Off Course

Read Off Course Online

Authors: Michelle Huneven

 

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For Dorée Huneven

 

If a woman in her late twenties hasn't found an absorbing occupation, and if, restless or adventurous, she begins to drift, she flirts with peril; for this is a vulnerable age, when demons present, singly and in droves, often taking the form of men.

—Dr. Beverly Cheswick

Love is trauma.    —Donna Pall

 

Contents

Title Page

Copyright Notice

Dedication

Epigraph

Part I: The Mountain

One

Two

Three

Four

Five

Six

Seven

Eight

Nine

Ten

Eleven

Twelve

Thirteen

Fourteen

Fifteen

Part II: The Foothills

Sixteen

Seventeen

Eighteen

Nineteen

Twenty

Twenty-One

Twenty-Two

Twenty-Three

Twenty-Four

Twenty-Five

Acknowledgments

Also by Michelle Huneven

A Note About the Author

Copyright

 

PART I

THE MOUNTAIN

 

One

Cressida Hartley moved up to her parents' mountain cabin to finish her dissertation. She would
not
become one of the aging lurkers around the Econ Department who hoped for sections of Intro to teach while the tenure track shimmered eternally on the far side of two hundred pages.

Her friend Tillie thought of the cabin. “Tell your folks you need three months free and clear and just bang it out up there.”

As it happened, Sam and Sylvia Hartley were building a new cabin behind the old A-frame and they liked the idea of Cress being around to keep an eye on the construction; they even offered to make her student-loan payments for the duration. Her mother, with uncharacteristic restraint, didn't mention that, historically, Cress hated the cabin and had never once gone up willingly.

Cress had never driven to the cabin on her own, either, but she'd remembered the turnoffs—north of Bakersfield onto a two-lane blacktop through the oil fields; then, just before the small agricultural city of Sparkville, a ninety-degree right turn due east toward the cloud-scarved Sierras; and finally, beyond the tiny, sad foothill town of Sawyer, a veer to the right of a huge red barn. The road began to climb then, twisting through oaks, back and forth, the blur of foliage alternating with glimpses into the ravine where the south fork of the Hapsaw River, low in August, formed green pools in biscuit-colored rock.

Being tossed around in the car for an hour was one reason Cress had hated going to the cabin. But it was better to be driving. And lovelier than she remembered, with glossy-leaved oak limbs draped over the road, river views, and dramatic granite outcroppings. Scenery, she thought, was wasted on children, or had been on her. In no time she was in the pines, then passing the Hapsaw Lodge—halfway already! At 5,500 feet, cedars proliferated, and by 6,500 feet, the hundred-foot ponderosa and lodgepole pines prevailed, along with the odd cluster of red-trunked giant sequoias.

The Hartleys' cabin was in the Meadows, a small private development surrounded by National Forest. Her parents had just left, and their housekeeper had come in, made the beds, and laid a fire, match-ready, in the freestanding Danish fireplace. Even in August, a fire at night was a pleasure.

But how ugly the A-frame was—she could see that now: its party-hat pointyness and spindly deck! And inside: the cheap pressboard paneling, the battered cast-off furniture, and ill-fitting venetian blinds. The fireplace, its blue enamel now blackened and chipped around the mouth, seemed a misguided effusion of the sixties, the Scandinavian design a prop for consciousness-raising and wife-swapping sessions—not that her parents went in for either.

A sugar bowl pinned down a note on the wood-grained Formica table:
Upstairs shower stall cracked, use downstairs. Rick and Julie Garsh (contractor + wife) want to have you over. Enjoy. Love, Mom.

Below that, in her father's slanted scrawl:
Enter high/low temp in log 8 a.m. and 8 p.m.

*   *   *

The sun had already slid behind Shale Mountain when she arrived, though another hour of light remained. She set up her typewriter on a card table in the living room. The air was warm and dusty, heat still shimmered off the deck. Outside, with her feet on the railing, she enjoyed a small portion of her mother's bourbon until the mosquitoes found her.

Another reason she'd hated the cabin: no comfortable place to settle in. A wicker love seat was too hard. The built-in window seat was better—at least she could stretch out—but narrow, and also hard, its cushion degraded from years of direct sun. She grabbed the top issue from a two-foot stack of
New Yorker
s, then couldn't stay awake. At eight, ignoring the thermometer and temperature log, she went to her usual room, the enclosed loft with an ultra-firm queen-sized bed that nobody else would sleep on. The day's warmth had collected in a familiar stuffiness. She wrestled the window open along its corroded aluminum track. Wind soughed through the trees, bearing the scent of pine and mineral dust. The moon cast a blue glow. As a child, alone in this room, she'd often heard a distant chorus singing in the highest registers. She knew that the singing came from her own mind, that it was a response to silence and often the prelude to a headache.

She stretched out on the unforgiving bed and closed her eyes. There, at the very edge of hearing, far far away, a thousand voices labored, a cappella.

And so it was on familiar roads, in her family's other home, with the blessings of those closest to her, that she veered off course, into the woods.

*   *   *

Morning brought still more reminders of why she'd hated the cabin: a panging headache, a weird gluey lethargy, small wheeling prisms in her vision. Her mother had attributed these symptoms to Cress's attitude, admittedly rotten. But Sylvia Hartley was off by a letter, as Cress had discovered camping in the Tetons and skiing in Utah. Anywhere above 6,000 feet, she was a poor adapter.

She phoned Tillie in Pasadena at 7:40 a.m. “My head's like an old hangover cartoon,” she said. “With little devils pitchforking my eyeballs.”

“Why are you calling so early?” said Tillie.

“The rates go up at eight.”

They got off the phone a minute before. Cress squinted at the clock. The thermometer hung on the porch sight unseen.

She took three aspirin, then chopped carrots, onions, and celery, and made enough lentil soup for a week, possibly a lifetime. She stuffed a man's large red mitten with ice and, stretching out on the window seat, placed it over her eyes.

The aroma of the soup must have carried outside. The porch creaked and Cress lifted the mitten. A very large dog nosed the sliding glass door as if waiting to be let in. She stood—too fast, setting the prisms into a frenzied whirl—and the creature too rose up on his hind legs. A bear.

He stood like a man, his arms hanging, his head cocked so that his long, whitened snout slanted upward against the glass. One eye—displeasingly small, yellowish, not intelligent—squinted in at her. The visible ear, round at the top and pinched at the stem, lent him a comical stuffed-toy look. He was definitely a he—in the sparser fur of the low belly was a hairier, vertical thicket, with something stuck on it—a dry leaf? A bit of bark? His own crustiness?

Perhaps overconfident of the Thermopane, Cress moved closer. Her heart, which recognized danger, began to race. But when had she ever been so close? She knew from childhood admonitions,
Mustn't meet his eye
.

He was not a handsome or hygienic bear, no, his coat dirty, clumped, its dull brown bleached unevenly on the ends.

His black nostrils quivered, steamed the glass, and slid against it in dark, shiny adhesions, leaving smears. The claws, translucent black crescents, looked like plastic.

She moved closer yet, and he dropped back to all fours. Doglike again, he lumbered down the steps, shoulders rolling. The whole cabin shuddered.

She noticed then other smears, at the same heights, high and low, all along the sliding glass doors, the front set and the side ones.

Her hands shook as she phoned her nearest neighbors, the retired couple a quarter mile up the hill. “I just had a bear on my porch,” she told Florence Orliss. “Big old shaggy brown one.”

“Him, yes. He's by here almost every day. Neville squirts him with a hose or bangs pans at him. You want to discourage familiarity.”

*   *   *

“It's Thursday, you should go to Family Night at the lodge.” Her mother was calling for the third time in as many days. “Jakey puts out a decent buffet. Charge your dinner to our tab. You can buy your own drinks. How's the writing?”

“Marvelous.” Cress eyed the sealed box of research notes. “I'm on fire.”

“Have you met the Garshes yet?”

“No, Mom, not yet.”

“They'll be there. Be sure and introduce yourself.”

*   *   *

Cress put on black cigarette pants, a velvet opera coat she'd bought in a Bakersfield thrift store on the way up, and lipstick. She brushed her straight fine hair, but by the time she'd walked the 1.2 miles to the Meadows Lodge, it had separated into strings again. She entered the log building through the bar, and the three dirt-blackened workmen hunched over beers turned as one. “Hey hey! Look at
you
! Can we buy you a drink, darling?”

“That's okay,” she whispered, regretting the velvet, the lipstick. “No thanks, no. Thanks, though.”

A few steps more and she was in the large, open room. The usual Meadows retirees were out in force, and older; she hadn't seen most of them since she'd been a regular visitor in high school, ten, twelve years ago. The Orlisses. Jim and Sandy Green. Abe and Belinda Johnson. That was Jakey Yates, the lodge owner, hauling a steel tub of broccoli to the steam table. Brian Crittenden waved to her from a booth—she was pretty sure it was Brian, whom she also hadn't seen in ten years, but her mother said he was at his family's chalet recovering from a divorce. Grateful to know anyone under seventy, Cress went over. A small, big-eyed young woman curled under Brian's arm.

“Join us,” Brian said. “Heard you were up.” His cheerleader good looks—blue eyes, snub nose, wide mouth—had thickened, gone bleary. When Cress was eleven, he'd told her he was “SAE at U.S.C.,” and the rhyme still bounced in her brain. “This here's Franny.” Brian jostled the slight waif, who had a delicate sharp jaw, those outsized eyes, and long mole-colored hair, shagged.

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