Driftless - Hardcover

Rhodes, David

  • 3.93 out of 5 stars
    5,098 ratings by Goodreads
 
9781571310590: Driftless

Synopsis

David Rhodes's long-awaited new novel turns an unblinking eye on an array of eccentric characters and situations. The setting is Words, Wisconsin, an anonymous town of only a few hundred people. But under its sleepy surface, life rages. Cora and Graham guard their dairy farm, and family, from the wicked schemes of their milk co-op. Lifelong paraplegic Olivia suddenly starts to walk, only to find herself crippled by her fury toward her sister and caretaker, Violet. Recently retired Rusty finds a cougar living in his haymow, dredging up haunting childhood memories. Winifred becomes pastor of the Friends church and stumbles on enlightenment in a very unlikely place. And Julia Montgomery, both private and gregarious, instigates a series of events that threatens the town's solitude and doggedly suspicious ways. Driftless finds the author's powers undiminished in this unforgettable story that evokes a small-town America previously unmapped, and the damaged denizens who must make their way through it.

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Reviews

After a 30-year absence from publishing due to a motorcycle accident that left him paralyzed, Rhodes is back with a novel featuring July Montgomery, the hero of his 1975 novel, Rock Island Line, which movingly involves him with the fates of several characters who live in the small town of Words, Wis. Through July, we meet Olivia Brasso, an invalid who loses her family's savings at a casino; parolee Wade Armbuster, who befriends Olivia after she is mugged; Winifred Smith, Olivia's new pastor; Jacob Helm, a widower who finds himself falling in love with Winnie; Gail Shotwell, a local musician who has an unusual reaction when her idol offers to record one of her songs; and Gail's brother, Grahm, and his wife, Cora, who blow the whistle on the milk cooperative that has been cheating them and other farmers. It takes a while for all these stories to kick in, but once they do, Rhodes shows he still knows how to keep readers riveted. Add a blizzard, a marauding cougar and some rabble-rousing militiamen, and the result is a novel that is as affecting as it is pleasantly overstuffed. (Oct.)
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*Starred Review* By the end of the darkly rhapsodic novel Rock Island Line (1975), July Montgomery has suffered enough tragedies for several cursed lifetimes even though he is only 22. His creator, on the other hand, was riding high as each of his three novels met with acclaim. But Rhodes was about to face his own season of loss. Now, in a triumphant return after 30 years (see the adjacent “Story behind the Story” for details), Rhodes picks up the thread of July’s life with deepened powers, writing not in shadow but in light. As for July, after two decades of drifting, he has finally found peace in the small town of Words, Wisconsin. Respected and cherished, he is the hub of this brimming novel, each spoke a suspenseful story line about the unexpectedly dramatic lives of the good people of Words. The compelling cast includes Graham, a farmer, and Cora, his whistleblower wife intent on exposing agribusiness corruption; Winifred, the high-strung pastor; and the incredible Brasso sisters: large, nurturing Violet and tiny, smart Olivia, who rules the book from her wheelchair. In vividly realized scenes involving family secrets, legal battles, gambling, and miracle cures, Rhodes illuminates the wisdom acquired through hard work, the ancient covenant of farming, and the balm of kindness. Encompassing and incisive, comedic and profound, Driftless is a radiant novel of community and courage. --Donna Seaman

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DRIFTLESS

By David Rhodes

MILKWEED EDITIONS

Copyright © 2008 David Rhodes
All right reserved.

ISBN: 978-1-57131-059-0

Contents

Prologue............................................3No reason...........................................7A Nation of Families................................17Scheduled Violence..................................26Mottled Sunlight....................................28Grief...............................................32Painted Bodies and Orange Fires.....................36Gathering Evidence..................................41Think Less, Do More.................................47Protecting Papers...................................51Keeping a Respectful Distance.......................54Humped Floors.......................................60A Room without Furniture............................67faith Keeps No treasure.............................70Broken Things.......................................77Hot Milk............................................83Hiring Help.........................................88Perpetual Perishing.................................98Epiphany............................................102Theft...............................................113Visitor.............................................118Straight Flush......................................122Testimony...........................................127A Private Heaven....................................134Work Begins.........................................141letter to the Editor................................146Fire in the Field...................................155A New Song..........................................160Finishing Up........................................164Snow................................................167Remembered Love.....................................172Desperation.........................................176Completing the Circle...............................182Family..............................................187Envy................................................193Seeking Help........................................200Theodyssey..........................................204Fear................................................210Reunion.............................................216Don't Go That Way...................................223Measuring Up........................................235The Meaning of Truth................................238A fragile Balance...................................249Insurgency..........................................255Slaughter...........................................264Sighting Dogs.......................................271The Thief...........................................285The Universal Acorn.................................292Hunting.............................................301Spring..............................................308New love............................................312Keeping in One's Place..............................317Mushrooms Are Up....................................324Making Bail.........................................328the Heartland Federal Reserve.......................332Inside the Neighbor's House.........................341Trapped by the Past.................................345Value...............................................350Letting Go..........................................358Lawyers.............................................360Resemblance.........................................365The County fair.....................................370Making Other Arrangements...........................376Meeting at snow Corners.............................379The Look of Death...................................391Finding July........................................394Selling Land........................................399Inside the Church...................................403The funeral.........................................409Driftless...........................................422

Chapter One

NO REASON

THE MORNING RIPENED SLOWLY. TEN O'CLOCK FELT LIKE NOON. July Montgomery cut open a sack of ground feed and poured it into the cement trough. He looked out of the barn window into his hay field, where a low-lying fog stole silently out of the ground, filling space with milky distance. Beyond the fence, the tops of maple, oak, and hickory formed a lumpy, embroidered edge against infinity.

July had lived here for more than twenty years, but because of the dreamy quality of the morning, the landscape now appeared almost unfamiliar. The row of round bales of hay-which he'd placed near the road only weeks before-seemed foreign and completely removed from any history that included him. The road itself looked different, and when a hawk stepped off a utility pole, opened its wings, and sailed up the blacktop road toward the nearby village of Words, it disappeared into the looming fog as though entering another world. July marveled at how easily the characters of even the massive, stationary things of reality could be changed by a little moisture in the atmosphere.

On the other side of the barn he could hear his small dairy herd hurrying back from the pasture. He had let them out just an hour before, and it seemed odd that they would be coming back. Normally, they preferred to graze all day, knee-deep in grass, even in the most inclement weather.

Several cows anxiously butted their heads against the wooden sides of the building and he opened the doors, allowing them back into the barn. Agitated, they bellowed and crowded against each other, milling nervously from one area to the next, swarming in slow motion.

Something had frightened them, and July stood in the opening and searched for an explanation-a pack of dogs, perhaps. But he could see nothing, and indeed it wasn't always possible to identify the reason for a herd's agitation. Like the fear that often seizes human society, it sometimes had no tangible cause. Given the social nature of animals, an errant yet terrifying idea could flare up in a single limbic system and spread into the surrounding neighborhood, communicated with the speed of a startled flock of birds. Before long, a climate of fear was established, perpetuated through the psyche's network of instinctual rumor.

A movement caught his eye. Several hundred yards away, at the very edge of where the fog swallowed objects wholesale, a large black animal jumped the fence into his hay field, turned around in an almost ritual manner, and looked directly at him.

Now there's something, July thought, staring back. It appeared to be a very big cat, a panther, also known as a cougar, puma, or mountain lion. He'd seen them out west and up north, but never here. Though they had once been native to the area, there had been no reports of them, as far as he knew, for generations. It wasn't even necessary to actually see one, of course; a stray scent of the beast-inhaled by a single cow-and the whole herd would vibrate with primordial anxiety.

Moving slowly, the panther paced with elastic ease along the old fence, carefully measuring its distance from the barn, keeping partially hidden in the fog, like a ghost not willing to assume corporeal form. As it moved, it continued to stare at July, and July continued to look back.

He wondered why a panther would reenter an area its ancestors had long ago abandoned. The larger reasons, of course, included the encroachment of human civilization and depletion of natural habitat; but July wondered what the urge itself must have felt like-from the inside-to compel it to leave its familiar haunts. If it was a male, the pursuit of a female might lure it into the unknown; a female, on the other hand, might venture out in search of food or the protective seclusion needed to raise its young. July also imagined that both male and female might, like some people, simply enter an unknown area for the sake of discovering how it compared with what they already knew.

As he watched the panther striding slowly, elegantly on the edge of the woods, July also saw no reason to deny to the creature the possibility of acting without a compelling motivation. Perhaps it ended up in his hay field without knowing why it had come.

July remembered his own journey to the Driftless Region, more than twenty years ago.

He recalled first that nothing had hurt. He'd woken up in a surprisingly comfortable ditch along an unrecognizable road in the middle of the night, near the end of September, somewhere in Wyoming. The stars seemed especially thick and chaotic above him, brilliant but mixed up, as though they had been stirred with a silver oar. He had no memory of how he'd come to be here-wherever here was-and he felt to see if some parts of his body were perhaps broken, bleeding, or missing. But nothing seemed out of place, and nothing hurt.

After more checking, he discovered that his wallet was missing. And his duffel bag, lying next to him in the long grass and weeds, had been ransacked. Most of his personal belongings-rope, stove, cooking utensils, hatchet, knife, compass, lantern, bourbon, dried food, candy bars, matches, soap, maps, and a couple books-were gone. All that remained were a couple items of clothing, his sleeping bag, and his water bottle.

But nothing hurt and that seemed like a good omen. Things could be much worse. Whoever had left him here had not found the flat canvas money belt tied snuggly around his abdomen. He then fell back to sleep and woke up an hour later at the sound of an approaching vehicle.

A pickup moved east along the highway. It was closely followed by a noisy single-axle trailer, pulled by a bumper hitch. As though extending a carpet of light before its path-a carpet it never actually rode on-the truck came to a rattling stop at the nearby inter section. The driver climbed out and walked back to check on the trailer. Cramped from sitting and arthritic with age, he moved stiffly.

July dusted off his clothes, walked out of the ditch, and joined the old man at the trailer.

"Everything all right?" he asked.

The old man seemed startled at not being alone and warily inspected July and the duffel bag extending from his left arm.

"So far, so good," he said, and resumed shining his flashlight through the open slats in the side of the trailer. The dense circle of yellow light moved over a massive Angus bull. The animal's warm smell had a sweet yet acrid quality and when it shifted its weight from one set of legs to another, the trailer groaned respectfully.

July walked to the other side of the road and urinated on the gravel shoulder.

It was a clear, summerlike night, and the sky glowed with unusual green luminance.

The spilling sound reminded the old man of his own full bladder and he also peed on the edge of the road. Far in the distance a dog barked.

"You need a ride, young man?"

Inside the truck, the driver adjusted his billed hat and lit a cigarette. July shoved the duffel bag under the seat and sat beside him. "Where you going?" he asked.

"Wisconsin. Ever been there?"

"Nope," said July.

As they rode through Wyoming, the old man explained that he and his brother kept a herd of Herefords in southwestern Wisconsin. They wanted to breed up some black baldy calves, and the old man had driven out to the stockyards in Cheyenne, looking for a long yearling with eye appeal. At a late auction, he'd bought one.

July liked the way the old man talked-his accent and choice of phrases. On this basis he decided to continue with him.

"How long you been in Wyoming?" the old man asked.

"Eight or nine months, working on a ranch."

"You from around here?"

"Nope."

"Where you from?"

"Everywhere," said July. "Never been to Wisconsin, though."

"Where were you before you were in Wyoming?" asked the old man, openly exhibiting the interest of someone who currently lived in the same house he had grown up in.

"Unloading ships on the docks in California."

"And before that?"

"Hauling wheat in Canada," July said. His window was open and the warm night air blew against the side of his face. "I spent almost a year in the prairie provinces, driving truck. While I was there I met a man, a logger with a plastic leg who could run faster than anyone I'd ever seen. And at night he'd take off his leg and count the money hidden inside it. Other people were always betting him he couldn't outrun them."

"How'd he lose his leg?"

"Cut it off by mistake with a chain saw, above the knee."

It was the kind of talk people make in bus stations and other places when they do not expect to see the person they're talking to again-stories about other people, maybe true and maybe not. It was good-natured talk, well suited to the thin, fleeting comfort shared by strangers. Ghost talk.

They traded driving in South Dakota and continued all the way into Wisconsin, where the old man began to anticipate returning to his brother and their farm more eagerly.

"It's not that far now," he said. "Only about twenty miles past the next town. My brother should be waiting up for us. The coffeepot will on and we can have a real meal."

The trailer rattled loudly after running over a large pothole in the pavement, and the old man stopped at the deserted intersection and went back to check on his young bull. It was dark, and after looking at the tires, he inspected the interior of the trailer with his flashlight.

July got out and stretched.

When the old man climbed back behind the wheel, July stood in the road and drew the large canvas duffel bag from under the seat. He pulled the strap over his shoulder.

"Thanks again for the ride."

"My place is just a little ways ahead. Look, my offer for a place to sleep is good."

"Thanks, but, well, no thanks."

"At least let me drive you into Grange. I don't feel right leaving you here in the middle of the night."

The young man looked away. He was uncomfortable with not complying with the older man's wishes yet remained determined to be on his own. "Where does that road go?" he asked, nodding north.

"To Words-nothing up there but a handful of houses. Look, my brother will be waiting for me. Our place is only a little ways from here. You can spend the night, and in the morning-"

"I wonder why they put so many stop signs here?" asked the young man, neither expecting nor waiting for an answer. "I really appreciate the ride."

Smiling, he closed the door.

"Wait," said the old man. "The sandwiches-there are a couple left. You paid for them." And he handed a greasy, lumpy paper sack through the open window.

July tucked it under his arm. "Well, thanks again, and goodnight."

He stood in the middle of the road and watched the glowing taillights move beyond his sight. The clanking and banging sounds of the trailer faded and disappeared. A grinning yellow moon dissolved all the stars around it and threw a greenish- blue glow over the countryside.

July set his pack down and took out a denim jacket, replacing it with the paper sack.

"Okay," he said, "which way now?" He hadn't thought further ahead than this unknown intersection.

He stood in the middle of the road wondering which way to go, waiting for some inspiration-a beckoning or sign. After receiving none, he decided a town called Words was good enough.

His boots made clumping sounds against the road's hard surface, which continued north in a meandering manner up and down hills. Moonlit fields of standing corn, hay, and soybeans merged with evergreen and hardwood, marshland and streams. Crickets, frogs, owls, and other nocturnal creatures called out to him as he passed. Of particular notice were the unidentifiable cries-the raw sounds of nature that refused to be firmly associated with mammal, fowl, or insect.

Set off from the road, an occasional yard light burned near a barn. The houses themselves remained dark, their occupants sleeping.

It had been some time since he'd been in the Midwest, and July attempted to picture himself in the central part of the United States once again. He'd been born just southwest of Wisconsin, in Iowa, so this seemed like a homecoming of sorts, or as much of one as his habitual homelessness could imagine.

In the distance a firefly of light appeared, disappeared, and reappeared at a different location. Once it was out of the hills, it advanced more earnestly, then disappeared for a longer time, only to float up into view a mile away. The single light rounded a corner and divided into two parts, accompanied by a harsh, rushing sound. then the headlights grew brighter, bigger, and louder, like an instinct merging into consciousness.

July stepped off the road, behind a stand of honeysuckle. He'd become accustomed to his own company again and did not wish to share it with anyone or explain where he was going when he didn't know himself.

After he had been walking for another half-hour, the faint yellow glow of a town in the near distance cautioned him to wait for morning before going further. He began looking for a place to pass the night.

Beyond the Words Cemetery a collection of old-growth trees ran downhill away from the road. He walked between several dozen gravestones, climbed the woven wire fence, picked his way through mulberry and hazelnut bushes, and found a small hollow of land covered with long grass, sheltered by an overhanging maple. In places, the moonlight fell through the branches and spotted the ground. The thick underbrush he hoped would announce the movement of any large intruders, and the rising slope of the cemetery blocked the view from the road. A short distance further down the hill, the rhythmic burbles of a stream could be heard.

July unrolled his sleeping bag. He folded his denim jacket for use as a pillow and ate one of the sandwiches from the paper sack. Then he drank from the water bottle, took off his boots, put his socks inside them, lay down, and zipped himself inside. He loosened the money belt that contained his savings from the past five or six years. somewhere in the distance a barred owl loosed its mocking cry, "Who-cooks-for-you, who-cooks-for-you-aaaaallllll." The light from an occasional star found its way through the tree above him, blinking on and off with the shuttered movement of leaves in the wind.

Closing his eyes, he tried to place the experiences of the past several days in a reasonable perspective: the drive from Wyoming, the wandering conversation with the old man, the walk down the mostly deserted road. The dark foliage above him seemed to draw nearer and a spirit of fatigue invaded his senses, disrupting his review of recent events. Blocking it out, he focused his attention and struggled for several long minutes to keep the images in his mind from sliding through the cellar door of nonsensical stories, and fell asleep.

Hours later, he woke up with sudden, blunt finality. He knew why four stop signs had been placed on a remote intersection: there had been an accident. Some time ago, people had died at the crossing and two extra stop signs had been put there. They were erected as memorials.

And so it was: the dead forever change the living. Even those unknown to the dead are required to stop.

The sky was still mostly dark, but morning stirred beneath the horizon and birds rustled about in their lofts in the trees and bushes, conversing through murmured chirping.

Climbing from the sleeping bag, he put on his socks and boots, unfolded his jacket, and siphoned his arms through the sleeves.

Why had he come here, he wondered, and walked down the hill. At the stream, he sat on the bank and stared into the dark water.

The air-warm and thick-filled with noises, and mingled with burbling water, rustling birds, and the dry ruckus of squirrels came the distant sounds of humans. Doors slammed, vehicles started, and an occasional, indecipherable, barking voice could be heard. A heavy truck moved along the road beyond the cemetery.

Why had he come here?

Not everything has a reason, he told himself. His arrival amounted to a whim of circumstance, a living accident. In the same random manner he had arrived in Chicago, Sioux Falls, Cheyenne, San Francisco, Moose Jaw, and many other places. There was no reason.

At least this is what he'd been telling himself for years, but he could no longer quite believe it. He now suspected that somewhere between his actions and what he knew about them-in that vast chasm of burgeoning silence-grew a nameless need, pushing him from one place to the next.

Something shiny near the water's edge caught his attention and he investigated.

A rusty flashlight, half covered in dead grass and dried mud. Most of the chrome had been chipped or worn off, the cylinder dented in several places.

(Continues...)


Excerpted from DRIFTLESSby David Rhodes Copyright © 2008 by David Rhodes. Excerpted by permission.
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