Sorrow Floats Read online




  Copyright

  Copyright © 1992 by Tim Sandlin

  Cover and internal design © 2010 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

  Cover design by Jessie Sayward Bright

  Cover image © Davidp/Dreamstime.com

  Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Published by Sourcebooks Landmark, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.

  P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Sandlin, Tim.

  Sorrow floats / Tim Sandlin.

  p. cm.

  1. Women travelers—Fiction. 2. Young women—Fiction. I. Title.

  PS3569.A517S67 2010

  813’.54—dc22

  2010020943

  Dedication

  For Flood and June,

  Also Larry, my good example,

  And Carol, who led me into the sunlight

  Table of Contents

  Front Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  28

  29

  30

  31

  32

  33

  34

  35

  36

  37

  38

  39

  40

  41

  42

  43

  44

  45

  46

  47

  48

  49

  50

  51

  About the Author

  Back Cover

  Acknowledgments

  I’d like to thank my horses, guns, and trucks experts—Greg Harris, Brian Nystrom, and Chip Rawlins. Laurel Denison helped me transform myself into a twenty-two-year-old woman, and my research assistant, Teri Krumdick, now knows more than anyone would ever want to know about the spring of 1973. When the going got strange, Jedediah’s Original House of Sourdough fed me.

  I also want to remember Perry Spray, who first brought Moby Dick into the neighborhood.

  Self-esteem, if it is to be enduring, can only grow out of steady faith. For writers, of course, self-esteem comes (or fails to come) from the books they are writing at the moment. At the moment I have just passed the mid-point of my fifth novel, and one little line from that novel has made me happy for weeks. The line is “Sorrow floats.”

  —John Irving

  I told the analyst everything except my experience with Mr. Rinesfoos.

  —James Thurber

  My behavior slipped after Daddy died and went to San Francisco. I danced barefoot in bars, I flipped the bird at churches. Early one morning in April I drove Dothan’s new pickup truck off the Snake River dike, and when the tow truck crew showed up they found me squatting on a snow patch in my nightgown crying over the body of a dead plover.

  Not that I’d ever been the Betty Crocker showcase woman. All through my teens GroVont townfolk called me “that Maurey Pierce girl,” then after I came home from the university it became “that Maurey Talbot woman.” But by May I’d taken to midday drinking and the writing of a daily picture postcard to Dad. I mostly sent him photographs of the Tetons from various views at various times of year—sunset from the top of Signal Mountain in winter, Jenny Lake on a cobalt clear day. I searched the valley curio shops for pictures of fall because Dad always did enjoy golden aspens and red chokecherries.

  What Dad didn’t like was cute kids in station wagons feeding Yellowstone bears. He looked at Yellowstone as a big zoo of tame animals and lost tourists.

  The pictures weren’t all mountains and ain’t-nature-wonderful shots. On Easter I mailed him the postcard of Clover the Killer with a rope around his neck sitting on a bow-back gelding surrounded by tourists in car coats and sneakers. Clover is wearing a red plaid shirt and he has only one eye; the other side of his face is an empty cavern that goes way in there to pink, wrinkled skin—no glass eyeball or black patch or anything, just a hole.

  On the back I wrote: “As the one-eyed whore said to the traveling salesman after he nailed her in the socket, ‘Hurry on back now, mister. I’ll keep an eye out for you.’”

  ***

  The tide of public opinion swung to my male slut husband, Dothan, after I cut my hair short and took to carrying Dad’s gopher popper in my windbreaker pocket. Nine-tenths of the men in Teton County drive around armed to the armpits, but let a woman pack a little Dan Wesson model 12 .357 Magnum with a four-inch, satin blue barrel, and the feed store cronies commence rolling their eyes and gabbing on about the Pierce family tendency to fall off the deep end.

  Everybody says you’ve got to have balls to get respect in this world, but I couldn’t help noticing that with that satin blue barrel poking out, the service improved considerably at Kimball’s Food Market. The guy at the Esso station moved right along when I said check the oil. Even Dothan cut down on criticizing my dusty kitchen surfaces.

  Dad won Charley—that’s what I call him—with two pair jacks high at a stock show in Billings. I didn’t load Charley with bullets. What I did was pretend he’s a penis without a man, which is the only kind I like. Probably some strange psychological word for carrying a disembodied prick in your pocket, but I don’t care. Where other people knock on wood, I rub my rod.

  ***

  Why did I fight the demon? Which leads to why did I drink? Why did the world in all its parts press down on me from every direction until I reached the point of personifying whiskey? “Whisky My Only Friend,” “Let Me Go Home, Whisky,” “Whisky River Take My Mind,” “Tonight the Bottle Let Me Down,” “Tiny Bubbles,” “Wine Me Up,” “Mean Old Whiskey,” “One Hundred Bottles of Beer on the Wall, One Hundred Bottles of Beer.”

  On my fourteenth birthday, before my first ever period, I had a baby named Shannon. Shannon is now eight and a half and beautiful, living in North Carolina with her natural father because I couldn’t take care of her. Let’s stress that—because I couldn’t take care of her.

  My son, Auburn, the light of my dark, frigid nights, started existence by defying the poison of Delfen foam, came out breech, had jaundice at three days and an undeveloped esophagus that wouldn’t close for nearly six months. Dothan blamed me, of course, and Auburn has howled at the colossal cheat that is life ever since.

  Dad’s dead; you know about him.

  Mom is a story unto herself. Don’t get me started on Mom. She cleans and perfects meat loaf recipes and hums show tunes. Every third y
ear or so she takes her clothes off in public—usually rodeos—and goes to pharmaceutical heaven for a few days, where they give her sponge baths and take the laces out of her shoes. My little brother, Petey, takes care of Mom after these periods, and the very thought of him sponge-bathing her white, droopy body gives me the willies.

  Dothan sells real estate. He has the dates and times of all the Kiwanis meetings penciled on his calendar, not because he’s a Kiwanian, but because he knows those are safe days to visit the members’ wives. That pretty much says it all about my marriage.

  I’m making a point here. My downfall can’t be blamed on histrionics. In May of 1973, the day it all got up and went, I had as much cause to drink lunch and write picture postcards to a dead father in San Francisco as anyone.

  1

  The air made everything flat. Buildings, cottonwoods, and the mountains behind all had a two-dimensional glare, with shiny surfaces and a paint-by-number look to the colors. I sat in our window seat in my blue fuzzy bathrobe with my bare feet on a cushion, waiting for Paul Harvey News and watching the alcoholics wander in from different directions onto the lawn of the Mormon church across the street. Alcoholics Anonymous met at noon every day but Sunday, and whenever Auburn was at his grandma’s I sat in the window studying the drunks and reformed drunks for signs of me.

  The men carried a stretched look in their eyes, like old dogs—the look of punishment accepted. They wore caps instead of hats and mostly had long-sleeved shirts rolled up over their wrists. An Indian wore torn pants and moccasins, a long-hair had on a red-white-and-blue vest, one guy was in a wheelchair. A non-alcoholic pushing a manual lawn mower stopped to look as four AA members lifted the wheelchair like pallbearers on a coffin. The crippled guy perched above their heads, grinning and bobbing, playing a harmonica while they carried him down the steps into the basement, where they held the meetings.

  Two women drove up in a blue-and-white Chevrolet that said Babe on the license plate. They sat for a moment, finishing their cigarettes. As they got out, neither woman checked herself in the rearview mirror, which I took as relevant. I still checked myself.

  Paul Harvey’s voice boomed: “Hello, America. Stand by for news.”

  Time. I poured myself a coffee cup full of Yukon Jack. Cradling the cup with both hands, I stared into the light molasses-colored liquid. Was there a connection between this and Dad? Closing my eyes, I brought the cup to my lips and smelled the fumes. The sweet fire swept around my tongue and under it onto the saliva glands, then to the back of my mouth, where, like advancing lava, it flowed into my body.

  The shoulder muscles, the jaw tight from clenching in my sleep, the fist-size rock in my stomach—everything let go at once. It was better than a masturbated orgasm.

  The empty cup dropped back to the windowsill as I opened my eyes on a softer reality. The church roof wasn’t shiny anymore. The non-alcoholic had disappeared, leaving his lawn mower in the middle of a pass. One last AA member, an older man in a white ambulance, pulled up against the curb. I pretended I could see him but he couldn’t see me, as if the window were a TV set. He had on overalls but no shirt, which is weird for ranch country, and sandals. I hadn’t seen guys in sandals since the university.

  While I poured another cup of Jack, I said a little prayer. I thanked God for Paul Harvey. As he plain-talked about the seal on Kerr canning jars, he was so sincere. Paul Harvey must be the sincerest man in the world. With all my heart I wanted to buy the jars. I could plant some lima beans and nurture them and watch them grow, and just at the perfect moment, I would pick my lima beans. I would boil them or whatever women do and can them in Kerr jars and stack them on shelves in the basement we didn’t own yet, then my family and I would have security. Come avalanche or nuclear war, we would eat wholesome food.

  Do beans grow above the ground like apples or below it like carrots? I knew horses, some about cows. I sure wasn’t no damn farmer.

  The old, skinny guy in the overalls had that farmer look. Before going down the steps he rubbed both hands on his legs, as if they were dirty. Farmers have dirt under their fingernails, ranchers have blood.

  My cup was empty so I filled it.

  The postcard was a photo of two girls in sunsuits on a chairlift with Jackson way down behind them. The picture must have been old because they had ratted and sprayed hair and cat’s-eye sunglasses with little oyster-shell fans at the corners. A California nightmare.

  I didn’t gulp the whole cup this time. Had to pick up Auburn at Grandma Talbot’s later, wouldn’t do to show up crawling.

  ***

  Dear Dad,

  Hank called yesterday to say Jenny Lind foaled a chestnut colt with a blaze. He opened the Miner Creek gate and flooded the south pasture, which I told him you didn’t want flooded. Mrs. Hinchman hit a pole and wrecked her Rambler and broke her hip. Knocked the phones out up Buffalo Valley.

  Come back.

  Maurey

  ***

  Hank Elkrunner was the only one at the ranch when Dad saddled Frostbite and went up Miner Ridge to find a cow and calf they missed when they moved the cattle off the forest lease. He took an old dog named Arnold with him. Arnold was a mean little dingo mix anyone other than a sentimentalist would have shot.

  Frostbite came home that afternoon dragging the saddle, so Hank walked up the ridge and found Dad. Near as Hank could tell after backtracking, Frostbite stepped in a badger hole and rolled over on Dad, who caught a rib through the lungs. Dad knew he was dead soon, so instead of trying to make the ranch, he coughed blood and crawled clear up to a spine with a view of the Tetons he’d always admired. Hank found him leaning on a rock with a bunch of blue penstemon clutched in his left hand and his black beard turned to the sunset.

  Son of a bitch cowboy died like a fucking poet. I could have killed him.

  Arnold did the loyal-cowdog-of-the-West thing and bit Hank when he first picked up Dad’s body.

  ***

  I named Frostbite. Dad said animals deserve the same respect as people, and he hated names like Spot and Fury. Our herd was big on thirties movie stars.

  On my tenth birthday I sat on the top rail of the corral while Dad led this skewbald colt in from the barn and handed me the reins. The yearling stuck the left side of his face up against mine with his nostril flare right in my ear. He wasn’t all that tall, but his back was broad and he had perfect hips for vaulting. I looked in his eyes and I knew. Sometimes you just know these things, like in college when I would meet a boy and know within five minutes I was going to nail him. That’s how I knew about Frostbite. We would fall in love and have one of those Disney Old Yeller, Lassie-and-Timmy relationships.

  We did, too. Frostbite and I trusted each other like no one trusts a lover. For three summers we spent almost every waking moment together, until the year I got pregnant. We were Intermountain Vaulting Champions for my age group in 1962. Champions. Me and Frostbite. He ran full blast across the arena at the Denver Coliseum and I did handstands, sidekicks, somi swings. We had a backflip dismount that knocked the collective socks off the crowd.

  It’s weird when your true love and loyalty horse rolls over on your father and kills him.

  Paul Harvey was talking sincerely about Watergate. The Senate did this, Nixon did that, Sam somebody was outraged. I couldn’t tell what side Paul Harvey was on, but whichever it was, he really meant it. I poured another cup of Claude. I named this bottle of Yukon Jack Claude after a boy at college who followed me around like a pet beagle my whole freshman year. He was sweet, with horn-rimmed glasses, two-tone sweaters, and a calculator case holster on his belt, and I could have brought him untold joy if I’d let him sleep with me. I should have. He deserved untold joy if only for his persistence, and I’d have hardly been compromised at all. Lord knows I got nailed by enough boys who didn’t like me in college; it wouldn’t have hurt to get nailed by one who did.

  Paul Harvey had
discovered a man in Missouri with a twenty-two-pound cantaloupe. If you only heard the sound of the words but not what they meant, you’d think cantaloupes and Watergate and Kerr canning jars were all equally fascinating.

  As Paul Harvey came to the daily bumper snicker, my phone rang.

  “You broke her heart again.”

  “Hi, Petey, how’s Mom?”

  “She’s an obsessive compulsive with a thankless daughter.”

  Here is that day’s bumper snicker: “Love your kids at home and belt them in the car.”

  Since I wasn’t talking, Petey went on. “Yesterday was Mother’s Day.”

  “I’m a mother.”

  “We spent all day in the parlor next to the phone. I’d planned to take her to luncheon at Signal Mountain Lodge, but she was afraid you’d call while we were out. We had her hair done nice, too.”

  “Petey, are you saying you wasted a whole Sunday sitting with Mom?”

  “I knew you wouldn’t call. Too busy mooning over Dad who’s eight months dead to call your live mom on Mother’s Day.”

  Got me with that one. “Nobody wished me a happy Mother’s Day. You don’t see me whining in the parlor.” Which was sort of a lie. Shannon sent a Mother’s Day card made out of construction paper with models cut from a catalog glued to represent a family—me, Sam Callahan, Lydia, and her. Lydia, Sam’s mom, who more or less raised Shannon the first five years, held a cigarette, and I was in a bra and slip. Playtex Cross Your Heart. I bet anything Sam made her do it. Probably even picked out the models to cut, because the one was me had dark hair and big boobs. Last time Sam Callahan saw me was at Dad’s funeral when I was nursing Auburn. He laughed at my breasts—not the comfort called for from a best friend.

  “Nobody wished you happy Mother’s Day because you’re such a bad mother,” Petey said. “You lost the first one and you’ll lose this one too. Or he’ll grow up like Dothan. I’d drown a baby before I risked that.”

  “Petey, do you like boys?”

  He hung up.

  Before Paul Harvey got through the list of those turning one hundred years young today, Petey called back. I poured more of Claude’s soul and answered the fifth ring. He said, “Take that back.”