Read Miss Me When I'm Gone Online
Authors: Emily Arsenault
“By the Moonlight Alone”
Almost Midnight
Bristol, Virginia
I’ve meandered off Highway 81 to stop in Bristol, Virginia, the purported “Birthplace of Country Music.” I hadn’t planned on stopping here, and it’s nearly midnight. But I’m thinking that later I might want to say that I did.
Since I’ve got the GPS, I allow myself to get lost a little, looking for a place that’s open for maybe a coffee, maybe ice cream. I don’t find anything but a convenience store, but I’m not in a King-Cone-in-my-car kind of mood. It’s a little actual humanity that I’m after. But I can’t seem to find it. I feel small and lonely in the dark of this unfamiliar town.
I turn into a residential neighborhood, just to see. It’s full of neat, modest brick houses with white doors and trim that practically glow in the dark. As I turn around, I hear a train hooting somewhere close. I pull over. I want to listen to the train—a bit of manufactured travel reverie, yes, but I indulge myself. After it fades I can hear only the crickets. I’d like to stay here with them, but surely my car looks out of place on this street at this hour. I drive around Bristol for a bit, listening to Carter Family songs: “Wildwood Flower” and the lesser-known “One Little Word.” Then I peruse my iPod for my favorite—“Meet Me by the Moonlight Alone.”
The narrator of this song is about to go to jail on the following day. The lyrics explain that he’s had a sad life. But he describes how much, nonetheless, he loves his sweetheart. Like many Carter Family songs, it’s a rearrangement (by A. P. Carter) of an older favorite. The song shares the chorus (and some of the lyrics) of the popular “Prisoner’s Song,” recorded in 1924 by Vernon Dalhart. Variations on the same song have also been titled “Someone to Love Me.”
I return to the convenience store to park and listen some more. I open the window—no crickets here, and no moonlight. Just the bright parking-lot lamps and the rumble of the nearby highway.
Meet me by the moonlight, love, meet me
Meet me by the moonlight alone
For I have a sad story to tell you
To be told by the moonlight alone
These words have always grabbed me, as they capture a longing I’ve never known how to express myself. Because deeper than a longing for romance, to me, is the desire to find that one person to whom you can tell your sad story. Once, in the moonlight, before you’re ready to go on. It’s not an intimacy that lasts forever. That’s not the point.
So many of the Carter Family’s songs are about that which one cannot have forever. It is a sentiment that their generation surely understood more keenly and experienced more regularly than my own. You can tell from the Carters’ voices and their restraint. In the words of the songs A.P. chose, and in the tough, sad beauty of Sara’s voice, you can almost always hear a reality that generations after theirs tend not to remember so regularly or so comfortably—the fragility of what we have—or don’t have—here.
Their best songs are as beautiful and stark as the rustle of leaves on a cold autumn night. Have you ever heard that sound late at night on your driveway—then shivered, and then hurried inside to avoid the feeling it gives you? Listening to the Carter Family is often like standing firm there in the dark, allowing yourself to be alone in the simple, scary beauty of it.
There’s no glitter or sass with the Carter Family. Since their material is primarily Appalachian folk songs, there is naturally a lot of suffering and death. And while many of those songs promise the comfort of a heaven beyond, many simply acknowledge life’s difficulties without attempting any reassurances. Life is hard. Marriage is hard (“Single Girl, Married Girl,” “Are You Tired of Me, My Darling?”). Love is hard (“I’m Thinking Tonight of My Blue Eyes”). Work is hard (“Coal Miner’s Blues”). And death is, of course, merciless (“Sad and Lonesome Day”).
And for all the words about heaven, there’s a fair amount about what’s left behind in death. Where one will be buried, who will remember us, miss us, or care that we were ever here (“Bury Me Under the Weeping Willow,” “Will You Miss Me When I’m Gone?,” “Lay My Head Beneath the Rose,” “See That My Grave Is Kept Green”).
While I admire both of the women of the Carter Family, it is A.P.’s story (and his occasional trembling voice in the background of their songs) that haunts me, along with the words of “Meet Me by the Moonlight Alone.”
Alvin Pleasant Carter was a peculiar type from boyhood, they say. He was a loner so full of nervous energy that his hands shook—attributed, by his mother, to a lightning bolt that nearly struck her when she was pregnant. Still, he was an accomplished fiddle player and sang as well. He tried several jobs in his youth and apparently wasn’t all that good at any one of them. A.P. was working as a fruit salesman, the story goes, when he first heard Sara singing through a window of a house he was approaching in hopes of making a sale. And fell in love.
It wasn’t until after over a decade of marriage (and some local performing) that A.P. managed to convince Sara and her talented cousin Maybelle (who was also his sister-in-law) to take a step toward pursuing a real musical career together—something unheard of for people of their background at the time. In 1927, he dragged them down to Bristol, Virginia, to sing for a New York scout from Victor Records. The trip resulted in a recording session, and soon after, the popularity of their music, starting with “Single Girl, Married Girl,” their first hit.
While the Carters enjoyed rare success throughout the Depression era, it wasn’t all fame and happiness for the family. Sara hated the spotlight, but A.P. drove her and Maybelle to record and perform more. He would also disappear for weeks at a time, searching for songs in the Virginia mountains—leaving Sara alone with their three children and all of the household responsibilities. And when he was home, his moods were unpredictable; he was often brooding, sometimes easily angered. Ever the eccentric, he even had a tendency to wander off during recordings and performances, frustrating Sara and Maybelle.
During his many absences, Sara started a love affair with one of his cousins. That relationship eventually led to their divorce in 1936. Sara continued to record and perform, however—reluctantly, but for the sake of providing for her family. The Carter Family’s audience didn’t know that she and A.P. had split. That would’ve significantly damaged their image as a happy, traditional family. They continued to give concerts with bills that proclaimed that “the program is morally good.” But in 1943, Sara—by then married to A.P.’s cousin—chose to stop performing with the group.
While Sara lived the rest of her life with her new husband in California, A.P. returned to Virginia and opened a general store. He reportedly spent the rest of his life brokenhearted at his loss of Sara, his loss of the musical life, his forgotten dream. He died in 1960.
He’s considered the father of country music, but some aspects of his peculiar personality remain a mystery. Where did his drive to write and discover new songs come from? What was the story he wanted to tell? Was it the story of his people, or something from within that he never found expressed quite right? What was the one little word he never managed to say? Was his love for Sara just about having a personal mouthpiece, or was it simply true and unrequited love?
Perhaps it was enough that her voice inspired him to bring so many songs to so many people. Well, maybe not
enough.
(Because is there ever really enough for the hungry human soul?) But perhaps a gift like that, however temporary, was more than most of us can reasonably expect to receive.
And again, the point is not—and can never be—to have forever.
The sound of the train and the trucks will fade. Even that of the crickets. The sound of your love’s voice fades and the sad story dies with you, or with the one you told it to. Either way, it disappears. A few will wonder what your story was and then no one will at all. There is a certain beauty in that, isn’t there—in how it all disappears?
—
Tammyland
Sam arrived at the hospital about an hour after they’d set my wrist.
“Jesus Christ, Jamie,” he said, when he met me in the empty waiting room. “Does it hurt a lot?”
“Yeah,” I answered, showing him my splint.
“What happened?” His tone was more sharp than sympathetic.
“Well, I fell and my fat pregnant ass landed on my own wrist. But I was lucky to fall on that and not on Charlie.”
“Very lucky,” Sam murmured, without looking at me. “On the phone, you said someone pushed you.”
“Yeah,” I said. “She’s in custody now.”
“Like, with the police?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Now, how did you end up at her place by yourself?”
“I had a feeling it was her.”
“And how did you know they’d come right after you?”
“I didn’t,” I admitted. “I just got lucky.”
“Jesus Christ,” he repeated, leaning back into a hospital snack machine. I gestured for him to sit next to me in the ugly green waiting room seats, but he ignored the silent request.
I didn’t make him ask anything else. I told him the whole story—starting with Gretchen’s final interview with Dr. Skinner and ending with the events in Diane’s backyard. When I was finished, he was quiet for a moment.
“What the fuck were you thinking?” he asked.
“I’m fine, thank you very much,” I replied.
“I know you’re fine. I can see you’re fine. In a superficial sense, anyway. So now I’m asking you a deeper question.”
“I thought we were gonna try to retire the F-word for the sake of the rugrat.”
“Cut the crap, please. He’s not here yet. So what the fuck were you thinking?”
I had to stifle a giggle. Sam was finally—and reasonably—angry enough at me to tell me to cut the crap, but had still remembered to say please
.
“I was thinking about Gretchen,” I said, after thinking about it for a moment.
“Yeah. Someone
killed
Gretchen. You knew that when you left for Emerson on Friday.”
“That’s true,” I said. “But it seemed more important than dangerous. And I didn’t want to worry you.”
I studied Sam because I couldn’t think of a further explanation. His hair was wild, as he’d probably been rubbing his head nervously the whole way up to New Hampshire. His eyes were tired. I wondered if this was how he’d look in the hospital when Charlie Bucket was born. With that thought, a familiar feeling of panic returned to me—one I hadn’t felt since Gretchen had died. Perhaps it was being in a hospital that finally brought it back—the sudden, life-stopping, nauseating-exhilarating realization:
One of these days, this kid is actually going to be
born
.
“More important than dangerous?” Sam repeated skeptically.
The wind had been knocked out of me, thinking about Charlie’s imminent arrival—about Charlie’s mere reality. It took me a moment to come back to our conversation.
“Gretchen and I had certain . . . standards for one another,” I said, after I’d caught my breath.
“So you’re saying she would have expected you to solve this for her.”
“No. She wanted to solve it for herself. But she couldn’t. Not quite. Someone stopped her before she got to finish. I couldn’t stand that.”
Sam was silent for a moment, his gaze flickering from me to the magazine table to the window, and then back to me again.
“Of course you couldn’t.”
“I needed to know that I could fix something. Just one thing. But I’m all right. Charlie is all right.”
“I’m still not wild about the name ‘Charlie,’ ” he admitted, finally stepping closer to me. “But I can still think about it.”
He sat in the seat next to mine, put his elbows on his knees, and clasped his hands. But said nothing.
“It feels like a hundred years ago,” I said. “When Gretchen and I were in college together. When we were so close. And now it feels like a hundred years to go without her.”
Sam cast his eyes down. Did he wonder if the comfort of him and Charlie was not enough to endure this vast new life ahead of me, without someone who’d once been so important to me? I didn’t ask. Not because I didn’t want to reassure both him and myself, but because to do so was impossible. And I didn’t want to lie to him.
Sam moved his hand to my splint, and we both stared at it.
After a moment he said, “Tell me a story about Gretchen. About how she was in college.”
I was surprised at this request, but happy that he’d made it.
I thought for a minute, and then said, “Well, there was this liquor store about a mile away from campus that would sell weird-flavored schnapps. Disgusting flavors. Blueberry. Grape. But at the time we thought they were yummy. Every couple of weeks, we’d walk there and get a bottle to share. Sometimes late at night, sometimes in the freezing cold. Once or twice in the snow, even.
“And once, when we were walking in the snow, this guy stopped and offered us a ride. This guy was in his late thirties or early forties, I’d have guessed. In some slick black asshole car, though I don’t remember the make now. And he just
looked
like a sleaze. Maybe not a psychopath or anything, probably more like someone who’d heard things about Forrester girls and maybe was hoping a ride could lead to a threesome. Something about his eyes and his smell told me that. I could smell his cologne from where I was standing, even though Gretchen was standing much closer.
“And he said, ‘You girls want a ride somewhere?’
“And Gretchen stared at him for a second, with this deer-in-headlights way she had about her sometimes. And then she looked at me, and I was wondering if I needed to tell her the answer was no.
“The guy was so startled by Gretchen, by her silence and her weird expression, that it threw him off. He couldn’t tell if she was game or just a little crazy.
“Then he said, ‘I . . . . uh . . . have heated seats.’
“And then he said again, ‘You want a ride?’
“And then Gretchen . . . I’ll never forget this. She took the bag with the schnapps in it, took off the cap really slowly, took a little sip, and then said to him, very serenely, ‘Not in the least.’ ”
Sam chuckled a little. I continued.
“He didn’t say anything back. He just looked confused for a second and then drove away. We got a good laugh at that, once he’d driven away. And for a couple of years after that, whenever one of us was in some kind of precarious situation or another, the other one would say, ‘Well, you know, I have heated seats . . .’ ”
Sam looked puzzled. “What does that even mean?”
“I don’t know. But we thought it was funny at the time. I can just see us like that. Sometimes, when I’m driving somewhere, and I see two girls walking together, talking . . . I think of us then. How we thought we were the most cynical people in the world, with our little paper bag of kiddie liquor. The way we’d make each other laugh. The way we knew how stupid everyone and everything but ourselves was. It was so ridiculous and so perfect. How we understood, finally, what dumb girls we’d been before we knew each other, and what smart women we were going to be.”
Sam nodded uncertainly.
“Sometimes,” I said, “I think my being sad about her dying is the most selfish thing. I mean, where it comes from. Because it’s maybe not just about being sad for her—but being sad for myself, and missing how we were together. Coming back to her was always like being reminded of that part of myself, reminded that it was still there. And without her, how am I going to remember to do that?”
Sam ran a finger up and down my splint, then cracked a tiny smile.
“I believe you may still be more of that person,” he said, “than you think.”
“Is that a good thing?” I asked.
Sam thought for a moment before answering.
“Sometimes, Madhat.”
I nodded and instinctively began to reach for my stomach, remembering a half second later that my splint would not allow me to. I reached with my left since my right ached.