by Tim Poland
When Vernon had returned that autumn and it had all happened, Edith had, of course, heard the story, the public facts, as well as the flurry of gossip that got stirred up around it all. She had taken in what she needed to know and winnowed out the rest. While others whispered and speculated, Edith left judgment and insinuation to “those other fools.” During those first afternoons, so much like this one, Sandy found herself beside Edith’s chair, watching the sunset while the old woman patted her hand, stroked her hair, and demanded nothing of her. With Keefe there was something like love, for certain, but they kept each other at arm’s length, that affection sustaining but never reaching fully into their separate selves. Margie was a mother duck, nudging her fledgling out into deeper water. But Edith understood. Understood her. Understood it all.
Sandy dropped to her knees and sat back on her heels. Edith’s patting ceased, but she kept Sandy’s hand held lightly between both of hers. Her eyes opened slowly, and the grin broadened across her face. The sun was now close to pressing onto the ridge across the pasture.
“You see, sun’s almost touching it now. Told you it wouldn’t be but a bit longer.”
“I’m guessing you enjoyed your day outside,” Sandy said.
“Oh my, yes, dear. Certainly better than being in there with all those smelly old people.” The grin returned, more impish than before, and Sandy had to chuckle along with Edith. “Actually, things got a bit exciting at one point.”
“What happened?” Sandy asked.
“Big old red-tailed hawk sailed right in over the pasture and landed just up there on the roof.” Edith’s eyes trailed up to the roof to their left. “Such a beautiful bird. I do so admire such creatures. Not a lick of nonsense about them. All business.”
“Yes, so beautiful and powerful,” Sandy said.
“She just sat there, taking it all in for a moment. And then she turned her eye on me. Gave me such a look, I swear, as if she was giving serious thought to carrying me off for a little lunchtime snack. Though I don’t know that this old carcass could have provided much of a meal.”
Sandy chuckled again and gave a soft squeeze to Edith’s hand.
“Really now, dear. When you think about it, it wouldn’t be such a bad way to go. At least be of some use to something. Sort of like being recycled, don’t you think?”
Sandy smiled and leaned her head to the side of Edith’s leg. The old woman lifted one hand and began to stroke the younger woman’s hair. “What happened then?” Sandy asked.
“You see those little sparrows over there?” A half dozen house sparrows hopped about the courtyard, searching for edible morsels. “Well, there’s one less of them than there was before. Guess that hawk decided there just wasn’t enough flesh left on these old bones and went for something a bit meatier.”
The rim of the sun began to bite into the ridge.
“There now,” Edith said. “Sun’s made it to the ridge, and I’m a woman of my word. Time to roll me on back in there.”
Sandy stood and gripped the handles of Edith’s wheelchair.
“Besides, if I know you,” Edith said, “you’re on your way to get a little fishing in before the day’s all gone.”
“Hope to,” Sandy said. Keefe might be expecting her, and if she wasn’t too long in getting there, she might make it while the yellow stoneflies were still hatching on the upper Ripshin.
“It’s been such a lovely day, dear. Thank you for indulging me.”
“Of course, Edith.”
“Well, come on now. I’ve held you up long enough. Let’s get this show on the road.”
Sandy turned the wheelchair toward the glass doors and rolled Edith across the courtyard.
“One thing, dear,” Edith said as they came to the doors. “I’m afraid I’ve made a goodly mess in my drawers. Guess you’ll need to get someone in to clean me up a bit. Pitiful being this helpless.”
“I’ll take care of you, Edith.”
With all of her professional precision and efficiency, Sandy settled Edith back into the bed in her room. She cleaned her, changed the soiled pants, and propped Edith comfortably up in bed. She took a hairbrush from the drawer in the bedside table, brushed the old woman’s thin, wind-tousled gray hair, and reaffixed the clip that held it in place.
“Thank you, dear,” Edith said. “Now, you shoo and go catch some fish.”
“I’ll see you tomorrow.” Sandy leaned over and pressed her lips to Edith’s forehead. The old woman’s eyes closed, and the grin eased back onto her face under the younger woman’s kiss.
2
STINK SAT BESIDE HER IN THE TRUCK CAB, GAZING PENSIVELY out the rear window, his muzzle resting on the back of the seat near Sandy’s shoulder. She’d lived with this dog for five years now but didn’t know exactly how old he was. She guessed about twelve or thirteen years, and the veterinarian in Sherwood had said that, given his history, he was in pretty good shape for a dog his age. He’d walked with a slight limp since before Sandy came to Willard Road, when Stink was still the devoted sidekick of Calvin Linkous, but that was the result of a barrel full of birdshot Sandy’s neighbor Tommy Akers had put in the “damn dog’s butt” one time for running Tommy’s small herd of black Angus down the road. “He was still a pretty young pup then,” Tommy had told her. The cyst around the bit of birdshot still in one of his rear legs had grown to the size of a golf ball, though the vet said not to worry about it, and a little arthritis had added to his limp, but he still managed to waddle around pretty well, all in all. The odd mixture of tawny hues that composed Stink’s coat shifted with changes in the light. Sandy still couldn’t decide what color he was.
Sandy had stopped at her house after work to pick up her dog and gear before heading up to Keefe’s. There were still a few hours of daylight left, and if she was lucky, she might yet be able to get in on the tail end of the yellow stonefly hatch. Stink wobbled a bit on the seat as they bumped their way up the fire road, but he kept his chin firmly on the back of the seat.
“Looking very thoughtful today, darling.” Sandy reached over and scratched briefly behind his ears. Stink’s eyes shifted slowly to Sandy. He took her in for a moment, then drew in a long breath and expelled a deep, wistful sigh that made his jowls flap slightly. His eyes returned to the rear window.
“Weight of the world, buddy. Weight of the world.” Sandy’s nose wrinkled a bit. She rolled her window down a few inches further and waved her hand in front of her face.
For most of his life, Stink’s primary mission had apparently been to kill every skunk in his part of the Ripshin River Valley. Thus the name Calvin Linkous had given him. It seemed too appropriate not to keep. His gait was too shaky now for him to be much of a hunter, but every once in a while an unsuspecting skunk would wander too close to the dog for its own good. No matter the various mixtures of soda water, peroxide, and unscented douche that Sandy applied to neutralize the stench, a certain whiff of the acrid smell would linger. Not even time and the sloughing off of old skin and hair ever made the dog fully free of the aroma. Stink’s most recent slaughter had been only about a month ago. A young skunk, newly emerged into the world from its den, had made the deadly mistake of carelessly waddling by the old tractor tire behind Sandy’s house where Stink often curled up.
“A little ripe today, you old killer.”
They appeared suddenly, leaping up the bank from the stream below and pausing, startled for a moment, in the middle of the road. Sandy, however, had been driving slowly up the rough fire road and was easily able to stop a good thirty feet from the doe and her fawn standing in front of the truck. The fawn’s white spots stood out clear and distinct on its sorrel flanks. The doe’s ears were erect and alert, her deep brown eyes locked on the threatening vehicle. Sandy could see the muscles in the doe’s tensed thigh twitching. Stink turned to look for the reason for stopping and spotted the two deer. His bent tail thumped slightly against the seat back, and his mouth cracked open, exposing his pink and purple tongue. Sandy looked at h
er dog, then back to the deer, cupping her hand over the dog’s neck.
“On a good day, you couldn’t catch them. You’ll have to stick to skunks.”
The doe whistled a snort, and she and her fawn fled up the slope. They disappeared through the dense growth of rhododendron lining the fire road as easily as if they were taking flight across open prairie. Sandy lifted her foot from the brake and continued up the road to Keefe’s bungalow.
She pulled her pickup in beside Keefe’s on the fan of gravel at the end of the cottage and let Stink out. He toddled to the wooden steps leading up to the plank porch of the bungalow, sniffed around for a moment, lifted his leg on the bottom step, then walked up to the front door and waited for Sandy.
Set at the back edge of the clearing that opened down to the stream, Keefe’s bungalow fit the space it occupied. Rather than an attempt to force some preconceived structure into the space, it had been built in keeping with the small clearing, the modest Appalachian trout stream pitching down the slope before it, and the forest surrounding it. The bungalow was a decidedly humble affair, a small rectangular structure of well-weathered cedar planks with a mossy cedar-shake roof extending over the wooden porch that ran the short length of the front of the cottage. The porch, where Stink now waited, was enclosed by a railing and the posts that supported the roof canopy. It could not have been more architecturally ordinary, yet each time Sandy looked at it, she couldn’t imagine it actually being constructed. For her, it inhabited the clearing like a creature that had emanated from the soil beneath it, the forest around it.
Stink’s bent tail wagged as Sandy carried her gear up the steps and tried the doorknob. Locked. Keefe wasn’t there. She dug into her little canvas purse, extracted her keys, and unlocked Keefe’s door with her own key. Inside, the bungalow was a two-room affair, the interior space given over to the living area Sandy and her dog entered, with a kitchenette at one end of the open room and a river-stone fireplace at the other. The fireplace was open through to a small, sparsely furnished bedroom on the other side of the chimney stone. A nondescript bathroom opened off of the tiny hallway passage between the main living area and the sleeping quarters.
Sandy dropped her gear on the floor and went to the kitchenette to fill a bowl of water for her dog. Stink amused himself sniffing amongst the more interesting clutter on the heavy pine coffee table sitting in front of the fireplace. The table contained its usual sort of mess—several books, an open fly box containing a variety of different flies, an ashtray, and assorted shreds of material Keefe sometimes used for tying flies. Today there were two crow feathers, one striped belly feather from a wild turkey, and three desiccated squirrel tails. Stink was most intrigued by the squirrel tails. Sandy set the water bowl on the kitchenette floor and walked back into the main living area to get her gear out.
“And stay off the sofa,” she said. Stink looked up at her, wagged his tail a few strokes, took one of the squirrel tails on the coffee table into his teeth, and promptly tugged himself up onto the sofa, where he lay down with a huff and began to lick the dried fur, holding the tail between his front paws. “Such a good, obedient boy. You make me so proud.”
Sandy stepped into her waders and slipped on her fishing vest. The room wrapped around her as she got her gear ready. While the other areas of the bungalow were slight and spare, this room was cluttered and densely packed. At its center sat the coffee table, along with the sofa where Stink now lay and an armchair, both of dark brown leather, both equally cracked and well worn. On the shelves that covered the walls from floor to ceiling all round, books were stuffed with little concern for organization: some set askew, some upright and spine out, others in careless stacks, and all well coated with a layer of dust. What space remained in the room was filled with fishing gear—old waders and fishing vests; an assortment of fly rods, some old, some newer; an old wicker creel hung from a small set of discarded deer antlers mounted on the wall near the front door. In the back corner of the room sat Keefe’s fly-tying bench with a straight-backed chair in front of it. The workbench was in fact an old desk, with a magnifying lamp attached to the left side and a brace of small drawers rising up from its back side. On the desktop and spilling from the drawers, the tools of the craft Keefe plied here—hooks of many sizes, a vise, scissors and pliers, bobbins, spools of various colors of thread, and shocks of feathers and fur in an array of textures, types, and colors, both drab and vibrant. Keefe was a skillful artisan, deftly producing all the standard fly patterns effective on the fish in the waters of the Ripshin River, patterns intended to imitate specific insects at various stages of development as well as those designed simply to attract and excite the eye of a hungry trout. But to Sandy he was also an artist, occasionally creating fly patterns defined more by their fanciful beauty than by any practical application in the catching of fish. He’d made the earrings that now dangled from Sandy’s ears—a fairly conventional woolly bugger pattern, with the hooks clipped off but with strands of aquamarine peacock herl woven through the black fluff. Each time she stood in the midst of the bungalow’s clutter, she felt what she could only explain as an embrace, one infused with a warmth she still craved after these past five years.
Keefe had never been overly forthcoming with details of his past. He had not, at first, even been inclined to permit Sandy much in the way of admittance to his little hermitage. Only as a result of the random happenstance of two anglers along the same river occasionally intersecting did their two very separate lives begin to become intertwined. Though they had grown comfortable and intimate with one another over the years, their relationship remained one very much situated in the present, shaped by a shared love and respect for the waters of the Ripshin and the fish in those waters. About all Sandy knew of Keefe’s past was that he had been for many years a professor at the community college in Sherwood. His credentials could have landed him a more prestigious, higher-paid academic position, but he had chosen Sherwood to be close to the trout waters of the Ripshin Valley. Eventually, Sherwood had not been close enough and he and his wife, Alice, had moved into the little bungalow nestled in the midst of national forest land here along the headwaters of the Ripshin. When his wife died in an auto accident only three months after the move, Keefe retreated into a private world of guilt and grief along the banks of the waters he loved still more. They each had traded a past life, at great cost, for a life along the Ripshin. And this had been a fair trade and enough for each of them. Their lives together thus far were of this place and this time, and neither clamored for more.
Sandy strung her rod and tied on the last yellow stonefly pattern in the fly box she carried in her vest. This one fly would likely be all she required for the evening’s fishing, but if she’d made it in time for the hatch and the brook trout were hitting, it would only be foolish not to have a few extras of this deadly fly pattern. She had a few yellow stoneflies in the emergency case in her purse, but it was simpler to step to Keefe’s tying bench and grab a couple. She knew he’d been tying this pattern in preparation for the season.
On Keefe’s tying bench she found an ample supply of newly tied yellow stoneflies, hooked in neat rows into a square of tattered foam board, at least a dozen of them. Sandy pinched one from the foam board, placed it in her fly box, and reached for one more. The second fly was tied with the same degree of expertise and identical to the first. But it was tied backward. The yellow dubbing was wrapped around the wrong end of the hook shank, making it impossible to thread the tippet through the hook’s eye, and the tinted squirrel-hair hackle swept away from, not over, the hook itself.
Sandy examined the small placard of flies more closely. Three neat rows of yellow stonefly patterns. At first glance they all seemed tied with Keefe’s usual precision. On closer inspection she found one more, perfect, except that it also was backward. Sandy set the card of flies back on the bench and dropped onto the chair. Keefe had always been prone to moments of reverie and distraction. And he’d certainly tied this particular pattern
so often that he could do it almost automatically. That, combined with one of those moments of distraction, could easily be responsible for the faulty flies. After all, it was only a couple of them. Then again, it could signal something more. Sandy, scrolling back through her memory, couldn’t think of any other signs that might, with this incident, begin to shape a pattern. This was simply a fluke, something that could be reasonably explained. Then again, so much of their time was spent apart, when a telling moment would be unnoticed by her. And there was that one time. She had tried to push it to the back of her mind, but it pushed its way forward nonetheless. About a month or so ago, as she was getting ready to leave Keefe’s place, he’d offered her the key to the fire-road gate, so she could let herself through. The entrance to the fire road was barricaded by a pipe-rail gate. To pass onto the fire road required a key to the huge, rusting padlock that held the gate closed. Aside from forest service personnel and game wardens, the only ones with a key were Keefe and whoever owned the other house along the fire road, a weathered, crumbling structure of brown-painted cinder block and plywood a half mile downstream from Keefe’s. “Some fellow from down in North Carolina, I think,” Keefe had told her. “Never seen him.”
That time a month past, Keefe had dug the key out of the clutter on the coffee table and held it up for her. She’d had her own key to the gate for nearly four years by then.
When, with some uncertainty in her voice, she had reminded Keefe of this, he shook his head, chuckled, and tossed the key back onto the coffee table.
“Of course. Wasn’t thinking, I guess. What do they call it? A senior moment?”