Wild Life
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Synopsis
In 1905, a cigar-smoking, feminist writer of popular adventure novels for women encounters Bigfoot in Molly Gloss’s best loved novel—“never has there been a more authentic, persuasive, or moving evocation of this elusive legend: a masterpiece” ( Kirkus Reviews, starred review). Set among lava sinkholes and logging camps at the fringe of the Northwest frontier in the early 1900s, Wild Life is the story—both real and imagined—of the free-thinking, cigar-smoking, trouser-wearing Charlotte Bridger Drummond, who pens dime-store women’s adventure stories. One day, when a little girl gets lost in the woods, Charlotte anxiously joins the search. When she becomes lost in the dark and tangled woods, she finds herself face to face with a mysterious band of mountain giants…or more commonly known as Sasquatch. With great assurance and skill, Molly Gloss blends “heady cerebral satisfactions, gorgeous prose, and page-turning adventure” (Karen Joy Fowler, bestselling author of We Are All Completely Beside Ourselves), and puts a new spin on a classic piece of American folklore.
Release date: February 5, 2019
Publisher: Gallery / Saga Press
Print pages: 336
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Wild Life
Molly Gloss
To write, I have decided, is to be insane. In ordinary life you look sane, act sane—just as sane as any mother of five children. But once you start to write, you are moonstruck, out of your senses. As you stare hard inward, following behind your eyes the images of invisible places, of people, of events, and listening hard inward to silent voices and unspoken conversations—as you are seeing the story, hearing it, feeling it—your very skin becomes permeable, not a boundary, and you enter the place of your writing and live inside the people who live there. You think and say incredible things. You even love other people—you don’t love your children and your husband at all. And here is the interesting thing to me: when this happens, you often learn something, understand something, that can transcend the words on the paper.
C. B. D.
September 1905
Sat’y 25 Mar ’05
The death of Jules Verne was reported in the morning papers—a great loss to France and to the world. When I read this news, I confess I was briefly startled into tears—just had to sit down and cry. Generally I am not much of a one for tears, and so my youngest son, named Jules for that very man, came and climbed on me, pulling at my hair and whining the way children will do, and dogs the same way, they’ll climb on you and lick your eyes because they want things to go on being understandable, they don’t want you to sit down suddenly in a kitchen chair crying.
I won’t tolerate having my hair pulled, which my children know very well, so I stood up and tumbled my son right out of my lap. “Don’t grab on my hair,” I said, and discovered, upon sitting down again, that I was already finished with crying. There followed a theatrical burst of sobbing from Jules where he lay on the floor at my feet, but as quickly done with—a long wet sigh—when I pulled him onto my knee. He settled his bony little spine against my bosom and began to twist a forelock of his own hair around his pointy finger while I held the newspaper out in front of us and read:
Death Relieves Jules Verne
Calmly Foresaw His End and Discussed It with His Family
He had suffered from cataracts and deafness and diabetes, this was something I knew. And seventy-seven. Well, it shouldn’t have been a surprise; I don’t suppose it was. But something about it was unexpected, a jolt. Indeed, he leaves large work, long years of glorious writing; and now is dead. The world is changing, he told us, and in my strong opinion Verne predicted very nearly every one of the major mechanical developments of this century; his ideas have obtained a kind of technological immortality. The world is changing but people go on dying in the usual ways, is somewhere near what I was thinking, now that the prophet himself had arrived at the limits of personal mortality.
“Bird of six weeks kills her self with gas,” my son read solemnly. My children all are smart as whips, which I have written in these pages many times, but this last one an uncommon case: not yet five years old, but for more than a year he has been copying his letters from books and reading to me the captions of the daily newspaper.
I looked where he pointed. “Bride,” I said. “Bride of six weeks.”
“What’s a bride?”
“A woman with a romantic inclination which has led her into reckless behavior.”
This answer might have seemed sensible to him if he hadn’t taken up from his older brothers a mistrust of anything I am likely to say about women. And my children are parlor artists, every one of them: he breathed out in a dramatical fashion and tipped his head backward against my breast, staring upward with the expectation of a revised reply.
“A woman newly married,” I said.
“What’s married?”
“Enslaved to a man,” I told him truthfully. At four years of age he has no appreciation of scrupulous truthfulness nor understanding of irony, and withal has learned from his brothers to question anything I am likely to say about men. “Ma!” he said, in the particular way of all my children, exasperated and demanding.
I said into his turned-up face, “When a man and a woman decide to live as husband and wife, that’s marriage. Like Otto and Edith.”
He considered the idea, studying upward with his eyes evidently fixed on the little dark caves of my nose; then he said seriously, “Like Jules and Charlotte.”
Well, boys are prone to confuse the mother with the wife; in fact, husbands are prone to this same thing. So I only said, “No, not like you and me. We are mother and son.”
I expected him to follow this line of questioning to its next natural point—to ask me if I had a husband, and who was he, which is related to, but not the same as, Do I have a father, and where is he? (heard and answered many times); but his mind does not work like mine and shortly he had circled round again to another issue. “Why’d the bride kill herself with gas?”
With a child as young as Jules there is not much point in carrying scrupulous truthfulness to the edge of the abyss. “I don’t know,” I said. “It may just be she was very, very sad.” Both of us considered this poor sad bride for a moment. The world is changing but people go on dying in the usual ways. Then I said, “Get up now, I have work. So do you. I want you to find the dog and a scissors and cut the hair away from his eyes, but not too short, and don’t poke his face nor yours, and put the scissors away after.”
This was something he had attempted without instruction on two occasions in the recent past, for which reason I had hidden the scissors thoroughly and cautioned the dog against cooperation. But I had lately been wondering if Permission would cut the desirability right out of that particular adventure, and in any case Horace Stuband would be rowing Melba up the slough by this time, and it might be, if Jules went on searching out the scissors for a quarter of an hour, Melba would be standing in my kitchen tying on her apron and I’d be locked away in the shed when the matter came to a climax.
Jules popped out of my lap with a little shout and went off at a gallop, calling for the dog.
“Ma!” Frank said from the very air aloft. “Lightning’s hid her kitties up here, Ma, there’s a hidey-hole under the eave. Look!”
Someone has taught that cat to count, is my belief, for she has never failed to notice when we have sneaked off with the weaklings and the crooked-born of her kittens, and she has become more and more wily with each successive litter, determined to raise them all, runts and mutants all, in a behavior that to my mind must be proof of the basic tenets of Darwin, or disproof; which, I cannot as yet decide. For more than a week my children have been looking for Lightning’s new litter in places as unlikely as sugar bowls, desk drawers, and rooftops.
“Where?” I called to Frank, and went out in the mud of the yard to see where he was pointing from his slippery toehold on the gable of the kitchen porch. “Oh my Lord, Frank. Can you see them? How many are in there?”
“She’s in there with them. I ain’t reaching in. It smells like puke and she’ll bite a hole in me and I’ll bleed to death.”
I school my children as to the rules of absolute construction, agreement of the participle, and placement of copulative conjunctions, but ignore the colloquial as a matter of principle. Ignore, as well, certain subjects of interest to Frank, whose inclination is to direct people’s attention toward blood, purulence, and excrement. I said, “Just look in there, Frank, for heaven’s sake. Count them.”
“I don’t want to put my face up there! She’ll tear my eyes out and I’ll be blind.”
Parlor artists, every one of them—which is something their departed father unjustly blamed on me. “Well, then, come down from the roof and go look for Lewis; he’s left the woodpile in a jumble. Let Lightning keep her mutant, godforsaken children, only I won’t be held responsible for what comes to pass. It’s inevitable, I suppose, that a Cat Monster will someday take over the earth.”
I shook the newspaper as interjection, but having given up for now any hope of reading the dying words of Jules Verne, I returned the paper to the parlor, to the teetery stack at the end of the davenport bed. If I’m to follow what is happening in the world, and what’s being said about this writer or that book, and the details not only of the book industry but of biology and archaeology, chemistry and medicine, the latest debates over the conceptions of Schopenhauer and Nietzsche, and arguments to do with socialism, feminism, evolution, eugenics, insanity, disease, not to mention what it was exactly that Jules Verne said to his family before he died, and if I’m to go on living three thousand miles from the centers of science and politics and publishing, it always will be necessary to rely on a barrowload of subscriptions to publications of all sorts, and books through the mails. It’s a very lot of reading, and for four days of each and every month there’s no keeping up, as Melba never can be persuaded away from making a monthly visit to her daughter, Florence, in Yacolt, leaving my children and me to manage the household without her; and since the U.S. Post Office continues to bring my mail to the dock at Skamokawa every day with the flood tide, the stack of unread newspapers and periodicals always will build up during my housekeeper’s monthly absence, until by the fourth and last day it slides off the arm of the davenport bed into a loose mountain on the floor beside it: a direct result of Melba’s stubbornness and the continuing inability of my children to manage their lives without subvention and stewardship.
As if in perfect demonstration of this truth, I discovered Jules in the kitchen standing on his toes on a high stool so as to peer through the deep dust along the top of the Wilson cabinet, while his brother stood below, jiggling the stool legs beneath him.
“Oscar, quit that. Jules, climb down from there. You won’t find the scissors in this kitchen, Jules, I’ve looked myself and I know for a fact they are not here. Look out in the potato cellar for them, that would be my advice. And failing that, try along the garden fence; someone may have left them lying on the grass there.”
“I never did,” Oscar said in a righteously aggrieved way.
“Did too,” Jules told him automatically, and the two of them fell to wrestling on the kitchen floor. Oscar, at barely seven, is small enough to present Jules, who is big for his age, with a challenging but not impossible opponent. They wrestle daily over important matters, such as whose arrow came nearest killing a particular Indian or slavering wolf, and trivial matters such as who wiped whose snot on whose trousers.
“I haven’t said that Oscar left the scissors out by the garden fence; I said you ought to go look there. In fact, both of you ought to head for the garden straightaway and search the fence line thoroughly.”
I stepped around their thrashing arms and legs and began to clear away these last four days of table scrapings. My personal belief is that a woman’s worth doesn’t lie in the cleanliness of her house; and at the commencement of each of Melba’s absences I always am determined, on principle, to let the housekeeping pile up. It is Melba’s belief, though, that a woman who neglects her home is unnatural, an abnormity more horrible than Frankenstein’s monster, and on her return there is a particular look she will give me as she surveys the disorder. I believe it’s dread of that look that sometimes moves me at the last moment toward a cursory sweep of the carpet, a symbolic neatening of dirty plates.
“Ma, I can’t find Lewis.” Frank was breathless, roseate. “I think he’s disappeared. There’s tracks and blood. I think he was maybe captured by Indians.”
“I wouldn’t be surprised. But if Lewis has disappeared, Frank, it’ll fall on you, as his twin, to neaten the woodpile.”
“Ma!”
“Go and ask any Indians you see skulking about whether they have seen your brother. Look in all the mine shafts and secret caves. Follow the blood trail. I’m serious, Frank. I want you to find Lewis and I want Lewis to put straight the woodpile.”
“Ma! He won’t do it, Ma! He’s out in the woods digging a bear trap and he says he won’t come.”
“Go tell Lewis I’m giving his clothes to the orphans in Panama and his pocket-knife to Oscar. Tell Lewis, since he’s got bear meat to eat, he surely won’t be needing a place set for him at the supper table. And tell Lewis that Melba is in a fine temper; if she sees the woodpile like that, she’ll box his ears off and he’ll bleed to death.”
Frank’s face brightened; he went off to deliver these warnings to Lewis. Oscar went off to claim Lewis’s pocket-knife. Jules went off to look for scissors in the deep grass along the garden fence. I stood briefly in an empty room.
Just as Samuel Butler is said to have stopped everywhere and anywhere to write down his notes, it is my habit to snatch up every moment of quiet and solitariness for myself, to sit right down in these circumstances and turn out a few lines, a paragraph of deathless prose, while none of my children are underfoot: I keep a little notebook in the pocket of every apron and wrapper for just such momentary occasions. But I expected Melba; and I am as liable to be governed by my housekeeper as any woman. I went on scraping the plates bitterly and carried the pail out to Buster, who has taken up the prudent doggy habit of hiding under the floor of the toolshed whenever summoned by a child below a certain age.
The shores of the Columbia River at this lower end are crowded with small and flat islands divided from one another by the narrow slackwater of the sloughs—that is to say, by the river’s back alleys as it finds its slow way round and among the islands. Price Island and Tenasillahe are so low lying as to be barely suitable for fish-seining sites, but this island (having no name, and therefore just the Island) is a great wedge of rolling pastureland and arable fields, as well as wood-lots of black cottonwood and red alder, engirt by the Steamboat, Alger, and Ellison Sloughs. I should be surprised if the highest hillock on the Island stands ten feet above the flood tide of an average spring freshet, for which reason this house and several of its outbuildings perch upon high stone piers in the hope (usually vain) of getting through our periodic out-of-the-ordinary tides with merely draggled skirts.
When Buster scooted out for the pail of scraps, I peered into the great muddy vacancy beneath the shed and called, “George,” for my oldest sat in the dim dampness there, with his back reclined to the rocks of a corner pier and his head not visible to me unless I bothered to circle around to another corner and lean in. He said, “What,” in a flat and sullen way as if it were a reply.
“What are you doing under there? Reading a book? Consulting the stars?”
George, having the advantage of years, has long since reached an understanding of irony, but continues without any appreciation for it. “Ma,” he said, from the very mountaintop of Impatience, “will you leave me be.”
He has gotten to be fourteen with no encouragement from me. I believe the perfect age for any son is a certain week in his eleventh year when he balances briefly at the triangular intersection of self-sufficiency, unconditional love, and eagerness to please. If Science is to be believed, nothing in the universe actually ceases to exist, but I have begun to wonder: Whatever happens to all that affection, those years of motherly attachment, when a son determines to discard them?
“I’ll do exactly that,” I told him, and I removed the empty pail from under Buster’s nose and carried it back to the house.
At this time of year the path between the kitchen and the shed is always a perfect trench of mud, for which reason I had gone over there barefooted and with my hem pulled up into my belt. I’ve read that the Wahkiakum and Kathlamet Indians of this coast never wore a shoe, and the sensibleness of that has stayed with me ever since. While I stood at the kitchen door stroking the bottoms of my muddy feet along the rag rug, I discovered Melba standing in the front hall taking stock of the clutter. Horace Stuband had delivered her and silently rowed himself home.
Her look went round the rooms while her hat came off and then her gloves. “I see you’ve left all the work to pile up for me,” she said in her usual way, which is Aggrieved.
Melba has failed to age well and suffers from an unlovely overbite as well as an unsympathetic nature, but I believe I understand why men once found her attractive. She is a small woman, under five feet in her shoes, generous of bosom, with a waist that suggests it once was narrow as a boy’s; it would be in a man’s nature to consider a woman’s figure ahead of her character. But she has made unlucky choices: two husbands have died young, and the third, Henry, is a terrible drunkard and a womanizer. Unlucky, too, has been her experience of childbearing: a miscarriage, then a stillborn son, then a daughter borne hard and born early, and a surgeon’s hysterical removal of her womb. Then, I suppose, Melba’s daughter married and left the house before Melba felt herself quite finished with raising her up; this would account for the way in which she goes on trying to direct Florence’s life from afar, in daily letters shored up by these monthly visitations.
There is an approach I have learned from the dog, who will always pass by a warlike cat by pretending not to notice her. “Frank has found Lightning,” was what I briskly announced. “It seems she’s been hiding her kittens in the eave of the kitchen porch roof.” Melba, catlike, received my information with a certain narrowing of the eyes and a throaty, wordless warning; but her coat then came briskly off and was hung upon the hook, after which she brought down her apron and tied up the strings. So if she was briefly distracted from my insufficiencies as a housekeeper, my purpose was served. “Frank is searching for Lewis, who may have been killed by Indians,” I said. “Oscar is in the house playing with knives. Jules is in the garden looking for scissors. George is lying under the shed with the dog.” I went about the business of gathering up my newspapers and digests while I delivered this household report to Melba; and while she was still standing in the front hall gathering up her dander, I was carrying my armload out the kitchen door and through the mud to the shed.
Every writer needs a time and place in which to work. When some or all of my children were yet unborn, there had been space in this house for me to claim as my own: an unused bedroom, a sunporch, the rib-roofed third-floor attic. But it has been a terrible task to write books underneath the same roof with five irrepressible boys; this house is full as a tick and peaceless. When push came to shove, I was forced to look to other buildings for a room of my own.
When her own children were young, it had been my mother’s habit to lock herself in the outhouse with her embroidery, and in certain seasons of the year when the deer were likely to come down into the yard to browse the tender lawn with our cow, Mother kept a rifle with her and developed a deadly aim from two hundred yards. I never did consider following my mother’s example, for our two-holer stands like a bastion upon its high stone foundation and is a favorite stronghold of my continually warring sons; they have made a particular science of scaling its ramparts, from which vantage they ambush their unsuspecting brothers with missiles of various kinds, or fire on their enemies with wooden guns. I briefly gave thought to the little barn the cow stands in to get relief from the rain, but refused it on the grounds that it’s three-sided (open to weather from the south), frequently lies in flood, and is home to certain of Lightning’s misconceived offspring. When I first looked to the shed, it was full up with stove wood and tools and broken things waiting there for repair, but numbered its walls at four and had a door that would shut and latch. I instructed the boys to bring the stove wood outside, where it was a-rowed between the stone footings under cover of the shed floor, and our broken things out to the yard, to rust or rot or be made over by one boy or another into a steam launch or a cannon; and then the tools and I were able to come to an amicable division of space. When I had fitted a lock to the inside of the door, the place became proof against my children. Horace Stuband, when he saw what I was doing, took it on himself to reboard the floor against mice and mud and reshake the roof against rain and draught. I have forty acres for no good reason except Wes had a childish notion of himself as a Gentleman Farmer; and with Wes gone, I have leased the greater part of these acres to my neighbor for his cows. Of course, Stuband long has conducted himself as no mere neighbor, instead a prospective husband, which I don’t encourage; but I accept the tangible tokens of his courtship with a sensible and silent gratitude.
The shed is windowless and dark, hot or cold with the weather, but if cold, Melba will send one of the boys over every long while with a heated brick for my feet to rest on, and if hot, a cake of ice. As for the lack of outlook, I consider I am driven inward to fanciful mountain-scapes and lost continents, and no worse for it, though in certain weathers I find I must take a breath when I go in the little dark room, in the manner, I suppose, of a hard-rock miner going down in the shaft; and sometimes, coming out, I am surprised by the light, by the absolute green of Stuband’s pastures, or a sky unexpectedly huge and blowsy with cloud, or the receding purplish ridges of the Nehalem Mountains. This, I imagine, must be the surprise felt by someone who comes up from years in a dungeon; or by Mountain Mary, returning from the black heart of a volcano where she has discovered blind pygmies living in a secret civilization.
On the other hand, I rather like the rain striking the roof of the shed, the unpatterned drumming, and on those days there is comfort in lantern light, the little room become snug and golden. Inasmuch as rain is what we commonly have for weather, I am able to get along.
I climbed up the ladder to the high doorsill and while I scraped my soles free of mud I said to George or the dog, “Don’t thump around down there while I’m at work,” and someone, George or the dog, made a sound of grievance. I toppled my papers and periodicals onto the maple secretary, which once was my husband’s, lit the lamp, locked the door, and put the chair under me. The dying words of Jules Verne notwithstanding, it’s my habit when I can escape to this study to keep my morning hours for reading, my afternoons for writing. Being as it was already (though barely) afternoon, I dipped the pen in the ink pot and drove the nib across the page with a pent-up fury. The horrible sight, I wrote, so clouded her mind and bound up the winds of reason that she nearly cried quits with Fate and gave up the battle of Life.
Melba always has complained of her son-in-law, Homer, that he torments his daughter in a man’s careless way by bringing down with him from the log camps horrid tales of Wild Men of the Woods, and so forth. I don’t believe a child is spoiled by the telling of monster stories; I’ve told them myself, in such a way as to make the boys jump. But Homer will swear every story is true, and that he has been a witness of great barefooted tracks in the mud, twenty inches from toe to heel, and night screaming of a bestial sort which is not the roaring of bears or lions, which he claims he would recognize. He brings to his family gruesome accounts of monstrous hairy men stepping forth from the shrub-wood to crush an empty oil barrel, or bend back the iron top of a donkey engine, or brandish an uprooted tree, and long recountings of stories other men have told him, of women captured from sylvan picnics and toted miles across the mountains on the shoulders of stinking man-beasts. (Such is the nature of men, I am sure in their own camps, outside the earshot of wives and children, these timbermen tell one another the lascivious details of the ways in which these creatures force their sexual attentions on captive women.)
Melba, I’m sure, wishes that her son-in-law would bring home to his wife and daughter gentler tales of the sort she told her own young child: St. Augustine’s fables of men whose ears are large enough to sleep in, and fanciful tales of griffins and centaurs. The Wild Man of the Woods strikes her as altogether too near to the real, and consequently dreadful. It is a discredited feeling in civilized nations, but I believe we are all still afraid of the dark, and here in this land of dark forests the very air is imbued with such stories; indeed, the loggers had the tales first from the Indians. The realness of them is another matter. As the woods are daylighted, and wilderness gives way to modern advances in education and technology, I expect to see the end of the Wild Man, exactly as faeries and gnomes disappeared with the encroaching of the cities in Europe.
I also frankly wonder why Homer’s stories remind me of certain of the white man’s fearful fictions of other races. It seems to me men always have endowed the Indian, the Negro, the Hottentot with savagery and a strong reek, with apelike looks and movements, and with a taste for white women, and my own belief is that it’s not a matter of other races but a matter of fear. There is a bestial side to human nature, basic and primitive impulses in the bodies of men which clamor for satisfaction, and it must be a Christian comfort to ascribe such things not to oneself or one’s tribe but to hairy giants and savages. It may be the Wild Man of the Woods is but a ghost of the wild man within.
I am forgiving of poor, dull Homer, though, inasmuch as I’m always on the lookout for the seeds of my novels and have begun to make these wild-man tales over, turn them quite on their backs and fill the shells with my own turtle stew: the brave Helena Reed, Girl Adventurer, has come face-to-face with a secret race of hairy mountain giants, and in particular with a single example, the great and fearful Tatoosh of the See-Ah-Tiks (whose civilization, of course, will prove more enlightened than our own).
Today I wrote straight through—brought the dear girl to the very gates of their great secret cavern—2,000 words in rather more than five and a half hours. Of course, by then it was long since dark. If it suits Melba, she will sometimes send one of my sons down with a sandwich at midday, but she never will bring my supper to the shed; she’s stubbornly of the opinion I should quit my work as the night falls, whether I’ve got to a stopping place or not. So when I went up the path to the house, I discovered Stuband sitting with my children at the supper table. Melba is determined that he should have a wife, and I’m determined that it never will be me, but standing on the porch looking through the kitchen window to the sight of my sons happily plying their forks, and sweet, sad Horace Stuband sitting with them, neatly tipping a glass of milk to his mustache, I admit I was pierced with loneliness. There is something about a lighted room when you are standing outside it in the cold night.
His hair has gone gray early, his whiskers gray, and his lean, pensive face just short of pleasing to the eye. He is indulgent of my children and kind with his cows, a man largely self-educated, and I believe he’s a bit in awe of me; in fact he seldom looks at me when he speaks, which I suppose is due to abject fear; all of which may very well be go
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