Such a nice boy! Aw, too bad, see ya around! Bye-BYEE! They're
still waving, really waving this time, as he turns over Rocinante's
engine and drives north, a little faster now, along the boulevard.
In an hour he rounds a bend,
pulls
off the pavement between two guardrails, bumps along to a stop on a
high cliff, and steps out of the truck's cab to hear the waves
collapsing among the rocks of the California coast. He's experiencing
his first sunset on the Pacific Ocean, and the smell of the strange
nameless wind-sculpted vegetation all around brings him for the first
time some awareness of just how far he is from Warren County, Georgia,
or pretty much anywhere he's ever been. On the
beach below, small
energetic birds are running, running, matched by their reflections on
the wet beach, running down to the restless water, running back with it
as boils up the darkening strand. He's only seen them in books.
Suddenly he wishes he could share this view with the two women from the
Los Angeles brothel. Would they know that these tears now forming in
his eyes were not for the beauty of the ocean alone, but for theirs as
well?
The Iron Buddha likes this
romanticized version of Smitty's remembering, but he has questions. Suppose you had had enough money to go in
and make that business
transaction. Would you have done so?
"Oh, probably, probably so.
But, y'see," says Smitty, "these ladies had a something" --
Innocence? smiles
the Buddha.
-- "Sure, whatever, anyway I'm
thinking there is more to this stuff than they told me about in church,
and even more to it than they told me later in the Left, about
exploitation and women's rights and sin and blah blah blah. Dunno how
to put it. Felt like I passed up a chance to learn something there."
But,
says the Buddha, you weighed risks,
then drove away. "Yeah," agrees Smitty.
It
wasn't
about not sinning, and it wasn't about not exploiting. I was being a
coward about something life was trying to show me."
Smitty waits for the Buddha's
comment on this, but, as the story goes in the old South, the Tar Baby
he sot there and sot there and he don't say nuffin at all.
4.
There's this
woman, who stands looking out
across the Cascade Range
from a high place, hugging herself with her arms, windblown brown hair
going straight back behind her, a knee-length gingham skirt blowing
back too. Turns her hazel eyes on Smitty and says, "you have to tell
all this someday. You'll tell it, o.k.?"
She gives him that
no-nonsense look.
"It matters," she adds.
"Yes, love,
I will."
He can't stop looking at her; she's glowing, a
sunset, a world
on fire. She hasn't told him, but cancer's destroying her brain. She's
missing him already, but he doesn't get it. Yet.
Rocinante noses up the coast,
stopping for a wine-tasting here and a view there, and hits the rains
of Oregon in the middle of a socked-in, moonless night. Smitty nearly
plows into a cliff on a mountain curve, which wakes him enough to find
his turn-off, a right into a valley that has in it the smallest post
office in Oregon, not much bigger than an outhouse, and about sixty
houses, all scattered along about fourteen miles of noisy creek. The
road turns to gravel, the cut-banks, full of bedraggled last year's
foxgloves, lean in to kiss the cab windows, and the dark turns
almighty. Smitty realizes he's passed the last house and must have
missed the commune he's heading for, so he begins a k-turn on the road,
jockeys back and forth about four times, and sinks his rear wheels in
the ditch. Ah, well. Whaddya expect?
Can't just go to bed and deal
with
it in the ay em, we're athwart the road and a sign back there did say
"Caution: Log Trucks" -- so this thing has gotta reroute before dawn.
Smitty digs out a flashlight and rain jacket, hikes back to where he
saw the last window with light in it. He gets his first whiff of wet
Douglas fir, along with other smells he can't identify yet: western
hemlock, western red cedar, red alder, bigleaf maple, sword fern,
bracken, thimbleberry, and salal. He looks up into the canopy closing
in far overhead of trees over a hundred and fifty feet tall, and on
impulse switches off the light to let the rain fall on his face in
silence, in darkness. Delicious.
Especially after Texas and its paving
of raw armadillo.
The house he comes to is
covered,
roof and walls, with cedar shakes and sticks itself out at the woods in
odd angles all over, as if it had been built by someone looking over
his shoulder. Raw red-alder smoke, full of half-digested creosote soot,
pours out the chimney and drifts down to the creek across the road. He
knocks. He hears activity.
"Whoa, hang on, somebody's
out there."
"Yeah, I bet they're in a
ditch halfway to Six Rivers."
The door opens, and Smitty
looks
up into the face of a tall man, six-four or better, with long hair and
a full beard and deep-set preacher's eyes. "Hi,
I'm Smitty, I'm looking
for the commune." "Which one? This here's a
commune, friend." "Uh, Omega Farm, friend of
mine lives there, guy named Dan.""Oh, yeah,
that's four miles
down, you
missed it. Four miles on the left." Big Guy waits, hoping to close the
door.
"Um, left my truck up the
Forest Service road, it's uh, stuck, I'd leave it but...."
"Yeah, we'll help you out,
actually we do that a lot, come on in."
Smitty enters the light of a
kerosene lamp, which seems to him bright after the mountain blackness.
He knows lamps, and appreciates at once the skills of his hosts: no
coloring dyes in the fuel, a clean chimney, trimmed wick. Real light,
steady, easy on the eyes. At once he takes in the interior scheme that
he will see in all the homes of his friends for the next ten years:
cedar paneling, a leaky skylight, spider plant in a rope-macrame-hung
planter to catch the drips from the skylight, shelves loaded with
little brass incense burners and copies of Ram Dass's Be Here Now. An
embossed iron stove sits on a brick pad in the midst, surrounded by six
people and a yellow lab (not barking at the intruder - a good sign).
Three small women, with the long straight hair, no makeup, long
dresses, small noses and freckles of hippiedom, such as Smitty had
known in Georgia in the Sixties, and three large men, patriarchs in
beards and suspenders, with ruddy cheeks and rough hands, look back at
him from deep within smoky-looking overstuffed chairs. Nice folks all,
really -- but Smitty feels he has interrupted something serious.
The man who has answered the
door
takes it on: "We, ah, we're White Star, oldest commune in the valley,
but, uh, we're breaking up. Yeah. Hmm, couldn't agree on how to divvy
up, so, uh, we're going to have a COIN TOSS."
One of the young ladies looks
up
soulfully, tossing her blonde mane, and shows Smitty a Walking Liberty
silver dollar. "Me and Jeffrey -- " she nods at the giant who spoke
before her -- have called heads, and the others here have called tails,
and title to the whole place will go to the winners." Heads nod.
"We'll do that after I help
Mr.
Smitty here," says Jeffrey. "Lemme get my rain gear." Jeffrey clumps
out to the mudroom. Smitty stands steaming
before
the
solemn contestants, wondering what to say on such an occasion.
The lady tosses her mane
again,
and wrinkles her freckles at him. "Where abouts did you come in
from?" "Georgia." Smitty steps
gingerly
across to the stove, leaving little puddles as he goes, and spreads his
hands to its warmth.
"Oh, you're a
friend of Dan's. Yeah.
He's really nice, hard worker and smarts too...how come you gave up on
Georgia?"
"Uh, well, I got married
three
times and divorced three times and felt like I kinda wore out my
welcome, thought I'd see what it's like out here."
"I know what you mean, nobody
is
from here, I'm from New Jersey really."
She seemed to need to explain further. "Too many
cemeteries."
Yeah, that makes sense to
Smitty.
All over Atlanta, all over the great snorting East, cemeteries,
including the one with the big lion sleeping over the mass grave of
Confederate dead, with the huge smokestacks of Cabbage Town's
cotton mill for a backdrop. Generations sitting on top of each other,
each doing things their daddy has done, breathing used air,
already know everybody they want to know, burying one another in long
rows, right up to the stone walls along the sidewalks, with dilapidated
gas stations across the street, hollow-eyed men leaning on pumps in the
shade of a tin roof, sucking at half-cold Nehi drinks, too hot,
too tired to curse a fate they 're only dimly aware of, OUTTA
THERE Smitty, Rocinante can go a pretty good ways in a straight line on
a fill-up, look for a place to breathe. No wonder you turned up your
face to the rain among those ancient fir trees. Even this room, with
its friendly woodstove, seems too civilized for you right now.
Jeffrey comes through, a
heavy-duty tow chain draped over both shoulders. "O.k., let's go," he
says.
5.
After a long summer spent musing
over mortality (in hospital waiting rooms, watching over the trials of
the flesh visited upon his aging parents), Smitty walks down to the Big
River and plants his feet in the soft mud beneath a mother-of-god huge
cottonwood. There are a couple of ospreys here, fluttering like
hummingbirds fifty feet above the water, then plunging with an audible
whack into the shallows for fish. They come up empty on most tries,
just as Smitty has so often done. Just because you have better than
20-20 vision, super-sharp talons, and a huge ready-for-business beak,
doesn't mean you win every time out, or even very often...hmmm. But the
good news is, the ospreys are here, meaning they got through the last
winter, meaning there's fish out there, meaning that some fish made the
ultimate sacrifice even in the dark of winter, when the water was high,
fast, and ugly. So maybe life is worth living?
The Iron Buddha
doesn't comment on this
one. Smitty briefly imagines him, cleaned up, tucked into the
playhouse-cum-zendo out behind the blackberries, sitting oh-so-serenely
on the cable-spool table with a bit of sandalwood burning under his
nose. You can go through exercises, setting up stuff like that, or not,
doesn't seem to matter. Watching ospreys, on the other hand, seems like
it has a payoff every time.
You're
getting the hang of it,
says
the Buddha.
Say what?
Omega Farm turns out to
be a
collection of some twenty-odd hippies of the anarcho-Catholic Worker
type that dates back to the Abraham Lincoln Brigade. The men all look
like Gurdjieff and the center of attention is a larger-than life woman,
called the Duchess when she's out of earshot, who sort of resembles
Madame Blavatsky in burgundy sweaters. Smitty likes the setting: big
white-and-brown farmhouse, retired dairy farm amidst densely forested
hills, smell of damp alder-wood smoke drifting through the omnipresent
Douglas firs. The meals are good: vegetarian fare, homemade bread,
homemade tofu, fresh eggs, real cream. He half entertains the idea of
joining the commune, but there's a commotion in the entryway. A new
member has taken a notion to sweep the area, out of the goodness of her
long-haired, willowy heart, and she's immediately surrounded by three
or four of the regulars.
"No, no, you mustn't sweep
the mudroom!"
"Why not? I feel like it..."
Lower lip trembles.
"You're not the one
scheduled to do it," says the first one.
"We each have our
responsibilities, we had meetings, we gotta do it like we said in the
meetings," adds the second one. "There's a
list. If it says
on the
list, sweep the mudroom, and your name is on it, you sweep the
mudroom." This third one is tall and warrior like, and says it with
arms crossed.
The joy goes out of her face
right there, and she slumps and surrenders the broom.
Smitty has already
planned his getaway.
He catches up to his old
Georgia buddy, Dan, out pulling up yellow flowers in the pasture.
"Uh, Dan."
"Yo, Buddy."
Dan, lanky, sandy-bearded,
always wearing a cowboy Stetson and always smiling, is quite a few
years younger than Smitty but has already seen much more of the world,
and, having seen it, has settled in as the farm's gardener the way
medieval types used to join the monastery.
"Dan, I got to pull up
stakes here and go to work somewheres."
"Tree planting."
"Um?"
"Yep. Pull up some of these
with me. Bend your knees, lock your arms, then straighten your legs.
They'll come right out."
The flowers are pretty, but
Smitty notices he doesn't like he smell of his hands after pulling one.
"What are they?"
"Tansy ragwort. Makes the
cow's milk bad, and if she eats enough of it, she dies."
Smitty starts pulling. "Tree
planting?"
"Yeah. I did that when I was
first out here."
Dan begins weaving tales: how,
when he first reached Oregon, needing work, he discovered a
cooperative, full of earnest hippies, that made bids on government
reforestation contracts and moved, en masse, to the work sites to live
in tents, buses, yurts, and pickup campers, sitting around campfires at
night singing, then working like demons the next day. How the work is
done, the terminology, the small-scale economics, a cross between
migrant work and tribalism. How his crew took over an abandoned
one-room schoolhouse and lived in it all winter, chopping wood,
carrying water.
The Iron Buddha knows that
one. Hey, Smitty...
Yes, the nun. She had worked
so
hard, carrying the water even at night, the steps were uneven and
mossy, but she was determined not to spill even a drop, as her sign of
mindfulness. And the bucket had simply, from old age, sprung apart and
dumped the water everywhere in the moonlight. Big kenshu! So she wrote
a poem: "...No more moon in the water. No more water in the pail!"
I bet there's a connection
here
somewhere, thinks Smitty, but the Buddha has let him tell the story to
himself.
Smart Buddha.
Chopping wood, carrying
water.
"So, uh, Dan, how do
the camp chores get divvied up?"
"Pile up the tansies; if you leave
'em all over the ground like that, they get any wet weather, they'll
re-root. Oh pretty much like in any family, y'know, them that are into
it do it, and if they get tired of it, they stop, then if everybody
else get's cold they'll get the hint and go pick up an ax, whatever."
"Sounds good. Where can
I join?"
"Um, well, Lemmee see."
Dan
straightens up, grunts,, puts his hands on his lower back, and swivels.
"There
are different crews in the co-op, about ten of 'em, and what you do is
join a crew. I was in the Stars; most of the people around here that
are in this thing are on the Face crew. I'll see if I can find out if
there's a crew meeting any time soon."
"Face?"
"I dunno, that's what
they called
it. How about you pick up that pile over there, I'll pick up this one,
and we'll dump it over the pasture fence."
6.
A
digression, both past and present.
So, Smitty, you've
changed a bit.
Shaved a thirty year's beard, grown a whole lot of hair (something you
never got around to doing in the hippie days), had your mid-life
crisis, watched astonished as crazed
terrorists threw planefuls of passengers at buildings in distant
cities. Still a paunchy bureaucrat at work, at home a mass of
contradictions, and gone back to fishing when the time finds you.
Fishing? Yep, sitting
in a hole in
the side of a covered bridge above the drowned Willamette River in a
reservoir, throwing worms at squawfish. The natives around here told
the pioneers that's what they call 'em, fish not fit for the men, gave
'em to their womenfolk. Governments and fishing associations don't care
to be called chauvinistic, so the official name is now, not squawfish,
but Northern Pikeminnow. Uh, huh. The city of Lowell, Oregon had their
festival again this year, and in letters three feet high, the sign said:
SQUAWFISH
DERBY
These
long-headed,
scaly things are described in one publication as "edible, but not
appreciated." They are full of tiny, branching bones, and after picking
the meat slowly off, like gathering grains of rice one by one, you get
a bite of almost absolutely flavorless fish. But Smitty feels
obligated. He grew among people fanatical for hunting and fishing, and
fanatical on waste.
"You gonna make wine out of these grapes?" His
father, eighty-three, asks him, already grieving the waste.
"No."
The answer hits
the old man like a hot bullet.
The purpose of the
Squawfish Derby
is to remove as many of these things from the reservoir as possible.
That's because their staple diet is the smolts of the much more
appreciated salmon, steelhead, and trout. One fish is tagged with a
$10,000 prize-winning tag, thrown back in, never to be seen again, and
about two hundred people, mostly middle aged men, full of beer and
grilled hamburgers, pay five bucks apiece per day to try to catch the
critter. Every squawfish they hand in goes in a fly-blown bin, to be
converted into fertilizer. Oh, well. Nothing Smitty has ever done with
a fishing rod looks like those three-men-in-a-ten-thousand-dollar-boat
TV shows, anyhow.
Smitty mixes in by
wearing a
"Fred's Bar-B-Q" hat and overalls, baits his number four treble hook
with shrimp, throws the rig thirty feet out, watches his bobber, and
comes up with a nineteen inch Northern Pikeminnow -- no tag, though. He
looks over at the bin, and, almost shamefaced, shuffles backward
through the army of the righteous to his truck and carts his catch home
to cook. Southern Boy Eats What He Kills.
Has to work at it, though.
Lots of salt and lemon juice.
Steelhead is of
course much better eating -- when you can get it.
Buddha,
remembering the only time
Smitty went steelhead fishing, can't resist that knowing smile of his.
You like to remember this, too, says
Buddha.
Yeah, well,
glory days.
And we thought we were hot stuff.
Illegal, yes?
Yeah, but, you
know, we
figured -- one fish -- and we felt like they owed it to us.
OK,
says
Buddha. Tell it to me. I have a lot of time today.
All right.
We were
working on this
godawful unit -- clearcut to you -- sixty-five acres of slash and
cliffs. A thing had happened in the morning: There was this rock face,
about forty feet high, and all the tree seedlings were delivered up
above, and the work was down below, no way to get them down but through
this chimney.
Which is?
Uh, a crack, rock over
here, rock
over there, air above you, air in front, air below. Nothing keeping you
alive but your knees pressed against the rocks.
I see it now.
Proceed.
So, we form like a
bucket brigade,
couple of guys above, couple below, me and John in the middle, and hand
these hundred-pound tree sacks down from man to man to the bottom. We
did this awhile, then somebody dragging a tree sack bumps this
basketball-sized rock and it rolls right down into the chimney.
Somebody hollers, "ROCK," and when you hear that you're supposed to go
hide, like behind a stump, only with our knees jammed into the cliff,
and hanging in midair like that, there's nowhere to hide. John is right
below me about six feet, and by the time this rock reaches him, its
contract with mother Earth is going to make it a sure John-killer. So I
kind of lean into it as it's going by, cup it in my hands, shock-absorb
it into my chest, and push off. Like setting up a volleyball. It's
enough, the thing just misses him. Next day my whole chest was blue
with one big bruise.
You have saved
John's life.
Well, that's not how
we think
about it at the time. We're mad that the unit is trying to kill us, I
mean, we're low-life tree planters, not hubristic Greek warriors or
anything, and mad at the Bureau of Land Management because their
inspection has been so tough, and they're not planning to give us full
pay and we're out here almost getting killed for them.
So then?
So then we work the
rest of the
day, and we go out the bottom of the unit, through a bunch of
I-can't-believe-it old growth Douglas firs, just all this stupefying
magnificence, onto a giant one-log bridge with a rusty steel cable for
a bridge railing, and down below in the pool, in near darkness,
something starts splashing around. Everybody looks at everybody else.
FISH! And we all get buck fever. Jump down
the bank and fan out around the pool.
"There goes one!"
"What's that? Salmon?"
"No, steelhead. BIG
steelhead, they're spawning!"
"Can we get one?"
"Damn right! Look,
you all herd
'em this way, I'll hit one over the head with my hoedad, right? Tonight
we eat good!"
We walk in the water,
slipping
over the wet riprap, toward John, who raises his weapon suddenly --
beaning Steve with an audible thump. Steve falls to his knees, moaning,
but keeps watching the action through his fingers, which have blood on
them.
"Didya get him? Oh, my head! Didya get him?"
"Yeah, Steve, we got
him. You gonna make it?"
"Uh, yeah, yeah, I'm
fine. Where we gonna put him?"
I've got the only
empty tree bag,
so they slide the fifteen-pounder into the belted canvas bag on my
hips, and we scramble up to the gravel road, twenty feet above, in the
gathering twilight.
A four-wheel-drive
pickup comes
around the corner of the mountain, and, sure enough, it's two
fresh-faced dudes from the Department of Fish and Wildlife. As they're
rolling down the window, the crew lines up on each side of me, so they
won't be able to see my tree bag flopping.
"Hi, fellas. Say, did
you see any fish down there when you came across?"
"Yeah, yeah!" (Flap,
flap.) Eight
good men eager to assist in the DFW's counting. (Flap,
flap.) "About
six, maybe seven steelhead, nah, no salmon. Pretty good looking
steelhead, though." (Flap, flap, flap flap.) Steve puts a bloody hand
in the bag, calms our dinner.
"Thanks!" Scribbling
in their
Tatum clipboard with a number two pencil. "Say, fella, you need some
help? How'd you get that nasty cut?"
"Oh, I ran into some viney maple back there,
I'm OK."
They stare at him some more.
"Really am. Uh, am." Steve grins,
tries not to faint.
"All right. Well, you
take care of yourselves, now." Vroom, vroom.
Flap, flap, flap.
We had fish steaks
that night, best ever.
Thank you. I always
like hearing you tell this.
Why?
But Smitty
knows better than to ask. Buddha answers questions with questions.
Is there anything
you would like to add?
Yeah, about Steve. I never
liked
him much till he reached in my tree bag and helped out there. He was
hurting pretty bad, but kept his head.
Presence of mind. Like
you and the rock.
Whatever.
Accept for yourself, as
for him. It is never a matter of scale.
Buddha lets that sink in for a bit.
But you
are sad.
Well, Steve, you
know, a few years
later, went feral-pig hunting in Hawaii. And one of the guys was
carrying a thirty-eight, and a pig ran across in front of them, and
this guy takes a bead on the pig and fires just as it goes behind
Steve, and Steve goes down and dies in under three minutes. Just like
that.
Buddha just looks
at Smitty and
doesn't say anything.
Smitty notices there's a little more rust on the
end of the iron Buddha's nose. It's been a year since he's looked,
maybe this Buddha is still out in the rain in that kid's back yard.
Smitty finishes
typing his
thoughts and goes outside, listening to the strange emptiness of the
sky -- no jetliners anywhere. People are walking about quietly,
admiring flowers and fountains, or standing under the huge English oaks
along the campus quadrangle listening to a rain of acorns. Some of them
have family or friends that worked in the New York towers. The people,
all kinds of people, don't
seem angry, or confused. They seem to him extraordinarily beautiful in
their dignity.
He thinks of the
passengers on
that plane over Pennsylvania, telling their loved ones goodbye on their
little telephones, then walking down to the cockpit to end their lives
in the grace of self-sacrifice.
The first jet Smitty
has seen in days passes overhead.
7.
Days after
young Smitty passed his driver's license
exam, in a stick 1960 Chevy Brookwood station wagon the length of a
football field, he asked his dad if he might borrow the wagon to go
fishing for a few days. Surprisingly, this Depression-era, dour,
penny-watching, ultracautious man agreed; perhaps it was the mention of
fishing, a manly activity. He always encouraged manly activities, but
the kid was a consistent disappointment. His feeling was that his only
son would not put out effort.
Said, "That boy is like a turtle on a
log."
Said, "What he has got is lead-itis of the
butt-itis."
What
Smitty tended to put effort into was reading, which did not bode well
for the family's prospects in the next great depression.
But getting out of
the house, yes,
he would put effort into that. Smitty had spent countless hours in the
creek and woods behind the house, and once ran away from home for three
days at the height of winter, surviving in a self-made wigwam in a
frozen swamp. That swamp bit was not far behind him, and he thought it
might figure into car-key denial, but, no, in keeping with his
restraint at the time of the boy's earlier disappearance, the father
softly replied, "That's nice, son, where to?"
"I thought Stone Eagle."
"Some good bass in there, catch one for me."
Handed 'em over. Wow.
Filled the wagon with
camping
gear: tent, couple of moth-repellent-wafting olive green blankets,
change of clothes, cans of beans, Boy Scout knife, canteen, and the
always-obligatory Snakebite Kit, which years later was found would do
more harm than good if actually used. He did put in a spinning rod and
a small tackle box, but that was just for camouflage. He was after some
other kind of fish; not sure what, but he felt it was something he
couldn't explain to the old man.
Stone Eagle, an organizational
campground and
forest preserve near the Oconaluckie National Forest in deepest
Georgia,
centers around two things: a mysterious pile of rocks in the
shape of a giant eagle, dating back to Creek and Cherokee times,
perhaps beyond, and a 110 acre lake bordered on most sides by oak
thickets and pine openings, both generously carpeted with poison ivy.
Throughout his childhood, most of the family vacations were spent here,
two hours' drive from the suburbs of Atlanta. They'd always stop first
at the Eagle, climbing the five steep flights of stone steps in the
observation tower, and look down to see if the mound had changed. It
never did. A high fence had been built around it to keep shiftless
hoodlums from shifting the grapefruit-sized quartzite rocks around.
Smitty stopped here,
in deference
to family tradition, easing into a shaded parking place with
self-conscious attention to the yellow lines, hoping no one was
watching that might shout, "New driver! New driver! Lookit that!" The
tower, gray and a bit forbidding, was sometimes locked, but he found it
open and wandered up through the darkness to the open windows. Yep.
Eagle's still there. Nope. Not changed much.
A stranger once found
him looking
down on the Eagle and told this: "Back in the forties, a fella had come
in here on a rainy night and stayed over, and along about two in the
morning a big bobcat got in, worked its way to the top floor, panicked,
bounced around the walls a few times, then jumped the man and killed
him. So that's why they put in that door at the bottom, and lock it up
nights."
The room, entirely of
stone, had
only the glassless windows on the viewing side, and lofted five floors
up, just above a seamless canopy of of oak and poplar trees. Seemed a
particularly sad place to die on a November night. Smitty didn't stay
long.
At the lake the road,
in 1965,
came down from the hot Georgia piedmont to the north and curved along
the lakeshore to a small boathouse. The building was just big enough to
hold a retired gentleman and a cash box; outside this stood a soft
drink machine, a pay phone, and a mercury vapor lamp. Thousands of
white moths lay beneath the lamp, testimony to its lone night vigils.
Alongside the building, at water's edge, stood a long-legged shed,
under which lay lay about fifteen wooden jon boats, green with yellow
numbers, the objects of the gentleman's care. A sign on the shed
read:
DAY USE ONLY
FISHING ONLY
$2/DAY
Smitty pulled up beside
the dead
moths. The old gentleman, of impressive girth and gruff appearance,
seemed to intimidate newcomers but was kind to his regulars. He huffed
up from his chair, took one and a half steps, and leaned in the
doorway.
"Hey, Mr. Johnson. How have you been, sir?"
"Oh, hey, kid. Where's your
old man? He arright?"
"Yessir, he's well. I'm
here on
my lonesome this time." Smitty didn't want to dwell on his newness in
this adult world, but the gent sensed both his reticence and his pride:
a first-timer out of the parental eye. An occasion to be marked by not
commenting.
"You here f'r'a boat?"
"Yessir, and may I
ask, I'd like
to take Number Eleven, here, over to the point, camp out there for a
few days? Won't cut up any trees or nothin'."
He looked across
the
water. "Y'dad knows you're here, right?"
"Yessir, and
here's
our phone number, sir."
"Okay, son, you'c'n do
that.
Things are slow, that's a fact. Y'kin leave y'car here. There's this
fire ring over there, use that, n'a good flat spot, but don't wander
off. Bad swamp back there. Check in w' me inna mornings."
"Yessir."
"Six bucks."
"Yessir."
"Here's yer paddles."
"Yessir, thank you, sir."
Under the eye of the
ancient Lord
of the Boats, Smitty was careful to be seen carrying the spinning rod
and the tacklebox, but he felt the lack of bait might be a giveaway. At
the time, in those parts, true fishermen carried a cricket cage or a
minnow bucket, and a large stringer, made of clanking steel rings, to
carry their catch of bass and bream. If he suspected a sham, he had the
grace not to say.
Number Eleven was a
high-sided
three-seater, sixteen feet long, square on each end, with a chunk of
cinder block for an anchor. It was the one not much favored by the
fishermen, because it tended to catch too much wind when still-fishing,
but Smitty liked it for that; he could get onto the lee end of the lake
and sail downwind, putting one paddle in the water behind him to steer
by. He rowed over to the
point, on the
east end of the lake, good for camping because it was to windward and
would not have a lot of mosquitoes, and good for him because there was
no road access. He could put up the tent, stretch out, nap, eat, read,
go off and paddle around, eat some more, sleep, build a fire, stare
into the fire, hum, chase snakes. Read, sleep. Thoroughly explore the
forbidden swamp. None of that "get this, do that, what are you sitting
around for?" His own schedule. For, hmm, only the second time in his
life. And this time with permission. he lay in the sun like a turtle on
a log, soaking up the future.
The last night, he put
his
kerosene lantern on the landing, so as to find his way home, and rowed
out to the middle of the lake under a stunningly red sky. Blankets,
dinner. Prepared to stay as long as the stars wanted company. Dropped
anchor in thirty-three feet of dark green water.
Ate beans, read till it was
dark,
which was quite late out away from the trees, looked about, made his
bed in the bottom of Number Eleven, put his feet up on the seat,
watched stars and things come out. Vega, overhead. Jupiter to the south
there. Bats flying low over the water, a moment of wings thrumming by
in search of whatever moths had been missed by the mercury vapor lamp.
Fell asleep.
Along about two in the
morning,
Smitty came to. Felt distinctly Not Alone. Had a brief moment of
remembrance about the bobcat, but it wouldn't be one of those. They
hate water. He lay still, wondering if maybe a cottonmouth had got in
with him, but those have a distinctive smell, a bit like watermelon.
And rattlesnakes waft a bit of cucumber. There was a smell, all right,
but it was like a wet rug.
Something mammal, then.
Smitty eased up in the dark
and
peered over the gunnel. A beaver, looking for all the world as long as
the boat, lay on the still surface, ten percent showing, like with
icebergs. Eyes closed. Legs sticking out a bit, tail. Shiny in the
starlight. Dead? He reached out a finger. Poked the wet fur.
There was an explosion.
Water
geysered up and descended on Number Eleven, the blankets, and Smitty,
as the startled beaver slapped water and sounded. The kid screamed.
Maybe twice, for good measure. His heart raced for a good while, and he
was fairly cold from the drenching by the time he got round to raising
the anchor. Could it have been sleeping out there, hundreds of yards
from the shore? Never heard of a beaver doing that. Then again, the
beaver had never heard of a boy doing that, either. They had both had a
pretty rough moment there. He set with the paddle.
In the morning, he packed up,
paddled around for three more hours, then pulled into the boathouse.
Mr. Johnson took possession of Number Eleven. He spotted the boy
sneaking to the wagon with the rod and tackle box, and couldn't resist.
"So, didya catch anything?"
With his Baptist upbringing Smitty felt
compelled not to lie outright. He explained that there had been a
really big one, but it had gotten away.
Back home, his dad helped him
bring in his stuff. If the fishing gear looked like it hadn't been
used, he didn't say. He fingered the rod a bit, as if to muse to
himself, where the lad could hear him thinking. Just. Whatever that boy
was up to, he could only hope it was Not a Bad Thing. The silence hung
between them like a sleeping beaver.
Buddha stops by.
You didn't
mention that on this trip you
did meditation.
What's the worry? Didya lose
some product placement there?
Buddha grins.
It's not about
me.
If so none of you would ever have heard of me. As it is, the first
thing they did about it was make me into a religion. Did you think,
going into that forestry cooperative, that it would become what is
usually called a religious experience?
(Nah,
that's just youth. Think about it, reader, assuming you're over thirty:
didn't everything that happened when you were about twenty-three to
about twenty-seven carry a freight of Significance? And your memories
of being younger than that, or much older than that, aren't they
getting a bit hazy? But the holy time, the hot zone, that time when the
music becomes the Real Music ever after, and anything else is just some
other doombah's golden oldies -- They say we become ourselves at about
two to four, but maybe that happens later, during a time of brighter
sunsets, deeper-hued waters. The smell of a deer's blood, if you first
smell it in your early twenties, will be the smell of blood to you
forever. That's just something about the wiring. So, Reader Under
Thirty, if you're gonna have religious experiences, get cracking.
They'll last you. Maybe outlast you, I dunno.)
Smitty gets
to the meeting of Face
crew at Slough Creek late on a Monday night. It doesn't look like a
meeting, it looks like a party. People are handing around plates of big
brownies, and one guy in John Lennon glasses with bushy grey hair and
beard and a black felt crusher hat is belting out melodies on a
gleaming soprano saxophone. His backup is a short, immensely muscular
black man in a multicolored shirt and dreadlocks, working the head of a
handmade conga drum. Smitty doesn't even know what these things are,
but they sound good to him after a long diet of pages from a Baptist
hymnal. A bronzed greek-goddess type offers Smitty a brownie.
"Have a
little milk to wash it down. But not too much." She smiles
conspiratorially.
Smitty likes food, and
especially
likes chocolate, so he's back to the brownie plate at regular
intervals, between snatches of conversation in which he apparently
joins the crew and is introduced to various craggy, bearded faces and
broad-shouldered, weathered blonde women. Suddenly he's thirsty, and
heads for the kitchen looking for a tumbler and tap water. The sink
balloons up under his eyes, and he realizes that he doesn't actually
know how to get water from a tap. Very alien thing, this silvery,
snaking device extending from the kitchen counter.
Smitty navigates slowly
through a
tilting living room, filled with undulating people who all sound as
though they are talking under water in a faraway place, and falls, in
slow motion, like a leaf or a bit of goose down, into an overstuffed
chair that seems to be vibrating and shimmying though the colors of the
rainbow. He checks his hands. He can feel that they're holding still,
yet they look as if they're rotating at the wrists.
"Cheezuz," says someone
nearby. "The new guy ate six brownies."
"Didn't he know what was in
them?" No, what?
A bushy black beard, flecked
with
silver and gold lights, looms nearby. "You better stay put for awhile
there, bud."
"Help," says Smitty, weakly.
"No, just stay there.
Breathe deep
and real slow." A blanket, woven of a thousand glittering stars,
appears across his lap.
Smitty feels his
eyes widening and
growing around to the sides of his head. He can see for miles,
everything in focus: each tree, every leaf of salal and salmonberry,
every fiddlehead glistening with the recent rains, every mouse
scurrying along windthrown hemlock logs. Uttering a croak of delight,
he spreads his black wings and swoops from his favored perch, a dead
branch near the top of a lightning-shattered old Douglas fir, seeking
beetles, flying ants, or maybe an unsuspecting earwig. Beneath him, the
shadows of small grey clouds, fresh from the Pacific, skitter across a
patchwork landscape of old growth and clearcuts, yarder landings,
gravel quarries, and beaver ponds. Slowly the light around him fades,
as though he has flown gently into one of the small clouds.
Next thing he knows,
he's sitting
in a cafe in a town he's never seen before. An empty cup is sitting
before him on the counter, and his friend Dan is pouring, apparently, a
second cup of coffee for him.
"Uh, where am I?"
"This is the Alderton
Cafe,
Omega
Farm owns it. Today's my duty day. You were saying?" Dan's wearing some
kind of long white apron with little stains of avocado on it. His
farmer's fingernails are clean.
"I guess I forget."
"Something about Zen and
the Art
of Motorcycle Maintenance, and how you understand it now."
Dan
looks
him in the eye appraisingly. "It seemed REALLY important to you."
"What day is it?"
"Thursday."
A guy, all bushy-beardy,
comes in
the front door. Smitty thinks he hasn't seen him before. Comes right
over to the counter. Puts his finger almost in Smitty's face.
"HIM!
That's the guy! Barfed all over my front steps and just drove off
without cleaning up after himself!"
Dan interposes himself
between
them.
"What did you expect? I hear there was acid in
those brownies,
not just hash, and you expect a new guy, looking for work, is gonna
know that? Did anybody bother to tell him? You start in on him here and
I will personally put you on the sidewalk."
Dan's not a big fella, but
suddenly he looks like a pro wrestler. "Well,"
says the dude,
"whatever,
I mean ya can't always look out for everybody, they gotta have some
smarts on their own."
"One thing at a time. So has
he
joined your crew?" Dan picks up a glass and starts cleaning it with a
dishrag, as a sign that The Crisis Is Over.
"I think so, yeah. And we
need
bodies, even a greenhorn." The big stranger rubs his chin though the
deep beard, turns to Smitty. "You got gear?"
"I've got my truck, clothes,
food."
"Hard hat? Rain gear? Caulk
boots?"
"What are 'cork' boots?"
Dan leans across the counter,
smiling. "He can have mine."
The tall guy looks
back and forth
between them, settles his light blue eyes on Smitty. "Ok, meet the
crummy at
the Greenwood Creek bridge at four-thirty tomorrow morning. Bring your
own lunch and water. We'll give yuh a dag and bag till the end of the
contract. What do we call yuh?"
"Smitty."
"Right, I'm Burt." Shakes
hands with a rough, supercalloused palm.
Four-thirty?
And what's a "crummy?"
8.
"Hi, I'm
Chuck, this is Willard, Amy, Juneen, Bill, Mike, Murray, Jerry-Up,
Jerry-Down, Burt, and Marie. We're gonna pick up the MaGruders and go
on up the hill."
"Uh, I'm
Smitty."
"Pleased to meet ya. Kinda crawl on to the back
there, put yer stuff under the seat, and take a nap if ya want, it's a
dark commute."
Smitty has never
seen a set-up like this before. As it pulled up, one headlight bright,
the other dim, it looked, in the dark, like some kind of over-extended
station wagon, but seats twelve, plus the driver. Five forwards, two
reverse. An unholy aroma of abused bodies, mud, long-dead food, and the
ashes of some kind kind of burning weed. He settles in next to a large
form hunkered in the darkness.
"Hey, I'm Burt.
Ya remember, ya puked on my porch."
"Sorry about
that."
"Well, things
happen. Sleep tight."
"Uh, yeah."
Burt shifts around a bit, winds up with his
massive head on Smitty's shoulder.
Lots of country miles, like driving through a
snake's guts, later, Chuck pulls the crummy off onto a wideout, just as
some
daylight has begun to appear, and two bushy-beards with Lennon glasses
throw their caulks, lunch sacks and hardhats in and climb into the last
front seats. They're twins. Must be the MaGruders. The gears rattle and
grind a bit, then the rig turns onto a gravel road and starts climbing,
in second, then flow, then low-low. Smitty's ears are popping. Then the
noise stops.
"Piss stop!" yells the driver.
Moaning, the crew crawl over one another and line up
alongside the road, the men standing, the women squatting. No one looks
at anyone else. There's something in front of them worth seeing, anyway.
At his feet Smitty sees the world drop away, a
sea of stumps almost at right angles downwards, receding into a cloud
bank that stretches to the horizon. The sun's rising over the clouds,
setting all their faces and the surroundings on fire, bright orange
with morning's promise. The air is already so clear, above the cloud
banks, that Smitty can see individual fir trees on islands of
mountaintop three ridges away. The horizon actually seems curved, like
an ocean's rim. Smitty has seen a lot of beauty already, done some
hiking, been above clouds before, been out of sight of land, has
watched the Mississippi and the Rockies and stuff roll by Rocinante's
windows, but somehow none of it has prepared him for this.
Buddha's curious. How was it different?
Oh, hi. Dunno, just, you know, a lot of those
other places, grand and all, but this had, umm, sublety. Like, the sun
came up and that was your basic C major chord like in the movies, but
then, on the clouds, there were all these pastels. Everybody got it.
There was this worshiping silence, and then somebody kind of whispered,
"Holy Shit." Even though they'd seen this maybe a hundred times, it got
to be new all over again every time, because it was that good. With all
the city folks still in bed. And suddenly I knew this was what I wanted
to do, was be here with these people and do what they did, so I could
be in places like that for as long as I could get away with it.
You stayed awhile.
Yeah, I did. I got old out there.
Regrets?
Nope.
Not about that part of it, anyhow.
When the crummy starts up again, things begin
to happen all through its innards. Feet squeeze into tall caulk boots,
coffee is poured, low conversations, coughs, noses blowing.. The
MaGruders are eating identical
oatmeal from identical wooden bowls. Hard hats are fished out from
under seats. A wisp of smoke drifts back from the front, and a small
soggy hand-rolled cigarette travels from hand to hand. By the time it
gets to Burt, it's small and even soggier. He produces a small surgical
clamp, clips it onto the brown paper along what's left of one side,
inhales from the smaller, non-smoldering end, and offers it to Smitty,
saying, in a curiously high pitched voice, "want a hit?"
Smitty's thinking of of the coughing some where
up front. "Uh, no, but thanks."
"Suit yourself. This stuff helps keep the rain
outta your bones."
They're arriving at a Scene of Destruction,
upended stumps, raw boulders, rusted jerry cans, a cleared flat gravel
space, big enough to turn around a tractor-trailer truck, oil-slicked
puddles, sawdust, deep tire tracks. A green pickup truck is standing
there, at a crazy tilt in the giant tire tracks, with a pile of brown
paper sacks the size of trash bags in the truck bed. Two men in rain
gear walk over to the crummy.
"Hey, Chuck."
"Hey."
"Got a full crew?"
"Yeah, twelve an' a newbie."
"'K, well this one's all slash down the right
hand side, 'bout five
acres, then a rockpile, good ground below the rockpile, steep but good
coming up the left side, twelve acres overall."
"Well, we could do it in a day if you'll let us
wide it out a bit."
"Well, I might, it's northeast aspect and we
think it'll survive good,
but the C.O. says stick to the contract, so we gotta hold you to the
nine-by."
Smitty suddenly realizes he's listening to Greek
or Chinese or
something. Arrh, every trade, a new language.
"Hey, Smitty!" Chuck's waving at him a large
rubberized canvas bag sewn
to a heavy web belt and a wicked-looking tool the size of a pickax.
"This here's a dag and bag. Mostly we own our own
here, these are
spares. Yuh want to stick about eight bundles of trees in here -- " He
demonstrates with twist-tied handfuls of green-topped, brown-rooted
seedlings " -- these are fifties, so that's four hundred, and keep
track of yer totals. This job's 'by-the-tree.'" Now grab yer dag,
follow me."
The tool has an ash handle a bit over three feet
long, curved like a
single-bitted axe handle. Smitty sees that it has a long flat blade at
the end, at right angles, for punching into the ground at the end of a
swing. The other crew member have curved blades, and they look sharper,
too. This spare must be an older model, the one no one else wants. Par
for the course.
The trees are heavy around his waist. The
unpadded belt is cutting off
circulation, bruising something. With the unfamiliar caulk boots, rain
gear, hard hat, gloves and tree bag, Smitty feels like a deep-sea
diver. He's sweating already, and he's not even off the landing.
Everyone else is already gone. Chuck disappears into thorn-covered
brush ahead of him. There are seedlings everywhere, protruding from
freshly upturned earth, and from the fog below, Smitty can hear
matter-of -fact conversations mixed with the thunk of the crew's
hoedads into the ground.
Chuck leads
the way, half crawling in mud and rotting vegetation, till
they come out into open ground downslope from the brush.
"This here's
the 'line,' see? Trees above yuh, no trees below you. So
yuh go nine feet -- that's three hoe handles till yuh get yer eye --
put a tree in, then nine feet to th' next one, like the checkerboard.
'Course, stumps and stuff will mess up yer grid, so yuh gotta adjust to
it."
"The
inspectors -- " he nods toward the green hats, who are standing on
stumps, leaning on shovels, chatting -- "are not yer friends,
and they
are going to be inspecting tight here. Ninety per cent quality pays a
hundred on contract price, eighty pays ninety, seventy pays eighty,
sixty-nine pays NOTHIN'."
He looks at
them again, to make sure his voice hasn't carried.
"They're
under pressure from above to pay ninety or less, so we gotta
keep our numbers up. That means planting tight-by, go eight feet
instead of ten, when the logs and stuff'll let yuh."
One of the
inspectors ambles over to watch the lesson.
"Y'open the
hole with the hoedad at the bottom by pulling up on the
handle,
see? Then the top by pulling down. Now yuh've got a hole twelve inches
deep and four across all the way down. Right? Now take yer tree and
dangle
the roots down; give 'em a shake so they'll hang loose and won't get
caught
upside down, see? 'Cuz roots upside down don't work -- they'll die on
yuh;
if all the roots are upside down the whole tree'll die. They only work
one way. When it's sunny, keep it in yer shade, too, and don't hold it
out in the wind
too long. All that sun and air'll kill yer tree. Now yuh pack the dirt
around the tree with yer hoedad blade, once, twice, like this, so
there's
no air pocket -- that air will kill a tree in the ground
just like it will in yer hand. Now press down with yer foot, but not
too
close to the stem and not too hard. There's hair roots, yuh can't see
'em,
on every root yuh can see, and if yuh get rough you'll strip those off
at the base, and they'll die, and there goes yer tree. O.K.? now on to
the next spot."
Smitty spends
the next half hour fumbling around with the awkwardly
heavy tool, the dirt and seedlings, trying not to fall off the
mountain. Chuck sticks with him, correcting his moves, commenting. The
inspector watches, amused. A bald eagle flies overhead, resplendent
even in the rain, but no one's watching. The hillside rings with tools
hitting stones and pebbles, the chuff of spiked boots into slick logs,
heavy breathing, and muttered curses.
It's hard, it's
uncomfortable, it's cold, it's wet, it HURTS to be here. But Smitty's
feeling a rising excitement, like he's singing inside. This activity
seems to have limitless potential of some kind, for measuring one's
self against one's self, like track and field. He hefts the hoe over
his shoulder and punches it deep into the earth.
"That's the spirit," says Chuck.
9.
Smitty's life has become a bruised but happy blur.
Mornings, he wakes easily; he's always been his own alarm clock. He
picks a time and -- bim! --
his eyes pop open. The crew discovers this and award him the role of
bellringer.
In the darkness his arm snakes forth from his sleeping bag and he feels
assorted pants and shirts in a pile on Rocinante's truckbed floor for
dampness. The least damp or mud-stiffened pants and shirt are nominated
as today's dress code.
Staggering outside in unlaced tennis shoes, he picks up a cold,
rained-slick hammer from a stump by feel and with his other hand waves
around in the air until he finds a seventeen-inch long forged-steel
hoedad blade hanging from a strand of baling twine. This he pounds on
for thirty seconds until lamps and flashlights pop on all over the
still-benighted camp.
"Okay, Okay, Smitty! Cheezis fugin
cries arready!"
Someone stumbles over bodies in the entryway of the crew yurt, dodges
pairs of sweating caulk boots hanging from the low rafters, lights the
white-gas lantern and begins the invariable breakfast of eggs with
broccoli.
Smitty likes ketchup on his.
The sky rolls slowly over into an alloy of lead and silver as boots,
dags, bags, raingear, and lunches are stuffed into the crummy, followed
by eleven groaning bodies.
The engine, feeling all of its two-hundred-twenty-seven thousand miles
plus a night of near-freezing rain, mumbles and hiccups as water in the
gas line is cleared away by sheer starter-motor power, and ultimately
catches. The headlights take a stab at the darkness, firs, cedars,
alders, hemlocks, stumps and Forest Service road signs appear and
disappear at regular intervals, punctuated by the occasional spooked
deer or even bear, and after many turns on hairpin curves over black
gulfs of wet wilderness, the crummy comes to the landing as the day
turns to as much day as it's going to.
Still pretty dark. The wind shoves brush around on the landing in the
rain, but the clouds, rippling through like a fast freight, never part.
Shrug into wet raingear, lace up caulk boots, slap on hard hat, bag up,
discuss the line strategy, step over the edge. Muscles still sore from
yesterday complain at first, then oil themselves with their own
internal residue and fade into the routine.
Lunch, standing up, shivering. It's whatever you bring. Smitty's is
baked potatoes sliced in half, with strips of bacon as the filling.
Crummy up, drive home, headlights, deer and bears again.
You like routine,
queries the Buddha.
What are you doing here? I don't meet you for decades yet.
I get around. You do look happy.
Umm, yeah, but, like, once all the days get to be the same, how much of
this can anybody take?
You will do this for another
ten years.
You are froggin kidding me!
Buddha has nothing to add.
A sunny day after what seems like months of rain. The crew puts in a
last ten hour day to finish the contract on time. As the crummy reaches
camp, it's still light. The rain has already soaked into the porous
earth and the grass looks inviting.
Chuck parks the crummy, and for a moment no one moves. All eyes are on
the transformed campsite. The setting sun, dropping down into a notch
in the westward-trending canyon, illuminates the beaten trucks, cars,
and buses, the sagging, bewildered tents, and the yurt with its rusting
cap and chimney. Dogs run to the crummy, wagging almost cheerily.
Chuck opens the door and and simply slumps to the earth. Bill and Mike
crawl out and simply lie down on top of Chuck. Willard, Burt, and
Jerry-Down pile out of the passenger side, take three steps, kneel and
collapse. Amy, Juneen, Murray, Smitty, and Jerry-Up simply add
themselves to the pile-on. The two heaps of treeplanters lie their,
like seals, with the dogs' inquiring tongues on their faces, for a good
twenty minutes.
The Magruders, who have stayed home today, noticing that no one has
come to dinner yet, leave the comfort of the yurt fire and amble out to
inspect the dazed herd. They pull their red wool crushers low over
their eyes and hook their thumbs in their suspenders.
"Uhhh, y'all want any macaroni and hamburger? Or doncha?" they ask.
"Got coffee, too." They turn around, as one, and stroll back to the
yurt.
The piles untangle, limb by groaning limb.
That night, the rains return with force. Rocinante's roof sounds like
she's been parked under a waterfall.
Smitty digs deeper into his sleeping bag, with just his nose sticking
out. He puzzles over the treeplanter heaps -- that felt nice, there
were no barriers and no one seemed to mind being napped on top of by
everyone else -- and tries to figure out how much he's made this week,
and reminds himself to sharpen the scalping blade on the back of his
hoe -- hit too many rocks today. And ...
With a sharp blade, too, you can quietly even up the dangly roots that
go over ten inches on your seedling, prevent J-roots and loss of income
to
disgruntled inspectors. Some let you trim, some don't. With the ones
that don't, you might go to their superiors about the catch-22 of
hoe-trimming
versus J-roots and the boss tells them to bring scissors and do the
pruning for you on request. So when you do that, they hate you and
things
just go from bad to worse. Better you look around, and as soon as they
are
preoccupied with something or someone else, schwick! -- it's pruned and planted.
There's an inspector standing by Smitty's bunk, which is strange
because the roof is only four feet high.
"So, Smitty!" he says, smiling wickedly. "I have to ding you or you
won't pay any attention!"
"Uhh, 'Scuze me? Tryna sleep here?"
"I know you are; that's just the problem. Lookit your line!"
With a sweep of his arm, Tatum clipboard in hand, the inspector's
gesture takes in the soggy, slash-befouled hillside. All along Smitty's
line the meticulously mineral-soil-scalped planting spots have baked
potato-and-bacon sandwiches planted up to their waists and properly
tamped.
Smitty can't see what's wrong with his sandwich planting, and turns to
the inspector to say so. But the inspector is now standing, arms
akimbo, with his mouth open impossibly wide. From it there comes the
sound of branches slipping past other branches, slapping faster and
faster through larger branches: crackings, smashings, roarings.
Smitty's suddenly wide awake, and somehow he knows what the sound is. A
tree is coming down, a fir, old-growth. It's going to hit the
truck and obliterate his little life from the earth.
There's nowhere to go. No time to wriggle out of the sleeping bag. The
forest hulk, shedding tons of moss, lichens, limbs, branches, twigs,
and rudely wakened birds, brushing aside hemlocks and alders as it
comes, is here -- here now -- surely here now, to crush the yellow
truck and its sweat-bemired occupant, oh-too-young-to-die. Now it
strikes, splintering millions of, five hundred years' worth of, fibers
--
-- and, umm, has missed the truck. The impact actually causes Rocinante
to leap, perhaps a quarter of an inch, rocking on her axle springs. But
there is, here, no death.
In the morning:
"D'ja, uhhh, hear anything last night?"
Amy, sleepy-eyed, regards the newbie, almost amused.
"Tree, somewhere, maybe."
Smitty's obsessed with the derailed freight train of broken timber that
interrupted his strange dream. In two days is his day off. He tries
upstream from camp, following the creek till the trail threads out,
snaggling his way through viney maples and thimbleberry until he comes
to it: a trunk seven feet thick, that has broken its neck among the
boulders, leaving wracked hemlocks and red cedars in a gap in the
forest canopy just beneath the clouds.
It's more than a quarter of a mile from camp.
10.
Burt and Chuck spend a good part of the next morning coaxing the
crew-bus crummy to life. Chuck cranks the motor over while Burt fills a
mayonnaise jar from the gas line, separates the gas from the water by
pouring slowly into a battered fuel can, and pours the gas back into
the truck's fuel tank. Then Burt sprays lighter fluid on the air
filter, Chuck cranks the engine over again with the twelve-volt's last
gasp, and the engine catches.
"Town. Gotta call in," says Burt to Smitty's raised eyebrow. Most of
the crew, all the men anyway, pile in.
"Beer run!" Oh, the joy.
Smitty's not really into beer. He spends the day wandering around the
mountainside, poking his nose into boomer holes and tree hollows.
Amy and Juneen are packing the yurt's furnishings into a couple of
galvanized trash cans.
Amy is twenty-three, pretty except for a broken front tooth, round like
a muscular apple, always wears overalls. She speculates a lot without
saying much of it aloud. Juneen is nineteen, taller than Amy, not
nearly as strong but so focused she outproduces her. Juneen is, or was,
a few years back, a runaway; ordinarily she would have wound up living
under a bridge in Portland and dying of dirty needles, but lucked into
hard work in the woods instead. They both love being here.
Amy spots a blue hole in the sky and brings all the caulk boots out to
dry in the sun, arranged in semicircles on old growth fir stumps. She
keeps pushing the boots back and forth on the stumps.
"What are you doing?" asks Juneen, in the yurt doorway with a dented
aluminum pitcher in one hand.
"Porkypines." Amy dreamily rearranges the last pair, and chums it
together with a gigantic pair of wet sneakers.
"Come again?"
"In th' winter th' porkypines got cold, see? So they, they got together
and one of 'em said, 'Look, we're all freezin' our butts off out here,
how about we circle up and we'll all be warm.'"
"I can see a problem with that."
"Yeah, that's th' point of th' story. So they circled up and they went
to stickin' each other, on accident, an', like, 'Ooh.' an' 'Owie.' an'
such, so they they spread out some -- "
"In the snow?"
Amy looks crushed. "Sooo, y'know this one, huh?"
"Not really, but you tell it so I can really see it."
"Uh-huh, well, so there they was freezin' again, so they went back 'n
forth till they got some body heat but not stickery."
"Wow."
"Yeah. This crew, it's like that, everybody gives a little 'n takes a
little. Even the new guy. So -- I guess I like it here."
"The new guy is nuts."
"We're all nuts, Juneen; you think anybody with any sense would be
happy in this much mud?"
Smitty, meanwhile, deep in the shade of some big-leaf maples on the
hillside, has knelt among the sword ferns, remembering a way of playing
that he had when a little boy. He breaks fallen twigs so that each one
is about the size of a new pencil, and sticks then in the ground side
by side, until he's made a little stockade, complete with barracks --
"Smittyyyyy!"
Woops. How long has he been here?
Juneen and Amy want help with the yurt poles.
To dismantle a crew yurt, first remove the polyethylene walls, with
their rips and burn holes covered with duct tape, and roll them up.
Take the shortest rafter, a ten-foot-long debarked and sun-dried
lodgepole sapling, the one with no eyebolt holding it tensioned against
the upper cable, and worry it till it comes loose in the interior of
the yurt in your hands. It becomes a tool. with it, you can push up on
the canvas roof from beneath, then walk the roof off to one side,
exposing all the other poles to daylight. Fold the roof so that its
steel cap, which is also the flashing for the woodstove pipe, rests on
top. Remove the other poles from the top of the upper cable, all
but the four that have the cable threaded through them. Stack the
rafter poles on the roof rack of the Jimmy-crummy, hanging out over the
headlights and the taillights. Now loosen the turnbuckle on the upper
cable, unthread it, take the remaining four poles that are still jammed
in the plywood donut ring that held the cap and stovepipe, and walk
them over to the side, dumping the donut ring on the ground. Next you
undo the bottom cable's turnbuckle, gather up both cables, unbolt the
door frame from the wall lattice, walk the lattice up flat, and place
the remaining rafters, the door and door frame, the rolled-up plastic,
the lattice, and the folded canvas roof on the crummy's roof rack and
tie down the load with scraps of rope. It's tempting to use the wall
cables, but you don't want to kink the wire rope.
Sounds complicated, but once you've done it you can get it down to
twenty minutes even with three people and two dogs.
Sounds ugly, and it is, but this is the Seventies -- cops won't pull
the crummy over unless it actually dumps something on the freeway. Live
and let live, more or less.
Smitty likes working with the women way better than working with the
men, though he's too shy to say so and wouldn't know how even if he had
the guts. Amy and Juneen feel it, though. They each know they'd be safe
alone with him -- well, they would be with any guy on the crew; company
loyalty is fierce and part of that is you uphold the dignity of your
mud-buddies as best you can -- but Smitty is this much different: he
likes to sit and listen to girl talk and join in.
Town means, among other things, a bar and a beer and chest-thumping.
Citizens staring. Here he can stack poles and wind up wire rope and
hear Amy thinking.
Amy wondered about this at first. To Juneen, in private: "D'ya think
he's gay?"
"No, he just likes being in our world."
After the kitchen is packed away in and on and behind the crummy, the
rain starts up again, and they gather all the boots and stash them
under the owners' assorted vehicles.
"Hey," says Amy. "Y'know that warm spring we heard about? I found it on
the district map."
"Yeah?" Juneen pushes her hair out of her eyes. She can feel it's
stiff, gnarly, no shower for three weeks.
"Whaddya think? Smitty, you got gas in your truck?"
Pay is by the job, and the jobs are three, six, eight weeks long. No
one's been paid since the last time the crew went to Eugene, a hundred
miles north. The next paycheck is probably a week away. Resources are
slim. Gas for the trip to the next job will come into camp with Burt
and Chuck in a fifty-five gallon drum.
"Umm, got some sawgas. Maybe a half gallon."
"Cool! Wanna go hot tubbin'?"
Rocinante gets a drink of the dark gasoline mixture and they're off.
Amy navigates, shining a flashlight on the map in the gathering gloom,
in Rocinante's cab. She sits in the middle, even though she's wide,
because her legs are shorter than Juneen's.
The headlights show, through the windshield wipers, one forest service
sign, then another. The signs indicate intersections; the roads are
numbered rather than named. Two or four digits means, roughly, paved
trunk roads and graded through roads. Three digits is a spur
road. They find the spur road they want.
"'Kay, Smitty, slow down; we want to go one-and-a-half miles and there
should be a wide spot and a trail off to the left."
"How are we gonna see that?" It's almost pitch black now."
"Shhh! Look. There's a wideout on the left. See a trail?"
"Not much. Looks like a piss-stop trail if anything."
"That's gotta be it. Not a lot of people know this is here."
Smitty pulls over and shuts off the engine. They push through the viney
maples and ocean-spray at the roadside, getting wet through and cold,
and, sure enough, it's a trail. Amy knows woods.
A couple of hundred feet into the darkness, they come to a tiny
clearing among second-growth firs. In the middle is a dark little hole,
about five feet across, with water in it, surrounded by trampled grass.
"This is a hot spring? It's not, umm, steaming or anything."
"It's just a warm spring, silly, just hot enough for a good bath
without cooking us up. Touch the water."
Smitty kneels down and, sure enough, just like a drawn bath. Warm, not
scalding. In all this rain in the middle of nowhere.
The fever for a washing up hits all three of them at once. Shoes,
pants, overalls, shirts, bras, and jockey shorts fall in a heap.
Smitty can feel the cold pressure of the grass stems on his buttocks
and the heat of the water on his tired, scabbed shins. In moments, he's
up to his neck, prone in the shallow and probably muddy water, lying
with the back of his head pillowed on the bank.
With a naked and attractive woman on either side of him, shoulder to
shoulder and hip to hip.
And all any of them can think of is that their poor, long-suffering
pores are opening to the heat of the water ... ah, paradise.
Juneen sits up, washes her hair, lies down again, drawing the surface
of the warm springs over her like a blanket.
The rain falls on their closed eyelids. No one says anything for a very
long time.
Back at camp, which would be around midnight, they discover that Burt
and Chuck, along with the rest of Face Crew, have returned. There's a
quick crew meeting by the light of the crummys' headlamps.
"So," says Chuck. "Got word. We'll hit Eugene tomorrow, get groceries,
and head up to the Olympics."
"Washington?" asks Smitty.
Chuck looks at him in pity for a moment. Then he looks a bit closer.
"How'd you get so clean?"
[to
be continued]
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