All the Bears Sing: Stories
By Harold Macy
()
About this ebook
Harold Macy's newest book, a collection of short stories depicting life in British Columbia, resonates with the land and the people who inhabit it.
Whether he’s chronicling the death song of a Douglas fir, the brassy orchestra of trumpeter swans, or the sweet sap symphony of a tapped maple, Harold Macy contemplates the beauty of all that British Columbia has to offer with graceful lyricism and appreciation for the natural world, highlighting the particular magic of the West Coast.
It is the human ties to the land that shine in Macy’s stories: everyday fishermen and loggers, gardeners and wildland firefighters, maple harvesters and weekend missionaries. From the rich bounty of the glacial loam to the wondrous stands of Sitka spruce, BC’s natural landscape is as much a character in Macy’s tales as any person.
With a genuine appreciation for the natural beauty of British Columbia, Macy’s collection reflects on how we both shape—and are shaped—by the land we inhabit.
Harold Macy
Harold Macy is the author of The Four Storey Forest (Poplar Publishing, 2011) and San Josef (Tidewater Books, 2020), and has been published in various literary journals. He has worked for the BC Forest Service Research Branch, been a silviculture contractor for a local forestry company, fought wildfires, had rain in his lunch pail heli-logging up in the mid-coast inlets, and for many years was the forester at the UBC Oyster River Research Farm, where he wrote and delivered online and weekend courses in small-scale forestry and agroforestry. He studied writing with the UBC Mentorship Program, Victoria (BC) School of Writing, Sage Hills (SK), and North Island College.
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All the Bears Sing - Harold Macy
All the Bears Sing
All the Bears Sing
stories
Harold Macy
Harbour PublishingCopyright © 2022 Harold Macy
1 2 3 4 5 — 26 25 24 23 22
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without prior permission of the publisher or, in the case of photocopying or other reprographic copying, a licence from Access Copyright, www.accesscopyright.ca, 1-800-893-5777, info@accesscopyright.ca.
Harbour Publishing Co. Ltd.
P.O. Box 219, Madeira Park, BC, V0N 2H0
www.harbourpublishing.com
Edited by Pam Robertson
Cover design by Libris Simas Ferraz / Onça Design
Text design by Carleton Wilson
Printed and bound in Canada
100% recycled paper
A Heartbreak of Winter Swans
appeared on CBC Radio One’s Rewind (2016) and in Harold Macy’s book The Four Storey Forest: As Grow the Trees, So Too The Heart (2011).
Gelignite
appeared in PRISM International (Spring 2014).
Lipstick
appeared in Rhubarb (2015).
The Sweet-Talking Ladies in the White Trailer
appeared under a different title in The Malahat Review (Winter 2017).
An earlier version of Unclipped
won first prize in the North Island College 3-Hour Fiction contest (2013).
Supported by the Government of Canada
Harbour Publishing acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, the Government of Canada, and the Province of British Columbia through the BC Arts Council.
Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication
Title: All the bears sing : stories / Harold Macy.
Names: Macy, Harold, 1946- author.
Identifiers: Canadiana (print) 20220242917 | Canadiana (ebook) 20220242933 | ISBN 9781990776007 (softcover) | ISBN 9781990776014 (EPUB)
Classification: LCC PS8626.A29 A75 2022 | DDC C813/.6—dc23
Whenever I’d pull on my boots and head for the truck, a wet nose, unconditional love and wagging tail accompanied me. Watchful, ever vigilant and welcome company: Meggie, Comet, Clancy, Duffy, Conrad.
And family dogs still among us: Jackson, Finnegan, Cooper, Frankie.
Contents
The Sweet-Talking Ladies in the White Trailer
Stir the Still Waters
Downhill
A Heartbreak of Winter Swans
Gelignite
Buses Come, Buses Go
Unclipped
Into the Silverthrone Caldera
Delta Charlie
The Patient Soil
Little Habits
Nightingale
Buried on Page Five
House, Waving Goodbye
Ditch Clothes
Beyond Yuquot
Donkey Shame
All the Bears Sing
Lipstick
Overburdened
Ephraim
By the Book
The Beast Within
Acknowledgements
About the Author
Outside of a book, a dog is man’s best friend. Inside of a dog, it’s too dark to read.
—Groucho Marx (attributed)
The Sweet-Talking Ladies in the White Trailer
The early summer lightning storms frolicked a hellish two-step across the forested steeps of North Island, trailing fire from Wolf River up to the hemlock-balsam jungle of the Artlish that has rarely felt this devil’s lick. The unusual drought earlier in the season parched the forests into cornflakes and shrivelled the needles and twigs. Lower branches curled down in search of scant water; underfoot, moss and lichen crumbled to grey lifeless powder, and the earth lay hollow in its thirst. Then, this swath of thunderbolts. Big fires around Gold River, above Muchalat Lake along the power line’s umbilical, an angry swarm close to Vernon Camp and blustery Atluck Lake.
So I’m pounding my kidneys to mush while driving a stiff-sprung, unforgiving sonovabitch of a two-ton Forest Service flat deck over the logging roads of the Island’s spine, bringing hoses, pumps, drinking water, Gatorade, relay tanks, fittings, food, foam, gaskets and gas to the exhausted crews. It’s thirty-seven degrees C air temp on the fire line—add another ten from the dragon’s breath. Dust, ash, smoke. Just being here is like a two-pack-a-day habit. Hours of dragging hose uphill, setting up containment systems, digging fire breaks, then the fickle wind veers and balls of burning debris jump the line and suddenly you have fire in front, fire behind. Run, boys, run. Not just boys. Most crews have women as members or leaders. Boot camp grads or seasoned vets, they have muscles in their black snot.
But I am too old for that and just drive the truck, thank God. A bit of pump duty—keeping the four screaming Wajax Mark 3s running flat out pushing water uphill, and cleaning the intakes of swamp goo from the pond we’re rapidly draining. And like Sisyphus, on this blistering bug-bit afternoon, it seems an unending if not outright audacious act—wildfire control—but we do it.
The Antler Lake fire burned to a scant kilometre from Gold River. Tourists in the SuperValu parking lot set up lawn chairs in front of their tethered RVs to point up at the helis bucketing water endlessly onto the roaring head of the firestorm. When it hit the crisp slash in a logged-off block, the beast rejoiced and tore off uphill faster than a man could ever run. The high-voltage power lines to Port Hardy were at risk. The air was so full of carbon and fried squirrels, fire already arcing from one wire to another, showering sparks onto the ground, torching off even more.
Orders flow from Quinsam Fire Base. There is mutual aid from the other provinces and the NWT—specialists in fuel behaviour, incident management and fire weather. There are a couple of hotshot unit crews like the Port Alberni Thunderbirds, each with distinctive grimy uniforms and earned pride. Word comes in: the crews at Muchalat Fire 1098 need a long list of supplies. We scurry about the warehouse filling totes and boxes, strapping down pallets of fuel, grabbing a detailed map of the lacework of forestry roads—one driver, one navigator. Out the gate and do a radio check.
Beside the base is a white trailer full of angels. The twenty-metre aerial is our mother watching over us, reminding us to make contact every two hours, thanking us when we do, gently chiding when we don’t. The door to the lair is plainly marked Do Not Enter.
At any one time the two or three women will be tracking a half-dozen helicopters, several airplanes and ten fire line crews, as well as those of us bouncing over the washboard, baby heads and potholes toward the black mountainsides. They remain serene, with voices of menthol—oral oases in a parched and smoking desert where the red dirt is baked like pottery. I have never walked over to the trailer to put a face to these calming voices nor has any of the crew—we prefer to build images from our own need.
One day rolls into the next—the air tastes metallic. Everyone is walking around like zombies. Crews rotate through, bringing fresh blood for the fiery kraken. Though we pray for rain, the sky cannot be trusted, the clouds only bring more fire, and we greet them with red-eyed suspicion. We have few friends these days.
Stir the Still Waters
My best friend and I were strutting the one street of our coastal village, on the lookout for adolescent fun, usually at someone else’s expense. Ahead of us was our latest target. Impossible for us to ignore since we had lived here all our lives and knew absolutely everything about everybody; the adults knew nothing and people from outside knew least of all. As if our world was the only one that mattered, the only one that would ever matter.
At the mercy of teenage juices, I was beginning to think about things beyond my squeaky voice and grander than girlfriends. Things less easy to define, things I didn’t have the question for let alone the answer. Like doubt. Like belief.
See that one there? The weirdo!
The guy wore a red toque with lots of curly blond hair rolling out from under the rough-knit seams. He had on common wool trousers and a canvas Carhartt jacket, frayed at the cuffs but bulged up strangely over his shoulders. I thought I saw a ripple under the cloth, which made me wonder what a hump is made of anyway. Muscle? Fat? I pictured a mound of boneless flab, like fleshy Jell-O, that sorta churned my stomach.
Hey, hunchback, lose your bell tower?
Yeah, get a haircut, hippy!
The guy turned and gave me this little grin, a cousin of a smile but with an odd look of disappointment and hope that made my heart drop. Sarcasm, my usual response, fell short. He didn’t say anything, just smiled and kept walking. Kenny and I glanced at each other, laughed thinly at the unexpected response and continued on our harmless hunt.
I worked part-time at my mom’s diner on the hill up from the wharf where the fishboats moored. It was no fancy joint, just your basic caffeine, suet and starch. Had the early shift, opening up in the first light before school and on weekends.
Our community was small enough with few surprises, so the back kitchen door of the café was left unlocked except during tourist season, when some of the upscale refugees from the city showed up in their big plastic boats that looked like giant bleach bottles. Others arrived from the city to open the handcrafted, though vulnerable, glass and cedar doors on expensive waterfront cottages overlooking private coves. That’s when strangers, with their urban expectations, broke into our lives. I thought this guy was one of them, just ahead of schedule.
The next morning, when I banged through the swinging half-doors with the round windows into the dining room, the guy we’d been mocking the day before was already in a booth, the one at the window where you could see who was going or coming on the docks. I was surprised, him just sitting there in the dim light. Only it wasn’t all that dark around him. Kind of a glow I didn’t really notice at the time. I thought he was just backlit by the sunrise in the front windows because it disappeared when I switched on the row of flickering fluorescent overheads and the buzzing red neon Open
sign and everything looked normal.
Nothing peculiar, other than that. He ordered the Big Breakfast Platter—bacon, brown toast, three eggs over easy, side of hash browns, pair of pancakes and a pickle. No coffee, just water. Sat there bent over the table with yolk dribbling off his chin.
Every time I passed by, he’d look up with storm-grey eyes, tilt his head a little bit like an invitation and give that slight grin, as if we were supposed to be sharing a private joke or a secret. By now the regulars were filling the booths and round chrome counter stools, cocky loggers waiting for the crummy to take them into the hills, and bachelor fishermen who lived in seclusion on their stinky trollers and gillnetters. Though I managed with simple orders from the grill, I was always relieved when Mom came in to take over in the kitchen. Orders stacked up and I was kept running.
When I went to clean the table where the guy had been, it was empty and a twenty was tucked under the plate—a big tip for an eight-buck breakfast—and he was nowhere to be seen, not in the diner, not walking down the sidewalk. There was a funny lingering smell. Not the usual rotten salmon from the cannery, more a sharp chemical tang like kelp left under the sun by the high tide.
Just up the hill, the school bell rang. I yelled to Mom I was leaving, grabbed my knapsack and headed out the front door. A few doors up from the diner was the fisherman’s supply store, the front window hung with every colour of lures, hootchies, flashers and painted plugs with brutal triple hooks. On the shelf below them was a spread of sharp gutting knives, wool socks, rolls of line and fingerless gloves. Old Mr. Marinillo shuffled out with a box of gear, got in his decrepit salt-rusted pickup and started to nose down the steep slope toward the wharf and his boat, squinting behind thick glasses nearly opaque with a widower’s grime—still mourning his Gabriella, gone two years now. From the steps of the diner I could see into the cab and I waved.
Suddenly his mouth made an open hole in panic, baring yellow teeth as the truck picked up speed. He glared at his feet as he rolled past. I could see his leg pumping the brake pedal with no effect. Other fishermen leapt out of the way as the truck barrelled down the hill onto the rough boards of the wharf, slammed over the bumper logs and tumbled into the bay. I joined the mob running across the dock to gather at the edge. We saw the truck lying on its side, driver’s door deep in the silt and garbage, leaking gas and oil making a rainbow swirl on the surface—yellow, violet and maroon, like a fresh bruise—prettier than a catastrophe ever should be.
All these valiant men of the sea stood helpless, none of them good swimmers, only looking at each other, waiting for someone to dive the six metres down to the truck. Silent. Just staring, no one doing anything. No heroes.
I remembered some old rope piled behind the freight shed at the shore end of the dock, so I dropped my knapsack and ran. At the back of the building lay the rope, but also a pile of clothes that looked familiar—tan jacket, wool pants, red toque. I thought I heard another splash. I grabbed the coil and raced back to the edge of the dock to peer into the water, now nearly opaque with oil from the truck.
Through the sheen I thought I saw a figure swimming into the deep shadow and I swear to this day it had wings, not fins or flippers, stroking down and down to where it yanked open the side door, pulled out a limp Mr. Marinillo, and pushed him to the surface. Then it turned and disappeared into the depths.
One of the fishermen finally tied the rope around his waist, handed off the other end, jumped into the water, and grabbed the bobbing old man. Three men on the dock hauled them both up. Mr. Marinillo lay coughing and puking up the pancakes I’d set in front of him not a half hour before. He’d left without paying,
Put it on my tab. I’ll settle up later,
he had said over his shoulder.
He barely got his door open,
someone remarked. Lucky, eh?
They thought the old fisherman did it all by himself. No one said anything about the diver or the wings. I kept quiet and just stared at the water.
I heard the ambulance coming from the mission hospital, so I picked up my pack and walked shakily around the freight shed toward school. The pile of clothes lay there, still undisturbed. I looked around for the man who’d left the big tip then glanced up at the overcast sky, corrugated like the tin walls of the net loft. Something moved through the clouds, churning them around.
No fireballs and lightning, no balance of the earthly and the divine; just a stirring of the still waters, just an angel pressing his ancient heart to mine.
Downhill
Sam stood for a moment at the