Steal the North: A Novel

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Authors: Heather B Bergstrom

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Steal the North

Heather Brittain Bergstrom

VIKING

VIKING

Published by the Penguin Group

Penguin Group (USA) LLC

375 Hudson Street

New York, New York 10014

USA | Canada | UK | Ireland | Australia | New Zealand | India | South Africa | China

penguin.com

A Penguin Random House Company

First published by Viking Penguin, a member of Penguin Group (USA) LLC, 2014

Copyright © 2014 by Heather Brittain Bergstrom

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA

Bergstrom, Heather Brittain.

Steal the north : a novel / Heather Brittain Bergstrom.

pages cm

ISBN 978-1-101-61275-0

1. Young women—Fiction. I. Title.

PS3602.E7564S74 2014

813'.6—dc23

2013036976

PUBLISHER’S NOTE

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

Version_1

Contents

Title

Copyright

Dedication

Part One

1 | Emmy

2 | Bethany

3 | Reuben

4 | Emmy

5 | Kate

6 | Reuben

7 | Matt

8 | Emmy

9 | Reuben

10 | Bethany

Part Two

11 | Reuben

12 | Emmy

13 | Jamie

14 | Emmy

15 | Spencer

16 | Kate

17 | Reuben

18 | Matt

19 | Teresa

20 | Emmy

21 | Reuben

Acknowledgments

For my sisters,
Angie and Jenny,
remember when it was just us?
I have not told you half of what I want to.

—Narcissa Whitman, one of the first two pioneer women to cross the Rockies, in a letter to her sister, 1836

My parents gave birth to me here, and I fancy this is my country.

—Chief Moses to an Indian agent, Okanogan River, 1870

Part One

1

Emmy

Until the summer I was sixteen and my mom sent me away, I lived with her in a Sacramento apartment located above a shop that sold seaweed powders, mood mists, Buddha statues, even menstruation journals. According to Mom, the women who frequented the shop were either rich and bored or neurotic. I loved everything about the shop, from the chanting monk music to the smell of sandalwood, and I regularly spent my allowance on tarot cards, amulets, and wishing pots. Mom taught English at three different junior colleges, and because her hours were sporadic and the colleges far apart, I was often alone, though never overnight. We had no family in the Sacramento Valley, or anywhere in California. Our only relatives in the whole world, supposedly, were a few distant cousins up north in Washington, and Mom had left them in the dust when she boarded a southbound bus with me, a baby on her hip. Los Angeles was her original destination, but I kept throwing up, and Mom liked the sycamore trees that shaded the city streets in Sacramento.

As for my dad, I was told he died the day I was born.

Mom didn’t mean he literally
died. I learned this the hard way after a fellow second grader teased that he too would’ve keeled over at the sight of my ugly face pushing out of my mom’s vagina. “I meant the most important part of your dad died the day you were born and he didn’t claim you,” Mom explained. “And you have a beautiful face.”

“So, he’s still alive?” I almost levitated.

She hesitated before replying, which was rare. “No, Emmy.” She said my dad, raised on a wheat farm in eastern Washington, was killed in a tractor accident. He’d always been reckless. “I’m sorry, honey.”

“Did you love him?”

“Too much.” I didn’t understand then how you can love someone
too
much. Now I recognize it’s the only way I know how to love.

After I finished crying, she made me swear I’d never again have a sad thought for that man. But it was my dad, I soon realized, she thought about when we drove mostly in somber silence around the rice fields north of Sacramento. It cheered Mom to drive east on weekends, through quaint foothill towns or even high into the Sierras, which seemed to me as a little girl the loneliest place, haunted by starving Donner Party ghosts. If Mom were to fall apart, I had no one, so I pretended to forget about my dad. Mom had left her past at the California border and never glanced back. I often consulted my tarot decks about her mysterious past and my future. Not even my favorite pack,
Healing with the Fairies
, warned me about the phone call that came near the end of my junior year.

Actually my life had already been changing behind my mom’s back with a boy named Connor, which was why I was late getting home from school the day she got the phone call. I attended a private “artsy-smartsy” school, which Mom mocked, even though she chose it. The high cost of my tuition—despite my almost full-ride scholarship—in addition to Mom’s own student loan payments, kept us stuck in the same small apartment we’d always rented. Not that she or I really minded. Mom preferred living in “midtown” among community theaters, ethnic restaurants, and used bookstores. She said it was far better than renting a larger apartment in a gated complex across from a shopping mall. It was Tuesday, and Mom usually taught class until eight. Three days a week I waited in my school library until five for Mom to pick me up, or at least I was supposed to. The other two days, like today, I was supposed to take public transit home. Connor had dropped me off at the corner.

“The service club held an emergency meeting after school,” I lied. “About the end-of-the-year food drive.” I was on the academic decathlon team and vice president of three clubs on campus. In order to retain my scholarship at Valley Art Academy—the largest secular private high school in northern California, outside the Bay Area—I had to stay involved, and Mom wanted no blanks on my college applications. Connor had written me a list of excuses to use if I ever got busted. At the top, he’d written, “Busy fucking my beautiful boyfriend.”

“Sit down,” she said. “We need to talk.”

“I took the later bus with Harpreet.” Another lie. Connor said to keep it simple, but I lacked confidence. “We stopped—” She waved her hand. I was going to say that we’d stopped for samosas at Harpreet’s parents’ restaurant. I wished. Harpreet had a large family and wasn’t really allowed to hang out with anyone except her cousins. Still, she was the closest thing I had to a friend. We both loved Leonardo DiCaprio (she for
Titanic
, which she saw at the theater three times over Christmas break, I for
What’s Eating Gilbert Grape
and
Romeo & Juliet
). We ate lunch together every day at school.

Mom seemed distracted and had yet to make eye contact with me.

“What is it, Mom?” I asked, taking off my heavy backpack and leaning my art portfolio against the wall. I sat down obediently on the couch. She continued to stand. I no longer felt worried about getting busted. Something else was wrong. Something bigger. Nonetheless, if Mom had any idea about Connor, especially what he’d just had me do in his bedroom, she would be dumbfounded and probably repulsed. She thought I was still a virgin and encouraged me to remain so until college. I needed to clean myself in the bathroom.

“Fuck,” Mom said, and began to pace. She didn’t often cuss. “Fuck.”

“Did something happen to Spencer?” My heart pounded. He and Mom had been dating since I was twelve. I adored him. She tried to act as if she didn’t.

“Spencer?” She almost looked at me, and I wished she would. “This has
nothing
to do with him.”

I knew Mom loved Spencer, but sometimes it seemed she didn’t want him to be part of anything. She’d had other, far-shorter-term boyfriends in the past, but those men she’d kept completely out of my life as if afraid she’d psychologically scar me. When I was younger, I used to occasionally hear her on the phone late at night with men. Once I found a guy’s sock in her room. She insisted the cat must’ve dragged it in. What cat?

“Sorry,” I said now about Spencer. Jeez.

She waved her hand again, then sat down in the European-looking chair we’d bought years ago at a flea market. It had crushed velvet cushions, but one of its legs was too short. She seemed to forget this and jumped when the chair tilted. “Shit chair.” She stood back up.

“But so much character,” I reminded her, which was why we wouldn’t let Spencer fix it. Mom called the chair Isabel, after her favorite Henry James character. Beautiful but flawed.

“You’re going to hate me, Emmy.” Finally she looked straight at me but remained standing. “I mean
really
hate me before tonight is over with.”

“That’s stupid.” We both had a flair for the dramatic, as Spencer once made the mistake of pointing out to Mom. “I could never hate
you.” Though I already did sometimes, or almost, and not just for big things like making me switch schools (in her endless pursuit of the best one to get me into U.C. Berkeley). Lately she could just be sitting across the table and I would hate her, just for a second, but it scared me. I’d have to go into my bedroom and light a detoxification candle or make an origami peace crane. Plenty of kids at school despised their parents, or pretended to. I didn’t want to despise my mom. She was smart, funny, and hardworking. And yes, she was controlling, as Connor always said. But again, she was all I had.

Mom sat down in the wicker chair over which a paisley throw hid the out-of-style southwestern design. She took a deep breath, paused, and said, “I have a sister—in Washington.”

“No, you don’t,” I protested. She was an only child, like me. Right around the age I quit playing with dolls, I begged her to have another baby. I wanted a relative. What if she were to die? Did she want me all alone on the earth?

“My little sister found me.”


Found?”
That made no sense. “You’ve been
hiding
from her?” I figured Mom’s childhood hadn’t been easy or she would’ve talked to me more about it, but to have never told me she had a sister and I had an aunt, that was mental.

“Not necessarily hiding.” She crossed her legs, then uncrossed them. Men stared at her legs. Spencer rubbed them when they sat close on the couch. “It’s more like I’ve been keeping some distance between me and the place she is a part of.”

“What?” I was even more confused. And keeping “some distance”? She meant a chasm. The walls of our apartment started to close in on me for the first time. “Why would you do that, Mom?” I demanded.

“Hold on. It gets worse.” She took another deep breath. “Your aunt isn’t the only person I’ve kept secret from you.” She asked me if I was ready for the bomb. “Your dad, Emmy—he isn’t dead.”

It was all too much. I went to bed for three days, sick like an Austen or a Brontë character who’d foolishly wandered the moors in a storm, with a strong will but weak ankles. Only the moors were my mom’s past, and I couldn’t find my way. No man on a steed came to rescue me. Connor didn’t even call to inquire why I wasn’t at school. No doctor, fetched at a great price, came to bleed me, and I was too chicken to cut myself like some girls at school did. Certainly no faithful sister wept at my bedside. As for my “grief-stricken” mom, I didn’t want her near me. Whenever she came into my room to bring me food or to plead with me to please get up, I’d hide under the covers. Either she felt terribly guilty for all her monstrous lies or my willfulness shocked and disorientated her because she’d retreat without pulling rank. I spent hours going over everything she’d told me, all the way up to why her sister had called, which was most frightening of all. If I thought of Mom’s past like a novel, it was easier.

There once was a girl named Kate, who had a younger sister named Bethany. Their mother died of cancer when the girls were young. The mother might have lived longer, but the family attended a fundamentalist Baptist church that didn’t believe in doctors. The church practiced faith healings, and Kate remembered her mother being dipped into one stagnant desert lake after another, even a mineral lake the Indians believed held special powers and was therefore considered pagan and off-limits. This all took place in Washington State, the dry eastern half that not many people know about. Kate and Bethany’s father was a stern man of God. In accordance with the church’s absurd policies on female modesty and femininity, he didn’t permit his daughters to wear pants or to cut their hair or, when they got older, to wear makeup. Their family didn’t own a TV, so as children they saw no images of the war raging in Vietnam. And because they weren’t allowed to listen to the radio or own rock records, they hadn’t the slightest idea who Bob Dylan was, let alone Zeppelin or Springsteen. The county library, with its rows of pornographic novels and atheist manifestos, was as forbidden as the movie theater. The girls attended school in the church basement and were taught by deacons’ wives, some of whom hadn’t graduated from high school themselves. It would’ve been a miserable childhood, but the two sisters had each other.

They slept in the same bed, braided each other’s hair, and memorized Bible verses together for school. Bethany, a rather frail girl, could sew beautifully and play the piano. Kate preferred to collect rocks, which she kept in her mother’s old mason jars, and to study maps when she could get her hands on them. This angered their father, who said Kate should keep her eyes above, not on earthly things, and set a better feminine example for her little sister by learning to cook. Kate insisted she studied the maps so God would direct her where to go as a missionary. One day in a rage her father took Kate’s rock collection and threw it into the river.

I forced myself not to feel sympathy for Mom at this point in the story. She had a sister to sleep with as a girl, which was far better than jars of rocks or tarot cards.

The sisters grew into young ladies. At church, they took sacred vows of virginity, promising God and the congregation that they wouldn’t so much as hold hands with a boy until they became brides. Most of the males in the church youth group were rawboned farm boys, so this wasn’t hard. Boys in town paid them no mind because of their long dresses and nonfeathered hair. Then one week a handsome boy named Matthew Miller came to youth Bible study with his cousin. Matthew’s parents weren’t religious, but he kept attending because of Bethany. Kate watched with jealousy at first, but Bethany and Matt were made for each other. Even the girls’ stern father could see that, although he tried to act as if Matt weren’t good enough. Matt and Bethany could sit beside each other at church, but that was all. It was enough for Matt. He was saved, baptized, and even spoke of becoming a preacher one day.

The summer Kate was seventeen and Bethany fifteen, their youth group got sponsored to attend a Bible camp in western Washington. At first their father refused, but Matt promised to watch over the sisters. The campgrounds were green with ferns, and pine trees scraped the sky. The sisters had never been west of the Cascades, though Kate clearly remembered the wistful way their mother talked about the moss-covered rocks of her Puget Sound childhood. Even the air smelled different from that in eastern Washington: dampness instead of dust, ferns and bark instead of hay and fertilizer. Mountains, instead of clumps of algae from farm runoff, were reflected on the lake’s surface.

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