put.
He clamped a hand on Davy's shoulder. The boy shrank away but Chet paid it no
mind. His eyes were on Mrs. Griswold. "You know something, Davy, a man once said
that luck is a funny thing. No matter how much you got, it always runs out. He
was a wise one."
Mr. Griswold climbed in the cab, and Mrs. Griswold waved to him from the deck.
Oh yeah, Chet nodded, he's definitely going on a trip, saving his life and he
doesn't even know it.
Mr. Griswold suddenly climbed back out and walked over to his wife. He took her
hand.
Sure, go ahead. Chet nodded some more. It'll be the last time you ever do it.
He kissed her and turned away. Chet wondered what Mr. Griswold Agency would
think when he remembered the last time he did that. That's if he could remember.
He'd probably blubber. He looked like a blubberer, but a lucky one at that. He
must live right or something. He gets to go on a trip, she gets to die. And I
get to use the blade.
He'd planned on taking along his gun. You can't manage two of them without one.
You need it till you get them all cozy and wired up, but even then it
can...spoil the experience. Not that he would have ever used it given the
choice. He never had. A gun was cowardly, for people who lacked the courage to
cut, to feel the moist heat steaming off their skin, first as sweat, then as
blood. But now she'd be alone, no dogs, no husband...no guns. A prize waiting to
be taken, a sweetness waiting to be tasted.
He watched Mrs. Griswold standing on the deck as her husband drove off, like she
missed him already. She didn't even know how much. But she would, she would.
The pickup rolled down the driveway, mostly hidden by the row of young firs and
a fair amount of brush, then turned onto the county road. No more than fifteen
seconds later Chet heard it drive by. And then it was gone. And she was alone.
Meant to be. Truly, truly meant to be.
Mrs. Griswold walked back in the house. Chet cracked his knuckles and stretched
his arms wide, open to the day, the sun, every reward and possibility.
He rubbed the boy's short hair. "You know, Davy," he said in a surprisingly soft
voice, "when the cat's away, the mice will play."
36
The Bear Haus catered to the summertime tourists who spilled over from Mount
Bentman State Park, and apparently also to the lovers who arranged their trysts
at this rustic inn. Jack had never even noticed the large log building nestled
in the woods well off the highway, but after making love last night in the vault
Helen had lain beside him, rubbed his chest, and said she'd spent some very
romantic weekends there.
Though dearly interested, Jack had refrained from asking with whom, how
recently, or whether she'd had a blood test since then. Instead, he'd replied
airily, "Really."
"Yes," she cooed as she nipped his shoulder, "and it was with Ralph, in case
you're wondering."
"No, not at all."
But now, as he lugged their bags to the inn, his worries assumed a new cast, to
wit, that he would run into someone he knew. He fully expected to find Ruth with
her suspicious gaze moonlighting as a desk clerk when he walked in the front
door. Even more reason, he decided, to give her a raise. But much to his relief
an old man rose from a stuffed chair and greeted them.
Helen might have sensed Jack's unease because as he lumbered to the room with
their bags she told him to relax. "Honey, if we see anyone from Bentman it's
probably because they're doing the same thing we're doing."
But Jack owned an insurance agency and therefore was accustomed to much better
odds than those afforded by the word "probably."
Helen unlocked the door to a room with a stunning view of Mount Bentman, but
that was all that he found impressive about their accommodations. As he rested
the suitcases inside the door, she stepped down into the recessed living room
and parodied a game-show model by throwing out her arms and smiling at a bear's
head mounted on the far wall. It's tongue hung out of the side of its mouth at a
peculiar angle and its eyes held a curious gaze. In short, it possessed the
vacant look of a voyeur mindlessly strumming himself to ecstasy.
"Don't you just love it!"
Before Jack could reply Helen pirouetted over to the sunken hot tub that took up
most of the floor space. She danced along its perimeter and shook her hips,
ushering back uncomfortable memories of last night's naked rumba in the front
office.
"And...check this out!"
She hurried over to a red-rock fireplace more than capable of dwarfing the
four-foot logs stacked neatly to the side. "We can have a romantic little fire
to warm us up."
Actually, it looked large enough to melt the polar ice cap. Hardly what he had
in mind, given the unseasonably high temperatures.
"Don't you think it's a little warm for that?"
She pointed to an equally imposing wall-mounted air-conditioning unit.
"You can have the best of both worlds when you stay at the Bear Haus."
"Well, how about that."
Jack didn't want to bust her balloon but the Bear Haus struck him as a
bit...excessive. The sofa and chair were made out of logs, ditto the footstool,
end tables, bed and bar. Then there was the...well, hell, he didn't know what to
call it. Art? Every wall had become a gallery for old saw blades of various
sizes and shapes on which forest scenes had been painted in lurid colors above
the vicious-looking teeth, a means no doubt of memorializing the pastoral peace
they had so rudely put to rest.
He was relieved when Helen suggested they go for a hike. He'd feared she'd want
to start up the hot tub, the fireplace, the air conditioner, and make love under
the bear's horny gaze. He figured after last night's vigorous lovemaking he'd be
good for no more than one round of it today on this, his final weekend of
infidelity. From now on it's going to be different, he vowed silently. It will,
he said again as if trying to convince himself.
They padded down a path from the back of the inn to the trailhead. To Jack's
relief they encountered no one, much less a familiar face. Helen took the lead
along the narrow needle-strewn track, and Jack watched her move with girlish
enthusiasm in her freshly pressed khaki shorts. Her legs lacked Celia's sculpted
definition but he found them amply appealing nonetheless. Now that they'd
escaped the oppressive confines of the Bear Haus, his ardor returned.
"Let's go this way," she said cheerfully as they approached a fork in the trail.
He noted with dismay that the trail marker said it was six miles to the
campground near Mount Bentman's modest peak. He wasn't up for that kind of
punishment and—bless her— neither was Helen as it turned out.
She slowed down as the path widened, and Jack moved up beside her. They'd been
out only fifteen minutes but already he felt winded. She didn't appear to
notice. As soon as he took her hand she started a running commentary on the
trees and ferns and other vegetation, surprising him with the breadth of her
knowledge. She identified numerous species of moss; berry bushes, which had been
stripped clean ("The bears," she explained casually. The what! he said to
himself); and of course the trees that towered over them from both sides of the
trail. Even Jack could tell a pine from a fir, but she amazed him with her
knowledge of deciduous trees as well.
"Isn't it beautiful?" She gestured to the surrounding forest. "I love this time
of year. There's something so special about it. Some things start to die but
other things come to life." She finished on a suggestive note and squeezed his
buns gently.
Despite this bit of encouragement, Jack hiked along feeling extraordinarily
stupid. "How did you learn all this stuff?"
"My daddy." She smiled. "He was a park ranger here."
"Is he still?" Jack tried unsuccessfully to hide his bald panic. The very idea
of running into Helen's father proved acutely uncomfortable. ("Nice to meet you.
Yes, that's right, I'm Helen's forty-five-year-old... friend.")
"No, silly. Do you think I'd bring you here if he was around? Do you have any
idea how much he spent on my wedding? He'd kill me if he ever found out. No,
he's retired now."
After this they hiked in silence until Helen stopped and jerked his hand.
"Do you see those leaves?" She pointed to a large leafy tree that Jack couldn't
have identified if his life depended on it. "Aren't those the most incredible
colors?"
"Yeah, sure," he panted.
"That red is a chemical called anthocyanin. It's in the leaves all the time,
even when they're green. It's like the leaves have to start dying before all
that red can come out. It's just like...it's just like blood!"
"Wow"— Jack caught his breath—"you have quite an imagination."
She turned to him and smiled. "I do, and you haven't even seen the half of it
yet. Come on, Buster Brown." She tugged on his arm. "I've got lots to show you."
37
The day was slipping away far too quickly. Celia had planned to go hiking a lot
earlier but she'd cleaned the house and treated herself to a leisurely lunch,
and then made the mistake of switching on the TV, which had sucked her into a
special on young gymnasts. She watched them bouncing and jumping, flipping and
twirling, and before she knew it, three-thirty had rolled around. It was so easy
to get lazy after a busy week. But that's it, she promised herself, you're going
to get moving.
She exchanged her athletic shoes for hiking boots, and locked the door behind
her. She took a deep breath and noticed that the acrid smell of the forest fires
hadn't faded completely. It still nipped her nose, and a slight taste of smoke
remained in the hazy air.
But she smiled as she walked to the edge of the deck. The orchards had all
changed color, and the reds and yellows danced on the vast stage below her. The
sun, however, now floated dimly over the mountains to the west, and she realized
she'd better get started before it slipped from the sky completely. Of course,
if she ran late it wouldn't be the first time she hiked home in the dark.
She planned to cut through the meadow just west of the house and then south into
the forest that ran along the ridge. She guessed she still felt a little spooked
about the incident with Mr. Boyce because she had no desire to take the deer and
elk trails on the other side of the county road; she'd rather stay closer to
home. But as she jumped down from the deck she remembered turning off the road
yesterday afternoon and seeing the broken sign. It was as if it had been hanging
in the corner of her eye just waiting to come into focus: our name, only half of
it. Is that right?
She stood by the deck clearly puzzled. She actually put her hand on top of her
head as though to hold on to her thoughts. Is that right? she asked herself
again. She recalled coming up the road and turning into the driveway. No, that's
right. It wasn't there. Half of it was missing. She found this curious, but
hardly alarming.
She started down the driveway and heard the crunch-crunch-crunch of her boots on
the gravel, loud in the afternoon hush while all of the forest around her
remained quiet and peaceful.
I'm all alone, she thought, and this heightened her good mood even more.
Finally, after a week filled with hassles she could do what she wanted to do. In
fact, she was feeling so good that she started skipping down the driveway. It's
true that she felt a little silly and childish, but she also felt free to do as
she pleased so she didn't stop whipping up dust until she reached the fence
post. That's when she saw the sign. Indeed, it had been split in half recently—
she could tell by the unweathered seam of broken wood— and when she looked down
she spotted the other half lying by her feet.
I'll be damned. Maybe a bear or a deer knocked it down. Some kind of animal. And
she'd heard about the cougars and coyotes, how they'd started stalking people,
even stealing babies out of backyards; but she was sure a lot of those stories
were gross exaggerations, the rural versions of those urban legends that had
crocodiles roaming the New York City sewer system.
She looked closely at the sign. Probably a gust of wind; we've got enough of it
up here. Some of the trees even leaned leeward, listing over the land like the
masts of big ships.
She walked back up the drive and dropped the broken piece of sign into the burn
barrel by the wood shed. They had recently bought four cords of red fir for the
woodstove and stacked it neatly inside the open-faced enclosure. Jack had left
the small ax he used to chop kindling lying on the ground where it would go to
rust if it ever rained. She picked it up and thought, he's so careless, as she
sank its narrow edge into one of the logs. The fir was dry and the ax was sharp,
and it cut deeply into the wood.
She returned to her point of departure by the edge of the meadow and worked her
way down to a trail. It meandered to her left in a southerly direction for about
half a mile. She passed a patch of orange poppies and saw that their petals
already had closed for the day.
The trail wandered into a dense forest canopied with Douglas fir and
thick-barked ponderosa pine. Minutes later it skirted a large hole that had
formed when another giant had toppled over. As she inched past the rotting trunk
she saw a meadow up ahead and remembered how welcome she'd always found it. She