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Seeing Things - Gerry Eugene

Seeing Things - Gerry Eugene

 

Seeing Things by Gerry Eugene

Book excerpt

My first summer home from college, I worked in an ice cream factory. In a gymnasium-sized freezer, I stacked sleeves of ice cream novelties on pallets and then moved those pallets into reefer rigs backed up to the airtight doors on the loading dock. The factory laid off the college kids in mid-August, so I traveled to the Boundary Waters for a canoe trip. I had never journeyed by canoe, but I cheerfully spent my savings from the factory job on a backpack, compass, topological maps, sleeping bag, tent, freeze-dried food, tiny butane stove, poncho, harmonica, and deet. I was nineteen and eager to rough it in the land of lakes, where voyagers can paddle from Minnesota to Hudson Bay.

My canoe companion was Jimmy Johansson. We met when we were five years old and remained friends through a mutual interest in art, music, literature, nature, fishing, and booze. Our debarkation point was Ely, a town full of canoe-trip outfitters. We rode the Greyhound north through Iowa and Minnesota—a long, mind-numbing day. When we arrived in Ely, we arranged first thing to rent a canoe. We ate steaks and potatoes at a local restaurant, and then in the dark of night we walked out of town to find a place to sleep. With so much camping equipment, we saw no reason to pay for a motel room.

About two miles out of town we saw, off to the side of the road in the dim starlight, a clearing in the trees. Jimmy and I crawled through a barbed wire fence and laid out our sleeping bags. We built a small fire. From my pack I pulled a bota of brandy. The brandy was cheap, and the bota’s latex lining had dissolved in it. The latex and the bota’s cured leather made the brandy taste utterly wretched. We drank it, and soon we passed out, oblivious to the owls, coyotes, wolves, and whip-poor-wills.

In the minutes of false dawn, I came awake to find that a cricket had crawled into my mouth. Shuddering, I spat it out. I lay on the ground, my head resounding, stomach churning, world spinning. I heard then, not far off, a stick snap. I heard a grumble and mumble from deep in some bestial throat. I heard very heavy footsteps drawing nearer and nearer.

I lay still as I could, my pulse drumming in my ears. I felt a new sensation—a tingling terror, electrical and pulsing. I was zipped immobile into my bag. I could smell the approaching bear. I felt his warm breath on my face. I felt then his wet nose push on my neck just below my right ear. Against the lids of my closed eyes, red light flashed like strobes. I imagined this bear tearing my head free of my body and batting it around between the jack pines. I felt as though I had no arms or legs, like a trout reeled from the lake and tossed onto the dock to twitch and flop.

As you can guess, I survived. Inexplicably, the bear did not attack me. He walked on. Just two yards away, Jimmy slept obliviously. The bear’s visit murdered sleep for me, and I waited for full-dawn, miserable, exhausted, and relieved. Later, as we walked from our campsite, we saw we had pitched camp on the edge of the city dump. No wonder the bear came close in the night.

Never before had I felt such fear, but I would again, and we all have felt it by our fourth decade, for survival is not without close calls. These confrontations with the heart in terror create, perhaps, a commonality and bridge between people, a shared territory in extremis.

***

Three days later I was an old hand in the stern of a canoe. As though born to it, I C-stroked and J-stroked across lake after lake. I learned to agree with my canoe partner on a point of land and paddle toward it, thus making our efforts cooperative rather than exhausting. We skimmed through the beautiful lakes, heard loons in the morning and wolves at night, saw moose in the brush, watched ospreys and eagles ride the thermals above the Iron Range. We portaged between lakes and paddled north across the boundary into Canada.

On the fourth day we negotiated a narrow, shallow isthmus. The water was no more than three feet deep. Ahead and off to the right side, Jimmy spotted a little creature swimming away from us. It appeared to be a muskrat or small beaver, maybe ten inches long. We could make out more of its wake than its body. We decided to take a closer look. We glided closer until the little swimmer was just beside our canoe and to our right, midway between me in the stern and Jimmy in the prow. We saw, then, that we had observed not a small rodent swimming, but rather just the nose of a bear walking though the water. The bear stood up and towered over us, dripping on us, and gazing back and forth at Jimmy and me. Jimmy held his paddle in both hands. “God, Jimmy, don’t hit him,” I stage-whispered. Again, I felt the electricity of terror. I saw my limbs tremble. The bear placed his paws on the gunwale of the canoe. He lifted his muzzle to the sky and opened his jaws wide. I could see his fangs and his tongue and the cavern of his maw. I heard his huge claws click and rasp the edge of the canoe. He uttered a sound very much like a yawn. I was impaled by fear. After several centuries-long moments, the bear released our canoe and swam around behind me. I felt, for the first time in my life, my scalp tighten and constrict. I knew my hair was standing up. The bear came into sight on the left. It waded to shore and sat down on a sandy spot. Around him, monarch butterflies rolled lazily in the air. Small waves washed gently on the rocks. I heard the hum of mosquitoes as they flew to us from the trees, and I heard the soft call of mourning doves across the lake.

 
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