Tracy Guzeman

The Gravity of Birds


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      THE GRAVITY OF BIRDS

      Tracy Guzeman

       For my parents, Jane and Dean and my sisters, Jill and Marnie—voracious readers, all

      I wake earlier, now that the birds have come

      And sing in the unfailing trees.

      On a cot by an open window

      I lie like land used up, while spring unfolds.

      Now of all voyagers I remember, who among them

      Did not board ship with grief among their maps?—

      Till it seemed men never go somewhere, they only leave

      Wherever they are, when the dying begins.

      For myself, I find my wanting life

      Implores no novelty and no disguise of distance;

      Where, in what country, might I put down these thoughts,

      Who still am citizen of this fallen city?

      On a cot by an open window, I lie and remember

      While the birds in the trees sing of the circle of time.

      Let the dying go on, and let me, if I can,

      Inherit from disaster before I move.

      Oh, I go to see the great ships ride from harbor,

      And my wounds leap with impatience; yet I turn back

      To sort the weeping ruins of my house:

      Here or nowhere I will make peace with the fact.

       Mary Oliver, ‘No Voyage,’ 1963

      Table of Contents

       Title Page

       Dedication

       Epigraph

       Chapter Six

       Chapter Seven

       Chapter Eight

       Chapter Nine

       Chapter Ten

       Chapter Eleven

       Chapter Twelve

       Chapter Thirteen

       Chapter Fourteen

       Chapter Fifteen

       Chapter Sixteen

       Epilogue

       Acknowledgments

       The Gravity of Birds: Q&A with Tracy Guzeman

       About the Author

       Praise for Tracy Guzeman

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Chapter One August 1963

      Alice haunted the mossy edge of the woods, lingering in patches of shade. She was waiting to hear his Austin-Healey throttle back when he careened down the utility road separating the state park from the cabins rimming the lake, but only the whistled conversation of buntings echoed in the branches above. The vibrant blue males darted deeper into the trees when she blew her own sweet-sweet chew-chew sweet-sweet up to theirs. Pine seedlings brushed against her pants as she pushed through the understory, their green heads vivid beneath the canopy. She had dressed to fade into the forest; her hair was bundled up under a long-billed cap, her clothes drab and inconspicuous. When at last she heard his car, she crouched behind a clump of birch and made herself as small as possible, settling into a shallow depression of ferns and leaf litter. Balancing her birding diary and a book of poetry in her lap, she peeled spirals of parchment from the trunks and watched as he wheeled into the graveled parking space at the head of his property.

      He shut off the engine but stayed in the convertible and lit a cigarette, smoking it slowly, his eyes closed for so long she wondered if he had fallen asleep or maybe drifted into one of his moody trances. When he finally unfolded himself from the cramped front seat, he was as straight and narrow as the trunks behind him, the dark, even mass of them swallowing his shadow. Alice twitched, her left foot gone to pins and needles. The crunch of brush beneath her caused no more disturbance than a small animal, but he immediately turned to where she was hidden and stared at a spot directly above her head while she held her breath.

      ‘Alice,’ he whispered into the warm air. She could just hear the hiss of it, could barely see his lips moving. But she was sure he had said her name. They had that in common, the two of them; they were both observers, though of different sorts.

      He lifted a single paper bag from the passenger seat, cradling it close to his chest, almost lovingly. Bottles, she decided, thinking of her father and his many trips back and forth between the car and their own cabin, carefully ferrying the liquor he’d brought, enough for a month’s worth of toasts and nightcaps and morning-after hair-of-the-dogs. Damn locals mark their inventory up at the first sign of summer people, her father had said. Why should I pay twice for something I’m only going to drink once? No one was going to get the better of him. So there’d been bottles of red and white wine, champagne, Galliano and orange juice for her mother’s Wallbangers, vodka and gin, an assortment of mixers, one choice bottle of