Goat Mountain Page 4
My father heaved at the line as the weight increased. Hard jerks, and the dead man turned until his back showed to us, the shirt and vest fallen away, and that cavern a dark eye iridescent and moving. His head was free then jammed back into the ground then free again and lifting, and his arms lifting, and he kept turning and we saw again the white luminous belly covered in a dried dark film.
My father heaving backward on that rope, pulling at an enormous bow, facing away from the dead man as if they had separate labors. The dead man’s arms swirling against the ground dreamily, mouth open in rapture. And then he was gone to us again and again we saw that cavernous eye in glints blue and green.
Not one of us could speak. I had never seen anything more beautiful. The bright meadow beyond, and the fall off the edge of the world from there, the source of this breeze as the mountain dove and we could see only blank air and other mountain ranges lost in the distance. The dead man in his slow spin before us somehow able to pull that distance toward him and able to tilt even the ground beneath us, collapsing all.
My father had seen nothing. He glanced back only to check that the man’s head was high enough above ground, and then he wrapped the rope around the tree several times, careful not to let it slip, and tied off. Get one of the sacks, he said.
It wasn’t clear who he was speaking to, but Tom and my grandfather didn’t move, so I went to the truck, reached behind the seat and saw my rifle. I put my hand on the stock but then grabbed one of the burlap sacks beneath and pulled it free.
My father was tying the man’s arms up to his sides. He tried wrapping, but that was slipping down, so he let the arms fall and tied one wrist, brought the rope up through the man’s crotch and led to the other wrist, cinched it tight, the man with one hand at his crotch now and the other at his butt, as if covering himself from view, a modest dead man caught without any clothing, except his jeans were still there.
The dead man’s behavior could not be accounted for, but my father slipped that burlap sack up over him and he was lost from view and no longer to be considered. Except that somehow hanging there in a sack like the carcass of a buck he became even larger in my imagination and I could see his open mouth and eyes and his look of pure wonder at the world. His skin had become whiter, and he was taller.
The sack was not long enough to cover his boots. My father kept heaving upward on that sack but it was at its limit. He’d have to tie around the man’s ankles or shins, around his jeans where the chains bit in, and these yellow-brown work boots would remain for all to see.
You can’t leave his boots showing, my grandfather said.
I’m aware of that, my father said.
Anyone could see it’s a man, not a buck.
I get that, Dad, my father said. It’s not a brilliant fucking insight you’re sharing with me.
We’re going to prison for a long time, Tom said. All of us. Except maybe the one responsible, since he’s a boy.
How about shut the fuck up, my father said.
Yeah, because I really owe you. You’re doing so much for me here. Thanks for being a great friend.
My father knelt down and pulled up on the man’s head. Then he looked at me and said, Come here.
So I knelt before the dead man and pulled his head against his chest. The burlap rough, like the weave of tree bark, and the man’s face hidden but I knew his mouth would close as his chin hit his chest. It won’t matter if you cover the boots now, I told my father. Because he’ll only get taller in the night, and then his boots will stick out again.
My father looked down at me, and I could see for the first time that he was not a handsome man. His chin too fatty on an otherwise narrowing jaw, and his nose too bony. His eyes might even have been too close.
My father returned to his work, tying that sack around the chain above the man’s boots. Done, he said. And thanks for the help, everyone.
We all stood back and looked at the man hanging there upside down. Even in burlap, it looked like a man. You could tell he had shoulders and his head pinned against his chest. You could tell those were boots at the top. A man learned to sleep upside down, wrapped in rough burlap wings larger but essentially the same as the wings of any other bat. Underneath, a body white as chalk. Waiting for nightfall.
Good enough, my father said. Time to set up camp.
So we pulled at that mattress that was darkened now on top and we carried it to one of the ancient rusted box springs and flipped it over, leaving the clean side to face the sky. This bed was for my grandfather, who had a bad back along with all his other ailments. The rest of us would sleep on the ground.
My father helped Tom carry the wooden crates of canned goods and plates and utensils to the tables beside the sink. They weren’t speaking or looking at each other. Tom’s face in those glasses could have been a boy’s face, someone my age. Dark hair, not receding like my father’s.
I hung the lanterns at the table. I carried my bedroll to a place between the trees where I always slept, level ground and pine needles.
Tom fixed lunch, as he always did. Just bread and lunch meat and cheese set out on the table, ketchup and mustard. We all sat on the benches, my father and grandfather on the uphill side, Tom and I being pulled slightly backward by gravity on the downhill side. The table had never been level.
Each of us with our hunting knives, long wide blades. My grandfather cutting his sandwich into strips like jerky. No place mats, just the stained old planks of the table and our knives etching into the wood as we cut. The blades thick on top, channeled, curving at their ends into narrow points. Each of our sandwiches cut differently, my father diagonal, Tom in simple half, mine in a cross, four pieces. And when we finished cutting, we stabbed our knives into the table so that they all stood on end, four pillars among the lunch fixings. Every time we came here was the same, except this time we didn’t talk. No one had anything to say. Cicadas turning the air into clicks and a pulse. Flies, the large horseflies that could take a nasty bite out of wrist or ankle. We moved only to chew or to swat away the flies, and we all looked down at the table.
The pines above us moving in the breeze and then silent again. The water at the basin. The growing heat in the meadow, radiating into the trees and shade.
Well, my father said, and he rose and walked away to his bedroll farther back in the trees.
My grandfather opened a pack of Saltines and crushed a handful into a tall plastic cup. He poured milk over them and ate with a spoon.
Tom got up without a word and wandered off to his bedroll, and I listened to my grandfather chew. Sopping and smacking sounds. Middle of the day and nothing but the insects inclined to move.
Well, I said, and I walked to my bedroll, an old green army sleeping bag that was too hot to get inside. I lay on top and looked at the pines against a bright blue. All vision moving toward the center, the pines rushing toward the blue but also remaining in place, as if they could constantly shed shadows of themselves, streaming off into the sky but never becoming any less substantial. All the world a kind of vapor drawn from what would not change.
The ground I was on could have slipped anywhere along that mountain, and could have caved in to any depth or seemed to cave. There were four points of us, and a fifth hanging, and all the rest only background.
5
WHY IS IT THAT WE HUNT? ISN’T IT TO RETURN TO something older? And isn’t Cain what waits for us in every older time?
When we woke late in the day, it was to prepare for the evening hunt. The air freshened, no longer heavy and dead. A promise at the end of every day, a quickening. The shadows of the trees extending beyond measure, smooth dark strips all angled in unison. Each yellow blade of grass in the meadow aligned also, inscribed, etched into existence, and the tallest of the ferns along the creek casting primeval banded markings across a mirror of water.
The breeze in the tops of the pines had increased, and this gave urgency to our movement. My father and grandfather and Tom gathered their rifles and
shells, canteens and binoculars, dark jackets and hats. Voiceless shapes in that forest, each grim and intent, awakened from the shadows.
We could have been any band of men, from any time. The hunt a way to reach back a thousand generations. Our first reason to band together, to kill.
I was not allowed my rifle. Weaponless, an outsider on the hunt that should have been my initiation. I was so angry about this I could not have found a way to speak. I climbed into the back of the pickup and waited.
The bed of the pickup cleared out now, and I could stand, my shoulders above that cab. We should have been hiking into the forest, stepping quietly, hidden by trees and looking for antlers or a twitch of ears or a patch of brown lighter than the background. Stopping to listen. But my grandfather had become something modern, an obesity pumped full of insulin and pills and unable to walk through a forest for miles. A thousand generations, tens of thousands of years, ended by him. Having to sit in a pickup and hunt with an engine, loud enough for every buck for miles around to hear we were coming. Unconnected to the ground, rolling on tires that snapped and popped and left a track that was foreign and unimaginable.
I watched my grandfather as he gathered and shuffled, and it did not seem possible that I had come from him. All features fading from his face, receding, leaving only expanses of blotched flesh and wattle.
My father sliding toward that same face, chin and cheeks loose. No word among the men, moving as silently as possible, all absurd since we were about to start the engine. They climbed into the cab with their rifles between their knees and pulled the doors shut carefully, no more than a click for each.
Then the engine, and backing and turning around and we rumbled on down that road, and who cared what the road held. I couldn’t even look at it. Pointless hunt. I was the spotter, but I looked instead at the trees. The older forest and then the newer one, the open section of land that had been logged a few years after my birth, all the trees thin and individual, planted, the areas between filled with wreckage. Grasses and ferns and poison oak gone red with fall, looking like bunches of flowers, a junked landscape waiting to burn, all smaller limbs left behind by the loggers and decaying still, choking every pathway, making a false floor.
I pounded the top of the cab with my fist and we lurched to a halt. The doors flew open and Tom was out the right side first, raising his rifle to his shoulder. Then my father out the left side, raising his rifle.
Where is it? Tom said. Trying to whisper but hoarse and loud. Where’s the buck?
I pointed to where the new forest rolled downward into brush and a lost part of the ranch we never hunted. We never found bucks this close to camp.
What was he? my father asked.
A big buck, I said. A three-point, I think, but he was leaping and moving fast into the brush.
My father took off across that wasteland at a run. Tom on his right flank and me following. No foothold secure. Small limbs and sawed-off stumps and holes everywhere, but the top of my father floated as if on springs, facing forward exactly to where I’d pointed, looking for that buck. His legs and boots laboring beneath, unconnected.
I looked back and saw my grandfather mired far behind, lost to the chase, and I smiled and tripped and went down hard into poison oak, greasy curse that would puff up along my face and neck and arms within a day, but I didn’t care. That was part of every hunt anyway. I was back on my feet and running hard, trying to catch up to the men. I wanted to whoop out loud, because I loved this. If they weren’t going to let me hunt, we’d chase phantom bucks into the worst hell this land could offer.
Running straight into the sun, low on the horizon. Tom holding his rifle in both hands, leaping over every obstacle, looking like a jackrabbit. My father lower and smoother, his rifle in just one hand, pulling ahead.
Shape had been transformed into color. My feet looking for the light brown of dirt, flat, avoiding darker shades of fallen branches and the white-gray of trunk tops or dark red rot. The yellow only an illusion, a screen, the same as air, insubstantial. Dry grasses were what we swam through, up to my waist in some places, veering to avoid thistle, milky green and white spines.
The trick was to look farther ahead. You could trip only if you looked too close, if you worried about what was happening right now. If you kept a wider view, staring into that sun, you could never fall.
My father and Tom shadows in that light, half-presences, becoming insubstantial, becoming movement without weight. An arm back, midstride, might catch the sun and the body would become a body again, but then return to shadow that stretched all the way to me and far beyond.
They were moving faster and faster, and I was losing them, falling behind, but then Tom would leap, and the height of his shadow would fling past and over me and the gap between us would collapse. He could expand or collapse and every part of him would remain to scale, and all the while, in every moment, everything around him grew, every long shadow of every thin tree, the world stretching toward me as I ran.
My father a more constant shape, held low, a different gravity. It didn’t matter that the buck was imaginary. I knew he would find it anyway. He would make a buck appear. He’d shoot on the run, that big boom rolling out across ridge after ridge and slapping back from the mountaintops.
What we wanted was to run like this, to chase our prey. That was the point. What made us run was the joy and promise of killing.
I could feel my lungs, my legs, but this was only because I knew there was no buck. The men would not feel a thing, all pain washed away in adrenaline. There was no joy as complete and immediate as killing. Even the bare thought of it was better than anything else.
My boots heavy as I lost sight of the men and focused only on the branches and trunks and brush and grass before me, trying not to fall. Fear of snake, fear of twisting an ankle or breaking a leg. I had been knocked out of the dream, but my father and Tom were still there.
I stopped and bent over, my hands on my knees, and tried to catch my breath. Looking back, this seems strange, that a kid could ever tire, but I remember my chest and head pumping and dizzy and everything overwhelmed. I remember walking after that, stepping over all the deadfall, and coming to poison oak so thick there was nothing to do but wade through it. Glossy, waxy green, the edges turned red, as if the plant had poisoned itself, rotting away and dying even as it secreted more poison. You have to wonder why it exists in this world.
Where the forest has been cut, all the most vicious plants grow, each one struggling to choke out every other. Thistle and nettle, live oak and poison oak, burrs and spines and thorns. And this is where I had sent my father and Tom, and this is where I followed.
We pushed our way into this oblivion and just kept going, the land falling down in a slow curve. The sun failing, winking along the farthest ridge and then gone, the sky still bright, the planet turning beneath us. Each of us alone now, separate on that hillside, hearing our own footsteps and blood against the rise of a breeze, the hot air from low in the valley making its way upward.
I did not call out for my father or Tom, and they did not call out for me. We continued, each of us, until that point when the sky had faded enough that we would return at the pickup in darkness, each of us knowing exactly when that would be, and though we took separate paths, we knew we would arrive at the same time.
Walking in a void. The truth of every landscape. When the promise of killing is taken away, the brush is without name, a dozen varieties but all of it dry and reaching upward and compact and unforgiving, grown too close and shortening all escape. The sky new and old and nothing, and the earth insubstantial. We walk on because that’s all that’s left.
My hands were empty, no rifle. What’s good is to hold the grip of a rifle and let the barrel go over a shoulder. The weight of that cutting a crease along your neck. The swing of it as you step, the burden and the heat still in that barrel. And in higher brush, to hook your other hand over the barrel and carry that rifle on both shoulders. You become a giant w
hen you hold a rifle like that. The distance from your shoulders down to the ground increases, and you can wade through any brush and never be held back. And you’re still watching for movement to both sides. In an instant, you could bring that rifle down and fire. One foot would be back for balance, but you’d never have thought to put it there. And even if you never find movement and never bring the rifle to bear, still it’s the two of you walking in that void, and the night as it closes in feels companionable.
But with no rifle, the air is only air, and it’s impossible to know what to do with your hands. Arms up to fend against brush but the hands themselves useless, and the brush grown tall, and no bearing available, one’s track winding like a snake’s. Buried in brush, and all of it endless, and each step a struggle.
I tore through enormous stands of poison oak and finally was clear to cross that more open wasteland, too dark to see the truck but light enough still to find my way, everything timed to the light from before I was born, and my feet timed, also, and my breath and my blood and even my thoughts, which were of nothing.
We stood around that pickup looking at the ground or the sky.
Too dark to track, my father finally said. But we’ll get him tomorrow.
Been a long time since we’ve gone down through there, Tom said.
Years, my father said. More than that.
Might be nothing down there.
Might be. We can decide in the morning. See how things look.
The four of us darker presences in that night, which had become cold already. The air too thin to hold heat once the sun was gone, but somehow it held still the barest bit of light. Enough to tell that my father and Tom both held their rifles in the crooks of their arms, barrels pointed down. My grandfather’s on a strap on his shoulder. A shadow in darkness can move anywhere, and as I blinked or shifted my glance, the men would veer closer or fall away.
Might be nothing at all down there, Tom said.
Might be, my father said. But we’ve seen one.