Read The Monsters of Templeton Online

Authors: Lauren Groff

Tags: #Ghost, #Animals, #Sea monsters, #Nature, #Single Women, #Marine Life, #Family Life, #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Sagas, #Historical, #Large tyep books, #Large Type Books, #Women genealogists

The Monsters of Templeton (9 page)

BOOK: The Monsters of Templeton
8.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

That year, all of the department was there, and most of the administration. There were caterers in tuxedos, the pool lit up in turquoise in the night, the glimmering lights of the Bay below. But that day, I had decided not to go. The party was right after Clarissa found she had lupus, and my hair was shorn close to my head; I had stopped running because there was something wrong with my knee and had gained about ten pounds since winter; that evening, I sat too late at my wheel after pottery class, and I was dressed in my filthy clothes, ripped jeans and a flannel shirt, loose and torn and filthy with clay. I looked horrible, not festive. Plus, I knew with utter certainty that this year the chosen student was going to be a boy, as usual.

And then, just as my pottery teacher left me alone in the studio, and I was spinning a vase on the wheel, I imagined people in their slinky dresses and suits ringing the Dwyers' doorbell. I sat there, watching my lumpy concoction swirl around and around and found myself wanting to be at the party more than any other place in the world. I washed my hands and my face, and put a clean tunic over my pants, hoping both that it covered the clay stains and that I looked bohemian and chic and not like the pigeon-coddling bag lady I felt like.

I made it to the party just as Primus Dwyer was clinking the wineglass in his hand, standing atop the diving board and wobbling around quite a bit.... This year, he was saying, the graduate students I am taking to Alaska will be (and here he paused and cleared his throat) John Beardsley and Wilhelmina Upton. I was in the midst of downing a glass of white wine like a shot, and froze. I saw The Castrating Bitch's eyes narrow; I saw her put her fists on her hips. But when I stepped forward, as everyone slapped my back, I saw her consider me; my pudgy face, my shorn hair, my messy clothing; I saw her relax. I almost saw her call me a dyke in her head. I frowned at her. She saw and gave me a little simper.

...we have two graduate assistants this year, Primus Dwyer was explaining, because this year is the year we will find what we have come close to finding for so long.

Hooray! shouted everyone around the pool.

Hooray, I whispered into my wine, weak in the knees, all trembly.

On the day that I met them at the airport, of course, I wore the femmest outfit I could find. I wore lots of makeup and a little pink minidress and high heels. I found the rest of the group just about to go through Security, and Dwyer and his wife having an emotional good-bye. For once, he wasn't dressed like a Victorian bachelor; he was wearing normal clothes, though he did look like a Geographic Society explorer in his matching khaki zip-off pants and button-down shirt and metal-toed boots. John Beardsley smirked at my outfit, then slid through the metal detector. Dwyer and his wife extracted themselves, and that's when they saw me.

He did a double-take, and looked away from the long stretch of my bare legs. His wife frowned, very hard. But there was no time, and then I went through. Dwyer followed, and there may have been the tiniest note of panic in his wife's voice as she called out behind us, "Good luck! Be good!"

We had a tight, cramped flight from SFO to Salt Lake City, a tiny bag of peanuts, one miserly lime soda. But after we were in the air from Utah to Alaska, John and I deep in our separate books, the flight attendant came and told us that there was an empty seat in first class, and Primus Dwyer had charmed her into offering it to one of us. John and I thumb-wrestled. I won. I went up, and there was Primus Dwyer resting behind an eyeshade, so I settled into the comfy chair and began to watch a movie.

Halfway through, he tapped my shoulder and proffered a fresh chocolate chip cookie in the tentative way one would offer a peanut to a zoo animal. So I paused my movie, and we began to speak. We talked about the project. In summary, it's a good assumption that native North American peoples came to North America from Siberia, via the Bering Strait. Our project was to push back the time frame when they'd arrived: though the lower climates have evidence that people were there 33,000 years before the present era, the oldest sites in Alaska date back only to maybe 14,000 years before the present era. This discrepancy is troublesome. Primus Dwyer and the Harvard boys were digging a site near Cape Espenberg that they were almost positive dated back to about 25,000 BCE, or before the common era. In the realm of human prehistory, if we found proof of human existence there that early, it would be an enormous discovery.

By the time we'd moved on to lighter topics, the doctor and I had begun to do a strange dance, flirting without seeming to admit that we were flirting, having a grand time, whispering because everyone around us was sleeping, even the flight attendant on her little seat in the front. It felt not unlike a sleepover party. I noticed for the first time that he had dimples, which surprised me, because I have always been a sucker for dimples. I didn't see the shiny red nose anymore, or the chinlessness. I was charmed. But I thought it was quite innocent until the very moment he looked at me, and slid his hand onto my thigh and raised an eyebrow.

I had two choices then. One: I could have very politely placed his hand on the armrest between us, and continued my sentence, and we would have had a very nice trip together, and I would have become an honorary man for the summer, and become good buddies with all the Harvard boys, and when we returned the conquering heroes in the autumn, they, feeling brotherly, would have done everything in their power to help me along in my career.

Two: I could have raised an eyebrow back. I could have slipped into the spacious first-class bathroom and waited for the scratch at the door. We could have then been very naughty, laughing and shushing one another, my pink dress going up, his khaki pants going down, and suddenly, in the midst of the lighthearted little mischief, I could look up to find a serious, sweet look on his face, and a kiss that wasn't so light and silly anymore. In the podlike bathroom, the engines droning on around us and the ranks of businessmen snoozing out beyond the door, I could have looked up to an expression on the last face I ever expected to see it on, and find myself beginning to fall, and heavily.

THIS IS WHERE Clarissa interrupted to say in a muted voice, "You, Willie Upton, are a big, fat fool."

There was a long pause then, and I think we were both thinking of how it wasn't, perhaps, uncharacteristic for me to have made what was so clearly the wrong decision. First, I had a thing for authority figures: there was the photography professor in college, balding, alcoholic. In the darkroom, under the red bulb, watching the grizzled face of a woman I had snapped on the street emerge in the chemistry bath, the professor had come up behind me, and put his hands on my stomach, and our weird fling lasted for two semesters, until he was fired for a DWI. Then there was my weakness for funny guys, boys who'd gone to clown college or who were obsessed with improvisational comedy; a man who made me laugh was exponentially sexier to me. And then there was the eentsy little promiscuity problem, the months I'd swear off boys, entirely, and then in one night have such a frenzy of flirtation that I would take one into the bathroom at a party, and then take another home with me. I was not promiscuous, I think; just sexually bipolar.

Then I told Clarissa how, when Primus and I emerged from the bathroom, the entire plane was still asleep, as if under a spell. How it could have been awkward between us then, but instead he held my hand under the armrest and fell asleep, mouth open like a little boy. And he was gentle and sweet on the difficult trip, from Anchorage to Nome, from Nome to Cape Espenberg, from Cape Espenberg out in the Land Rovers, then on the hike all the way out to our site. He bought me coffee whenever we waited, and I'd catch him gazing at me, a little smile on his lips, from time to time.

And so it happened again. And then again and again and again. Nearly every night in my little separate tent, in sleeping bags zipped together against the chill of the ground. Even on days it was too cold for me to take a bath, it happened.

It was a kind of insanity: there we were in that impossible, beautiful place, with the sun shining all the time. All those migratory birds spinning about us, stunning colors in the bare and impressionable landscape. Our dig was going well, the camaraderie good between us and the Harvard guys, and even the food was excellent, one of the Harvard grad students having been a chef before he gave it all up for academia. The work was excruciatingly hard, and it felt nice, at the end of a long day, just to be soft with someone. And in the sun, he lost his pallor. With the work, he grew harder and fit, and a scruff covered his weak chin, and all of a sudden, Primus Dwyer was really gorgeous, and not just to me. One of the Harvard grad students, a macho gay man, began calling him "Dr. To-die-for." I lost my extra weight, and lost even more, so that my muscles were tight against my skin, and my tan dark. I knew I looked good, too. And as there is very little fucking on the tundra that can go unnoticed, it was inevitable, perhaps, that the others knew what was happening. The Harvard guys all knew Primus Dwyer's wife, of course; she had been around for a long time. They tended to look beyond my face when they addressed me.

The time when I was supposed to get my period came, and then went again. I thought: no worries, happens all the time, just the change in diet. And then the time for it came and went the second time, and I began to feel nauseated.

But just as I began to feel sick, we found the spearhead. And then, one day later, we found the skeleton. Pre-Clovis, both. Our osteologist guy was dancing around: he was almost positive, just by looking at the teeth, that the skeleton was of close Siberian ancestry: John was our biofact guy and said the seeds in the stomach area were from some plant he was almost certain was extinct at least 22,000 years ago up there. The Harvard principal investigator had called for a bush plane, and we were waiting in the Land Rover at the strip to say good-bye to him, because he was off to Nome and then Anchorage, to the university, to radiocarbon-date some things.

We were just fooling around, talking about a pickup game of Wiffle ball, when there was the sound of an engine over the wind, and we all prepared to say good luck to the Harvard PI off to Anchorage. Over the horizon, the little speck of the plane turned into a big speck, and it touched down and taxied. The pilot slid out of the plane, props still spinning hard, but his face was pale and pinched. He crossed over to the passenger side and opened the door.

Out slid The Castrating Bitch.

She marched her bony ass straight up to me. By that time, the good Doctor Primus Dwyer had taken his arm off my shoulders and sidled away. His wife took her cold hand out of her mitten, pulled the sleeve up on her puffy winter coat--unnecessary in that weather--and smacked me across the cheek. My mouth dropped open, and she went over to her husband and dragged him away from the rest of us, hissing.

I watched them move off. My cheek began to burn. The Harvard guys and John were watching, amazed.

That's when I went a little crazy. I went right up to the bush plane and slammed the door and somehow put it in gear, and began driving after Primus Dwyer and his wife. He turned around and his eyes went round, and then he sprang out of the way, pulling his wife with him.

Imagine a bush plane roaring out across the tundra, spinning about, revving up. Two small figures running away from it, hand-in-hand. The plane beginning to accelerate toward the figures, and then, when they split up, turning toward the smaller figure, the skinny one, bearing down on the screaming, running lady in the puffy down jacket. Then the pilot, goddamn gutsy, swinging up into the cockpit, and swerving the plane at the last minute. He took one look at my face, then pushed the plane full throttle, lifting us up off the ground.

He took me all the way back to Nome because, he said, he was scared what I would have done if I had stayed. I caught a flight to Fairbanks and from Fairbanks a flight to San Francisco. All paid for on a credit card I'd found in the black Gucci pocketbook in the front of the plane, still warm from Dwyer's wife's hands. The cockpit was still sweet with the perfume she'd sprayed on herself only moments before she slid from the plane.

I touched down at the San Francisco airport, shaking so badly I could barely walk. I had no luggage and took a taxi to Stanford, the palm trees like a military line down Memorial Drive, the buildings pink as heaven. I sweated in my Alaska clothing as I loaded my car with everything that was important to me. And then I set off on my drive. I had had no sleep, was crying, going ninety miles an hour for the most part. I only stopped for gas and the bathroom, once to try to wash myself and change into a tee shirt and shorts. I ate nothing and could see very little by the time I crossed through Erie. A vision of Primus Dwyer sometimes sat in the seat beside me, the way I knew him best, tan and handsome, in his explorer's kit. He said nothing, just smiled. Still furious, I pretended not to see him.

I arrived in Templeton in the dark before dawn and parked my car before the post office, where it still was sitting by the time I talked to Clarissa. I was afraid that my mother would hear me arrive and come out with a hatchet. I stood staring at Averell Cottage for an hour or so, working up the nerve to go inside.

And then I told Clarissa about the monster dying, how I touched it and felt the black of the lake, infinite depth. The monster's death, I told her, just went to show that everything, everything, everything was falling apart.

THERE WAS AN excruciatingly long pause, then, and I could almost hear Clarissa thinking. My story had taken hours; it was deep night in San Francisco, and the city was quiet in the receiver. At last, she said, "Well. Your life's a mess, that's true. Then again, it's not that bad. You're in Templeton, at least. So put yourself back together. Heal, yadda yadda, come back home to San Francisco."

BOOK: The Monsters of Templeton
8.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

All the Rage by A. L Kennedy
Carolina Heat by Christi Barth
The Prophecy by Nina Croft
Seducing Mr Storm by Poppy Summers
Silent Assassin by Leo J. Maloney
White Lily by Ting-Xing Ye
Edge of Nowhere by Michael Ridpath