The Hunter Wife
The Hunter Wife
The Hunter Wife
ANTHONY DOERR
MAY 2001 ISSUE
It was the hunter's first time outside Montana. He woke, stricken still
with the hours-old vision of ascending through rose-lit cumulus, of
houses and barns like specks deep in the snowed-in valleys, all the
scrolling country below looking December—brown and black hills
streaked with snow, flashes of iced-over lakes, the long braids of a
river gleaming at the bottom of a canyon. Above the wing the sky had
deepened to a blue so pure he knew it would bring tears to his eyes if
he looked long enough.
Now it was dark. The airplane descended over Chicago, its galaxy of
electric lights, the vast neighborhoods coming clearer as the plane
glided toward the airport—streetlights, headlights, stacks of buildings,
ice rinks, a truck turning at a stoplight, scraps of snow atop a
warehouse and winking antennae on faraway hills, finally the long
converging parallels of blue runway lights, and they were down.
He walked into the airport, past the banks of monitors. Already he felt
as if he'd lost something, some beautiful perspective, some lovely
dream fallen away. He had come to Chicago to see his wife, whom he
had not seen in twenty years. She was there to perform her magic for a
higher-up at the state university. Even universities, apparently, were
interested in what she could do. Outside the terminal the sky was thick
and gray and hurried by wind. Snow was coming. A woman from the
university met him and escorted him to her Jeep. He kept his gaze out
the window.
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They were in the car for forty-five minutes, passing first the tall,
lighted architecture of downtown, then naked suburban oaks, heaps of
ploughed snow, gas stations, power towers, and telephone wires. The
woman said, "So you regularly attend your wife's performances?"
Inside the front door about thirty nametags were laid out on a table.
His wife was not there yet. No one, apparently, was there yet. He
found his tag and pinned it to his sweater. A silent girl in a tuxedo
appeared and disappeared with his coat.
The granite foyer was backed with a grand staircase, which spread
wide at the bottom and tapered at the top. A woman came down. She
stopped four or five steps from the bottom and said, "Hello, Anne" to
the woman who had driven him there and "You must be Mr. Dumas"
to him. He took her hand, a pale, bony thing, weightless, like a
featherless bird.
Her husband, the university's chancellor, was just knotting his bow tie,
she said, and she laughed sadly to herself, as if bow ties were
something she disapproved of. The hunter moved to a window, shifted
aside the curtain, and peered out.
In the poor light he could see a wooden deck the length of the house,
angled and stepped, its width ever changing, with a low rail. Beyond it,
in the blue shadows, a small pond lay encircled by hedges, with a
marble birdbath at its center. Behind the pond stood leafless trees—
oaks, maples, a sycamore as white as bone. A helicopter shuttled past,
its green light winking.
"Is it?" the hostess asked, with an air of concern, perhaps false. It was
impossible to tell what was sincere and what was not. The woman who
had driven him there had moved to the bar, where she cradled a drink
and stared into the carpet.
He let the curtain fall back. The chancellor came down the staircase.
Other guests fluttered in. A man in gray corduroy, with "Bruce
Maples" on his nametag, approached him. "Mr. Dumas," he said, "your
wife isn't here yet?"
"You know her?" the hunter asked. "Oh, no," Maples said, and shook
his head. "No, I don't." He spread his legs and swiveled his hips as if
stretching before a footrace. "But I've read about her."
"I guide hunters." He was looking out the window to where snow was
settling on the hedges.
"What?"
The hunter met his wife in Great Falls, Montana, in the winter of 1972.
That winter arrived all at once—you could watch it come. Twin
curtains of white appeared in the north, white all the way to the sky,
driving south like the end of all things. Cattle galloped the fencelines,
bawling. Trees toppled; a barn roof tumbled over the highway. The
river changed directions. The wind flung thrushes screaming into the
gorse and impaled them on the thorns in grotesque attitudes.
The hunter watched her pink, fine-boned face, her hanging hair, her
outstretched throat. Her eyes caught the spotlight. Was she looking at
him? Did she see his face pressed against the window, the wind
slashing at his neck, the groceries—onions, a sack of flour—tumbled to
the ground around his feet?
She was beautiful to him in a way that nothing else had ever been
beautiful. Snow blew down his collar and drifted around his boots.
After some time the magician rejoined the severed box halves,
unfastened the buckles, and fluttered his wand, and she was whole
again. She climbed out of the box and curtsied in her glittering dress.
She smiled as if it were the Resurrection itself.
Then the storm brought down a pine tree in front of the courthouse,
and the power winked out, streetlight by streetlight. Before she could
move, before the ushers could begin escorting the crowd out with
flashlights, the hunter was slinking into the hall, making for the stage,
calling for her.
He was thirty years old, twice her age. She smiled at him, leaned over
from the dais in the red glow of the emergency exit lights, and shook
her head. "Show's over," she said. In his pickup he trailed the
magician's van through the blizzard to her next show, a library
fundraiser in Butte. The next night he followed her to Missoula. He
rushed to the stage after each performance. "Just eat dinner with me,"
he'd plead. "Just tell me your name." It was hunting by persistence.
She said yes in Bozeman. Her name was plain, Mary Roberts. They
had rhubarb pie in a hotel restaurant.
"I know how you do it," he said. "The feet in the box are dummies. You
hold your legs against your chest and wiggle the dummy feet with a
string."
She laughed. "Is that what you do? Follow a girl from town to town to
tell her her magic isn't real?"
"You're right," she said, and smiled. "It's not funny. I'm that way with
magic. I dream about it. Even when I'm not asleep."
"But I dream bigger dreams, you know," she said afterward, after she
had eaten two pieces of pie, carefully, with a spoon. Her voice was
quiet and serious. "I have magic inside of me. I'm not going to get
sawed in half by Tony Vespucci all my life."
But the next winter Vespucci brought her back to Great Falls and
sawed her in half in the same plywood coffin. And the winter after
that. Both times, after the performance, the hunter took her to the
Bitterroot Diner, where he watched her eat two pieces of pie. The
watching was his favorite part: a hitch in her throat as she swallowed,
the way the spoon slid cleanly out from her lips, the way her hair fell
over her ear.
Then she was eighteen, and after pie she let him drive her to his cabin,
forty miles from Great Falls, up the Missouri and then east into the
Smith River valley. She brought only a small vinyl purse. The truck
skidded and sheered as he steered it over the unploughed roads,
fishtailing in the deep snow, but she didn't seem afraid or worried
about where he might be taking her, about the possibility that the
truck might sink in a drift, that she might freeze to death in her pea
coat and glittery magician's-assistant dress. Her breath plumed out in
front of her. It was twenty degrees below zero. Soon the roads would
be snowed over, impassable until spring.
At his one-room cabin, with furs and old rifles on the walls, he
unbolted the door to the crawl space and showed her his winter hoard:
a hundred smoked trout, plucked pheasants and venison quarters
hanging frozen from hooks. "Enough for two of me," he said. She
scanned his books over the fireplace—a monograph on grouse habits, a
series of journals on upland game birds, a thick tome titled
simply Bear. "Are you tired?" he asked. "Would you like to see
something?" He gave her a snowsuit, strapped her boots into a pair of
leather snowshoes, and took her to hear the grizzly. She wasn't bad on
snowshoes, a little clumsy. They went creaking over wind-scalloped
snow in the nearly unbearable cold.
The bear denned every winter in the same hollow cedar, the top of
which had been shorn off by a storm. Black, three-fingered, and huge,
in the starlight it resembled a skeletal hand thrust up from the ground,
a ghoulish visitor scrabbling its way out of the underworld. They knelt.
Above them the stars were knife points, hard and white. "Put your ear
here," he whispered. The breath that carried his words crystallized and
blew away. They listened, face-to-face, their ears over woodpecker
holes in the trunk. She heard it after a minute, tuning her ears in to
something like a drowsy sigh, a long exhalation of slumber. Her eyes
widened. A full minute passed. She heard it again.
"We can see him," he whispered, "but we have to be dead quiet.
Grizzlies are light hibernators. Sometimes all you do is step on twigs
outside their dens and they're up."
He began to dig at the snow. She stood back, her mouth open, eyes
wide. Bent at the waist, the hunter bailed the snow back through his
legs. He dug down three feet and then encountered a smooth, icy crust
covering a large hole in the base of the tree. Gently he dislodged plates
of ice and lifted them aside. From the hole the smell of bear came to
her, like wet dog, like wild mushrooms. The hunter removed some
leaves. Beneath was a shaggy flank, a patch of brown fur.
"He's on his back," the hunter whispered. "This is his belly. His
forelegs must be up here somewhere." He pointed to a place higher on
the trunk.
She put one hand on his shoulder and knelt in the snow beside the
den. Her eyes were wide and unblinking. Her jaw hung open. Above
her shoulder a star separated itself from a galaxy and melted through
the sky. "I want to touch him," she said. Her voice sounded loud and
out of place in that wood, under the naked cedars.