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Annie Proulx
Brokeback Mountain
Ennis Del Mar wakes before five, wind rocking the trailer,
hissing in around the aluminum door and window frames. The
shirts hanging on a nail shudder slightly in the draft. He
gets up, scratching the grey wedge of belly and pubic hair,
shuffles to the gas burner, pours leftover coffee in a
chipped enamel pan; the flame swathes it in blue. He turns
on the tap and urinates in the sink, pulls on his shirt and
jeans, his worn boots, stamping the heels against the floor
to get them full on. The wind booms down the curved length
of the trailer and under its roaring passage he can hear the
scratching of fine gravel and sand. It could be bad on the
highway with the horse trailer. He has to be packed and away
from the place that morning. Again the ranch is on the
market and they've shipped out the last of the horses, paid
everybody off the day before, the owner saying, "Give em to
the real estate shark, I'm out a here," dropping the keys in
Ennis's hand. He might have to stay with his married
daughter until he picks up another job, yet he is suffused
with a sense of pleasure because Jack Twist was in his
dream.
The stale coffee is boiling up but he catches it before it
goes over the side, pours it into a stained cup and blows on
the black liquid, lets a panel of the dream slide forward.
If he does not force his attention on it, it might stoke the
day, rewarm that old, cold time on the mountain when they
owned the world and nothing seemed wrong. The wind strikes
the trailer like a load of dirt coming off a dump truck,
eases, dies, leaves a temporary silence.
They were raised on small, poor ranches in opposite corners
of the state, Jack Twist in Lightning Flat up on the Montana
border, Ennis del Mar from around Sage, near the Utah line,
both high school dropout country boys with no prospects,
brought up to hard work and privation, both rough-mannered,
rough-spoken, inured to the stoic life. Ennis, reared by his
older brother and sister after their parents drove off the
only curve on Dead Horse Road leaving them twenty-four
dollars in cash and a two-mortgage ranch, applied at age
fourteen for a hardship license that let him make the
hour-long trip from the ranch to the high school. The pickup
was old, no heater, one windshield wiper and bad tires; when
the transmission went there was no money to fix it. He had
wanted to be a sophomore, felt the word carried a kind of
distinction, but the truck broke down short of it, pitching
him directly into ranch work.
In 1963 when he met Jack Twist, Ennis was engaged to Alma
Beers. Both Jack and Ennis claimed to be saving money for a
small spread; in Ennis's case that meant a tobacco can with
two five-dollar bills inside. That spring, hungry for any
job, each had signed up with Farm and Ranch Employment--they
came together on paper as herder and camp tender for the
same sheep operation north of Signal. The summer range lay
above the tree line on Forest Service land on Brokeback
Mountain. It would be Jack Twist's second summer on the
mountain, Ennis's first. Neither of them was twenty.
They shook hands in the choky little trailer office in front
of a table littered with scribbled papers, a Bakelite
ashtray brimming with stubs. The venetian blinds hung askew
and admitted a triangle of white light, the shadow of the
foreman's hand moving into it. Joe Aguirre, wavy hair the
color of cigarette ash and parted down the middle, gave them
his point of view.
"Forest Service got designated campsites on the allotments.
Them camps can be a couple a miles from where we pasture the
sheep. Bad predator loss, nobody near lookin after em at
night. What I want, camp tender in the main camp where the
Forest Service says, but the HERDER"--pointing at Jack with
a chop of his hand--"pitch a pup tent on the q. t. with the
sheep, out a sight, and he's goin a SLEEP there. Eat supper,
breakfast in camp, but SLEEP WITH THE SHEEP, hunderd
percent, NO FIRE, don't leave NO SIGN. Roll up that tent
every mornin case Forest Service snoops around. Got the
dogs, your .30- .30, sleep there. Last summer had goddamn
near twenty-five percent loss. I don't want that again.
YOU," he said to Ennis, taking in the ragged hair, the big
nicked hands, the jeans torn, button-gaping shirt, "Fridays
twelve noon be down at the bridge with your next week list
and mules. Somebody with supplies'll be there in a pickup."
He didn't ask if Ennis had a watch but took a cheap round
ticker on a braided cord from a box on a high shelf, wound
and set it, tossed it to him as if he weren't worth the
reach. "TOMORROW MORNIN we'll truck you up the jump-off."
Pair of deuces going nowhere.
They found a bar and drank beer through the afternoon, Jack
telling Ennis about a lightning storm on the mountain the
year before that killed forty-two sheep, the peculiar stink
of them and the way they bloated, the need for plenty of
whiskey up there. He had shot an eagle, he said, turned his
head to show the tail feather in his hatband. At first
glance Jack seemed fair enough with his curly hair and quick
laugh, but for a small man he carried some weight in the
haunch and his smile disclosed buckteeth, not pronounced
enough to let him eat popcorn out of the neck of a jug, but
noticeable. He was infatuated with the rodeo life and
fastened his belt with a minor bull-riding buckle, but his
boots were worn to the quick, holed beyond repair and he was
crazy to be somewhere, anywhere else than Lightning Flat.
Ennis, high-arched nose and narrow face, was scruffy and a
little cave-chested, balanced a small torso on long, caliper
legs, possessed a muscular and supple body made for the
horse and for fighting. His reflexes were uncommonly quick
and he was farsighted enough to dislike reading anything
except Hamley's saddle catalog.
The sheep trucks and horse trailers unloaded at the
trailhead and a bandy-legged Basque showed Ennis how to pack
the mules, two packs and a riding load on each animal
ring-lashed with double diamonds and secured with half
hitches, telling him, "Don't never order soup. Them boxes a
soup are real bad to pack." Three puppies belonging to one
of the blue heelers went in a pack basket, the runt inside
Jack's coat, for he loved a little dog. Ennis picked out a
big chestnut called Cigar Butt to ride, Jack a bay mare who
turned out to have a low startle point. The string of spare
horses included a mouse-colored grullo whose looks Ennis
liked. Ennis and Jack, the dogs, horses and mules, a
thousand ewes and their lambs flowed up the trail like dirty
water through the timber and out above the tree line into
the great flowery Meadows and the coursing, endless wind.
They got the big tent up on the Forest Service's platform,
the kitchen and grub boxes secured. Both slept in camp that
first night, Jack already bitching about Joe Aguirre's
sleep-with-the-sheep-and-no-fire order, though he saddled
the bay mare in the dark morning without saying much. Dawn
came glassy orange, stained from below by a gelatinous band
of pale green. The sooty bulk of the mountain paled slowly
until it was the same color as the smoke from Ennis's
breakfast fire. The cold air sweetened, banded pebbles and
crumbs of soil cast sudden pencil-long shadows and the
rearing lodgepole pines below them massed in slabs of somber
malachite.
During the day Ennis looked across a great gulf and
sometimes saw Jack, a small dot moving across a high meadow
as an insect moves across a tablecloth; Jack, in his dark
camp, saw Ennis as night fire, a red spark on the huge black
mass of mountain.
Jack came lagging in late one afternoon, drank his two
bottles of beer cooled in a wet sack on the shady side of
the tent, ate two bowls of stew, four of Ennis's stone
biscuits, a can of peaches, rolled a smoke, watched the sun
drop.
"I'm commutin four hours a day," he said morosely. "Come in
for breakfast, go back to the sheep, evenin get em bedded
down, come in for supper, go back to the sheep, spend half
the night jumpin up and checkin for coyotes. By rights I
should be spendin the night here. Aguirre got no right a
make me do this."
"You want a switch?" said Ennis. "I wouldn't mind herdin. I
wouldn't mind sleepin out there."
"That ain't the point. Point is, we both should be in this
camp. And that goddamn pup tent smells like cat piss or
worse."
"Wouldn't mind bein out there."
"Tell you what, you got a get up a dozen times in the night
out there over them coyotes. Happy to switch but give you
warnin I can't cook worth a sh*t. Pretty good with a can
opener."
"Can't be no worse than me, then. Sure, I wouldn't mind a do
it."
They fended off the night for an hour with the yellow
kerosene lamp and around ten Ennis rode Cigar Butt, a good
night horse, through the glimmering frost back to the sheep,
carrying leftover biscuits, a jar of jam and a jar of coffee
with him for the next day saying he'd save a trip, stay out
until supper.
"Shot a coyote just first light," he told Jack the next
evening, sloshing his face with hot water, lathering up soap
and hoping his razor had some cut left in it, while Jack
peeled potatoes. "Big son of a bitch. Balls on him size a
apples. I bet he'd took a few lambs. Looked like he could a
eat a camel. You want some a this hot water? There's
plenty."
"It's all yours."
"Well, I'm goin a warsh everthing I can reach," he said,
pulling off his boots and jeans (no drawers, no socks, Jack
noticed), slopping the green washcloth around until the fire
spat.
They had a high-time supper by the fire, a can of beans
each, fried potatoes and a quart of whiskey on shares, sat
with their backs against a log, boot soles and copper jeans
rivets hot, swapping the bottle while the lavender sky
emptied of color and the chill air drained down, drinking,
smoking cigarettes, getting up every now and then to piss,
firelight throwing a sparkle in the arched stream, tossing
sticks on the fire to keep the talk going, talking horses
and rodeo, roughstock events, wrecks and injuries sustained,
the submarine Thresher lost two months earlier with all
hands and how it must have been in the last doomed minutes,
dogs each had owned and known, the draft, Jack's home ranch
where his father and mother held on, Ennis's family place
folded years ago after his folks died, the older brother in
Signal and a married sister in Casper. Jack said his father
had been a pretty well known bullrider years back but kept
his secrets to himself, never gave Jack a word of advice,
never came once to see Jack ride, though he had put him on
the woolies when he was a little kid. Ennis said the kind of
riding that interested him lasted longer than eight seconds
and had some point to it. Money's a good point, said Jack,
and Ennis had to agree. They were respectful of each other's
opinions, each glad to have a companion where none had been
expected. Ennis, riding against the wind back to the sheep
in the treacherous, drunken light, thought he'd never had
such a good time, felt he could paw the white out of the
moon.
The summer went on and they moved the herd to new pasture,
shifted the camp; the distance between the sheep and the new
camp was greater and the night ride longer. Ennis rode easy,
sleeping with his eyes open, but the hours he was away from
the sheep stretched out and out. Jack pulled a squalling
burr out of the harmonica, flattened a little from a fall
off the skittish bay mare, and Ennis had a good raspy voice;
a few nights they mangled their way through some songs.
Ennis knew the salty words to "Strawberry Roan." Jack tried
a Carl Perkins song, bawling "what I say-ay-ay," but he
favored a sad hymn, "Water-Walking Jesus," learned from his
mother who believed in the Pentecost, that he sang at dirge
slowness, setting off distant coyote yips.
"Too late to go out to them damn sheep," said Ennis, dizzy
drunk on all fours one cold hour when the moon had notched
past two. The meadow stones glowed white-green and a flinty
wind worked over the meadow, scraped the fire low, then
ruffled it into yellow silk sashes. "Got you a extra blanket
I'll roll up out here and grab forty winks, ride out at
first light."
"Freeze your ass off when that fire dies down. Better off
sleepin in the tent."
"Doubt I'll feel nothin." But he staggered under canvas,
pulled his boots off, snored on the ground cloth for a
while, woke Jack with the clacking of his jaw.
"Jesus Christ, quit hammerin and get over here. Bedroll's
big enough," said Jack in an irritable sleep-clogged voice.
It was big enough, warm enough, and in a little while they
deepened their intimacy considerably. Ennis ran
full-throttle on all roads whether fence mending or money
spending, and he wanted none of it when Jack seized his left
hand and brought it to his erect cock. Ennis jerked his hand
away as though he'd touched fire, got to his knees,
unbuckled his belt, shoved his pants down, hauled Jack onto
all fours and, with the help of the clear slick and a little
spit, entered him, nothing he'd done before but no
instruction manual needed. They went at it in silence except
for a few sharp intakes of breath and Jack's choked "gun's
goin off," then out, down, and asleep.
Ennis woke in red dawn with his pants around his knees, a
top-grade headache, and Jack butted against him; without
saying anything about it both knew how it would go for the
rest of the summer, sheep be damned.
As it did go. They never talked about the sex, let it
happen, at first only in the tent at night, then in the full
daylight with the hot sun striking down, and at evening in
the fire glow, quick, rough, laughing and snorting, no lack
of noises, but saying not a goddamn word except once Ennis
said, "I'm not no queer," and Jack jumped in with "Me
neither. A one-shot thing. Nobody's business but ours."
There were only the two of them on the mountain flying in
the euphoric, bitter air, looking down on the hawk's back
and the crawling lights of vehicles on the plain below,
suspended above ordinary affairs and distant from tame ranch
dogs barking in the dark hours. They believed themselves
invisible, not knowing Joe Aguirre had watched them through
his 10x42 binoculars for ten minutes one day, waiting until
they'd buttoned up their jeans, waiting until Ennis rode
back to the sheep, before bringing up the message that
Jack's people had sent word that his uncle Harold was in the
hospital with pneumonia and expected not to make it. Though
he did, and Aguirre came up again to say so, fixing Jack
with his bold stare, not bothering to dismount.
In August Ennis spent the whole night with Jack in the main
camp and in a blowy hailstorm the sheep took off west and
got among a herd in another allotment. There was a damn
miserable time for five days, Ennis and a Chilean herder
with no English trying to sort them out, the task almost
impossible as the paint brands were worn and faint at this
late season. Even when the numbers were right Ennis knew the
sheep were mixed. In a disquieting way everything seemed
mixed.
The first snow came early, on August thirteenth, piling up a
foot, but was followed by a quick melt. The next week Joe
Aguirre sent word to bring them down--another, bigger storm
was moving in from the Pacific--and they packed in the game
and moved off the mountain with the sheep, stones rolling at
their heels, purple cloud crowding in from the west and the
metal smell of coming snow pressing them on. The mountain
boiled with demonic energy, glazed with flickering
broken-cloud light, the wind combed the grass and drew from
the damaged krummholz and slit rock a bestial drone. As they
descended the slope Ennis felt he was in a slow-motion, but
headlong, irreversible fall.
Joe Aguirre paid them, said little. He had looked at the
milling sheep with a sour expression, said, "Some a these
never went up there with you." The count was not what he'd
hoped for either. Ranch stiffs never did much of a job.
"You goin a do this next summer?" said Jack to Ennis in the
street, one leg already up in his green pickup. The wind was
gusting hard and cold.
"Maybe not." A dust plume rose and hazed the air with fine
grit and he squinted against it. "Like I said, Alma and me's
gettin married in December. Try to get somethin on a ranch.
You?" He looked away from Jack's jaw, bruised blue from the
hard punch Ennis had thrown him on the last day.
"If nothin better comes along. Thought some about going back
up to my daddy's place, give him a hand over the winter,
then maybe head out for Texas in the spring. If the draft
don't get me."
"Well, see you around, I guess." The wind tumbled an empty
feed bag down the street until it fetched up under his
truck.
"Right," said Jack, and they shook hands, hit each other on
the shoulder, then there was forty feet of distance between
them and nothing to do but drive away in opposite
directions. Within a mile Ennis felt like someone was
pulling his guts out hand over hand a yard at a time. He
stopped at the side of the road and, in the whirling new
snow, tried to puke but nothing came up. He felt about as
bad as he ever had and it took a long time for the feeling
to wear off.
In December Ennis married Alma Beers and had her pregnant by
mid-January. He picked up a few short-lived ranch jobs, then
settled in as a wrangler on the old Elwood Hi-Top place
north of Lost Cabin in Washakie County. He was still working
there in September when Alma Jr., as he called his daughter,
was born and their bedroom was full of the smell of old
blood and milk and baby sh*t, and the sounds were of
squalling and sucking and Alma's sleepy groans, all
reassuring of fecundity and life's continuance to one who
worked with livestock.
When the Hi-Top folded they moved to a small apartment in
Riverton up over a laundry. Ennis got on the highway crew,
tolerating it but working weekends at the Rafter B in
exchange for keeping his horses out there. The second girl
was born and Alma wanted to stay in town near the clinic
because the child had an asthmatic wheeze.
"Ennis, please, no more damn lonesome ranches for us," she
said, sitting on his lap, wrapping her thin, freckled arms
around him. "Let's get a place here in town?"
"I guess," said Ennis, slipping his hand up her blouse
sleeve and stirring the silky armpit hair, then easing her
down, fingers moving up her ribs to the jelly breast, over
the round belly and knee and up into the wet gap all the way
to the north pole or the equator depending which way you
thought you were sailing, working at it until she shuddered
and bucked against his hand and he rolled her over, did
quickly what she hated. They stayed in the little apartment
which he favored because it could be left at any time.
The fourth summer since Brokeback Mountain came on and in
June Ennis had a general delivery letter from Jack Twist,
the first sign of life in all that time.
Friend this letter is a long time over due. Hope you get it.
Heard you was in Riverton. Im coming thru on the 24th,
thought Id stop and buy you a beer Drop me a line if you
can, say if your there.
The return address was Childress, Texas. Ennis wrote back,
you bet, gave the Riverton address.
The day was hot and clear in the morning, but by noon the
clouds had pushed up out of the west rolling a little sultry
air before them. Ennis, wearing his best shirt, white with
wide black stripes, didn't know what time Jack would get
there and so had taken the day off, paced back and forth,
looking down into a street pale with dust. Alma was saying
something about taking his friend to the Knife & Fork for
supper instead of cooking it was so hot, if they could get a
baby-sitter, but Ennis said more likely he'd just go out
with Jack and get drunk. Jack was not a restaurant type, he
said, thinking of the dirty spoons sticking out of the cans
of cold beans balanced on the log.
Late in the afternoon, thunder growling, that same old green
pickup rolled in and he saw Jack get out of the truck,
beat-up Resistol tilted back. A hot jolt scalded Ennis and
he was out on the landing pulling the door closed behind
him. Jack took the stairs two and two. They seized each
other by the shoulders, hugged mightily, squeezing the
breath out of each other, saying, son of a bitch, son of a
bitch, then, and easily as the right key turns the lock
tumblers, their mouths came together, and hard, Jack's big
teeth bringing blood, his hat falling to the floor, stubble
rasping, wet saliva welling, and the door opening and Alma
looking out for a few seconds at Ennis's straining shoulders
and shutting the door again and still they clinched,
pressing chest and groin and thigh and leg together,
treading on each other's toes until they pulled apart to
breathe and Ennis, not big on endearments, said what he said
to his horses and daughters, little darlin.
The door opened again a few inches and Alma stood in the
narrow light.
What could he say? "Alma, this is Jack Twist, Jack, my wife
Alma." His chest was heaving. He could smell Jack--the
intensely familiar odor of cigarettes, musky sweat and a
faint sweetness like grass, and with it the rushing cold of
the mountain. "Alma," he said, "Jack and me ain't seen each
other in four years." As if it were a reason. He was glad
the light was dim on the landing but did not turn away from
her.
"Sure enough," said Alma in a low voice. She had seen what
she had seen. Behind her in the room lightning lit the
window like a white sheet waving and the baby cried.
"You got a kid?" said Jack. His shaking hand grazed Ennis's
hand, electrical current snapped between them.
"Two little girls," Ennis said. "Alma Jr. and Francine. Love
them to pieces." Alma's mouth twitched.
"I got a boy," said Jack. "Eight months old. Tell you what,
I married a cute little old Texas girl down in Childress--Lureen."
From the vibration of the floorboard on which they both
stood Ennis could feel how hard Jack was shaking.
"Alma," he said. "Jack and me is goin out and get a drink.
Might not get back tonight, we get drinkin and talkin."
"Sure enough," Alma said, taking a dollar bill from her
pocket. Ennis guessed she was going to ask him to get her a
pack of cigarettes, bring him back sooner.
"Please to meet you," said Jack, trembling like a run-out
horse.
"Ennis--" said Alma in her misery voice, but that didn't
slow him down on the stairs and he called back, "Alma, you
want smokes there's some in the pocket a my blue shirt in
the bedroom."
They went off in Jack's truck, bought a bottle of whiskey
and within twenty minutes were in the Motel Siesta jouncing
a bed. A few handfuls of hail rattled against the window
followed by rain and slippery wind banging the unsecured
door of the next room then and through the night.
The room stank of semen and smoke and sweat and whiskey, of
old carpet and sour hay, saddle leather, sh*t and cheap
soap. Ennis lay spread-eagled, spent and wet, breathing
deep, still half tumescent, Jack blowing forceful cigarette
clouds like whale spouts, and Jack said, "Christ, it got a
be all that time a yours ahorseback makes it so goddamn
good. We got to talk about this. Swear to god I didn't know
we was goin a get into this again--yeah, I did. Why I'm
here. I f*ckin knew it. Redlined all the way, couldn't get
here fast enough."
"I didn't know where in the hell you was," said Ennis. "Four
years. I about give up on you. I figured you was sore about
that punch."
"Friend," said Jack, "I was in Texas rodeoin. How I met
Lureen. Look over on that chair."
On the back of the soiled orange chair he saw the shine of a
buckle. "Bullridin?"
"Yeah. I made three f*ckin thousand dollars that year. f*ckin
starved. Had to borrow everthing but a toothbrush from other
guys. Drove grooves across Texas. Half the time under that
cunt truck fixin it. Anyway, I didn't never think about
losin. Lureen? There's some serious money there. Her old
man's got it. Got this farm machinery business. Course he
don't let her have none a the money, and he hates my f*ckin
guts, so it's a hard go now but one a these days--"
"Well, you're goin a go where you look. Army didn't get
you?" The thunder sounded far to the east, moving from them
in its red wreaths of light.
"They can't get no use out a me. Got some crushed
vertebrates. And a stress fracture, the arm bone here, you
know how bullridin you're always leverin it off your
thigh?--she gives a little ever time you do it. Even if you
tape it good you break it a little goddamn bit at a time.
Tell you what, hurts like a bitch afterwards. Had a busted
leg. Busted in three places. Come off the bull and it was a
big bull with a lot a drop, he got rid a me in about three
flat and he come after me and he was sure faster. Lucky
enough. Friend a mine got his oil checked with a horn
dipstick and that was all she wrote. Bunch a other things,
f*ckin busted ribs, sprains and pains, torn ligaments. See,
it ain't like it was in my daddy's time. It's guys with
money go to college, trained athaletes. You got a have some
money to rodeo now. Lureen's old man wouldn't give me a dime
if I dropped it, except one way. And I know enough about the
game now so I see that I ain't never goin a be on the
bubble. Other reasons. I'm gettin out while I still can
walk."
Ennis pulled Jack's hand to his mouth, took a hit from the
cigarette, exhaled. "Sure as hell seem in one piece to me.
You know, I was sittin up here all that time tryin to figure
out if I was--? I know I ain't. I mean here we both got
wives and kids, right? I like doin it with women, yeah, but
Jesus H., ain't nothin like this. I never had no thoughts a
doin it with another guy except I sure wrang it out a
hunderd times thinkin about you. You do it with other guys?
Jack?"
"sh*t no," said Jack, who had been riding more than bulls,
not rolling his own. "You know that. Old Brokeback got us
good and it sure ain't over. We got a work out what the f*ck
we're goin a do now."
"That summer," said Ennis. "When we split up after we got
paid out I had gut cramps so bad I pulled over and tried to
puke, thought I ate somethin bad at that place in Dubois.
Took me about a year a figure out it was that I shouldn't a
let you out a my sights. Too late then by a long, long
while."
"Friend," said Jack. "We got us a f*ckin situation here. Got
a figure out what to do."
"I doubt there's nothin now we can do," said Ennis. "What
I'm sayin, Jack, I built a life up in them years. Love my
little girls. Alma? It ain't her fault. You got your baby
and wife, that place in Texas. You and me can't hardly be
decent together if what happened back there"--he jerked his
head in the direction of the apartment--"grabs on us like
that. We do that in the wrong place we'll be dead. There's
no reins on this one. It scares the piss out a me."
"Got to tell you, friend, maybe somebody seen us that
summer. I was back there the next June, thinkin about goin
back--I didn't, lit out for Texas instead--and Joe Aguirre's
in the office and he says to me, he says, 'You boys found a
way to make the time pass up there, didn't you,' and I give
him a look but when I went out I seen he had a big-ass pair
a binoculars hangin off his rearview." He neglected to add
that the foreman had leaned back in his squeaky wooden tilt
chair, said, Twist, you guys wasn't gettin paid to leave the
dogs baby-sit the sheep while you stemmed the rose, and
declined to rehire him. He went on, "Yeah, that little punch
a yours surprised me. I never figured you to throw a dirty
punch."
"I come up under my brother K. E., three years older'n me,
slugged me silly ever day. Dad got tired a me come bawlin in
the house and when I was about six he set me down and says,
Ennis, you got a problem and you got a fix it or it's gonna
be with you until you're ninety and K. E. 's ninety-three.
Well, I says, he's bigger'n me. Dad says, you got a take him
unawares, don't say nothin to him, make him feel some pain,
get out fast and keep doin it until he takes the message.
Nothin like hurtin somebody to make him hear good. So I did.
I got him in the outhouse, jumped him on the stairs, come
over to his pillow in the night while he was sleepin and
pasted him damn good. Took about two days. Never had trouble
with K. E. since. The lesson was, don't say nothin and get
it over with quick." A telephone rang in the next room, rang
on and on, stopped abruptly in mid-peal.
"You won't catch me again," said Jack. "Listen. I'm thinkin,
tell you what, if you and me had a little ranch together,
little cow and calf operation, your horses, it'd be some
sweet life. Like I said, I'm gettin out a rodeo. I ain't no
broke-dick rider but I don't got the bucks a ride out this
slump I'm in and I don't got the bones a keep gettin
wrecked. I got it figured, got this plan, Ennis, how we can
do it, you and me. Lureen's old man, you bet he'd give me a
bunch if I'd get lost. Already more or less said it--"
"Whoa, whoa, whoa. It ain't goin a be that way. We can't.
I'm stuck with what I got, caught in my own loop. Can't get
out of it. Jack, I don't want a be like them guys you see
around sometimes. And I don't want a be dead. There was
these two old guys ranched together down home, Earl and
Rich--Dad would pass a remark when he seen them. They was a
joke even though they was pretty tough old birds. I was
what, nine years old and they found Earl dead in a
irrigation ditch. They'd took a tire iron to him, spurred
him up, drug him around by his dick until it pulled off,
just bloody pulp. What the tire iron done looked like pieces
a burned tomatoes all over him, nose tore down from skiddin
on gravel."
"You seen that?"
"Dad made sure I seen it. Took me to see it. Me and K. E.
Dad laughed about it. Hell, for all I know he done the job.
If he was alive and was to put his head in that door right
now you bet he'd go get his tire iron. Two guys livin
together? No. All I can see is we get together once in a
while way the hell out in the back a nowhere--"
"How much is once in a while?" said Jack. "Once in a while
ever four f*ckin years?"
"No," said Ennis, forbearing to ask whose fault that was. "I
goddamn hate it that you're goin a drive away in the mornin
and I'm goin back to work. But if you can't fix it you got a
stand it," he said. "sh*t. I been lookin at people on the
street. This happen a other people? What the hell do they
do?"
"It don't happen in Wyomin and if it does I don't know what
they do, maybe go to Denver," said Jack, sitting up, turning
away from him, "and I don't give a flyin f*ck. Son of a
bitch, Ennis, take a couple days off. Right now. Get us out
a here. Throw your stuff in the back a my truck and let's
get up in the mountains. Couple a days. Call Alma up and
tell her you're goin. Come on, Ennis, you just shot my
airplane out a the sky--give me somethin a go on. This ain't
no little thing that's happenin here."
The hollow ringing began again in the next room, and as if
he were answering it, Ennis picked up the phone on the
bedside table, dialed his own number.
A slow corrosion worked between Ennis and Alma, no real
trouble, just widening water. She was working at a grocery
store clerk job, saw she'd always have to work to keep ahead
of the bills on what Ennis made. Alma asked Ennis to use
rubbers because she dreaded another pregnancy. He said no to
that, said he would be happy to leave her alone if she
didn't want any more of his kids. Under her breath she said,
"I'd have em if you'd support em." And under that, thought,
anyway, what you like to do don't make too many babies.
Her resentment opened out a little every year: the embrace
she had glimpsed, Ennis's fishing trips once or twice a year
with Jack Twist and never a vacation with her and the girls,
his disinclination to step out and have any fun, his
yearning for low paid, long-houred ranch work, his
propensity to roll to the wall and sleep as soon as he hit
the bed, his failure to look for a decent permanent job with
the county or the power company, put her in a long, slow
dive and when Alma Jr. was nine and Francine seven she said,
what am I doin hangin around with him, divorced Ennis and
married the Riverton grocer.
Ennis went back to ranch work, hired on here and there, not
getting much ahead but glad enough to be around stock again,
free to drop things, quit if he had to, and go into the
mountains at short notice. He had no serious hard feelings,
just a vague sense of getting shortchanged, and showed it
was all right by taking Thanksgiving dinner with Alma and
her grocer and the kids, sitting between his girls and
talking horses to them, telling jokes, trying not to be a
sad daddy. After the pie Alma got him off in the kitchen,
scraped the plates and said she worried about him and he
ought to get married again. He saw she was pregnant, about
four, five months, he guessed.
"Once burned," he said, leaning against the counter, feeling
too big for the room.
"You still go fishin with that Jack Twist?"
"Some." He thought she'd take the pattern off the plate with
the scraping.
"You know," she said, and from her tone he knew something
was coming, "I used to wonder how come you never brought any
trouts home. Always said you caught plenty. So one time I
got your creel case open the night before you went on one a
your little trips--price tag still on it after five
years--and I tied a note on the end of the line. It said,
hello Ennis, bring some fish home, love, Alma. And then you
come back and said you'd caught a bunch a browns and ate
them up. Remember? I looked in the case when I got a chance
and there was my note still tied there and that line hadn't
touched water in its life." As though the word "water" had
called out its domestic cousin she twisted the faucet,
sluiced the plates.
"That don't mean nothin."
"Don't lie, don't try to fool me, Ennis. I know what it
means. Jack Twist? Jack Nasty. You and him--"
She'd overstepped his line. He seized her wrist; tears
sprang and rolled, a dish clattered.
"Shut up," he said. "Mind your own business. You don't know
nothin about it."
"I'm goin a yell for Bill."
"You f*ckin go right ahead. Go on and f*ckin yell. I'll make
him eat the f*ckin floor and you too." He gave another
wrench that left her with a burning bracelet, shoved his hat
on backwards and slammed out. He went to the Black and Blue
Eagle bar that night, got drunk, had a short dirty fight and
left. He didn't try to see his girls for a long time,
figuring they would look him up when they got the sense and
years to move out from Alma.
They were no longer young men with all of it before them.
Jack had filled out through the shoulders and hams, Ennis
stayed as lean as a clothes-pole, stepped around in worn
boots, jeans and shirts summer and winter, added a canvas
coat in cold weather. A benign growth appeared on his eyelid
and gave it a drooping appearance, a broken nose healed
crooked.
Years on years they worked their way through the high
meadows and mountain drainages, horse-packing into the Big
Horns, Medicine Bows, south end of the Gallatins, Absarokas,
Granites, Owl Creeks, the Bridger-Teton Range, the
Freezeouts and the Shirleys, Ferrises and the Rattlesnakes,
Salt River Range, into the Wind Rivers over and again, the
Sierra Madres, Gros Ventres, the Washakies, Laramies, but
never returning to Brokeback.
Down in Texas Jack's father-in-law died and Lureen, who
inherited the farm equipment business, showed a skill for
management and hard deals. Jack found himself with a vague
managerial title, traveling to stock and agricultural
machinery shows. He had some money now and found ways to
spend it on his buying trips. A little Texas accent flavored
his sentences, "cow" twisted into "kyow" and "wife" coming
out as "waf." He'd had his front teeth filed down and
capped, said he'd felt no pain, and to finish the job grew a
heavy mustache.
In May of 1983 they spent a few cold days at a series of
little icebound, no-name high lakes, then worked across into
the Hail Strew River drainage.
Going up, the day was fine but the trail deep-drifted and
slopping wet at the margins. They left it to wind through a
slashy cut, leading the horses through brittle branchwood,
Jack, the same eagle feather in his old hat, lifting his
head in the heated noon to take the air scented with
resinous lodgepole, the dry needle duff and hot rock, bitter
juniper crushed beneath the horses' hooves. Ennis,
weather-eyed, looked west for the heated cumulus that might
come up on such a day but the boneless blue was so deep,
said Jack, that he might drown looking up.
Around three they swung through a narrow pass to a southeast
slope where the strong spring sun had had a chance to work,
dropped down to the trail again which lay snowless below
them. They could hear the river muttering and making a
distant train sound a long way off. Twenty minutes on they
surprised a black bear on the bank above them rolling a log
over for grubs and Jack's horse shied and reared, Jack
saying "Wo! Wo!" and Ennis's bay dancing and snorting but
holding. Jack reached for the .30- .06 but there was no
need; the startled bear galloped into the trees with the
lumpish gait that made it seem it was falling apart.
The tea-colored river ran fast with snowmelt, a scarf of
bubbles at every high rock, pools and setbacks streaming.
The ochre-branched willows swayed stiffly, pollened catkins
like yellow thumbprints. The horses drank and Jack
dismounted, scooped icy water up in his hand, crystalline
drops falling from his fingers, his mouth and chin
glistening with wet.
"Get beaver fever doin that," said Ennis, then, "Good enough
place," looking at the level bench above the river, two or
three fire-rings from old hunting camps. A sloping meadow
rose behind the bench, protected by a stand of lodgepole.
There was plenty of dry wood. They set up camp without
saying much, picketed the horses in the meadow. Jack broke
the seal on a bottle of whiskey, took a long, hot swallow,
exhaled forcefully, said, "That's one a the two things I
need right now," capped and tossed it to Ennis.
On the third morning there were the clouds Ennis had
expected, a grey racer out of the west, a bar of darkness
driving wind before it and small flakes. It faded after an
hour into tender spring snow that heaped wet and heavy. By
nightfall it turned colder. Jack and Ennis passed a joint
back and forth, the fire burning late, Jack restless and
bitching about the cold, poking the flames with a stick,
twisting the dial of the transistor radio until the
batteries died.
Ennis said he'd been putting the blocks to a woman who
worked part-time at the Wolf Ears bar in Signal where he was
working now for Stoutamire's cow and calf outfit, but it
wasn't going anywhere and she had some problems he didn't
want. Jack said he'd had a thing going with the wife of a
rancher down the road in Childress and for the last few
months he'd slank around expecting to get shot by Lureen or
the husband, one. Ennis laughed a little and said he
probably deserved it. Jack said he was doing all right but
he missed Ennis bad enough sometimes to make him whip
babies.
The horses nickered in the darkness beyond the fire's circle
of light. Ennis put his arm around Jack, pulled him close,
said he saw his girls about once a month, Alma Jr. a shy
seventeen-year-old with his beanpole length, Francine a
little live wire. Jack slid his cold hand between Ennis's
legs, said he was worried about his boy who was, no doubt
about it, dyslexic or something, couldn't get anything
right, fifteen years old and couldn't hardly read, he could
see it though goddamn Lureen wouldn't admit to it and
pretended the kid was o. k., refused to get any bitchin kind
a help about it. He didn't know what the f*ck the answer
was. Lureen had the money and called the shots.
"I used a want a boy for a kid," said Ennis, undoing
buttons, "but just got little girls."
"I didn't want none a either kind," said Jack. "But f*ck-all
has worked the way I wanted. Nothin never come to my hand
the right way." Without getting up he threw deadwood on the
fire, the sparks flying up with their truths and lies, a few
hot points of fire landing on their hands and faces, not for
the first time, and they rolled down into the dirt. One
thing never changed: the brilliant charge of their
infrequent couplings was darkened by the sense of time
flying, never enough time, never enough.
A day or two later in the trailhead parking lot, horses
loaded into the trailer, Ennis was ready to head back to
Signal, Jack up to Lightning Flat to see the old man. Ennis
leaned into Jack's window, said what he'd been putting off
the whole week, that likely he couldn't get away again until
November after they'd shipped stock and before winter
feeding started.
"November. What in hell happened a August? Tell you what, we
said August, nine, ten days. Christ, Ennis! Whyn't you tell
me this before? You had a f*ckin week to say some little
word about it. And why's it we're always in the friggin cold
weather? We ought a do somethin. We ought a go south. We
ought a go to Mexico one day."
"Mexico? Jack, you know me. All the travelin I ever done is
goin around the coffeepot lookin for the handle. And I'll be
runnin the baler all August, that's what's the matter with
August. Lighten up, Jack. We can hunt in November, kill a
nice elk. Try if I can get Don Wroe's cabin again. We had a
good time that year."
"You know, friend, this is a goddamn bitch of a
unsatisfactory situation. You used a come away easy. It's
like seein the pope now."
"Jack, I got a work. Them earlier days I used a quit the
jobs. You got a wife with money, a good job. You forget how
it is bein broke all the time. You ever hear a child
support? I been payin out for years and got more to go. Let
me tell you, I can't quit this one. And I can't get the time
off. It was tough gettin this time--some a them late heifers
is still calvin. You don't leave then. You don't. Stoutamire
is a hell-raiser and he raised hell about me takin the week.
I don't blame him. He probly ain't got a night's sleep since
I left. The trade-off was August. You got a better idea?"
"I did once." The tone was bitter and accusatory.
Ennis said nothing, straightened up slowly, rubbed at his
forehead; a horse stamped inside the trailer. He walked to
his truck, put his hand on the trailer, said something that
only the horses could hear, turned and walked back at a
deliberate pace.
"You been a Mexico, Jack?" Mexico was the place. He'd heard.
He was cutting fence now, trespassing in the shoot-em zone.
"Hell yes, I been. Where's the f*ckin problem?" Braced for
it all these years and here it came, late and unexpected.
"I got a say this to you one time, Jack, and I ain't foolin.
What I don't know," said Ennis, "all them things I don't
know could get you killed if I should come to know them."
"Try this one," said Jack, "and I'll say it just one time.
Tell you what, we could a had a good life together, a f*ckin
real good life. You wouldn't do it, Ennis, so what we got
now is Brokeback Mountain. Everthing built on that. It's all
we got, boy, f*ckin all, so I hope you know that if you
don't never know the rest. Count the damn few times we been
together in twenty years. Measure the f*ckin short leash you
keep me on, then ask me about Mexico and then tell me you'll
kill me for needin it and not hardly never gettin it. You
got no f*ckin idea how bad it gets. I'm not you. I can't
make it on a couple a high-altitude f*cks once or twice a
year. You're too much for me, Ennis, you son of a whoreson
bitch. I wish I knew how to quit you."
Like vast clouds of steam from thermal springs in winter the
years of things unsaid and now unsayable--admissions,
declarations, shames, guilts, fears--rose around them. Ennis
stood as if heart-shot, face grey and deep-lined, grimacing,
eyes screwed shut, fists clenched, legs caving, hit the
ground on his knees.
"Jesus," said Jack. "Ennis?" But before he was out of the
truck, trying to guess if it was heart attack or the
overflow of an incendiary rage, Ennis was back on his feet
and somehow, as a coat hanger is straightened to open a
locked car and then bent again to its original shape, they
torqued things almost to where they had been, for what
they'd said was no news. Nothing ended, nothing begun,
nothing resolved.
What Jack remembered and craved in a way he could neither
help nor understand was the time that distant summer on
Brokeback when Ennis had come up behind him and pulled him
close, the silent embrace satisfying some shared and sexless
hunger.
They had stood that way for a long time in front of the
fire, its burning tossing ruddy chunks of light, the shadow
of their bodies a single column against the rock. The
minutes ticked by from the round watch in Ennis's pocket,
from the sticks in the fire settling into coals. Stars bit
through the wavy heat layers above the fire. Ennis's breath
came slow and quiet, he hummed, rocked a little in the
sparklight and Jack leaned against the steady heartbeat, the
vibrations of the humming like faint electricity and,
standing, he fell into sleep that was not sleep but
something else drowsy and tranced until Ennis, dredging up a
rusty but still useable phrase from the childhood time
before his mother died, said, "Time to hit the hay, cowboy.
I got a go. Come on, you're sleepin on your feet like a
horse," and gave Jack a shake, a push, and went off in the
darkness. Jack heard his spurs tremble as he mounted, the
words "see you tomorrow," and the horse's shuddering snort,
grind of hoof on stone.
Later, that dozy embrace solidified in his memory as the
single moment of artless, charmed happiness in their
separate and difficult lives. Nothing marred it, even the
knowledge that Ennis would not then embrace him face to face
because he did not want to see nor feel that it was Jack he
held. And maybe, he thought, they'd never got much farther
than that. Let be, let be.
Ennis didn't know about the accident for months until his
postcard to Jack saying that November still looked like the
first chance came back stamped DECEASED. He called Jack's
number in Childress, something he had done only once before
when Alma divorced him and Jack had misunderstood the reason
for the call, had driven twelve hundred miles north for
nothing. This would be all right, Jack would answer, had to
answer. But he did not. It was Lureen and she said who? who
is this? and when he told her again she said in a level
voice yes, Jack was pumping up a flat on the truck out on a
back road when the tire blew up. The bead was damaged
somehow and the force of the explosion slammed the rim into
his face, broke his nose and jaw and knocked him unconscious
on his back. By the time someone came along he had drowned
in his own blood.
No, he thought, they got him with the tire iron.
"Jack used to mention you," she said. "You're the fishing
buddy or the hunting buddy, I know that. Would have let you
know," she said, "but I wasn't sure about your name and
address. Jack kept most a his friends' addresses in his
head. It was a terrible thing. He was only thirty-nine years
old."
The huge sadness of the northern plains rolled down on him.
He didn't know which way it was, the tire iron or a real
accident, blood choking down Jack's throat and nobody to
turn him over. Under the wind drone he heard steel slamming
off bone, the hollow chatter of a settling tire rim.
"He buried down there?" He wanted to curse her for letting
Jack die on the dirt road.
The little Texas voice came slip-sliding down the wire. "We
put a stone up. He use to say he wanted to be cremated,
ashes scattered on Brokeback Mountain. I didn't know where
that was. So he was cremated, like he wanted, and like I
say, half his ashes was interred here, and the rest I sent
up to his folks. I thought Brokeback Mountain was around
where he grew up. But knowing Jack, it might be some pretend
place where the bluebirds sing and there's a whiskey
spring."
"We herded sheep on Brokeback one summer," said Ennis. He
could hardly speak.
"Well, he said it was his place. I thought he meant to get
drunk. Drink whiskey up there. He drank a lot."
"His folks still up in Lightnin Flat?"
"Oh yeah. They'll be there until they die. I never met them.
They didn't come down for the funeral. You get in touch with
them. I suppose they'd appreciate it if his wishes was
carried out."
No doubt about it, she was polite but the little voice was
cold as snow.
The road to Lightning Flat went through desolate country
past a dozen abandoned ranches distributed over the plain at
eight- and ten-mile intervals, houses sitting blank-eyed in
the weeds, corral fences down. The mailbox read John C.
Twist. The ranch was a meagre little place, leafy spurge
taking over. The stock was too far distant for him to see
their condition, only that they were black baldies. A porch
stretched across the front of the tiny brown stucco house,
four rooms, two down, two up.
Ennis sat at the kitchen table with Jack's father. Jack's
mother, stout and careful in her movements as though
recovering from an operation, said, "Want some coffee, don't
you? Piece a cherry cake?"
"Thank you, ma'am, I'll take a cup a coffee but I can't eat
no cake just now."
The old man sat silent, his hands folded on the plastic
tablecloth, staring at Ennis with an angry, knowing
expression. Ennis recognized in him a not uncommon type with
the hard need to be the stud duck in the pond. He couldn't
see much of Jack in either one of them, took a breath.
"I feel awful bad about Jack. Can't begin to say how bad I
feel. I knew him a long time. I come by to tell you that if
you want me to take his ashes up there on Brokeback like his
wife says he wanted I'd be proud to."
There was a silence. Ennis cleared his throat but said
nothing more.
The old man said, "Tell you what, I know where Brokeback
Mountain is. He thought he was too goddamn special to be
buried in the family plot."
Jack's mother ignored this, said, "He used a come home every
year, even after he was married and down in Texas, and help
his daddy on the ranch for a week fix the gates and mow and
all. I kept his room like it was when he was a boy and I
think he appreciated that. You are welcome to go up in his
room if you want."
The old man spoke angrily. "I can't get no help out here.
Jack used a say, 'Ennis del Mar,' he used a say, 'I'm goin a
bring him up here one a these days and we'll lick this damn
ranch into shape.' He had some half-baked idea the two a you
was goin a move up here, build a log cabin and help me run
this ranch and bring it up. Then, this spring he's got
another one's goin a come up here with him and build a place
and help run the ranch, some ranch neighbor a his from down
in Texas. He's goin a split up with his wife and come back
here. So he says. But like most a Jack's ideas it never come
to pass."
So now he knew it had been the tire iron. He stood up, said,
you bet he'd like to see Jack's room, recalled one of Jack's
stories about this old man. Jack was dick-clipped and the
old man was not; it bothered the son who had discovered the
anatomical disconformity during a hard scene. He had been
about three or four, he said, always late getting to the
toilet, struggling with buttons, the seat, the height of the
thing and often as not left the surroundings sprinkled down.
The old man blew up about it and this one time worked into a
crazy rage. "Christ, he licked the stuffin out a me, knocked
me down on the bathroom floor, whipped me with his belt. I
thought he was killin me. Then he says, 'You want a know
what it's like with piss all over the place? I'll learn
you,' and he pulls it out and lets go all over me, soaked
me, then he throws a towel at me and makes me mop up the
floor, take my clothes off and warsh them in the bathtub,
warsh out the towel, I'm bawlin and blubberin. But while he
was hosin me down I seen he had some extra material that I
was missin. I seen they'd cut me different like you'd crop a
ear or scorch a brand. No way to get it right with him after
that."
The bedroom, at the top of a steep stair that had its own
climbing rhythm, was tiny and hot, afternoon sun pounding
through the west window, hitting the narrow boy's bed
against the wall, an ink-stained desk and wooden chair, a b.
b. gun in a hand-whittled rack over the bed. The window
looked down on the gravel road stretching south and it
occurred to him that for his growing-up years that was the
only road Jack knew. An ancient magazine photograph of some
dark-haired movie star was taped to the wall beside the bed,
the skin tone gone magenta. He could hear Jack's mother
downstairs running water, filling the kettle and setting it
back on the stove, asking the old man a muffled question.
The closet was a shallow cavity with a wooden rod braced
across, a faded cretonne curtain on a string closing it off
from the rest of the room. In the closet hung two pairs of
jeans crease-ironed and folded neatly over wire hangers, on
the floor a pair of worn packer boots he thought he
remembered. At the north end of the closet a tiny jog in the
wall made a slight hiding place and here, stiff with long
suspension from a nail, hung a shirt. He lifted it off the
nail. Jack's old shirt from Brokeback days. The dried blood
on the sleeve was his own blood, a gushing nosebleed on the
last afternoon on the mountain when Jack, in their
contortionistic grappling and wrestling, had slammed Ennis's
nose hard with his knee. He had staunched the blood which
was everywhere, all over both of them, with his shirtsleeve,
but the staunching hadn't held because Ennis had suddenly
swung from the deck and laid the ministering angel out in
the wild columbine, wings folded.
The shirt seemed heavy until he saw there was another shirt
inside it, the sleeves carefully worked down inside Jack's
sleeves. It was his own plaid shirt, lost, he'd thought,
long ago in some damn laundry, his dirty shirt, the pocket
ripped, buttons missing, stolen by Jack and hidden here
inside Jack's own shirt, the pair like two skins, one inside
the other, two in one. He pressed his face into the fabric
and breathed in slowly through his mouth and nose, hoping
for the faintest smoke and mountain sage and salty sweet
stink of Jack but there was no real scent, only the memory
of it, the imagined power of Brokeback Mountain of which
nothing was left but what he held in his hands.
In the end the stud duck refused to let Jack's ashes go.
"Tell you what, we got a family plot and he's goin in it."
Jack's mother stood at the table coring apples with a sharp,
serrated instrument. "You come again," she said.
Bumping down the washboard road Ennis passed the country
cemetery fenced with sagging sheep wire, a tiny fenced
square on the welling prairie, a few graves bright with
plastic flowers, and didn't want to know Jack was going in
there, to be buried on the grieving plain.
A few weeks later on the Saturday he threw all Stoutamire's
dirty horse blankets into the back of his pickup and took
them down to the Quik Stop Car Wash to turn the
high-pressure spray on them. When the wet clean blankets
were stowed in the truck bed he stepped into Higgins's gift
shop and busied himself with the postcard rack.
"Ennis, what are you lookin for rootin through them
postcards?" said Linda Higgins, throwing a sopping brown
coffee filter into the garbage can.
"Scene a Brokeback Mountain."
"Over in Fremont County?"
"No, north a here."
"I didn't order none a them. Let me get the order list. They
got it I can get you a hunderd. I got a order some more
cards anyway."
"One's enough," said Ennis.
When it came--thirty cents--he pinned it up in his trailer,
brass-headed tack in each corner. Below it he drove a nail
and on the nail he hung the wire hanger and the two old
shirts suspended from it. He stepped back and looked at the
ensemble through a few stinging tears.
"Jack, I swear--" he said, though Jack had never asked him
to swear anything and was himself not the swearing kind.
Around that time Jack began to appear in his dreams, Jack as
he had first seen him, curly-headed and smiling and
bucktoothed, talking about getting up off his pockets and
into the control zone, but the can of beans with the spoon
handle jutting out and balanced on the log was there as
well, in a cartoon shape and lurid colors that gave the
dreams a flavor of comic obscenity. The spoon handle was the
kind that could be used as a tire iron. And he would wake
sometimes in grief, sometimes with the old sense of joy and
release; the pillow sometimes wet, sometimes the sheets.
There was some open space between what he knew and what he
tried to believe, but nothing could be done about it, and if
you can't fix it you've got to stand it.

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