Blue of the World: Stories
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“There are coastal mountains plunging headlong into the sea. There are towering trees and hills teeming with life. Birds in the sky and fish in the rivers. Everywhere all at once. Yet there’s also this: an dead expanse of nothing at the center of the world. Every inch identical to the inch before and after . . .Where is there any
Douglas W Milliken
DOUGLAS W. MILLIKEN is the author of two novels-TO SLEEP AS ANIMALS and OUR SHADOWS' VOICE-as well as several chapbooks and collaborative multimedia projects, including IN THE MINES with the musician Scott Sell and Monolith with the metal smith Cat Bates. He has won numerous awards for his short stories, including Glimmer Train's "Family Matters" contest, a Maine Literary Award for Short Fiction, a Pushcart Prize, and the Stoneslide Corrective's annual Short Story Contest. He is exhausted by the mouse chorus of souls following his heartless kitten through the understory. He lives with his contra-wife in Saco, Maine.
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Blue of the World - Douglas W Milliken
Table of Contents
PILLARS
SALTWATER BALDWIN
BOYS’ LIFE / ROUGH FRONTIERS
UNDER THE WING
PRETTY
A THIRTEENTH APOSTLE’S STAR
FRAISES DES BOIS
ADVENTURE STORIES FOR MEN & BOYS
HYACINTH & WAXWING
GIRLS’ SCHOOL
BUTTERSCOTCH
TROCHA STEP
A FLUENT BLUE
AFTER THE INTROMIT
PINK HORSES / TOUCHED & BLESSED
SAW-WHET
SKIDDER & DRAW
BLUE OF THE WORLD
GOLD & RUST
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ALSO BY DOUGLAS W. MILLIKEN
Acclaim for
Blue of the World
"Blue of the World reminds me of some wild, enormous mineral towers I saw once above a riverbed. Just when you thought you’d figured out the contours, another plane appeared, and then another, then a broken edge, a polished step, a rippled bowl. These stories are like that—brilliant surfaces, hidden depths, unsettled corners. Weeks since I finished the book, still I dip into it like dreaming, the perfect paragraphs new in my hands." — Bill Roorbach, author of Life Among Giants and The Remedy for Love
There’s such a satisfying alchemy to Milliken’s sentences—rhythms, textures, and resonances that magic our day-to-day idiocies into almost hilarious beauty. And by beauty, I don’t mean some transcendent feeling or deliverance from our isolation, but something much deeper and stranger: the extraction of an inner warmth we always hoped was there.
— Meghan Lamb, author of Silk Flowers
Beneath the lucid, serene surface of Milliken’s prose lie disturbing realities. His immersive fiction takes us to places where we may be afraid to look and invites us to celebrate the beauty of unsettling mystery.
— Nat Baldwin, author of The Red Barn
Milliken is a master of leveling the field of experience and revealing the things we all carry with us—awe, insecurity, nostalgia—whether we’re looking up at the stars or about to be swept out to sea.
— Celia Johnson, Creative Director, SLICE Literary
BLUE OF THE WORLD
Stories
DOUGLAS W. MILLIKEN
Tailwinds Press
Copyright © 2019 by Douglas W. Milliken
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the written permission of the publisher.
The following stories originally appeared, in slightly different forms, in the following publications: Adventure Stories for Men & Boys
in the Adirondack Review; After the Intromit
and Pillars
in Slice; A Thirteenth Apostle’s Star
in Camera Obscura; Blue of the World
in Glimmer Train; Boys’ Life / Rough Frontier
in the Lascaux Review. Butterscotch
in the Maine Review; Gold & Rust
in Per Contra; Fraises des Bois
(as Horse Story
) in Midwest Prairie Review; Hyacinth & Waxwing
in the Stoneslide Corrective; Pretty
in the Lindenwood Review; Saltwater Baldwin
in the Cortland Review; Saw-Whet
in the Wooden Leg Press chapbook One Thousand Owls Behind Your Chest; Skidder & Draw
in Portland Monthly. A Fluent Blue
was originally composed as part of a multimedia collaboration with the metal smith Cat Bates.
Tailwinds Press
P.O. Box 2283, Radio City Station
New York, NY 10101-2283
www.tailwindspress.com
Published in the United States of America
ISBN: 978-1-7328480-1-6
1st ed. 2019
BLUE OF THE WORLD
For Barbara and Donna, whose endings
were the beginning.
Now something is becoming clear to her that she has failed to consider all this time: If no one knows she exists any longer, who will know there is a world when she is no longer there?
— Jenny Erpenbeck, Visitation (trans. by Susan Bernofsky)
PILLARS
It was an intuitive animal-prayer when he was younger, how he’d stand outside for hours in the summertime and gaze up through the night’s silence at the stars. No telescope or even binoculars. Just naked eyes. He’d stand in the patchy grass as far from his dad’s trailer as he dared and stare up until his neck hurt and even then, keep staring. So many bright tiny errors in a perfect black screen, but he knew: the blackness was the error, the distance between each light. Yet still, the lights could all be seen. It filled him with hope that there might be something better out there.
Hope means a lot.
But now he’s older and lives in a city where the nights have been replaced by an orange haze soft against the black. Sometimes a moon. More often: high airplanes, passing. Where could they all be going? Late when his wife lies safely asleep, he sits in the pale glow of his computer’s screen, clicking through the space program’s archive of deep-space photography. All the universe catalogued by wide-array telescopes. The collision of galaxies. Columns of dust stretching through centuries. Stars birthing or fading away. Light visible only to mechanical eyes. He stares at the Crab Nebula and the Tadpole Galaxy and the Pillars of Creation, and feels the deep icicle of loneliness pierce clear through him, all the way through and then deeper still. Almost to the end. Then a little more. The loneliness never passes out the other side.
It’s not just the magnitude that breaks him. It’s something closer. Like missing someone to whom you still have something important to tell. Someone you love who doesn’t know. You want so bad to tell them. But they aren’t ever coming back. They’ll never know. So much beauty, so vast and far away. They don’t even know what they are.
SALTWATER BALDWIN
Ethan’s message was waiting for me when I got home late that night. I’d been flying for the company—had spent all morning en route to Boston, where I lingered just long enough to trade bags with a man I met in the terminal before turning around and boarding the same exact plane to come home—so I was already feeling justified in playing hooky for a day. The voice on my machine gave me the excuse I needed. A favor asked from an old friend. The little company man would have to wait. I turned out the studio lights and lay on my pallet. I fell into a dreamless sleep.
With these sorts of things, I’m guilty of too many blind spots. I don’t remember when Ethan and I met. For a while it seemed we were both around the same places, in the company of the same people. Like when you pass the same person every day on your drive to work. You don’t know him and he doesn’t know you, but five days a week at six-fifteen, you pass along the same stretch of road. Two strangers waving hello. It wasn’t until one summer a few years back, when Ethan took on a contract harvesting seaweed and asked me to help him out, that we really became friends. We spent five months in a low rowboat together, holding close to the shore and hauling great swaths of ribbony green up out of the ocean’s gut. Then we’d heap it all into the bed of his pickup. It was an old Ford made sometime in the 70s that still ran like a tin-can dream. I remember, when the bed was full, how the seawater poured through the gaps and rust-holes in shining streams, splashing and clapping on the rocks underfoot. It was a music I could almost understand.
We did that together for three summers straight—just two men, silently at work—until his dad had his stroke and Ethan took over running the family orchard full-time. Then my current company found me and liked me for how little I talked. In the years since, by circumstance, Ethan and I have rarely visited or spoken. Then he called me while I raced above the earth at several thousand feet, asking for my help, and again our lives intersect.
It was almost dawn when I woke but I knew I wouldn’t be sleeping any more. I lay on my pallet and watched the light-shapes cast by my window shift and change across the ceiling. Then I called out from work. I didn’t even wait for the little man’s response. I hung up and dialed Ethan’s number.
Samuel?
Through the phone, his voice sounded dry as an old hinge. That you?
I ran my tongue over my teeth. Then I swallowed. I’m coming.
I hadn’t the tools that I used to but I still had a pair of hand-pruners from Switzerland that I’d kept oiled and sharp. I supposed Ethan would have most anything else we could need. I drove out of town and for a while more under shore-side woods, then turned off where two big rocks flanked a driveway cutting through ragged coastal pines. I’d been this way before. We met in the front yard of his family’s big white house and shook hands—there was the farm-stand along the driveway, all boarded up for the season, and a row of hubbard squash shining blue in the frosty grass—then we climbed into that same baby blue Ford and drove out back. He looked just as I remembered, tall and wooden and grey. His sister and someone they’d hired—a Jamaican man whose name I never learned or don’t remember—followed in another vehicle. We passed through an uneven, rocky meadow of bleached seagrass, then down toward the sandy bluffs where the orchards ranged by the water.
There was a time in my life when the care and propagation of trees was my prevailing motive and occupation. But that life was over by the time Ethan and I became friends. This wasn’t my first time visiting his family’s orchard but it nevertheless confounded me still that it could exist. Exist and thrive. Never before had I heard of fruit trees surviving in saltwater and sand. His family’s trees were beautiful.
It was late December but felt more like April without any snow, a thin milky fog rolling in off the bay. On the other side of the inlet, dimly, I could see the town where I lived. It was just past dawn. High and full, cutting through the fog, the moon did the work of the sun.
Where I did my business for the company, there was a man who I felt was torturing me, though I understood it wasn’t personal. I just had to work with him more than anyone else. I took the brunt of him. He was a short man, so maybe that had something to do with it. He’d feed me misinformation so that my work would come out all wrong. Or he’d very calmly offer me something—a binder of receipts or my own jacket or some food—then, just as calmly, would throw that something against the wall or floor. He had a doctor’s notice, I guess, explaining this behavior, but mostly he was the owner’s son. So whatever complaint I might file had no bearing on his continued employment. In time it came to feel as though this behavior was the sole purpose of his job. Getting paid well to make life harder for me. It didn’t bother me at all, skipping out for the day.
Though I guess it isn’t fair to say that the trees grow all in sand. There were deep veins of rock in the orchard as well. Mostly long granite knuckles of ledge. So for the trees, the sand was a sort of treat. We parked the trucks on a high stony slope above the orchard, then gathered our tools and headed down. Ethan and the Jamaican paired up to prune one row. I was to work with his sister.
Which, I have to admit, disappointed me. There was nothing wrong with his sister—Evelyn was her name, rosy-cheeked from chapping wind and pretty though hard and by this I mean fit, a joyful woman who’d worked this land each day of her life—but I wasn’t friends with Evelyn, I was Ethan’s friend. Maybe there was a motive in having us work together, I don’t know. But I knew Ethan had a new son, his first, born in the summer, and in the months since learning this news, I hadn’t been in contact, had not congratulated him or asked after his growing family. It made me feel like a shit for not having done these things. I hadn’t thought to ask about his boy in the short ride over from the house to the shore. I’d have to wait more for another chance.
There were other trees in the orchard that weren’t so close to the water, Russets and Gravensteins and Rhode Island Greenings tumbling up the grassy slopes above us, their naked limbs making witchy shapes against the foggy sky, but the rows we pruned were those closest to the water. Evelyn used a pole saw to take out the higher boughs. I used my Swiss hand-shears on those below. It pleased me to cut through branches as big around as my wrist, but I didn’t kid myself too much about it. I’d kept the tool in good shape. It was doing all the work.
In the row beside us, Ethan and the Jamaican had a similar process going on. Down the line, we thinned and shaped the trees into open rising pyramids. All our trimmings we stacked in knitted piles like beaver dams in the path between the trees. I supposed they’d dry these and use them to light fires. I felt fine out there. Evelyn would laugh each time a big branch came crashing down, like this was some playful game of sorts. I’ve always liked it when people take a joy in their work.
After a little while, their father came walking through the trees to join us. He didn’t seem much like anyone who’d had a stroke. His hair and beard were white and he walked with a slight limp, but he otherwise moved with the speed and force of a hungry bear. He took to helping clear the trimmings for us so we could focus on our business of pruning. I don’t remember anyone telling me his name.
Late in the autumn after our first