To Ben, James, and Paul, who taught me how to be in a family
Contents
Before 2003
April 15, 2015
May 20
Before 2009
May 21
May 22
May 23
May 24
May 25
Acknowledgments
A Note on the Author
I think hard times are coming.
—Ursula K. Le Guin, 2014 National Book Awards
Things You Would Know If You Grew Up Around Here
This Drought Is the Worst Anybody Has Ever Seen
Even the oldest of the old-timers agree. It’s been more than two years since the lakes were full, and now they’re at less than 30 percent. Cattle are dying, so beef prices are skyrocketing. The towns at the bottoms of the lakes are rising up out of them.
The old-timers say it’s not the apocalypse but the leading edge of it. They say that we’re giving too much water to the rice farmers one hundred miles south; this area of the world was never meant to grow rice. The restaurants on the lake closed a long time ago. The boat ramps jut out into thin air.
They say an El Niño will fill everything back up, as if the warming of the earth is a good thing. But rain or no, we will be a desert one day. That is the direction this part of the earth is taking. Once we were at the bottom of the ocean. The dinosaur bones you find here are finned, the limestone the remnant of an ancient seabed. The coming storm will bring water, but it’s temporary. The tide is on its way out.
BEFORE
2003
After Boyd’s first day of kindergarten, she’d told her mother about Miss Davis, her teacher, and how the woman was sad. By the second week of school, Boyd told Lucy Maud that Miss Davis had lost a little girl. Lucy Maud had not known what to do with this information, so she’d stayed after one day when she picked Boyd up. Miss Davis wore a floral dress, pink flowers on a black background, and the belt had bagged at the waist. Through the window, Lucy Maud saw Boyd happily playing on the blacktop next to the playground, swinging a striped, segmented jump rope. One two, the rope clacked as it hit the ground. One two.
Miss Davis had been hanging letters on a bulletin board, but she stopped when Lucy Maud came in. “Have a seat,” she told Lucy Maud, and Lucy Maud had folded herself into the offered chair, a foot off the ground, meant for kindergartners. She’d looked down at the table: the name tag read BOYD. One two.
Lucy Maud hadn’t known what to say, hadn’t, in fact, known what Boyd meant. So she just said what she’d come to say: “Boyd says you’re sad. Did you lose a little girl?” How young she had been, how stupid. She hadn’t considered how much this question would hurt. One two.
Miss Davis stopped, hand resting below that loose belt, cupping an absence. “What?” she asked, pale under the fluorescent lighting.
Lucy Maud, now aware that she’d asked the question too bluntly, that she was doing more harm than good, rose. “I’m sorry. I didn’t think—”
Miss Davis was more than pale then, ashen, grief across her features, but it was a private grief, something she’d been unable to share. To the world, miscarriage is an unfortunate thing, a disappointment, something medical, but to the mother, a death to mourn alone. “How did Boyd know? It was this summer, and I’ve been so careful not to say anything.” She pressed her eyelids closed, unsuccessful at keeping the tears at bay. “I’m sorry.”
Lucy Maud stood to offer a tissue, saying No no no, don’t be sorry, and now the jump rope was silent. Miss Davis took the tissue and gasped. Lucy Maud turned to see what Miss Davis saw: Boyd in the window, eyes big in her freckled face, called to Miss Davis’s pain. Who could blame the woman for the fear that hardened her features? It was a monstrous thing.
There had been other times. Hurt children trailed Boyd for years. Anytime Lucy Maud let her out, they’d follow Boyd like some pied piper, giving her candy, toys, pencils, erasers, marching almost martially behind her. At the Texas State Fair in Dallas one year, Boyd, maybe ten, had convinced Lucy Maud to buy one hundred dollars’ worth of skin care products, even though they didn’t really have the money, and then had, at home, tossed the stuff in the garbage. “It doesn’t work,” Boyd said. “But the man needed money or else he’d lose his house.” When Lucy Maud had pressed, Boyd had said two children, a boy and a girl. Boyd had said maybe; she’d said she thought. Lucy Maud had been unnerved, sure, but had dismissed it. What child didn’t have a wild imagination?
The time on the road trip to Colorado when Boyd had said Turn here: the elderly couple broken down on the side of the road. The time at the grocery store, Boyd lingering on the greeting-card aisle, selecting a sympathy card for Aunt Jackie, two days before Kevin’s brother Dillon had died in the car accident. The time Boyd, much older, sixteen, came to Lucy Maud and told her about her husband’s girlfriend, back when Lucy Maud still thought she’d be married to Kevin forever.
All of these things, so easy to ignore. Simple explanations, really. Boyd was perceptive, maybe; maybe she paid attention. Paid so much attention that other people’s trauma hurt her. A sort of sympathetic lightning rod. But no, that wasn’t quite right. Boyd was like the forked stick of a dowser, positioned over dry earth, tuned not to water but to pain.
April 15, 2015
In the fourth year of the drought, Boyd erected a scarecrow. She was technically a senior in high school, but she’d been homeschooled since seventh grade when she had made that scene in the middle school cafeteria. Her mother had pulled her out of school, and her father thought it was fine—it was a better educational model anyway, he thought, and he told Boyd to read Thoreau by the edge of their lake.
Boyd hadn’t started with the scarecrow, though. That year, when they were deep in the throes of the drought, their next-door neighbor, Carla, half a mile up the road, made organic soap for a living and had oils delivered in drums. An empty drum washed ashore one afternoon in March, floating because the lid was still attached, and by the beginning of April, Boyd had scrubbed it, coated it with waterproof paint, and set it at the corner of the house where the garage gutters drained.
But it did not rain, so Boyd had time to study the barrel. She did not like the green she had painted it, as the house was on a downslope and the green cut into the sky, so she repainted the drum, blue this time, the matte blue of the bluebonnet, of the vein in the crook of her wrist. One morning a scrim of water was on the lid, and she knew the mosquitoes laid eggs in nothings, in slips, in waters the depth of eggshells. She turned the barrel on its side, cut a hole, and lined it with wire screen to trap any mosquitoes that grew inside, and she built a stand so that it would not roll down the hill. Dew no longer collected on the top.
That was the year a mosquito could shrink a baby’s head, the year we poisoned our children in Flint, the year we sprayed millions of gallons of water into the ground to loose the gas instead. That was the year we arrested looters, that year when the lake fell and towns emerged. There was a fire just east of the capital and the smoke dusted everything. The wind took the fire and unfurled it, a motion like the casting of dice.
Still no rain, so Boyd instead repaired the decaying network of gutters that lined the eaves of the entire house, so that one-half inch of rain would fill the fifty-gallon bucket. She did not wait for the rain but planted anyway, despite her mother’s objections about the cost of water. She planted Big Boy tomatoes, Celebrities, yellow pear tomatoes, all from starts, all already bearing fruit on the branches. She planted rosemary and oregano, the fragrance attaching to her fingers, then to her clothes, then to linens and furniture and dishes until she tasted
the herbs in meals when she had not added them, smelled them in her shampoo. She scattered a handful of pole beans across a cleared patch, the beans clicking as they hit the parched earth. “Be fruitful,” she told the beans. “Multiply.” She watered them into their new home with the hose, and still it had not rained.
As she worked, she thought about what she was, about the things she felt that were not her own, about the way she had even come to see clear thoughts that did not belong to her. She did not think about this vision in any specific way, no ordered questioning of who she was and what she was for, but she simply felt the keen difference between herself and everyone else she had ever met. Something told her that she was not alone, that at least one more person was out there who understood and processed the world in the way that she did. Her mother was not this person, nor was her father. Isaac was the only person who had never asked anything from her emotionally, never taken a strength or comfort from her to use for himself. But Isaac was not the person she sensed out there in the larger world, the one who would understand what Boyd was because that person was the same thing.
The new blooms on her plants would not fruit and she blamed the lack of bees. She took a paintbrush to the plants early one morning, spreading pollen from blossom to blossom, as Isaac’s father, Ruben, had taught her to do. Isaac would return home soon from his first year at college, and Boyd did not yet know what they were, or if she would easily slide back to him, the way that she wanted. The grackles gathered and she built the scarecrow from an old pair of jeans and a pink lawn shirt with buttons in the shape of a cat’s head, stuffing straw into the sleeves and the pant legs. She attached a pair of her mother’s old Nikes to the empty holes at the ankles. “You are alive,” she told the scarecrow. “Now scare all these birds off.” Then she knelt next to the fissured earth, her fingers pressed into the dust, and said, “I wish I could fix you.” Part of her felt that the cracks in the earth understood.
What is coming: when the drought breaks in the fourth week of May, when the rains finally come, they will break every river for hundreds of miles. Houses will float off moorings and children will never be found. When Boyd returns to her garden, the scarecrow will be missing one shoe, and footprints will be in the mud, circling, circling, displaying the brand’s trademark Swoosh in the ball of the footprint. The other shoe, the one the scarecrow will still wear, will be crusted with mud.
But on this day, the garden made its first claim on her: when she rose from her kneeling position, she saw the bean tendrils had wrapped around her wrists. She hesitated, unwilling to break them, and when she pried the stems off, a bee stung her in the hollow of her neck. She slapped it and another stung her in the rise of her collarbone. When she was still again, the tendrils wrapped around her shoulders.
In the sky, the mockingbirds. In the earth, the stone.
Things You Would Know If You Grew Up Around Here
Where There’s Quartz, There’s Gold
This is what the old-timers will tell you, but it’s not quite that easy. Quartz indicates gold, yes, but so much quartz is around here that it’s not a reliable measure. Not all quartz indicates gold; you could search for a long time and find nothing. If the quartz has bleached areas, that’s a good sign; the acid in certain minerals that would bleach a rock indicates gold. Likewise if the rock is rusted. If there’s oxidized iron—any of the iron oxides or oxyhydroxides, not just the rust that we normally think of—even if it’s not only in the quartz, you’ve got good conditions. Hematite, magnetite, and ironstone are all iron oxides, so that’s something you’re looking for. You’re looking for slate; slate and quartz together—now, that’s a good sign.
Gold is heavy, so it’s buried deep. What rises to the surface are flakes, dust, grit. But you know how the world is today. You know how the Hill Country attracts a certain kind of people: individualist to the extreme, a little off, prone to believing in the apocalypse. You know how these Hill Country people feel about banks, about the stock market. They have six months’ worth of canned goods in their pantry, six weeks’ worth of water in rinsed-out milk jugs. That gold dust is worth a lot these days because people feel as if the world might end. Gold seems solid, substantial, able to hold its value. You can pay a semester of tuition at UT with a tiny sack of that gold dust.
May 20
The first night Isaac came home, he invited himself to dinner. Boyd didn’t know if it was because of her or because he wanted to pan for gold at the edge of their lake, as he had the summer before, and the summer before that. Their late-night conversations left things open-ended, as they had always been with the two of them—both of them wanting to be together, but Isaac wanting to leave the Hill Country and Boyd wanting to stay. There was no good answer, and they both knew that.
Over the last four years, Boyd’s mother, Lucy Maud, had become accustomed to seeing Isaac over her kitchen table, and when he’d camped on their lakeshore over the previous two summers, he’d often turned up unexpectedly right at dinnertime, and though he’d been uninvited, Lucy Maud had given him her share and had made herself a ham sandwich. She liked Isaac—she really did—and she noticed how relaxed Boyd was around him, how Boyd’s body seemed to settle back, how Boyd seemed to slow down. But Isaac’s ambition bothered Lucy Maud—she knew from experience how such naked ambition could be both powerfully magnetic and dangerously callous. But now Lucy Maud chased this thought from her mind, putting the dinner leftovers on a paper plate and covering it with foil, but it wasn’t for Isaac. “Here, you two,” she told Boyd and Isaac. “Take this to Carla.” Boyd was still eating, twirling her fork in the last of the Alfredo sauce, humming to herself she was so content and happy.
Isaac took the plate from Lucy Maud. “We’ll head up the road soon as Boyd’s done.”
Boyd shook her head. “Carla isn’t up the road. It’s Friday.”
Lucy Maud, taking bread out of the pantry, and ham and mayonnaise out of the refrigerator, nodded. “It’s Friday,” she repeated, as if Isaac would know Carla the way that she and Boyd did. “Why d’you think I’m sending her some supper?” Boyd knew Lucy Maud was worried that Carla had started up her wandering again.
On Friday evenings, Carla would not be up the road at her house, making soap or knitting beanie hats and scarves. She still did those things, only not on Fridays, and one of the reasons she took this break on Fridays was because her soaps weren’t selling well in the grocery stores, and she would never make a living on hand-knit beanies that took three hours to make and sold for ten dollars. If her soaps weren’t selling, then she might have to return to Austin, to cubicle land, and the thought inspired in her little hippie heart the coldest sort of fear. Freedom, that’s what that soap represented, and she was willing to risk a lot for freedom. And ever since she’d found out that the pioneer settlers had probably buried the victims of the hanging tree on her ten acres, she’d been convinced that the reason she wasn’t selling soap was because her property was cursed.
So she’d set about trying to reverse the curse, but she didn’t immediately fall into the pattern of her Friday vigil. Nobody had any idea where they’d buried those people, other than on that slope down by the water, the slope that was more than an acre, where a poured-concrete picnic table sat under a scraggly live oak, and where prickly pear bloomed nearly all summer long. The graves had never been marked, and the dragonflies sure weren’t telling. The acre was sown with the black pebbles of deer scat and the powdery brown hills of fire ant mounds. Carla wasn’t even sure if the convicts had been buried there; she just had what the sheriff and the city councilman had told her. A small part of her suspected that they had been pulling her leg; they were just the type to mess with a middle-aged woman living out here all by herself.
Still, she got a metal detector and walked all over that acre, finding nothing but marble and granite so shot through with iron that the stone was beginning to rust. She found some fishing tackle, long, long abandoned and ancient, and a beer can that had the old-fashioned pul
l tab removed. She’d knelt and unearthed it when the detector had started beeping, and it had been such a curious sensation to see that can, that link with at least thirty years ago, and maybe even more. The last hand to touch it might also be buried in the ground, and she thought then that the whole world was a graveyard and that they were all cursed. She never found the unmarked plots, and she guessed that the victims of the hanging tree had not been buried in lead coffins but had probably been tossed as is into rough-hewn graves. Nothing to set off the detector, so she had turned her attention to the tree itself.
Boyd and Isaac found her down there that night, on the far end of Boyd’s family’s property, headed toward the dam and away from the house, just as the sun was disappearing in a riot of coral and turquoise. The hanging tree was an ancient matriarch of a live oak, set in a grove of mesquite, and the big branches arced out over them like the tentacles of a sea monster. Boyd had a Maglite for the dark, though it hadn’t yet come, and Carla was setting up candles in a row underneath the old live oak, whispering to herself. “Oh,” she said when she saw them, then she stopped whispering and just started talking, now that she had an audience. “This one’s for George Bluffton, who killed a Comanche over a saddle with silver hardware. They wouldn’t have hanged him, but he shot the sheriff’s horse.” She set a dollar-store votive candle in the granite gravel as the night began to take over. “This one’s for a different Comanche, blamed for the dead baby on Babyhead Mountain.” The hanged Comanche got a tall votive, the kind the grocery store sold with the Virgin of Guadalupe and a rosary printed on it. Boyd saw the script on the side and felt an urge to read it aloud, but she said nothing and let Carla run the show. “This is for the woman Hettie Meyer, who killed her own children.” This was a tall red pillar, twisted into the dirt until it stayed upright, though it canted to the side and would drip wax. Carla didn’t seem to care and stood, dusting her hands on her broomstick skirt.
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