Standing in a gap in the logs where a
door might have been, she imagined the view cleared to the water.
She envisioned chickens in the yard, a cow browsing among the
trees, a chopping block by a stack of cordwood. A neat garden
with a wattle fence against the rabbits and the deer. A footpath
to the stepping stones and her flat boulder in the stream, the
perfect place for dipping buckets. She could almost see the
water sloshing to the ground, splashing a woman’s skirt.
I’ll restore what I can, she thought.
The work was invigorating. She no longer
woke in the mornings to that crushing dread or what had come
after — an undifferentiated pain that made her think she
must be ill until she remembered and then she’d bury her
face in the pillow, willing herself back to sleep. Now, she
got up with an eagerness that surprised her. Some days she almost
felt good. She still spent most of her hours away from the house,
but her excursions seemed less an escape than a journey she
looked forward to. Before she left, she rubbed citronella on
her skin, tucked her long sleeves into gloves, pulled a bug
net over her head. Sometimes she even thought to pack a lunch.
And when she returned in the evenings, if she felt up to it,
occasionally she prepared a meal.
The rest, she left to Walker. She had
grown used to letting things slip, knowing that he would see
to them. The cradle, the quilt, the row of Polaroids —
all the baby things had disappeared. The bed had been returned
to its place in front of the window. The standing half of the
Manitoba maple had been cut down, the limbs sawn into lengths
and stacked in the woodshed. The twigs and small branches that
littered the lawn had been raked into a pile and burned. For
days he’d worked to clear the fallen trees and smooth
the ragged wounds of the limbs ripped off by the weight of ice.
He had done the work without complaint,
though in the nights, when she was restless, he would leave
their bed, too, sitting with her on the couch, his arm a clamp
on her shoulders, his questions heavy in the air.
Why won’t you talk to me? he’d
say.
And, What do you want from me? What more
can I do?
Then, Fine, I’ll leave you alone, if that’s the
way you want it. Let me know when you decide to snap out of
it.
Through it all, she said nothing, paying attention to the faint
whisper that told her to keep herself apart, raise a shield
around herself, though if you asked her why?, against what?,
she wouldn’t have known what to say, since it wasn’t
a thought or even a feeling so much as an urge, the same sort
of thing that had told her to push the baby out, cradle it to
her breast.
After a while, he’d given up. He
started sleeping through the day and working through the night
again, so that, by the time she found the remnants of the cabin,
they were back to their old routines. When she left in the early
morning and when she returned as darkness fell, she could see
his shadow in the barn-door window, always in the same position,
as if he’d grown rooted to the spot, forever reaching
up to something just outside her field of vision.
But even that was something she noticed
only in passing. Her brain, idle for so long, was given over
to her project, devising strategies, identifying tools, imagining
the cabin, the height of its walls, the placement of its openings,
until it seemed to her as substantial a piece of architecture
as the house in which she lived. She cleared a path from the
cabin threshold to the stepping stones across the stream, cut
back the underbrush from around the low rim of logs, and raked
the earth bare within. She piled the stones at one end and brought
an old wooden chair from the shed, so that when each phase of
her work was finished, she could sit in front of the makeshift
hearth and stare into the non-existent fire, trying to think
what else to do.
She was prying out a piece of chinking
— she had the inspiration that if she could figure out
how it was made, she could reseal what remained of the walls
— when she spotted the edge of something soft. She pulled
on it and a rag slipped out. Behind it was another, cleaner
than the first. She picked out more of the loose chinking, more
scraps of rough, grey cloth, then reaching deeper between the
logs, she touched something smooth, thin but rigid. A thing
with weight to it that she pinched out of the narrow gap. A
fold of clean white cloth wrapped around a leather bag. Inside
that, a book.
She lifted the cover. The pages were brittle,
the colour of strong tea. When she touched them with her fingers,
small bits broke off the edges. She slid the thin blade of her
pocket knife between the leaves, lifting them up just far enough
to read.
It was a cookbook, the rules for rising steamed puddings, instructions
for roasting caribou, the seven types of stains and how to remove
them. The sort of old-fashioned manual of household management
she’d often picked out of the boxes of books that Renata’s
parents sent twice a year, eccentric, worthless volumes culled
from the overburdened shelves of their used bookstore in the
city.
The pages in the middle were too parched
to separate, even with the knife, so she turned the book over
and opened it from the back. Bits of dried leaf and stem spilled
onto her lap. She picked them up, peering at the veiny texture,
trying to identify what they’d been.
The sky was darkening, a wind gathering
in the upper leaves. She was picking up the fragments of plant
material, thinking she’d tuck them back in the book and
take it to the house where she could study them in better light.
That was when she noticed the handwriting — six or eight
pages of it — the space reserved for cookery notes completely
filled with long lists in cramped penmanship so small she couldn’t
make out the words, and then, right at the end, a few sheets
closely written in cursive script, the paper written over twice,
side to side, then top to bottom, so that the sentences seemed
woven together, and she knelt there by the logs, the wind worrying
at the pages as she tried to tease the phrases apart, until
at last she found an opening and tracing her finger along the
lines, she came at last to the beginning,
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| I am a woman Alone
in all the wide World. Until today I had three Brothers,
William Wallace, Robert Bruce, Harry Douglas, named for
good Scots heroes, every one. Margaret the Queen, they called
me. Now the Queen has taken her Revenge. |
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