Crybaby Ranch (12 page)

Read Crybaby Ranch Online

Authors: Tina Welling

“Take it or leave it, right?” He tosses his knotted napkin onto the table. “You know what I think? I think if I hadn't been sleeping with Caro, you wouldn't even have let me get this close.”

My throat closes the way it does when I hear unexpected truth. I drop my eyes from his angry stare and try not to cry. I don't want this to describe me.

Bo pushes away from the table and stands. I'm afraid he will come to me. I turn my back and begin rinsing our plates. If I could explain the constrictions I feel binding me right now, I would. I want to give him Erik's old advice to me:
Don't take it personally.

“You know how long I've waited for someone special? Long enough to have given up. Then you…” He stops. “You don't want to hear this, do you?”

“Bo, I can't even ask you to wait. There's so much I need to do…before I could be ready for you.”

“You can ask me to wait.”

“No. I can't. I'm sorry.” I hope he understands. This could take years.

After a long silence, he releases a big breath and rolls up our place mats. He sets them on top of the refrigerator, goes out the back door. After a while, he returns and sounding resigned, he says, “Still want to go up?”

I nod.

He gathers into Baggies some brownies I baked earlier, and I pour coffee into a thermos. We continue with our plan to climb up the steep side of the butte directly behind my shed to have our dessert on a rocky ledge and watch the moon rise.

 

“More cold is coming,” Bo says, “probably even freezing temperatures tonight.” The wind lifts the hair over his eyes as he halts his climb to look south and east, as if he hears the footfalls of the weather echoing through the canyons, making its way toward us across the flats.

Clutching tufts of grass to pull myself up on the steep slope, I finally reach the outcropping behind Bo. He hauls me over the ledge with his solid grip, as if we were shaking hands and things got suddenly rowdy. I scramble on hands and knees with my butt in the air, until he has to grab my belt in back to secure me in place. Just being this high up makes me feel off balance.

Then I catch myself. It was my mother who was afraid of heights and suggested that we shared that fear. I test my own feelings up here and realize I am exhilarated by the beauty of the land spread before me. No urge to perform headstands on the rock ledge, but I'm not uneasy with the height. I take a big breath and settle myself. Without the burden of my mother's fears, I feel weightless, ungrounded in the new self I'm discovering.

Bo pours the coffee; I unwrap the brownies. I want to do my share toward making Bo and me comfortable with each other. I search my mind for a subject we can talk about.

“Were your aunts close to their mother?”

“Nah. Too close to each other. Siamese twins joined at the funny bone, Grandma used to say.” He sounds cool, still unhappy with me, but willing to warm. He doesn't look at me, but off into the distant hills. He asks offhandedly, “Were you?”

“Pretty close. She has Alzheimer's.” I didn't mean to say this. Why have I chosen tonight to tell him? It reminds me of when I used to argue with Erik, then stub my toe or get a splinter afterward to help mend us back together. Here I am: injured. In need of you.

“Oh, God. When did you find out?” Bo turns to me, sets his coffee on the ground, and gives me his full attention.

“Few days ago. But I've suspected for a while she had something more going on than the depression I mentioned to you. Last month during my visit, she put the lit end of a cigarette in her mouth.”

I look off to the distance, remembering. She and I were alone that evening. She played solitaire and watched television; I read beside her on the sofa. She turned to me and said, “Look.” She opened her mouth and showed me the ash on her tongue.

“Oh, my God.” I held up an ashtray to her mouth. “Quick. Spit.”

“Can you believe anyone would do something so stupid?” She laughed. “I'm telling you, you got to watch me every minute.” I thought that was the message: Pay attention to her. So I set my book aside.

Now I tell Bo, “That's when I really became frightened.”

“You didn't get tests?”

“Got lots of tests, but a clinical diagnosis for Alzheimer's disease consists only of ruling out every other possible explanation.”

“You still hoped?” Bo sounds tentative with his questions, uncertain how to respect my privacy, while trying to understand my situation.

“I don't know…. I kept expecting Mom to wink and con-fide she'd finally found a way to get Dad to show some real affection for her.” I feel guilty suspecting Mom's games might have extended to faking Alzheimer's.

Bo seems puzzled. “Did your mother lie about things?”

“She never lied. She just trained us, my dad and me, not to believe her behavior.” I try to explain to Bo. “Nothing was the way it seemed. She was the center of the family's attention, yet she always accused us of ignoring her.”

I am ambushed with the realization that I am talking about her in the past tense. I press grass with the flat of my hand a moment. Then I continue. “She is the most dependent member but, somehow, controls us all.”

“The world works like that,” Bo says. “The strong are in service to the weak.”

A shaming anger rises in me. “It shouldn't work that way.” Maybe I'm not as generous as I like to think.

“Sure it should,” Bo says. “What better use can strength be put to?”

“Gaining greater strength.”

“Then what? Tyranny?” Bo strips a tall weed of its husk, breaks it off, and sticks the tip in his mouth. His eyes lift for the long gaze across the valley. “Nah, got to bring everybody along best you can.”

We're getting cold. Our calculations for the moonrise are based on vaguely remembering that last night the moon rose about nine. It's now past nine thirty and the temperature has dropped to thirty-eight degrees, according to the zipper-tag thermometer on Bo's jacket.

“I got in trouble trying ‘to bring everybody along,'” I tell Bo. “I never learned to erect psychic walls. I just wallowed in the trenches with everybody, sharing their misery.” I'm thinking of Erik, my mom, Beckett. These are the people whose emotions have made up life for me.

“You sure as hell got walls now.”

“I know.” I attempt to explain myself to us both. “Somehow finding I could create jewelry a couple years ago triggered a delayed sense of self. I became decisive and more and more independent. Finally, I wanted something just for me. I needed to protect that.” But maybe I have carried the wall building too far.

My eyes spot a glow seeping from behind pine boughs high on a distant peak across the valley. Bo leans up from his backrest against a boulder. We watch the moon finally slide into place above the Gros Ventres. It's a fat, gold-tinged beach ball about to roll over this side of the mountain range. We watch in silence. Then scramble down off the butte, chased by a deepening chill. Bo helps me carry my potted geraniums to the frost protection of the front porch, up close against the cabin logs still holding the day's warmth. He checks his watch.

“Okay if I brush my teeth? Brought a toothbrush over this morning. Think I'll go into town from here.”

“Sure.”

When he comes out of the bathroom, I'm sitting on the kitchen bench, leaning against the wall beneath the shelf, the lamp shining on a new bead catalog that I'm pretending to read.

“You don't want to know this,” Bo says, “but I'm telling you anyway. If her brother has left, I'm ending things with Caro right now. I'm doing it for me, not you.”

He's taken me by surprise. I could have sworn he wouldn't have touched the subject of Caro again with me. Stalling, I ask, “What brother?”

“Benj. He visits a lot.”

“What's he got to do with it?” I don't care about her stupid brother. I just don't know what else to say.

“He sticks pretty close to her. I don't like him much, and if he's still in town…I'll wait. I'm just telling you my intention.”

I nod. Maybe this intention is just like the one about not drinking too much.

“And…I'll take you up on being friends.” He waits for a response, but I feel unable to speak without my voice breaking, so I nod again. He nods back. “Good luck with your new job Tuesday.”

Once the sound of gravel bouncing off the underside of Bo's Suburban fades, I pull all the shades down, turn on more lamps, and try to retrieve my sense of adventure in solitude. But I feel restless walking the tight trail of my own and Grandma Garrett's single experiment in living alone. It's just so…solitary.

RESPITE

OCTOBER 2-8

Ducks and geese are moving south. Brown and brook trout are spawning in increasing numbers. Elk, moose, mule deer, and pronghorn are mating as narrow leaf cottonwoods continue dropping their leaves and fall colors generally fade. Bighorn sheep are grazing alpine meadows located close to cliff retreats, the rams and ewes still in separate bands.

For Everything There Is a Season
—Frank C. Craighead, Jr.

thirteen

E
ach day I am reminded that I am animal. Lately, my sense of smell has awakened. Outside, the aroma of sun on fallen aspen leaves, the freshness of the earth, and the mineral smell of wet creek stones fill me to overflowing. Inside, I smell wood smoke and ashes, the fragrance of ripening apples.

Whereas once I was mainly aware of taste, now food presents a double delight, and so does Bo. Besides enjoying the sight of him, lately I notice he smells like the outdoors and saddle soap. Bo alerts all my senses. Half an hour ago, confined in the cabin with him during a fleeting hailstorm, I abruptly left him doing his laundry with what's become our communal washer and dryer and grabbed a jacket and an old cowboy hat of O.C.'s as I passed through the mudroom on my way outside. The potency of Bo's effect on me felt almost stifling.

I headed for the creek. A surge of physical need compelled me to step off the trail to smooth the glossy bark of a willow, then lick a cattail as if it were a fuzzy Popsicle. I scooped mud from the creek bottom and smeared it like a potion on my inner wrists and watched the slush of softening hail balls rinse it off.

While this icy rain tapers to mist, I sit in a dry spot beneath a cottonwood and try to see the aura around a chokecherry bush. Tessa claims all living things have auras. She warned me during the hectic summer whenever an angry tourist, aura throbbing, approached the register at the bookstore. The chokecherry's aura evades me entirely, but my attention to my surroundings is rewarded, anyway, with a faint rainbow slicing through the Gros Ventres.

Later, Bo and I are going into town to O.C.'s trailer to cook for him. Pork chops. “I'm a vegetarian only in my spare time,” Bo has said to explain why he cooks meat so often. He claims it takes longer to prepare meals without meat. Of course, that's because he isn't familiar with such a diet, which is natural for a rancher. Trouble is, Bo keeps buying enormous quantities of food for our once-a-week dinners together, as if we were a large Mormon family who took seriously the pledge to keep stores for a full year's survival. He bought the “fiesta” size salsa today, a sixty-four-ounce jar that will take us half a year to use.

Though on Bo's good side, I should list his excellent bathroom habits. It's good to know what it takes to instill them in a man, and, apparently, it's two mothers. Bo refers to our weekly dinners as “neighborhood potlucks,” as if the rest of the people didn't show up, just forgot we did this every Friday—his way of making me feel less threatened about planned time together.

I feel an uncanny delight wearing this old hat, smudged and stained, that I found discarded in the shed. Once I wouldn't have touched it with a stick, but I've changed. During the summer, I sometimes removed my boots and hiked barefoot. I don't wash my hands as many times as I used to each day. I wipe them on my khakis, instead. Maybe I'm going native the way British officers sometimes did in Africa when they let their hair grow and cast off their uniforms for native dress.

I rise from beneath the shelter of the cottonwood and move along the trail. I pick a handful of late-ripening Oregon grapes and, without washing them first, eat the berries while I walk, even though the notion flits through my mind that a moose could have urinated on this very bush.

The sun glides into a slot between gray clouds and warms my cheekbones. The atmosphere pulses so purely just now. The glance of a raven above me in the cottonwood cuts through the air like flame does smoke.

At work the other day, I told Tessa that weather for me has become an ongoing drama of greater meaning than merely how to dress for it. Lately, it determines my activities and my moods. And I described my feelings of deliciousness while falling asleep lately and then again when waking up. Tessa said, “Your chakras have been cleansed. They're like circular fans and pull energy from the universe into the body. Yours, girl, are spinning to beat the band.”

It's true I don't remember feeling awake like this before. But I suppose it's simply that I've found my spot on earth and I have come home to my self. I spend many hours outside each day and the rest at an opened window, when once I could go a week without a breath of unprocessed air. Now I check the sky for the first snow clouds, search the butte for mule deer, trace the siren calls of red-tailed hawks. Through these acts I feel as if I am touching the beads of an invisible rosary that remind me where I am and who I am.

“Your trouble is that you're stuck in that cow town in Wyoming,” my dad said shortly after I left Erik and sounded low one phone call. “You should have taken yourself to a big city in the East where you had more choices.” But when I left Erik, I wasn't looking for the kind of choices my dad had in mind: entertainment and opportunities and careers. I was looking for life itself. Here, where the land thrusts upward and the wild animals bound, the world pulses with aliveness. I needed majestic doses to stun me into wakefulness after marriage to Erik.

But waking comes with its own demands. Since autumn began I have wanted to stock food and firewood and candles for winter. I have wanted more sleep, more fats, warm creamy drinks, and baked cakes. Mostly I have wanted to scratch out a den, circle three times, and lie down with my mate.

Whether my mind and emotions feel ready or not, my body is looking for a mate. But it's just winter coming, I remind myself. It's just Bo hanging around my kitchen.

Erik sold our house in Findlay, paid off the mortgage, and sent me my share of the profit, but he doesn't respond to my phone messages or notes. Beckett said that his dad moved into a new town house complex with its own gym and that he works out regularly with weights. I was glad to replace the image of Erik standing alone on the stoop as I pulled out the drive with the image of Erik working up a healthy sweat.

My eyes follow the curve of land rising high against the sky, some peaks frosty with fresh snow that fell as rain and hail down here on the valley floor, and I feel I have completed a cycle in my new life. I arrived as last winter's snowmelt first trickled, then crashed down this mountain stream. I have watched bison calves grow from ovals curled in the meadows like golden eggs into rusty creatures half the size of their mothers. And I myself have burst through a placenta of misconceptions and fears that had held me both protectively and restrictively balled into myself.

The picture of Erik framed by my rearview mirror, alone on the porch stoop, has kept me twisting in and out of the covers many nights, entangled by the concern that I sacrificed him for my own life. I hear him calling to me as I bump down the sidewalk with my suitcase full of books, “If you're going to Florida, keep to the expressway.” At the time I didn't hear these words or respond to them. Now something sounds off to me as the memory replays once again. Why did he assume I was going to Florida? Did Erik intend for his behavior to prompt me into going away without him for spring break? Or for the rest of his life? This was how Erik accomplished what he wanted. He got me to feel the emotions and express them for both of us. He did nothing that could be traced.

Some men ended their marriages by bringing home floozies, expensive cars, drunken friends, empty pay envelopes. My husband brought home pineapple pizza. I feel both freshly enraged and suddenly relieved. I did not single-handedly end a long-term marriage. Erik, in his passive way, also carries responsibility. How many times before had he done similar things and I disappointed him by forgiving, swallowing my anger—choking down pineapple pizza?

The sun has dropped behind Saddlestring Butte and only the dark hulk of the butte is contoured against the late-afternoon sky. From this, the dark silhouettes of Canada geese fly out of shadow and split off in a jagged V, looking as if the side of the hill has exploded into pieces.

It's time to return home.

 

O.C. twisted his knee. Dr. Goldy prescribed that he stay off his feet, which is why Bo and I are having our weekly dinner there tonight. We'll stock groceries and cook for O.C. and exercise his new puppy—the cause of the accident. Five months old and Pet of the Week at the pound, she has the bad habit of tearing around in a frenzy of joy and, in passing, bumping full speed into the back of O.C.'s knee with her head. O.C.'s knee collapses and down he goes. This has happened twice, twisting the same leg.

“Look at this,” Bo says now. He cuts the engine and dips his head to get the full view of O.C.'s trailer out the windshield. “Have you ever seen such mess?”

I laugh in relief that Bo has said something first. Decades' worth of orange Wyoming license plates with the bucking bronco and county number twenty-two stamped on them cover the short end of O.C.'s trailer, which faces the street. Dozens of moose, elk, and deer skulls are mounted on the front side of his trailer beneath the roof of the deck, which is supported by highly varnished burled pine posts. That's not all. The yard, which Bo and I enter through an archway constructed of stacked elk antlers, is the size of two large lots and is enclosed by a cement wall with pale river stones and brightly colored pieces of glass embedded in it.

“Oh,” I say. I spread my arms. “Look at all these…sculptures.”

“O.C. says they're totems. He doesn't like them called sculptures.”

The totems are built from the same mix of stone, glass, and cement as the wall and are scattered about the lawn. There's a giant cowboy boot, a sunflower, a fishing dory, a moose with a pair of antlers rooted in the cement, a jackrabbit with antelope horns, and a prairie schooner. I turn around and see a tall glittering cactus, a windmill, and an unfinished project that may be a doghouse.

Suddenly, the trailer door flies open. I spin around in surprise, and to cover up being stupefied, I bubble extravagantly, “All this…creativity. It's just…amazing. Such profuse amounts of…artwork.”

While I search for words, O.C. hobbles along the deck hanging on to the burled railing. Every foot or so a colorfully painted wooden whirligig spins in the breeze: a man saws wood; a rooster bobs at a corncob; a woman hangs laundry; a little boy…the little boy, I believe, is shaking his penis after peeing in some wooden tulips.

I can't stop jabbering. “I admire your work. I didn't know you were an artist.”

“I'm not a goddamn
artist
.” Now I become aware of O.C.'s grim expression. He squints at me, raises disgusted eyebrows at Bo, then spits over the railing. “So,” he says accusingly to me, “I guess you're his first one.” He cocks his head sharply toward Bo.

“I doubt
that
,” I say before thinking.

Bo disguises a grin by stretching his neck upward to take a puckered surveillance of the gathering clouds, of which an assortment of shapes and colors holds council low over the valley, behind O.C.'s head.

“I hear this one's a crybaby,” O.C. says.

A prickly warmth flushes my underarms. My glance floats in forced casualness to Bo. I plan on denying this accusation, so I can't express outrage just yet that Bo would talk about me to anyone.

“I don't know what…I am not a crybaby,” I say to O.C. Mentally, I add,
Except for that one night you're probably talking about, but your grandson didn't act so damn mature either.
Then I pull myself together and realize O.C. must be referring to something entirely different. Still, he is rude.

“I don't like the way you're talking to me,” I say to him. O.C. says, “I'm not talking to you. I'm talking to my grandson.” Then he turns toward Bo and says, “Snippy little gal.”

I wonder if O.C. always talks to one person while he looks at the other when he feels mean. Perhaps that habit allows him comfort with his harsh language.

Bo, I notice, is looking at his grandfather as if he'd like to reach up and stuff one of those rag brown clouds down O.C.'s throat. He says to me, “He calls artists crybabies.” To O.C. he says, “Don't start on her.”

O.C. ignores his grandson. “The girls tell me you make some kind of baubles.”

Every time O.C. refers to the aunts as
the girls
, which he often did at the barbecue last spring, I get thrown for a second. I picture teenage twins, for some reason. Could it be because that's the image stuck in O.C.'s mind and somehow gets projected with his words? His daughters when they last made sense to him? Say fourteen and fifteen, before adulthood, before driving rights, illegitimate baby boys? Since Violet was held back a year, both girls, like twins, would have been in the eighth grade then.

“Pop…not yet. Okay?” Bo sounds like he knows what's coming.

“Hell to hope, she's a crybaby or she ain't. Let's get it out.” O.C. spreads his spindly short legs—the left with a removable plastic cast around the knee—one step apart and challenges me. “You one of them God-farting artsy whiners? Expect to get your food from the government because you like to daydream on paper and doodle in colored paints and nobody in their hardworking honest mind is going to pay you to do that crap instead of working like the rest of us?”

“What?” I say.

“She works, you old coot. Nobody in government
pays
her. She creates things for free,” Bo says.

I look at Bo, unsure whether he's defending or insulting me.

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