Book Read Free

The Meadow

Page 1

by James Galvin




  The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way. Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the author’s copyright, please notify the publisher at: us.macmillanusa.com/piracy.

  CONTENTS

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Acknowledgments

  Often I Am Permitted to Return to a Meadow

  I.

  II.

  Also by James Galvin

  Copyright

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  I wrote this book for Emily.

  Thanks to Allan Gurganus, William Kittredge, Richard Kenney, Jorie Graham, William Strachan, Abigail Thomas, and Beverly Pepper for their help and encouragement. Special thanks to Curtis Bill Pepper for talking it out of me to begin with.

  Thanks also to the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation for a grant which helped enormously in the writing of this book.

  The text on page 131 first appeared in the Coe Review under the title, “Small Countries.”

  OFTEN I AM PERMITTED TO RETURN TO A MEADOW

  as if it were a scene made-up by the mind,

  that is not mine, but is a made place,

  that is mine, it is so near to the heart,

  an eternal pasture folded in all thought

  so that there is a hall therein

  that is a made place, created by light

  wherefrom the shadows that are forms fall.

  Wherefrom fall all architectures I am

  I say are likenesses of the First Beloved

  whose flowers are flames lit to the Lady.

  She it is Queen Under The Hill

  whose hosts are a disturbance of words within words

  that is a field folded.

  It is only a dream of the grass blowing

  east against the source of the sun

  in an hour before the sun’s going down

  whose secret we see in a children’s game

  of ring a round of roses told.

  Often I am permitted to return to a meadow

  as if it were a given property of the mind

  that certain bounds hold against chaos,

  that is a place of first permission,

  everlasting omen of what is.

  —Robert Duncan

  I.

  The real world goes like this: The Neversummer Mountains like a jumble of broken glass. Snowfields weep slowly down. Chambers Lake, ringed by trees, gratefully catches the drip in its tin cup, and gives the mountains their own reflection in return. This is the real world, indifferent, unburdened.

  Two rivers flow from opposite ends of Chambers Lake, like two ends of yarn being pulled off a spool at the same time. The Laramie River flows through its own valley, through its own town, then into the North Platte. From the opposing end of the lake the Cache la Poudre gouges into a steep canyon down to the South Platte River. At North Platte, Nebraska, the two forks of the Platte conjoin and the separate, long-traveled waters of Chambers Lake remarry.

  The real world goes like this: Coming down from the high lake, timbered ridges in slow green waves suddenly stop and bunch up like patiently disappointed refugees, waiting for permission to start walking out across the open prairie toward Nebraska, where the waters come together and form an enormous inland island, large parts of three large states surrounded by water. The island never heard of states; the real world is the island.

  There is an island on the island which is a meadow, offered up among the ridges, wearing a necklace of waterways, concentrically nested inside the darker green of pines, and then the gray-green of sage and the yellow-green of prairie grass.

  The story of the meadow is a litany of loosely patterned weather, a chronicle of circular succession. Indians hunted here in summer, but they never wintered here, as far as we can tell, not on purpose. It’s the highest cultivated ground in this spur of the Medicine Bow, no other level terrain in sight. There have been four names on the deed to it, starting just a hundred years back.

  The history of the meadow goes like this: No one owns it, no one ever will. The people, all ghosts now, were ghosts even then; they drifted through, drifted away, thinking they were not moving. They learned the recitations of seasons and the repetitive work that seasons require.

  Only one of them succeeded in making a life here, for almost fifty years. He weathered. Before a backdrop of natural beauty, he lived a life from which everything was taken but a place. He lived so close to the real world it almost let him in.

  By the end he had nothing, as if loss were a fire in which he was purified again and again, until he wasn’t a ghost anymore.

  The way people watch television while they eat—looking up to the TV and down to take a bite and back up—that’s how Lyle watches the meadow out the south window while he eats his breakfast. He’s hooked on the plot, doesn’t want to miss anything. He looks out over the rim of his cup as he sips.

  The meadow is under two feet of snow, which looks gray but not dirty in this light. Leafless willow branches make an orange streak down the middle. Each year the snow tries to memorize, blindly, the landscape, as if it were the landscape that was going to melt in spring.

  The wind has cleared a couple of the knobs above the meadow, and the silver-gray sage throbs out. Above that stands the front line of timber, where the trees begin, or end, depending, still dead black though the sky has brightened behind it, a willing blue. Nothing is moving across the meadow this morning.

  Yesterday sixteen elk streaked across the hillside above the meadow. Lyle could easily imagine what they had done to the fence where it runs under deep drifts on the east side. They walked through it, not even feeling the barbs through their winter coats. They dragged broken wire through the woods, strewing it like tinsel. He’d find the pieces in the spring like tendrils of steel briar growing along the ground. It doesn’t make him angry anymore, as it did in the early years. He figures the elk have been crossing that section of timber to forage on the north side of Bull Mountain for a lot longer than there has been anyone here to build fence and get pissed off every time the elk tear it up. Now he splices the fence with baling wire, which is lighter, so it will break easier and always in the same place and not get dragged so much or pull out posts.

  The first light hits the meadow and the kitchen window, and it’s like Christmas lights going on. The trees go from black to loden green. The snow turns a mild electric blue and sparks.

  A white crown sparrow lights on a small juniper branch that bends down and springs back up. Lyle says, “What kept you?” The sparrow hops onto the windowsill as a chickadee lights and begins bouncing up and down on the juniper branch just left by the other. “And you, you cheerful little sonofabitch, you don’t waste no time either, do you?”

  Lyle slowly straightens his stiff joints as he gets out of the chair and shuffles (his shoes are still untied) over to the wood stove. He picks up the plate with the extra pancake, carries it back to the table, and sits down. He cranks the window open about an inch—not enough for the birds to come in and kill themselves trying to get out—pinches off some warm pancake and crumbles it onto the outside sill. “Little beggars.”

  When the day’s first visitors have finished their crumbs and flown, Lyle picks up a two-month-old newspaper Ed Wilkes brought and begins to read, but he is soon interrupted by a tiny beak tapping on the glass. This one is a junco, and then the chickadee is back, bouncing from branch to branch chirping. Lyle gives them some crumbs. Addressing the chickadee, “I don’t know what you’re so goddamn happy about all the time.”

  There’s a racket of chirps and squawks by the front door. Lyle unbends out of the chair again, takes an
other pinch of flapjack to the door, and steps outside on the stoop. The screeching squawk is a Stellar’s jay, who flees the wire he’s perched on as soon as the door opens. He’s had enough stones and snowballs pitched at him to know. To the little row of sparrows that has returned to the perch Lyle says, “That hatchet-head won’t bother you now.” All at once they fly down and light on his uplifted palm. They peck off pieces of cake and flee back to the wire like greedy children waiting another turn. When the pancake is gone Lyle goes back inside to wash the dishes.

  Once, coming back from town, I saw Lyle’s truck parked at the Wooden Shoe. I stopped to say hello. Lyle was building a new garden fence, and as I approached, he held up his hand, a signal not to come closer. Then he leaned his shovel against the post he was setting and walked slowly across the garden to where a barn swallow was perched on a rail. Lyle took off his glove, and with the back of his huge index finger, touched the swallow gently under its throat, then ran his finger down once, gently, over its breast. Then he put his glove back on and walked away, and the bird took to the air again.

  Lyle said, “Up close them swallows are the funniest damned looking things you ever saw. They fly like angels and then up close they look like little clowns. The damndest thing.”

  Lyle’s thinning hair is the color of last year’s grass next spring, fresh from under the long snow. He cuts it himself, so it’s always nebulous on top and hacked away in patches above the back of his neck, which is red with chain link creases.

  He would be almost homely if he didn’t look so bright: long in the chin and nose, wide of mouth, eyes such a cutting pale blue that when he looks at you, he makes you think of whatever it is you are ashamed of. It’s like he can smell your soul’s feet.

  I’ve never seen a stranger meet him who could return his stare. Not that he’s trying something. He’s just looking at you. I’ve known Lyle since I was two years old. There’s nothing he doesn’t know about me. That’s the only reason I can look him in the eye.

  Lyle is sixty-three. When he sits in a straight-backed chair he kind of folds himself down, like a folded union suit—the terrible posture of someone who is usually exhausted before they allow themselves to sit—legs crossed, hands in lap, almost liquid shoulders.

  When he smiles at a joke you can see a lot of gold behind his teeth. And his eyes flare in their far blue.

  Here’s the first dream: Lyle is still Lyle, still driving the ’59 Studebaker that sounds more like it runs on an electric motor than a gasoline one it’s tuned so fine, but you can tell it’s a dream when he drives it into Denver: the kind of detail that lets the dreamer know he’s dreaming even as he dreams.

  The dreamer, outside this dream, has only seen Lyle ruffled once. That was the time his sister, Clara, put his rifle in her mouth and painted the roughsawn boards in his room with her brains. Generally, he’s unflappable: The time his baler caught fire he didn’t seem in much of a hurry to put it out.

  In this dream he’s scared to tears just from being in Denver. He arrives at this house my family lived in for a while. The pickup is loaded down with tape measures of many sizes, all sprung out of their cases. Some are as big as rolls of steel, the way they come from the mill. We start unloading them, but we can’t because we are cutting our hands to shreds and we haven’t got any gloves. Lyle’s eyes are like blue lasers. His tears shine like some light leaking out. Then we are both crying because we can’t get the tapes out and Lyle doesn’t understand the directions for getting out of the city. I offer to go with him but he refuses, saying things just have too much direction and you can’t find your way back to anywhere, and besides, someone has to stay here with the tapes, which have somehow unloaded themselves while we were talking and weeping.

  So we shake bloody, shredded hands, both weeping inconsolably because we know that Lyle will never find his way out of the city and back to Sheep Creek, but he is leaving anyway, and I am left standing there with all these tape measures on the lawn of a house where I don’t live anymore.

  I want to go to Sheep Creek, too, but I can’t because of all these tape measures, different sizes, too heavy to lift, too sharp to touch without slicing my fingers into more spaghetti than they already are. I can’t even wave good-bye right.

  The first owners of the meadow on Sheep Creek (Indians, like I said, never wintered in these mountains) were just hiding out. That’s what Lyle says. They weren’t really trying to make a go of the place and they didn’t. Back then a man could have homesteaded a bigger hay meadow closer to town and down out of the mountains so he wouldn’t be buried alive for six months a year. Lyle said, “They were horse thieves or xenophobes or something.”

  The second name on the deed is App Worster’s, a good enough man by plenty to make the place work. He built miles of fences, yards of homemade wooden pipe, a house, barns, sheds, corrals. He put up hay with horses and got down to scythe among the willows where the mower couldn’t go. He never quit from last star to first, proving that the price of independence is slavery.

  That was before hunting laws and App could harvest what he needed of deer and elk, antelope, grouse, brook trout. Outside the fence around his own meadow there wasn’t any fence in those days, so App could turn his cows out in summer and bring them home in winter to feed them the hay he’d made.

  What broke App was trying to keep his wives from dying. When one died he married her sister. When the sister died they left four kids and enough doctor bills between them that App had to give up his freedom to stay out of jail.

  The third owners weren’t even close. They lost the place in the Depression.

  White as death and twice as cold, mathematical, it offers itself as a symbol of all stillness, all isolation when it reaches the windowsill and no one is going anywhere for a while, or when, by March, the drifts loom higher than the roofs of houses. The snow is deepest up on Deadman, where all our streams begin, where timber combs the snow out of the wind.

  Sometimes in summer the air is so dry the rain evaporates before it reaches the ground. When it rains hard the soil can’t take it in. It washes out the roads and pours off the surface of the pasture. Here what living things depend on is the snow that melts off mountain faces and high timber, swelling our springs and streams, filling the reservoir, infusing miles of irrigation ditches, making the meadow green.

  Lyle is down mowing. From up here by the cattleguard on the hill, the Farmall looks like a river barge, low in the water, pulling upstream as it makes its first swath through the deep timothy that borders the streak of willows along the creek. The tractor moves forward but Lyle is looking back as he goes, watching the scissoring blades of the sickle bar take down the tall grass. Going forward looking back, spiraling toward the middle of the field.

  There’s a coyote following the tractor, just about ten feet behind it. Every so often he pops into the air like he’s been stung and pounces. He’s catching field mice the mower turns up. Lyle isn’t paying any attention to him.

  A lot of people would shoot a coyote if they got that close to it, which is why a lot of people never get that close. This one isn’t Lyle’s pet; coyotes can’t be tamed, even if you start with a pup. It’s as close to a pet as Lyle has, though. He won’t have a dog or cat for fear of becoming too attached.

  Lyle admires coyotes for more or less the same reasons others hate them. To begin with, the average coyote is smarter than the average human. That is why it’s so difficult to trap them, and why they haven’t gone the way of wolves. Then there’s their toughness and uncompromising independence: if by some lapse in attention one is caught in a trap, off comes the offending limb and he’s on his way.

  As the price of defiance they have to work harder than most animals just to stay alive. They live mostly on mice and insects. When they are lucky or clever enough to come up with something bigger they are overcome with joy and love for one another. They rhapsodize. They harmonize their loneliness and sorrow and they don’t care who likes it.

  Lyle says for
coyotes, “They sure never pity themselves.”

  When he gets done mowing he will climb down, choke the tractor, and walk around where that coyote is sitting down just looking at him. He’ll chuck a stone or a block of wood at the critter and say, “Don’t you know better than to come that close to people?” The coyote, trotting casually away, watching Lyle over his shoulder as he goes, of course, does know better. He knows the difference between this man who lives in the meadow alone, summer and winter, and the ones who set the traps and poisons and poke the muzzles of .30-.30s out the windows of their pickups. This human has somehow raised his consciousness almost up to coyote level.

  The coyotes trust Raymond, too, but they must think him sentimental: he puts out Alpo for them. Ray and Lyle can argue all night about the desirability of moose or wolves or grizzlies, but they are in accord on coyotes. Ray says, “You can admire a coyote—he’s an outlaw, but it’s damned hard to admire a sheep.”

  Each year when Ray drains the reservoir, trout get stranded in pools below the dam. One August a mother coyote showed up with her two pups to teach them a thing or two about angling, coyote-style. It was before sunrise, but she didn’t realize a drunk can be awake anytime, and that morning he surprised them. She somehow let those pups know to run for cover while she held Raymond in her gaze. He tried talking to her, and after awhile, she decided he was harmless if not quite admirable.

  The next morning she showed up by the weir in full view of the house. There was the open can of Alpo. Ray was watching, drinking instant coffee, from the kitchen window. After that the three coyotes came in broad daylight. Ray and Margie Worster watched from the house as they splashed and romped in the shallow water, swallowed whole about a bushel of trout apiece, and, bellies swaying, moved off to find some shade in which to spend the rest of the day, and maybe sing a little toward dusk.

 

‹ Prev