DEDICATION
For my children,
and theirs
EPIGRAPH
The land is a being who remembers everything.
You will have to answer to your children, and their children,
And theirs—
—JOY HARJO, “CONFLICT RESOLUTION FOR HOLY BEINGS”
Be like the fox
who makes more tracks than necessary,
some in the wrong direction.
Practice resurrection.
—WENDELL BERRY, “MANIFESTO: THE MAD FARMER LIBERATION FRONT”
CONTENTS
COVER
TITLE PAGE
DEDICATION
EPIGRAPH
Prologue: Bonnie, Tropical Storm Irene
Part I: River (September) Vale
Lena
Vale
Deb
Lena
Hazel
Vale
Deb
Lena
Deb
Vale
Deb
Vale
Hazel
Lena
Vale
Lena
Stephen
Deb
Deb
Part II: Woods (October) Lena
Vale
Stephen
Lena
Vale
Stephen
Vale
Deb
Vale
Lena
Part III: Fields (November) Stephen
Vale
Lena
Stephen
Deb
Vale
Hazel
Lena
Vale
Hazel
Vale
Hazel
Vale
Deb
Lena
Hazel
Deb
Vale
Lena
Deb
Deb
Vale
Part IV: House (December) Lena
Lena
Hazel
Vale
Deb
Vale
Hazel
Deb
Vale
Lena
Hazel
Vale
Deb
Danny
Vale
Deb, Danny, Vale
Hazel
Bonnie
Vale
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ALSO BY ROBIN MACARTHUR
CREDITS
COPYRIGHT
ABOUT THE PUBLISHER
PROLOGUE
Bonnie
4 P.M., AUGUST 28, 2011
Tropical Storm Irene
Maple and oak branches lash the windowpanes, sirens scream all over town. The power went out an hour ago, and all Bonnie and Dean can see are those branches, their wind-thrashed, mottled leaves, and heavy rain. A hurricane! They said it was coming on TV, and here it is. Here it is.
“All yours, baby,” Dean says, handing Bonnie the needle. She’s on the couch, shaking, not hungry, thinks she might vomit in the kitchen sink. Instead she lifts the sleeve of her nightgown, winds the band around her left arm, and searches for a vein not hardened. She slips the needle in. Ah! There it is: immediate heat, warm breeze.
She tips her head back against the couch cushion and closes her eyes. Poppies from Afghanistan: she sees them waving in a bright field in her mind. The mysterious source of this magic. Bonnie smiles and she’s a young mother again, Vale in her arms, spinning on the shore of a lake, fireworks in the distance, laughing. She puts her chin into the rolls of fat at Vale’s neck and breathes in. That sweet-sour milk: homegrown yogurt.
Divine, Bonnie thinks, smiling, her eyes still closed, listening to the rush of wind.
“I’m going out to wet my feet,” she calls out to Dean, rising from the couch. “Explore the fray!” He nods, lining up packs of smack and fentanyl on the table. Bonnie slips out of her nightgown, tugs on jeans and a sweatshirt with a neon-pink wolf across its front, pulls Reebok sneakers over her bare feet. How long has she had these sneakers? They are Patti Smith sneakers. Motherfucking Joan Jett sneakers. She laughs. Glances at her face in the mirror. What’s happened to it? Pockmarked. Drawn. Ghost version of her former face.
“I’ll see you,” she says to Dean, walking out the door and down the three-story exterior staircase to the ground below.
The water of Silver Creek, usually running languid twenty feet away, has climbed the concrete embankment and crossed the parking lot, is kissing the soles of her sneakers. “Holy water,” she whispers, kneeling to touch it. It’s cold and rust orange—a color she’s never seen water before. It’s climbed ten feet, at least, maybe fifteen. It crashes against the basement windows on the far side of the building, deafens the air with its roar.
There’s a woman across the street standing on her rooftop taking pictures. She waves to Bonnie, shouts something Bonnie can’t hear, and Bonnie waves back. Grins. Turns and walks parallel to the creek.
A barrel shoots by. A child’s plastic truck. Three car tires.
A hurricane! Just like they said on TV. Bonnie and Dean had filled the bathtub with water and waited all day for the wind, but it was peaceful, eerily mild, just a steady rain and the branches gently striking the windows. But the river—who knew? The storm they’d all been waiting for. Bonnie does a little dance, her body warm, electric.
She walks onto the Estey Street bridge—concrete piers, green iron—and stands in the middle of it, facing the surge, her arms spread out on either side of her. Like Jesus on the cross, Bonnie thinks, raising her face to the rain.
She’s found him of late: Jesus. The tall preacher, in that concrete church at the edge of town where Bonnie makes it some Sundays, hollers: “For by grace you have been saved through faith.” His blue eyes flickering.
She sits in the back row, her head in her hands, nodding.
Bonnie looks upstream at the roiling river. Rain pours down her cheeks, her neck, her lips, slips under the collar of her sweatshirt. A warm rain! A Bahamas-scented rain. A southern-scented rain. Like in that city where her daughter lives—too far away. Bonnie tips her head back, bares her teeth, lets the water seep through onto her tongue. Whoever drinks the water I give them will never thirst, it says in Matthew.
Bonnie wrote that on her wall with a black Sharpie.
“Wild, baby girl!” she shouts into the roar and din, imagining this same rain pouring down Vale’s neck and chest in New Orleans. The water answers back. A deep and glorious bellow. The asphalt below her feet shakes. Bonnie laughs. Whispers, “Holy water,” heart thundering below her rib cage.
PART I
River
Vale
AUGUST 28, 2011
Vale is tending bar in New Orleans—pouring lavender bitters into juniper-infused gin, flicker of wrist, carmine leather, Beyoncé’s “Diva” playing on the dust-covered speakers in the corner—when she gets the call from Deb: High water. A bridge. Your mother.
For twenty-four hours she’s been watching the storm on TV. Hurricane Irene touched down the night before in New Jersey, downing trees, flooding rivers, causing seven deaths. One and a half million people without power. It landed next over Long Island—roads, houses, streets destroyed, sewer plants overflowing in Long Beach. Then headed north into New England, where it lost its intensity and dropped to a tropical storm. Just heavy rain, the news said. Winds slowed. Sighs of relief at the bar. “Baby gone to sleep,” Monty whispered, laying his palm on the cigarette-marred mahogany of the bar top, watching the footage of search and rescue missions along the coast of New Jersey. Someone going to turn this bar into a guitar someday, Vale can hear Moe, the piano player who comes in on Thu
rsdays, say in her head. She wasn’t here for Katrina, but the residual trauma has soaked into her bones, here where they know the power of wind and rain all too well. When storms come there is a magnetic, dread-sickened buzz in the air. They turn the music up. Over-drink. Dance more recklessly. They are waiting, every day, for the next big one, not an if but a when. Tonight Vale mixes drink after drink and, alongside the others there in Marigny, breathes a sigh of relief for their brethren in Brooklyn, brethren in Queens. Awful. Destructive. Yes. But not near as bad as predicted. The end of the world has not come.
The bar is full, and she loves the flickering motions that take over her body on busy nights. She steals shots, dances in slow motion to Shorty and Missy and Kanye.
But later that night, eleven thirty, other footage starts floating in: cell phone videos from northern New England. The winds dropped, yes, like the news said, but the rains picked up. The screen shows images of roads torn up, trees downed. “Just think of the ghosts unearthing,” says Monty, who found his cousin’s body, bloated in two feet of water, at the house where he was born, four days after the storm. Vale taps her glass against his bourbon. Says, “They’ll be just fine there.” Vale is from Vermont—a blue-walled apartment above the river. Hurricanes don’t hit there. It’s one of those places that is oddly immune: to poisonous snakes, poisonous spiders, tornadoes, earthquakes, landslides. But the next shot is of a double-wide—green vinyl siding, black shutters—being swept downstream. “Shit,” Vale whispers, passing another Maker’s Mark to Monty, who starts to shake visibly. Vale’s mother, Bonnie, is in one of those river towns being torn up, right now, by floodwater. The storm, according to the news, has dropped eleven inches of rain in eight hours. Creeks have surged. River depths soared. The screen shows a 250-year-old covered bridge collapsing and going under. Vale reaches for her phone and calls Bonnie’s landline, but the number is disconnected.
She gets the call from Deb, her aunt, a near stranger, an hour later. Deb’s voice is scratchy, barely audible. She must be standing at the top of the field above Hazel’s house, the only place there’s cell reception there on the farm. “Bridge . . . missing . . . eight hours—” she shouts, her voice breaking up in places.
Vale feels a cold stillness. She takes the phone outside into the street’s warm air. The branches of a thick-trunked magnolia rise above her. Sirens wail in the distance. She must have misheard. “What?”
Deb repeats herself. Is shouting over the sound of the rain. Vale’s mother, she says, walked out into the storm eight hours ago. Was seen by a neighbor walking toward a bridge that collapsed. Hasn’t been home since. “They’ll find her. I’m sure,” Deb says, the last word rising like a question.
The images register in Vale’s mind, piece together slowly. The first time she saw her mother with a needle in her arm Vale was sixteen years old; claw-foot tub, wood floors, smell of incense and bathwater. A slow progression of wine, then Oxy, then heroin in that blue-walled apartment above the river.
“Okay,” Vale says into her phone before hanging up. Vale was doing her own stuff back then, too—pills of all kinds. At eighteen, eight years ago, she got clean and left home. She hasn’t seen her mother since. She looks up into the branches of the magnolia rising above her. Puts her forehead against its thick trunk.
She loves this city—its warm heat, its music, its light. She hates home—its silence, its whiteness, its holes, the people she left there.
“Bonnie,” she whispers.
The next morning she slips into boots, packs a bag, gathers her cash, and walks herself to the bus station on Loyola Avenue.
Lena
MAY 17, 1956
Dearest Pines—
My sister’s husband’s eyes are the color of moss, the color of fern. I’ve never seen eyes that color, certainly nowhere in this town or on this mountain. Earth-colored, speckled with light. I’m living in what used to be my grandfather’s hunting camp, one room made of hemlock and spruce, still dank with the smell of whiskey and deer hides, a place where I keep my bird books and this notebook and the photographs I cut out of Outdoor Life and Field & Stream. The Battle of Taejon took my father, and Lex, my sister’s husband, came back from that war distant, drinking too much, averse to shoveling shit and milking cows. Who wants anything to do with a world like that? Sick with killing—nuclear.
My place? Wool blankets hung over the windows to keep out the drafts in winter, a battery-operated radio that plays Little Richard and Patsy Cline and Louis Armstrong. Buckets of creek water lined up near the door, and Otie, my one-eyed barred owl, found on Route 100, hit by a truck and barely breathing. I brought him home on a cool night in March, built him a nesting box from an old apple crate, and here he is, two months later, one-eyed, unable to fly, fervently alive.
“Fervently alive, Otie,” I call out. He purrs. “He” because he’s smaller than others I’ve seen; according to my bird book, males are significantly smaller than females.
And so it is just he and I, and these letters I chicken-scratch, while Satchmo sings “Mack the Knife” on the radio.
“Mouse!” I call out, laughing and handing Otie a live one, pulled from the trap, by the tail. He swallows it whole, blinks his thank-you. In the daytime: clings to my shoulder wherever I go. The barn, the fields, the woods. Anywhere but near houses or towns—their cool stares and many eyes. Their imposing expectations. Every one of which I’ve failed.
I avoid my sister’s house below, too. Its polished floors and clean lines and Lex’s fiddle on the back porch late at night—one-hundred-year-old melodies leaking up into the sky.
I’m like the three-legged coyote that lives nearby, the one that crosses the field in the evening, sticks to the darker edges.
Like this morning. Dawn, mist rising out of the valley, over the sunburnt trees, over the orchard and Silver Creek and the pines—you, my friends—who stand upright at the top of the hill.
“Good morning!” I call out, stretching. White pines: straight-backed ladies, winsome. You bend with the wind, sing in the strongest storms, smell like earth when the sun shines and like sugar when it rains. Hear that? Like sugar when it rains.
“What am I good for, my friend?” I ask Otie, who blinks and asks the trees. Me: twenty-seven years old. One wandering eye that won’t behave.
I laugh. Bring my cup of coffee—black, no sugar—to the granite slab outside my door, Otie by my side. The coffee burns my lips; I rub them together, feel the chaff there. Tip my head back to face the sun. A bear was here last night circling the trash can, sniffing the food-scrap pit. Her muskiness still in the air. Otie hops across the yard until he finds her scat, full of acorns and last fall’s apple drops, steaming near the outhouse door.
“Good work, Otie,” I call out, laughing.
Smoke rises from the farmhouse below. And faint but undeniable: the sound of a fiddle. He must be drunk at dawn.
“Go to sleep, Lex,” I whisper toward the trees. You shiver in response. Shake your heads. Say nothing.
Vale
AUGUST 29, 2011
Alabama. Tennessee. Virginia.
Factories. Strip mines. Blue mountains.
Billboards for Smoky Mountain Motor Lodge, billboards for Dollywood. “Damn, I could use me some tits like those!” Bonnie cooing from the couch as they watched Dolly sing on the Grand Ole Opry. “Beauteous fake babies. Not like your mama’s little knockers.” Laughing and kissing Vale’s head, sipping her Chardonnay. Vale is seven. She curls up on her mother’s lap—her favorite place to be: lavender and salt, always warm. “You and me, baby,” Bonnie whispers, reaching for Vale’s feet, pulling them onto her lap, brushing her fingers across them slowly.
Flicker of bus lights. Pounding wheels.
Deb called earlier to say the police and National Guard are still searching but have found nothing. Her broken-up voice, spotty reception.
“My mother is not dead,” Vale whispers.
Deb might sound doubtful, but eight years or no, Vale still feels
her mother’s particulate matter in this world. Somewhere: a wet field. A cold barn. An empty house, window cracked open, next to a roaring fire.
Vale closes her eyes.
A story Bonnie used to tell, quoting Vale at four: Mama, you know how we get love?
How?
When you’re in the mama’s belly you hear the heart. And that makes your own heart. And then when you come out you have that love. The mama is a love factory.
Bonnie laughing, grinning, reaching for Vale, “The mama is the love factory!”
Bonnie, Vale writes in neon script across the dark sky of her mind, as the bus crosses the border into Vermont.
She’s shocked by the destruction: a garage collapsed, a pine uprooted, a black sedan wedged into the low branches of a large oak tree. Vale eyes it all slowly, looking for familiar limbs—five feet tall, dark hair, walking or sitting.
Vale checks the local headlines on her phone: 2,400 roads, 300 bridges, and 800 homes destroyed or damaged in the state. Some 117,000 people without power. Two dead. One missing.
One missing, Vale thinks, turning back toward the window, eyeing the streets of this town she left eight years ago swearing she’d never return: my own.
THE MAN AT THE BUS STATION IN NELSON LAUGHS WHEN VALE tells him where she’s trying to get: ten miles out of town, uphill.
He has one blue eye and one brown. Points, with eyebrows raised, toward Vale’s boots: thin soles, cracked leather.
Vale shrugs, throws her backpack over her shoulder, walks to the edge of the road, and sticks her thumb out.
Tomorrow she’ll go to her mother’s apartment, that place above the river where Dean will no doubt be, heating a nugget of smack on the stove, that sickly sweet, damp vinegar smell. Tomorrow she’ll go to the bridge where Bonnie was last seen.
Right now Vale needs food and a bed to sleep in. She needs to get uphill to Hazel’s old farmhouse, that place where Bonnie grew up. That house—cold white rooms, white pine painted clean again and again—where Vale’s ancestors have lived for two hundred years. Joyless in old photographs, their mouths thin lines. “How many years can you go without joy before the whole shit show crumbles?” Bonnie saying years ago, pinching Vale’s side, laughing.
Heart Spring Mountain Page 1