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Authors: Michelle Huneven

BOOK: Off Course
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For dinner, Tillie had braised a rump roast all day with ten onions and two cans of beer. Cress made coleslaw and biscuits; after such gamboling in cold fresh air, their hunger was shocking. They stayed in and drank wine and played charades and one by one drifted off to bed. As she had for three nights now, Cress slept downstairs, on the window seat, that unforgiving, narrow little shelf.

*   *   *

After the beds were stripped and the duffels and totes and grocery sacks hauled down to the cars, her friends departed. It was December 31, everyone had a party to get to. Cress herself was scheduled to work at the country club's New Year's Eve bash. Her eye, at first faintly blackened from the snowball, grew more colorful by the hour. The morning was bright, the roads clear, the thermometer read sixty-three. Nobody would skid into snowbanks today. Cress waved her friends off without regret. She'd spent her high school years yearning to be with them; she'd moved to Braithway Court to do so. But she could only take so much. The years of childhood exile up here had trained her to solitude after all.

The world clicked with the sound of water dripping off trees and eaves onto the softening snow.

“Another perfect day in paradise!” Don Dare called from the new house.

Cress went upstairs and took a nap—she'd be up late tonight. Jakey woke her with a phone call at two. “Big boulder and mudslide on the highway just below the back entrance,” he said. “Nobody's getting in or out till Monday, which is as soon as the state can get up here.” It was Thursday.

Cress phoned Beech Creek, told Dalia about the rock, then walked down to see it. Elephant-gray fine-grained granite with veins of white quartz, the oblong boulder sat high on a bulging skid of mud: God's shrug. Cress sketched it from two different angles; the surging shape suggested her grandmother's old swamp-green Hudson Hornet. When she tried to climb over the slide for another perspective, she sank to her thigh in pebbly mud.

Her friends had chipped in money to pay for a housekeeper so Cress wouldn't have to do all the cleaning and laundry. Franny arrived at four-thirty. “Who popped you one?” she said, lightly touching Cress's eye.

They made the beds together. “Brian's stuck down in Sawyer. Donna was the last person to make it up before the rock,” Franny said, “which is good, since she's singing tonight. DeeDee and the boys are down, so I told Jakey I'd work her shift tonight, although it won't be many people at the party now, with the rock. Jakey's doing a six-buck steak for everyone stuck up here for New Year's.”

Franny shuffled through the loose stack of monoprints and drawings left behind on the kitchen table—portraits the friends had made of each other, a few snowscapes. Cress pointed out Tillie's portrait of Edgar. “That's my favorite. I like her line, how playful it is.”

Franny looked hard at the drawing, traced the line with her finger.

*   *   *

Strands of yellow crepe paper looped from the beams. Reggie Thornton pinch-hit as bartender. Jakey served forty-some steaks, with black-eyed peas and greens. Cress, Franny, and Donna sat with the carpenters. Donna spoke softly in Cress's ear: “At the Sawyer Inn, Saturday night, Quinn and Caleb came in with their wives to hear me sing. They were really living it up—cocktails, steaks, more cocktails. Sylvia only had one greyhound and she literally slid under the table.”

“That's exactly what Quinn said would happen if she drank.”

“They kept dragging her up, and she kept slipping down again. It was kind of weird. I mean, why didn't he take her home?”

When Donna went onstage, Jakey took her seat. “Dr. Hartley!” He crushed into Cress. “Helluva shiner there! Hey, that friend of yours, Tillie, she's a live wire: ‘You can't put one over on me, Jakey Yates, I've heard
allll
about you.'”

“Oh dear.”

“I liked her. And all your friends. Nice people. That climatologist, Edgar, the Paki? Interesting guy.”

The vet tech was sipping a green drink at the bar and giving Cress evil green looks. When Jakey moved on, Cress stood, stretched, and said her good nights. Happy New Year, Happy New Year, everyone! It was ten o'clock.

*   *   *

Cress was home only a few minutes and still fiddling with the fire when she heard drumming on the glass door.

“What are you doing here?” she said, sliding it open. “Why aren't you with that nice, pretty animal handler? Seeing how she came up to see you and rented that whole place and all.”

“She told me she came up to cross-country ski.” Jakey handed Cress a bottle of champagne, shrugged out of his coat.

“Can we drink this out of plastic?” she said, reading the label. “Not that we have any choice.”

As she peeled off the lead seal, Jakey gathered her up. “I'm crazy about you, Hartley, you know that,” he said into her neck. “Always will be.”

“I know, Jakey,” she said. “But…”

“It's New Year's Eve,” he said. “Who wants to be with strangers! Auld lang syne, Hartley!”

She laughed and relaxed. She too could do what she wanted. She too could really live it up.

*   *   *

The phone rang sometime after midnight, waking her. Jakey rolled over, went back to sleep. Cress padded downstairs, lifted the receiver. “I wanted to hear your voice,” Quinn whispered. “I'm in my mom's bedroom again. Can't really talk. We'll have a happy new year, Cressida, once I get back.”

Or that's what she thought he said, or hoped he said, but he was whispering and there was static and she was half asleep.

*   *   *

During the boulder's siege, the days were sunny and short. Snow melted. Nights bristled with frost. Mornings loosed sprays of diamonds. The clack of water dripping into snow was continuous. Cress worked on a chapter, but mostly she drifted, read about the Black Death, and made herself small bits to eat: cinnamon toast, a sliced apple with cheddar cheese. By Saturday, the snow was mostly gone, and she walked her full loop, the world re-revealed, saturated and darker, spongy underfoot.

She felt delicately buoyed by her discovery that she preferred, even required, long stretches of her own company. She was pleased, too, that she hadn't offered her most recent love life to Tillie or the others as a topic of conversation. She'd kept Quinn for herself.

Monday morning a series of concussions rattled the A-frame's plate glass. A strand of white smoke spiraled above the trees to the south. Later, on her walk, she visited where the boulder once sat, now a mud-colored stain on the black road, a scattering of fist-sized gray rocks swept off to the shoulder.

*   *   *

The brothers returned on black roads bathed in snowmelt.

She ran into Caleb at the lodge; he was buying Bisquick. “With the cats away, the mice wreaked havoc,” he said. “What's with the eye?”

“Snowball,” said Cress. “Enjoy your holidays?”

“A lot of eating. Took the kids out to the drags.”

“The drags?”

“Drag races,” he said.

She'd never known anyone who went to drag races. Dubious, she said, “Was that fun?”

“Had a ball,” he said. “How's the drawing?”

“I've been sketching a lot of rocks.”

“I'd like to see your work sometime.”

“Anytime.” She didn't ask about Quinn, and Caleb didn't mention him, either.

*   *   *

Something threw her: a new hat. Dark leather, handmade, stiff: the new version of his old one. She could see now that the hat was something you'd buy at the kind of craft fair that sold quilted Bible covers, wind chimes, and finger puppets. She grieved for the broken-in, chewed-up old model with its coiled brim and distinctive, lopsided silhouette. No need to ask who'd replaced it.

Snow blew through the door as he came inside. Cress poured bourbon into her mother's plastic tumblers. He sat beside her on the wicker love seat. The low fire pulsed and flared. “God, it's been forever,” he said.

He pulled a wad of gray-and-blue tissue paper from his jacket pocket. “For you.”

She hadn't seen this small, perfect donkey in his garage. The mane was finely articulated and tinted dark, the hooves dainty, the eyes shiny and black. She turned it over: two tiny teats. A female. “Hard picking out the right one for you,” he said. “Singling them out, they start getting symbolic. I know you liked the beaver…”

“But you settled on the ass.”

“I used black onyx beads for the eyes,” he said.

“I love it,” she said. They clicked glasses and he put his down. Taking her face in his hands, he examined her eye, now yellowish, with green-and-purple tints. He kissed it, then her mouth. She inhaled his ferny cologne, tasted his finely pebbled tongue, received the brush of his thick trimmed beard. He kissed her for a long time, through the first exuberant swells of emotion to a shining calm. Any minute, Cress thought, they would rise and climb the stairs and shed their clothes. But Quinn kept kissing her, his patience exquisite. In time, her lips grew numb and her desire receded; she opened her eyes and read the faded spines of books on the shelf and watched the long spiderwebs hanging from the rafters; thickened by dust, the strands swung slowly in the updrafts of heat from the stove. And still, he kissed her.

Each adjustment to their embrace caused the wicker to drily creak—never was a love seat less conducive to lovemaking than this wobbly pine-and-straw scaffold. She shut her eyes again and drifted languidly, daydreamed a blur of yellow meadows, blue snowfields. The fire sputtered; logs crumbled into coals with a sigh, and out of nowhere, it seemed, desire slammed back into her. Her womb twanged, the pain sharp, clarifying, and eye-opening, literally.

Over Quinn's shoulder, she saw a snow-dusted figure at the sliding glass door. Bundled, behatted, he'd raised a hand to knock. She shut her eyes and wished the apparition away, to never-have-been. She kissed Quinn with new determination—to distract. When she checked again, the visitor was gone.

Quinn stood, and led her up the stairs.

 

Thirteen

Snow fell and stayed, and more snow fell on top of that, and more yet. The world quieted, lost detail, shadows turned blue. Cress found skis in the basement, wooden Nordic skis, her parents' apparently, but hardly used. John Bird had taught her how, and they had skied cross-country over Midwestern fields, in leafless woods. She fit into her mother's pair and quickly picked up the old rhythms; Quinn, with thick socks, could use her father's set and, with his unusual sense of balance, he skied gracefully his first time out. For a scant hour and a half of light in the late afternoons they looped in wide slaloms to the meadow, and across the meadows' open expanses, then followed fire roads. The only other tracks belonged to chipmunks, rabbits, and hopping jays. They met no other skiers until at dusk one day, out toward Camel Crags, they skied in someone else's grooves and met Jakey and Ondine coming back. Jakey was ruddy from exercise. Ondine, fair and lithe in an ivory snowsuit, glowed.

Beautiful, lovely, the four said. Perfect time to be out. So quiet.

Getting cold, though. Whoops! You okay? Falling's part of the sport.

*   *   *

The brothers hosted no more card games in the trailer. Nor were there poker nights at DeeDee's.

Cress saw DeeDee only at the lodge. They were civil but not friendly. And then Cress stopped seeing her at the lodge, too.

“Hey, where's DeeDee?” she asked Jakey.

“Quit on me,” he said. “The boys were missing too much school. Rented her house out to River Bob and Freddy. Went to live with her mom in Visalia. Took a job at the trophy factory.”

*   *   *

Sylvia and Candy, he said, were bringing the kids up Saturday morning to play in the snow. “So you know,” he said. “Arriving Saturday, leaving Sunday.”

“You can't all fit in the trailer,” Cress said.

Caleb's family would be camping in the Rodinger house, in sleeping bags. Sylvia and Evan would be in the trailer, with him.

“Did you invite them?”

“It was their idea.”

“Will I see you tonight?” she said.

“Got the trailer to clean. Some deep bachelor squalor to dispatch.”

“Have fun,” she said.

“Don't be like that,” he said.

“Like what?”

“Sarcasm doesn't suit you,” he said.

*   *   *

She drove down the hill with Don Dare to see Donna sing. The Sawyer Inn was a two-story wood-sided building at the edge of town. The restaurant was in front, the lounge in the back, a dozen hotel rooms upstairs. Donna packed the place: in among the hotel guests and various locals, Cress recognized Beech Creek Country Club members and a famous painter from Los Angeles with his glamorous young wife. (“They have a place up on Noah Mountain,” Don said.) Donna sang “Blue Bayou,” then “Okie from Muskogee,” which provoked stomping and hollering from the cowboys and loggers at the bar. She called a mandolin-playing sheriff onstage, then Mason the banjo player, and finally a dentist. “I see Felton the Extractor's brought his fancy Martin ghee-tar tonight—” Donna said. “Well, pull it out, Dr. F., show us how you do!”

Afterward—it was past one o'clock!—the banjo and mandolin players came over to Donna's house. She lived on the river south of Sawyer in a raffish neighborhood of old vacation shacks. Her roommate, a cheerful, very large young woman named Norma, had baked chocolate chip cookies. Don built a fire in the woodstove, and there was another hour of music and enough drinking so that even Cress sang the choruses.

In a sleeping bag on Donna's sofa, Cress thought of another sleeping bag—and Evan only a few feet away.

Later still, she was awakened by faint swipes of a guitar chord and bawled words—
Donna! Donna! Please, baby. Let me in!
Felton the Extractor was serenading! Don Dare emerged from Donna's bedroom buttoning his jeans. “Occupational hazard,” he told Cress. “Half the guys in any audience fall in love with her.” Don went out, talked to Felton. Got the expensive Martin back in its case, the lovelorn dentist back behind the wheel.

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