Montana 1948 (7 page)

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Authors: Larry Watson

BOOK: Montana 1948
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And it was not as though Ollie had forsaken his own people. Though he was not from the reservation, he drove out there every weekend with bats and balls, equipment he paid for out of his own pocket, and organized baseball games for the boys.
Because my father obviously liked and respected him—held him up, in fact, as a model—I tried to feel the same way about him. But it was difficult.
Mr. Young Bear, as my father insisted I call him, was a stern, censorious man. He was physically imposing—tall, barrel -chested, broad-shouldered, large-headed—and he never smiled. His lips were perpetually turned down in an expression both sad and disdainful. He seemed to find no humor in the world, and I have no memory of hearing him laugh.
He and my father went bowling together, and I was sometimes allowed to tag along. I didn't particularly care for the sport, but I loved Castle's Bowling Alley, a dark, narrow (only four lanes), low-ceilinged basement establishment that smelled of cigar smoke and floor wax. I loved to put my bottle of Nehi grape soda right next to my father's beer bottle on the scorecard holder and to slide my shoes under the bench with my father's when we changed into bowling shoes. I loved the sounds, the heavy clunk of the ball dropped on wood, its rumble down the alley, the clatter of pins, and above it all, men's shouts—“Go, go, gogogo!” “Get
in
there!” “Drop,
drop!”
Then the muttered curses while they waited for the pin boy to reset the pins. When I was in Castle's Alley I felt, no matter how many women or children might also be there, as
though I had gained admittance to a men's enclave, as though I had
arrived.
When Ollie Young Bear was with us, however, I felt like a child. Ollie could not keep from giving me instruction or correcting my game. Make sure you bring the ball straight back, he would say. Follow through. Use a five-step approach, keep your eye on the spot and not the pins. He was relentless in his criticism, and my father would simply say, “Now listen to what Ollie's telling you. Do you know what kind of average he's carrying in league play? Two-ten. You listen to what he's telling you.” I know my father was trying to show his esteem for Ollie and his lack of prejudice, but the only thing that was accomplished was that going bowling began to seem an awful lot like going to school.
When I saw my father and Ollie Young Bear sitting together at a table away from the others in the cafe, I knew my father was asking Ollie if he had heard anything about Uncle Frank molesting Indian girls. Was he asking the right man? I wondered. Although Ollie Young Bear was much admired by the white population, he had no special status among the Indians. In fact, I once heard Marie say of Ollie, “He won't be happy until he's white.” Both Ollie and my father leaned over the table, their coffee cups between them, their voices low.
I left my friends at the counter and crossed the room to say hello to my father.
As I walked toward them, Ollie Young Bear was the first to notice me. He stopped talking and sat up straight, and then both of them stared at me. Neither smiled nor gave any sign of
recognition, and I felt as if I were moving down a long chute, as if I were livestock, a horse, a sheep, a calf, being inspected as I walked. At that moment I knew that as long as this business was going on with his brother, my father had no use for a son. I could come and go as I wished; he wasn't about to notice me.
When I got to the table, my father said, “What can I do for you, David?”
By way of explanation I pointed to my friends at the counter. “We were fishing....”
My father reached for his billfold. “You need some money.”
“No, that's okay.” I backed away. “I just wanted to say hi.”
He managed a smile. “Are you going home? Look in on Marie, will you? Make sure she's taken her medicine.”
When I got home Marie's door was open slightly but she was sleeping, as she almost always seemed to be since she'd gotten sick. Her bottle of pills and a glass of water were beside the bed, so I assumed she had taken what she was supposed to. I didn't want to wake her.
I was in the house for a few minutes when I felt something was wrong, yet I wasn't sure what it was. Then it struck me. It was the silence.
On our kitchen counter was a small Philco radio, its once-shining wood case now dull and riven with tiny hairline cracks in the varnish (on the top there was a darker brown
ring where something—either a tube inside or a hot object outside—had burned a perfect circle). The radio wasn't on and probably hadn't been for a couple days, and when Marie was there she always had the radio on, usually tuned to a Canadian station that played Big Band music. To this day when I hear one of those television commercials urging us to send in $19.95 to get all the hits of the Big Band era—The Glen Miller Band, Artie Shaw and His Orchestra, Paul Whiteman, Kay Kaiser, Duke Ellington—or when I hear even a few bars of that music—“String of Pearls,” “Tuxedo Junction,” “Satin Doll”—I think of Marie. But I do not send my money in. My memories are strong enough—and painful enough—without prodding them further.
I turned the radio on and raised the volume, hoping that Marie would be able to hear her music when she woke.
That night, after we had eaten dinner and my mother had fixed soup for Marie, my father stood at the kitchen table and said, “Gail, maybe you and David would like to go for a walk. I want to speak to Marie again.”
My mother began to stack dishes but my father stopped her. “Those can wait. I want to talk to Marie right now. While she's awake.”
“She might want me here. She might feel more comfortable.”
“Yes, she might, but I'm afraid Marie's comfort isn't
what's important now. This is something that has to be done. You and David go outside.”
Since he had questioned Marie before when I was in the house I figured that this time it was my mother he didn't want around. But she didn't seem to understand, and she persisted. She said, “There might be some ways I can help.”
By this time my father had retrieved a small notebook from the pocket of his suit coat. He stopped flipping its pages to say to my mother, “Did you hear me, Gail? Some of this I'd just as soon you didn't hear.”
Was he being gallant—sparing his wife from hearing the particulars of his brother's alleged crimes? Or was he protecting his brother and keeping the number of witnesses to the accounts of his crimes to a minimum?
My mother and I didn't go far. That was all right. She wasn't much for taking walks and I was child enough to think I was too old to go for walks with my mother. We stayed in the backyard, though it was big enough that if we did nothing but walk up and down its length we could have gotten our exercise.
We stood in the middle of the yard while a gusty wind that lowered the temperature twenty degrees in less than an hour whipped my mother's hair in front of her face and wrapped her skirt tight against her legs. A cool front was moving through—sure to ruin the fishing, the local fishermen would say. My mother shivered and folded her arms. “I should have brought a sweater,” she said.
“Do you want me to get you one?”
“No,”
my mother said sharply. “No. You stay out of there. Your father's doing . . . official business.”
I swallowed hard. I had already decided that I was going to ask my mother, once we were alone out there, why my father was talking to Marie. I knew the reason, of course, yet I wanted my knowledge out in the open. I wanted to be included, to know more than what my eavesdropping brought me. I supposed I wanted adult status, to have my parents discuss this case in front of me, not to have to leave rooms or to have people shut up when I came near, or worst of all, have them speak in code as if I were a baby who could be kept in ignorance by grown-ups spelling words in his presence.
Yet now that I had the opportunity, alone with my mother, my courage was running out. I wasn't sure which prospect was more unsettling: that she wouldn't tell me anything and would scold me for prying, or that she would reveal everything and I would have to hear that story coming from my mother's lips.
Finally I emboldened myself enough to ask a quick, awkward, suitably vague question: “What's going on, anyway?”
My mother kept her face turned to the wind but had closed her eyes against the blowing dust.
“Oh, there's some trouble going on with the Indians. Possible trouble, I should say.” Now she was as cautious as my father.
“Why does he have to talk to Marie? When she's sick.”
She took a long time in answering. Obviously her mind was elsewhere, somewhere off with the wind. “He thinks Marie might have some information.”
“I thought the BIA handled Indian problems.”
“He's just helping, dear. It's not so much.”
“It's not so much” was a phrase my mother inherited from her mother. I had heard Grandma Anglund use it for occasions ranging from a scraped knee (mine) to a family burned out of its farm. It was her Norwegian way of keeping all our earthly affairs from achieving too much importance.
My mother wandered a few steps away and stopped next to the one tree we had in our backyard, a towering, spreading oak exactly in the center of the lawn—precisely in the spot that kept the yard from being a boy's perfect football field.
“I love the wind,” she said, tilting her head up to catch as much of it on her face as she could. “It reminds me of North Dakota. My goodness, how Dad used to curse the wind. ‘Carrying away the topsoil,' he'd say. ‘Giving it to South Dakota.' But I always loved it, that feel of rushing air. Bringing something new, was the way I felt.”
“Makes good fishing,” I said. “Riffles the water so the fish can't see you.”
She turned a slow circle. “But the wind has a different smell here. In North Dakota it always smelled like dirt. Even in the middle of winter with all that snow there could still be the smell of dirt in the air. As if the wind came from some open place that never froze. But here the wind smells like the
mountains. Like snow. Like stone. No matter how far away the mountains are, I still feel them out there. I can't get used to it. I never will. I guess I'm a flatlander at heart.”
Had I any sensitivity at all I might have recognized that all this talk about wind and dirt and mountains and childhood was my mother's way of saying she wanted a few moments of purity, a temporary escape from the sordid drama that was playing itself out in her own house. But I was on the trail of something that would lead me out of childhood.
“Is Marie in trouble?” I asked. “Is Ronnie?”
“What? Oh, no. No, nothing like that. Your dad just wants to see if she can give him some information. Answer some questions.”
I looked back at the house. I could see, in the kitchen window, my father's form. I wondered how long he had been watching us. “He's out,” I said. “We can go back in.”
My mother turned and waved in my father's direction. If he saw he gave no sign, yet he remained in the window.
“The sun must be in his eyes,” she said.
“Let's go in.”
“You go ahead. I'm going to stay out here for awhile.”
“And sniff the wind?”
She laughed. “Something like that.”

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