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I
cant remember the last time I envied a man, or, in fact, if I ever
have. I have loved men, hated them, befriended them, taken care of them,
and all too often compromised my sense of self for them, but I dont
think I have ever looked at a man and actually coveted something his maleness
gave him. And yet envy was at least one of the surprising things I felt
last spring when I found myself standing armpit deep in a freshwater stream
at 2:00 a.m., near Interlochen, Michigan, fly-casting for steelhead with
a bunch of male poets.
Winters are long in northern Michigan, and dark and frozen. Spring is
late and wet and full of spirit-breaking storms. The landscape is primarily
forest and water and has not been tamed like most of the Midwest. Both
the wildness and the hardship show on the faces of the people who choose
to live there.
When a man named Jack Driscoll first calls and invites me to Interlochen,
he tells me about the Academy, a place where talented high-school students
from forty-one states and fifteen countries are given a lot of time to
develop their art. Although he makes it clear that I will be expected
to read from my fiction and talk to the students about craft, every other
time we speak on the phone, all he really wants to talk about is fishing.
For all the time I spend outdoors, I am not much of a fisherman. And fly
fishing, like all religions, is something I respect but dont particularly
understand. If Jack bothers to ask me if I want to go fishing, I will
say yes. I have always said yes, and as a result the shape of my life
has been a long series of man-inspired adventures, and I have gone tripping
along behind those men, full of strength and will and only a half-baked
kind of competence, my goal being not to excel, but to simply keep up
with them, to not become a problem, to be a good sport. It is a childhood
thing (I was my fathers only son), and I laugh at all the places
this particular insecurity has taken me: sheep hunting in Alaska, helicopter
skiing in Montana, cliff diving in the Bahamas, ice climbing in the Yukon
territory. Mostly I have outgrown the need to impress men in this fashion;
in the adventures I take these days, I make the rules. But, as my trip
to Michigan draws nearer, I feel a familiar and demented excitement to
be back at the mercy of a bunch of lunatic outdoorsmen, a stubborn novice
with something older than time to prove.
I fly up to Traverse City on what the woman at the United Express counter
calls the big plane, a twin-engine that bumps between thunderstorms
and patches of dense fog for an hour before skidding to a stop on a bleak
and rainy runway surrounded by a leafless April woods.
I am greeted by what looks like a small committee of fit and weathered
middle-aged men. Their names are Jack Driscoll, Mike Delp, Nick Bozanic
and Doug Stanton. Their books are titled after the landscape that dominates
their lives, collections of poetry called Under the Influence of Water,
The Long Drive Home, and Over the Graves of Horses, and Jacks award-
winning collection of stories, Wanting Only To Be Heard. They fight over
my luggage, hand me snacks and sodas and beers, and all but carry me to
the car on the wave of their enthusiasm.
Weathers been good, Mike says, by way of a greeting.
The lake ice is breaking.
Its a real late run for the steelhead, Doug says. Youre
just in time.
Any minute now, any minute now, Jack says, his mind full of
the long dark bodies of fish in the river, and then, Youve
got a reading in forty-five minutes, then a dinner that should be over
by ten, the president of the local community college wants to meet you.
At midnight, we fish.
By 12:25 a.m. I am dressed in my long underwear, Jacks camouflage
sweat clothes, Mikes neoprene liners, Dougs waders, and Nicks
hat. I look like the Michelin tire man, the waders so big and stiff I
can barely put one foot in front of the other. We pile into Mikes
Montero, rods and reels jangling in the back. Jack and Mike and Doug and
I. Nick, each man has told me (privately, in a quiet, apprehensive voice),
is recovering from bursitis and a divorce, and for one or another of those
reasons, he will not fish this year.
No one asks me if Im tired, nor do I ask them. These men have had
nine months of winter to catch up on their sleep, cabin fever reflecting
in their eyes like exclamations. The steelhead will start running soon,
maybe tonight, and there is no question about where they should be.
It takes almost an hour to get to the river with what I quickly understand
is an obligatory stop at the Sunoco in the tiny town of Honor for day-old
doughnuts and Coca Cola and banter with the cashier. Along the way we
listen to what Mike and Jack say is their latest road tape, three Greg
Brown songs recorded over and over to fill a ninety minute drive. Gonna
meet you after midnight, say the lyrics repeatedly, at the
Dream Café.
The rotating sign on the Honor State Bank says 1:51 a.m. and twenty-two
degrees. The men have bet on what the temperature will be. They have also
bet on how many cars we will pass on the two-lane highway, how many deer
we will see in the woods between Mikes house and the bridge, if
it will snow or rain, and, if so, how hard (hardness gauged by comparison
with other nights fishing). Doug wins the temperature bet, closest
without going over, at twenty-one degrees.
The betting is all part of a long conversational rap among them, a rap
that moves from Mikes last fish to Jacks latest fiction to
concern for Nick and his lost house to the girl at the Sunoco to an in-unison
sing-along to their favorite Greg Brown lyrics. The whole conversation
is less like speaking really and more like singing, a song theyve
spent years and years of these cold spring nights together learning, nights
anybody anywhere else in the world would call winter, nights filled with
an expectation that can only be called boyish and shadowed by too much
of the grown-up knowledge that can ultimately defeat men.
Sometimes they remember I am there; sometimes they forget I am a woman.
I feel, in those moments, like Ive gone undercover, like Ive
been granted security clearance to a rare and private work of art. And
though I have always believed that women bond faster, tighter, deeper
than men could ever dream of, there is something simple and pure between
these men, a connection so thick and dense and timeless that I am fascinated,
and jealous, and humbled, all at the same time.
Shit, Jack says, Look at em all. We have
come finally out of the woods and to a bridge no longer than the width
of the two-lane roadway. As impossible as it is for me to believe, at
two a.m. the gravel areas on both sides of the bridge are lined with pickups,
a counterculture of night stalkers, two and three trucks deep.
I can see by the posture of the men who line the bridge and look gloomily
over the edge that they do not teach poetry at Interlochen Arts Academy.
One of them staggers toward the truck, reeling drunk. A boy of nine or
ten, dressed all in camouflage, tries to steady him from behind.
They aint here yet, the old man says, an edge in his
voice like desperation. It may be they just aint coming.
Theyll be here, Jack says, easing himself out of the
Montero and steering the man away from the broken piece of bridge railing.
Its been a long winter for everybody, Jack says, almost
cooing, and the old man drunkenly, solemnly nods.
Mike pulls me out of the truck and hands me a flashlight. We creep to
the edge of the bridge and peer over. Just on for a second and off,
he whispers. Even to me it is unmistakable; the flashlight illuminates
a long, dark shape already half under the pylon. Dont say
anything, Mike mouths to me soundlessly. Jack leaves the oldtimer
to sleep in his car and joins us. Mike holds up one finger and Jack nods.
Well go downstream, Jack says after some consideration.
Nobodys gonna do any good here.
We drive downriver while Mike points out all the sights as if we can see
thema place called the Toilet Hole, where Doug and Nick got lucky,
the place Mike got his car stuck so bad four-wheel drive couldnt
help him, the place Jack caught last years biggest fish. We can
see the headlights of people who are smelt-dipping out where the river
empties into the lake, and a red and white channel marker lit up and looming
in the darkness, its base still caked with lake ice and snow.
We drop Doug off at his favorite hole near the mouth of the river, drive
back upstream a few hundred yards, park the Montero and step out into
the night.
Its a little bit of a walk from here, Mike says, And
the muds pretty deep. It is impossible for me to imagine how
I will move my stiff and padded legs through deep mud, how, at twenty-two
degrees, I will step into that swift and icy river, much less stand in
it for a couple of hours. I cant imagine how, with all these clothes
and pitch dark around me, Ill be able to cast my fly with anything
resembling grace.
Two steps away from the truck and already I feel the suction. The mud
we are walking in ranges from mid-calf to mid-thigh deep. Im following
Jack like a puppy, trying to walk where he walks, step where he steps.
I get warm with the effort, and a little careless, and suddenly theres
nothing beneath me and Im in watery mud up to my waist. Mike and
Jack, each on one arm, pull me out so fast it seems like part of the choreography.
Lets try to cross the river, says Jack, and before I can even
brace for the cold, we are in it, thigh
hip
waist deep, and
I feel the rush of the current tug me toward Lake Michigan. One
foot in front of the other, Jack says. The holes right
in front of you; when youre ready, go ahead and cast.
I lift the rod uneasily into the night, close my eyes and try to remember
how they did it in A River Runs Through It, and then bring it down too
fast and too hard with an ungraceful splat. Let out a little more
line, Jack says, so gently its like hes talking to himself.
A few more splats, a little more line, and I am making casts that arent
embarrassing. Jack moves without speaking to help Mike with a snarl in
his line. This is your night, Delp, Jack says, his shadowy
form floating away from me, a dark and legless ghost.
What in the world are you doing here? a voice giggles up from inside me,
and the answers sweep past me, too fast to catch: because I cant
turn down a challenge, because my father wanted a boy, because touching
this wildness is the best way I know to undermine sadness, because of
the thin shimmery line I am seeing between the dark river and the even
darker sky.
Soon I stop thinking about being washed to Lake Michigan. I marvel at
how warm I am in the waders, so warm and buoyant that I forget myself
from time to time and dip some unprotected part of me, my hand or my elbow,
into the icy water. A deer crackles sticks in the forest across the river;
an angry beaver slaps his tail. In whispers we take turns identifying
the constellationsUrsa Major, Draco, Cassiopea, Mars and Jupiterand
murmur at the infrequent but lovely falling stars.
When we are quiet I can hear a faint crashingconstant, reverberantsounding
in the dark for all the world like the heartbeat of the Earth. Lake
Michigan coming over the break-water, Jack says to my unasked question.
There must be a big wind on the other side.
My fishing is steadily improving: every fifth or seventh cast hangs a
long time in the air and falls lightly, almost without sound.
You know, Jack says, there arent too many people
who could come out here like this and not hook themselves or me or the
shoreline
isnt that right Delp? Mike murmurs in agreement,
and my head swells with ridiculously disproportionate pride.
The constellations disappear, and a light snow begins falling. God,
I love the weather, Mike says, his voice a mixture of sarcasm and
sincerity, and for a while there is only the whisper of the line and the
flies.
Fish! Jack shouts suddenly. Fish on the line!
I am startled almost out of my footing, as if Ive forgotten what
weve come here for, as if the silence of the night and the rhythm
of the flies hitting the water have become reason enough. We reel in our
lines and watch Jack land his fish. It is long and thin and its speckled
belly gleams silver as it thrashes in the tiny beam of the flashlight.
Jack looks at us helplessly, delighted by his luck and yet wishing, simultaneously,
that it had been me who caught the fish, wishing even harder, I can see,
that it had been Mike.
We fish a little longer, but now theres no need to stay. The spell
has been broken; the first steelhead has been caught in its journey up
the Platte.
Lets wade down river a little, Jack says, when weve
reeled in our lines, to try to avoid the mud. I take short
rapid breaths as we move through the water. This part is deep,
Jack says. Take it slow.
The water creeps up my chest and into my armpits; Im walking, weightless,
through a dark and watery dream. For a moment there is nothing but my
forward momentum and the lift of water under the soles of my boots that
keep me from going under. Then I feel the bank rise suddenly beneath my
feet.
No problem, I say, just before my foot slips and I do go under,
head and all into the icy current. I thrash my arms toward shore, and
Jack grabs me. Better get you home, he says, as the cold Ive
ignored for hours moves through my body with logarithmic speed. Youve
gotta meet students in a couple of hours. Back at the truck Doug
is curled under a blanket like a dog.
The next day Jack sleeps while Mike makes sure I meet my classes. The
students are bright, skeptical, interested. My head buzzes with the heat
of the all-nighter, a darkness, like the river dark, threatening to close
in. Mike and I drink bad machine coffee in one of the tunnels that connects
the English department to the other school buildings, tunnels to keep
the students from getting lost in the storms that bring the blowing snow.
Its hard to explain how much I love these guys, Mike
says suddenly, as if Ive asked him. I dont know what
Id do without what we have.
The cement walls of this poor excuse for a lounge move in on us like the
weather, and this poet who more resembles a wrestler looks for a moment
as if he might cry.
It is late in the evening. I have met three classes, talked to at least
thirty students, given another reading, signed books in Traverse City,
and as part of an orgy of a pot luck, cooked elk steaks, rare, on the
grill. Mike, in his other favorite role of DJ, plays one moody song after
another on the stereo: John Prine, John Gorka, and early Bonnie Raitt.
We are all a little high from the good food and tequila. Mikes ten-year-old
daughter Jamie and Jack dance cheek-to- cheek in their socks on the living
room floor.
So are we gonna do it? Jack says when the song ends, a sparkle
in his eye that says the river is always in him, whether hes standing
in it or not. This fish and fiction marathon is in its thirty-eighth hour,
and I have moved beyond tired now to some new level of consciousness.
I have spent too much of my life proving I can be one of the guys, never
saying uncle, never admitting Im tired, or hurting, or cold. Tonight
I am all three, but the thing that makes me nod my head and say yes I
want to go back again and stand in that icy river has nothing, for a change,
to do with my father, or my childhood, or all the things in the world
I need to prove. It is the potent and honest feeling between these men
that I covet, that I cant miss an opportunity to be close to. I
have stumbled, somehow, onto this rare pack of animals who know I am there
and have decided, anyway, to let me watch them at their dance. I want
to memorize their movements. I want to take these river nights home with
me for the times when the darkness is even heavier than it is in this
Michigan sky.
A flurry of rubber and neoprene, and were back inside the Montero.
Greg Brown is singing the song about the laughing river. This is
your night, Delp, Jack says, I can feel it. Around the
next bend will be Honors scattered lights.
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