Greenwood
Page 1
ALSO BY MICHAEL CHRISTIE
If I Fall, If I Die (2015)
The Beggar’s Garden (2011)
Copyright © 2019 by Michael Christie
McClelland & Stewart and colophon are registered trademarks of Penguin Random House Canada Limited.
All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system, without the prior written consent of the publisher—or, in case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from the Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency—is an infringement of the copyright law.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication data is available upon request.
ISBN: 9780771024450
Ebook ISBN 9780771024467
This novel is a work of fiction. The characters, places, incidents, and dialogue are the product of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Book design by Jennifer Griffiths
Cover art: (tree) Public Domain by https://www.rijksmuseum.nl/nl/collectie/RP-P-1904-2091
Interstitial art: (cross-section of tree rings) © Josef Mohyla/E+/Getty Images
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CONTENTS
Cover
Also by Michael Christie
Title Page
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
2038
THE GREENWOOD ARBOREAL CATHEDRAL
GOD’S MIDDLE FINGER
KNUT
THE GREAT WITHERING
PLANKED SALMON
A STORY TO TELL
2008
TWENTY-SEVEN AND FIVE-EIGHTHS
SUPPLIES
THE HALLOWEEN TREE
LIVE AUTHENTICALLY
JOURNEYMAN
A QUESTION
THE VIOLA
GAPS
1974
WILLOW GREENWOOD
IT’S GOOD TO MEET YOU
ALL THE YEARS IN BETWEEN
I WON’T MENTION IT AGAIN
SUMTHING THAT COULDNT BE MINE
1934
THE CRY
HARVEY BENNETT LOMAX
THE BUNDLE
THE SLIPCASE
BLANK
TO THE TREE
THE HOUSE
A CALLER
THE HOUSE AGAIN
THIS ISLAND, BURNING
THE HERMIT
NO BUSINESS
A DESCRIBER
THE COAT PEG
ALL FREIGHTS
LIAM FEENEY
A CAKE OF SOAP
THE CITY
THE CITY
THE LEAST OF WHAT YOU’LL LOSE
THE RAILWAY COMMAND GROUP
A FLANNEL
YOUR LITTLE HELL
THE BIG MAN
PERHAPS A RELATION?
JUDGMENT
THE SALT RHEUM
1908
HEARTWOOD
MRS. FIONA CRAIG
THOSE BOYS
THE GREEN WOOD BOYS
NUMBERS AND LETTERS
THE LOG CABIN
A CONDITION
RECRUITMENT
AN OATH
A FOUL SWING
PRIVATE GREENWOOD
NO RETURN
COULD’VE GONE EITHER WAY
1934
THE DUST
TEMPLE
THE GREAT LIBRARY OF ESTEVAN, SASKATCHEWAN
FULL TITLE
SAPLINGS
THE HISTORY OF SEED CRUSHING IN GREAT BRITAIN
VANCOUVER
THE SOIRÉE
HER BEDROOM
A TELEGRAM
KEEP HER
FLYING OFF ON YOU
INTO THE MOUNTAINS
A PICNIC
STORM CELLAR
A RETREAT
FIRVALE
ONE OF THE MOST DANGEROUS THINGS THERE IS
GET YOUR THINGS
SENSIBLE
THE ECONOMY OF NATURE
SHOEBOXES
THE SECRET & PRIVATE THINKINGS & DOINGS OF EUPHEMIA BAXTER
GREENWOOD ISLAND
THE NEW SUN WAH
TRAPS
SHORTWAVE
THE VALISE
AT THE TREELINE
HIS VOICE
RIFLES
BULLETS
HER VOICE
THE TIME MACHINE
TO THE TREE
BIRDS
1974
BLACK CARS
WHO DO WE HAVE HERE?
THE READER
BEQUEATHMENT
2008
A SPINE
NOTHING IS TRUE
MAPLES
CLEAR
GROUND ZERO
SUPPLIES
WHAT THEY DID
YOU’RE STILL HERE
JACINDA GREENWOOD
2038
PROPORTEE OF WILLO GREENWUD
THEIR EQUAL
CONSANGUINITY
THE TREE ENTERTAINMENT BUSINESS
BRUSH CLEARANCE
HBL
CATHEDRAL PROPERTY
THE GREENWOODS
THE SECRET & PRIVATE THINKINGS & DOINGS OF EUPHEMIA BAXTER
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
For my family
Trees warp time, or rather create a variety of times: here dense and abrupt, there calm and sinuous.
JOHN FOWLES, THE TREE
There is drama in the opening of a log—to uncover for the first time the beauty in the bole, or trunk, of a tree hidden for centuries, waiting to be given this second life.
GEORGE NAKASHIMA, THE SOUL OF A TREE
THE GREENWOOD ARBOREAL CATHEDRAL
THEY COME FOR the trees.
To smell their needles. To caress their bark. To be regenerated in the humbling loom of their shadows. To stand mutely in their leafy churches and pray to their thousand-year-old souls.
From the world’s dust-choked cities they venture to this exclusive arboreal resort—a remote forested island off the Pacific Rim of British Columbia—to be transformed, renewed, and reconnected. To be reminded that the Earth’s once-thundering green heart has not flatlined, that the soul of all living things has not come to dust and that it isn’t too late and that all is not lost. They come here to the Greenwood Arboreal Cathedral to ingest this outrageous lie, and it’s Jake Greenwood’s job as Forest Guide to spoon-feed it to them.
GOD’S MIDDLE FINGER
AS FIRST LIGHT trickles through the branches, Jake greets this morning’s group of Pilgrims at the trailhead. Today, she’ll lead them out among the sky-high spires of Douglas fir and Western red cedar, between granite outcrops plush with electric green moss, to the old-growth trees, where epiphany awaits. Given the forecasted rain, the dozen Pilgrims are all swaddled in complimentary Leafskin, the shimmery yet breathable new fabric that’s replaced Gore-Tex, nano-engineered to mimic the way leaves bead and repel water. Though the Cathedral has issued Jake her own Leafskin jacket, she seldom wears it for fear of damaging company property; she’s already deep enough in debt wit
hout having to worry about a costly replacement. Yet trudging through the drizzling rain that begins just after they set out on the trail, Jake wishes she’d made an exception today.
Despite the litre of ink-black coffee she gulped before work this morning, Jake’s hung-over brain is taffy-like, and it throbs in painful synchronization with every step she takes. Though she’s woefully unprepared for public speaking, once they reach the first glades of old-growth she begins her usual introduction.
“Welcome to the beating heart of the Greenwood Arboreal Cathedral,” she says in a loud, theatrical voice. “You’re standing on fifty-seven square kilometres of one of the last remaining old-growth forests on Earth.” Immediately, the Pilgrims brandish their phones and commence to feverishly thumb their screens. Jake never knows whether they’re fact-checking her statements, posting breathless exclamations of wonder, or doing something entirely unrelated to the tour.
“These trees act like huge air filters,” she carries on. “Their needles suck up dust, hydrocarbons, and other toxic particles, and breathe out pure oxygen, rich with phytoncides, the chemicals that have been found to drop our blood pressure and slow our heart rates. Just one of these mature firs can generate the daily oxygen required by four adult humans.” On cue, the Pilgrims begin to video themselves taking deep breaths through their noses.
While Jake is free to mention the Earth’s rampant dust storms in the abstract, it’s Cathedral policy never to speak of their cause: the Great Withering—the wave of fungal blights and insect infestations that rolled over the world’s forests ten years ago, decimating hectare after hectare. The Pilgrims have come to relax and forget about the Withering, and it’s her job (and jobs, she’s aware, are currently in short supply) to ensure they do.
Following her introduction, she coaxes the Pilgrims a few miles west, into a grove of proper old-growth giants, whose trunks bulge wider than mid-sized cars. These are trees of such immensity and grandeur they seem unreal, like film props or monuments. In the presence of such giants, the Pilgrims assume hushed, reverent tones. Official Holtcorp policy is to refer to the forest as the Cathedral and its guests as Pilgrims; Knut, Greenwood Island’s most senior Forest Guide and Jake’s closest friend, claims that this is because the forest was the first (and now, perhaps, the last) church. Back when air travel didn’t command a year’s salary, Jake once visited Rome on a learning exchange and saw only curving limbs and ropy trunks in its columns and porticoes. The leafy dome of the mosque; the upward-soaring spires of the abbey; the ribbed vault of the cathedral—which faith’s sacred structures weren’t designed with trees as inspiration?
Now some of the Pilgrims actually begin to embrace the bark for long durations without irony or embarrassment. In their information packages, the Pilgrims are instructed not to approach the trees too closely, as their weight compacts the soil around the trunks and causes the roots to soak up less water. But Jake holds her tongue and watches the Pilgrims commune, photograph, and huff the chlorophyll-scrubbed air with a reverence that is part performance, part genuine appreciation, though it’s difficult for her to estimate in which proportions. Soon they barrage her with impossibly technical questions: “So how much would a thing like this weigh?” asks a short man with a Midwestern accent. “This reminds me of being a girl,” a fifty-something investment banker declares, caressing a moss-wrapped cedar.
While most of the Pilgrims seem to be tuning in to the Green magnificence, a few appear lost, underwhelmed. Jake watches the short Midwestern man place his palm against a Douglas fir’s bark, gaze up into the canopy, and attempt to feel awed. But she can sense his disappointment. Soon he and the others retreat back into their phones for the relief of distraction. This is to be expected. Even though they’ve paid the Cathedral’s hefty fees and endured the indignities of post-Withering travel, there are always a few who can’t escape the burden of how relaxed they’re supposed to be at this moment, and how dearly it’s costing them to fail.
The Pilgrims are easily mocked, but Jake also pities them. Hasn’t she remained here on Greenwood Island for the same purpose? To glean something rare and sustaining from its trees, to breathe their clean air and feel less hopeless among them? On the Mainland, the Pilgrims live in opulent, climate-controlled towers that protect them from rib retch—the new strain of tuberculosis endemic to the world’s dust-choked slums, named after the cough that snaps ribs like kindling, especially in children—yet they still arrive at the Cathedral seeking something ineffable that’s missing from their lives. They’ve read that article about the health benefits of shinrin-yoku, the Japanese term for “forest bathing.” They’ve listened to that podcast about how just a few hours spent among trees triples your creativity. So they’re here to be healed, however temporarily, and if Jake weren’t mired in student debt and hadn’t embarked on such a pitifully unmarketable career as botany, she’d gladly be one of them.
When Jake notices a patrol of Rangers creeping through some cedars in the distance, she carefully herds the Pilgrims to the picnic area for their prepared lunches, dubbed “Upscale Logging Camp” by the resort’s Michelin-starred chef. Today, it’s artisanal hot dogs with chanterelle ketchup and organic s’mores. While watching them photograph their food, Jake’s eye snags on a particular Pilgrim sitting apart from the group, wearing large sunglasses and an unfashionable cap pulled low. He’s wealthy, some Holtcorp executive or actor no doubt, though Jake would be the last person to know. Because she can’t afford a screen in her staff cabin—her student loan interest payments don’t leave her enough for internet access—she seldom recognizes the resort’s famous visitors. Still, the true celebrities can be identified by that glittery aura they exude, the sense that they’ve forged a deeper connection to the world than regular people like her.
After lunch Jake escorts the Pilgrims to the tour’s grand finale, the largest stand on Greenwood Island, where she hits them with a poetic bit she wrote and memorized years back: “Many of the Cathedral’s trees are over twelve hundred years old. That’s older than our families, older than most of our names. Older than the current forms of our governments, even older than some of our myths and ideologies.
“Like this one,” she says, patting the foot-thick bark of the island’s tallest Douglas fir, a breathtaking tree that she and Knut have secretly named “God’s Middle Finger.” “This two-hundred-and-thirty-foot titan was already a hundred and fifty feet tall when Shakespeare sat down and dipped his quill to begin writing Hamlet.” She pauses to watch a stoic solemnity grip the group. She’s laying it on thick, but her hangover has cleared and she’s finally found her rhetorical groove. And when she gets going, she wants nothing less than to wow the Pilgrims with the wonders of all creation. “Each year of its life, this tree has expanded its bark and built a new ring of cambium to encase the ring of growth that came the year before it. That’s twelve hundred layers of heartwood, enough to thrust the tree’s needled crown into the clouds.”
As she’s wrapping up, a hand shoots skyward from the back of the group, upon its wrist a thick, dangly Rolex. “A question?” Jake says.
“How much do you think one of these is worth?” the celebrity says while kneading his square chin between his finger and thumb. “One tree. Ballpark.”
Normally, she’d shimmy out of answering a question of such crudely capitalistic inanity. But coming from that face, from behind those regimentally straight teeth that resemble actual pearls, it nearly sounds witty.
“Oh, I really couldn’t say, sir,” she says in a serious tone. “These trees are fully protected by Holtcorp’s strict preservation—”
“Just toss out a number,” he persists.
As a Forest Guide, Jake is routinely advised against making prolonged eye contact with Pilgrims, to avoid interfering with their epiphanies—but she now boldly peers into the greenish depths of the man’s expensive sunglasses. “It depends,” she says.
“On what?”
“On who’s buying. Now are there any other questi
ons?”
“You want a photo?” the celebrity asks her just before they start back. He says it like he’s offering an object of great value. She nods and he stands abreast with her directly in front of God’s Middle Finger, aiming his phone with a hooked wrist, kinking his neck into the frame. He doesn’t know that appearing in photos and selfies are indignities that Forest Guides are contractually obligated to suffer—they’re certainly Jake’s least favourite part of the job. To think of all the photos she’s haunted in her nine years here, a sedately smiling extra, briefly appearing in the brilliant, globe-trotting lives of others.
“What’s your name?” the celebrity says, thumbing the screen afterwards. “I’ll tag it.”
Only because she’s required to, she tells him.
His eyebrows crest from beneath the rim of his sunglasses. “Any relation?” he says, doing a little finger twirl, meaning: to all this?
Jake shakes her head. “My family are gone,” she says. “And even when they were alive, they weren’t the island-owning type.”
“Sorry,” he says, wincing.
“It’s fine,” she says, forcing a smile. “But we ought to be getting back.”
Just as the group rejoins the path, Jake notices that some patches of needles high up on the east-facing side of the old-growth firs have browned. Odd, especially at this time of year. She calls a premature water break and picks her way back through the waxy salal underbrush while scanning the canopy. The Pilgrims wait at the trail, tapping the toes of their Leafskin hiking boots, eager for the private luxuries of their solar-powered Villas, which are in fact secretly grid-connected, because the primeval canopy allows only enough actual sunlight to power a two-slice toaster or to charge their phones, not both.
Upon closer examination, Jake discovers two firs, both directly adjacent to God’s Middle Finger, whose needles have rusted to a stricken, cinnamon tinge. And down near the soil, she notes that a few sections of their thick, cement-grey bark have gone soggy. A tree’s bark performs the same function our skin does: it keeps intruders out and nutrients in—so any weakening of the bark does not bode well for the tree’s long-term survival. With her heart banging behind her ribs, Jake scrutinizes the soggy tissue as though she’s peering out a car window at a roadside accident—with curiosity and horror, compassion and revulsion—but the bark seems to be intact, and there’s no sign of hostile insects or fungal intrusion. Somewhat satisfied, she takes one last look before hurrying back to the impatient Pilgrims.