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The
Man Who Swam with Beavers
Excerpt - The Woman Who Would Marry a
Bear
The
bride-to-be sat at her kitchen table with Brides magazine,
turning down pages and making notes on a pad of paper.
There were so many decisions to be made, so many details
to attend to. Naturally, she wanted everything about
her wedding to be perfect. Suzanne looked in the magazine
at the photos of a cherry-blossom wedding, bridesmaids
in dotted Swiss and pink butterfly bows. They were heavenly:
the armfuls of blossoms, the flower girls with pink
cheeks and more blossoms tucked into their golden hair.
Her two little nieces were dark, and, to tell the truth,
sort of sour-looking, but that was what she had to work
with.
She turned down the page with the cherry blossoms
and went on to an article about registering for gifts.
She would need to choose silver and china patterns.
Already, she could imagine them before her, glowing
and glittering down the length of a long, cloth covered
table. Serving spoons and butter knives, platters and
casseroles, linens, candlesticks, a teapot of Japanese
design—the gifts she would need to make her new home.
Shuffling and snuffling noises began at the rear
of the house. She heard the back door creak, movement
through the hall. A bear entered the kitchen and rose
up on his hind legs before the counter.
Sudan continued paging through her magazine.
He was a magnificent bear, six hundred pounds
of muscle and gorgeously thick, sun flecked fur. When
he stood at the counter, his back to the woman, the
fur of his massive back parted down the middle of a
dark stripe that ran from the base of his head to his
triangular tail. He placed one heavy paw on the counter,
pinning a bag of Dorito chips, and tore the wrapping.
“Don’t make a mess there,” Suzanne said.
He turned his dish-shaped head and nearsightedly
surveyed the room. Pieces of chip stuck to the end of
his nose the way bits of rubbed eraser stick to an eraser
head. His jaw worked slowly, his mouth opening over
pink gums and gleaming canines. Then he dropped to the
floor and swung his head back and forth, as though sighting
down the long barrel of his pale muzzle. His eyes, the
color of old wet pennies, turned from Suzanne to the
door to Suzanne again.
Suzanne ran a hand through the hair at the back
of her neck and sighed. “I’ve got so much to do. I absolutely
must get the invitation order to the engravers tomorrow.
And decide on napkins and matchbooks.”
The bear walked away, stiff-legged, rolling enormous
shoulders. He moved quietly, his claws barely clicking
against the linoleum. As he passed through the doorway
into the living room, Suzanne stared absently after
him and chewed on the end of her pen. She made another
note on her pad, examined the polish on one nail, rested
her chin on her hand.
A minute later Suzanne sniffed disagreeably.
She pushed back her chair and got to her feet, stomped
to the cleaning cabinet below the kitchen sink. She
knocked around among the floor waxes and oven cleaners,
emerging with a can of room deodorizer. This she sprayed
liberally around the kitchen, pointing the fluorocarbon-driven
drizzle into the four corners, the air above the counter,
and the doorway. She covered every scent of food, home,
human, and bear with the fragrance of artificial pines.
A
At
the florist’s, Suzanne looked in the glass cases and
in picture books. Wildflowers, she’d learned, were very
popular this year, and that’s what she wanted.
“Too puny,” she said, looking at yet another
example of a wild orchid.
The florist rubbed a finger against the corner
of her mouth. “They’re smaller than your domestic orchids,”
she said. “Wildflowers are. They haven’t been bred for
size and shape. What you get is something more delicate,
feminine.”
“Droopy.” Suzanne turned plastic pages in the
florist’s selection book. “No daisies. Daisies are passé.”
“We could fashion, I think, a very nice mixed
bouquet, round and full and still natural looking.”
The woman fluttered her hands in front of her chest,
a gesture that made her look like a pollinating bee.
“The wild poppies and orchids will be very nice when
they’re softened with something lacy.”
Suzanne looked dubious. The only thing she liked
about the orchids was the idea that someone in a faraway
forest was going to hunt them one by one. That was ever
so much classier than buying from a greenhouse. She
looked again at her list. “I’ve still got the corsages,
the boutonnieres, flowers for the church, and the table
centerpieces.” She fiipped to the white section of the
book again. A label caught her eye. “Bear flower!”
“A member of the saxifrage family. It grows only
in Alaska and parts of northern Canada,” the florist
said.
“That’ll be my married name. Bear.” Suzanne peered
more intently at the photo. “Cool—matching flowers.”
“We have some in the case,” the florist said,
going to get them. “I’m sure we can integrate them into
your scheme.” She placed them on the table, and they
looked at them together with some of the other wildfires.
They weren’t really all that attractive, in Suzanne’s
opinion. Too stalky. Still, this was the kind of detail
that would make her wedding memorable. People would
say, years later, Remember the bear flowers at the Bear
wedding?
The door to the shop tinkled, and the bear entered,
huge and heavy, his weight shifting as he stepped from
paw to paw across the front room and into the back,
where the two women leaned over the flowers
“Here he is!” Suzanne exclaimed. “Look, we found
something called a bear fewer. And it’s a wildflower,
just like I wanted.”
The bear raised his massive head to the counter
and thrust forward nostrils like a monstrous, oversized
electrical outlet, flaring and shrinking, rimmed with
bubbles of mucus. The starry petals lifted to meet his
inhalation, and then, as he released his breath, were
blown back. He tilted his head and opened his mouth,
and the flowers disappeared into the space behind his
teeth.
“Stop that!” Suzanne grabbed a roll of the paper
used to wrap cut flowers and whopped the bear, hard,
across the snout. His head jerked away and the back
part of his mouth stretched open so that spittle and
a chain of crushed petals spilled out. The fur on the
back of his neck and shoulders stiffened, waving like
fringe, and his ears flattened against his head.
“Au,” Suzanne said, sounding like she might cry.
“I don’t know why I bother trying to make everything
absolutely perfect.” She turned back to the florist.“It’s
such a women’s thing, isn’t it? It just takes a female
sensibility to care about doing things right, to have
any idea about what looks nice.” She waved her hand
dismissively at the bear. “They have absolutely no sense.”
The bear, his head lowered into a corner, opened
and closed his jaw with a couple of smacking noises
and swallowed the flowers He shook his head as if to
shake oV the impact of the paper roll, and the fur on
his neck and shoulders relaxed. Still tossing his head,
he walked, a little more hurriedly, back the way he’d
come.
Suzanne looked at her watch. “Darn. I’m going
to be late to the photographer’s. Just put the damaged
flowers on my bill, will you?” In her rush from the
shop she forgot, entirely, to leave her swatches of
bridesmaid colors.
Suzanne
agreed to have her mother help her plan the reception’s
dinner menu. The two of them gathered in Suzanne’s living
room with lists of caterers, foods, guests, decorations,
and other details.
Suzanne’s mother surveyed her over the top of
her glasses. “You are sure you want to go through with
this? It’s not too late to change your mind.”
“Mo-ther!” Suzanne brushed back her hair so that
it fell over her arm to her elbow, and then she turned
to admire it. “We are not going to have that conversation
again. You wanted to help, so this is where you get
to participate. We need to get a menu pinned down.”
“I just hope you’ve taken everything into account.
Compatibility is such a big part of marriage. Your father
and I . . . ”
Suzanne covered her ears. “I don’t need this
lecture.”
“Well, just listen for a moment. What if, for
example, he really loved sports and you really loved
opera. You might have a basic incompatibility.”
“No way. I hate opera. C’mon. Let’s get serious
here.”
“This is what mothers are for.”
“No, it’s not. I have it right here.” Suzanne
waved a glossy book at her mother. “The authors of Planning
Your Wedding say, and I quote, ‘the role of mother is
moral support and to do those things that are delegated
by the bride.’”
Her mother looked at the closed book. “You memorized
that?”
“Or words to that effect.” Suzanne took a long
swallow from a Pepsi, then set the can back on the table.
“I don’t think I want roast beef. Then you get into
a thing where it’s too rare for some people and not
rare enough for others, and it’s just kind of gross
anyway, when they’ve got a guy carving it up right there
in front of people and blood running all over the place.”
“Are you sure he, you know, doesn’t have any
bad habits? What if you find out later he’s got some
annoying little habit that you just can’t live with?”
“Like what?”
“I don’t know. Your Aunt Ruth married a man who
never slept. He was always wanting to go do something
in the middle of the night, or he’d just bang around
the house and keep her awake. He wore her right out.”
“Not a problem. He sleeps a lot.”
“Well, that could be a problem, too.”
“He snores.”
“He snores?”
“That’s what I said. But I know what to do. I
just won’t let him lie on his back. Ever hear of sewing
a tennis ball into the back of a nightshirt?”
Suzanne’s mother looked slightly scandalized.
“Ma.” Suzanne made eye contact. “I got that from
Ann Landers.” She drained the rest of her Pepsi and
tossed the can across the room into an open sack of
garbage. She rummaged through her purse for her makeup
kit, snapped open her compact, and examined her face.
She touched a finger to one mascaraed eyelash.
“You don’t want roast beef,” her mother said.
“What would you like instead?”
“I was thinking of veal. It has such couture,
it’s just so much better looking. Some bright vegetables
would go well with it. I want those really light, flaky
rolls. And the butter absolutely needs to be those little
balls, like tiny scoops of ice cream. Are you writing
this down? Then we can call the caterer.”
Suzanne’s mother started a new list on a yellow
pad.
Suzanne, dangling her leg over the arm of the
sofa, discovered the beginning of a run in her pantyhose.
She stretched and pulled at the material to draw the
run up and down her leg, and then she ripped at the
hole to widen its track.
“We used to put a little clear nail polish on
our runs to stop them,” her mother said.
Suzanne pulled back her skirt and stretched the
hose to draw the run right up to her hip. “I love to
do this,” she said. “Did I tell you I decided on my
silver pattern?” She fumbled for her magazine and turned
to a dogeared page. “Victoria. It’s me, don’t you think?”
“Whatever you like,” her mother said, handing
the magazine back.
Suzanne read, “‘Sterling gives your table an
aura of romance and a sense of heritage.’ Not to mention
that it’s worth a lot of dough.” She stood up and stripped
off her pantyhose, wadded them into a ball, and stuffed
them into the garbage sack.
Her
friends, coworkers, and female relatives gave Suzanne
a bridal shower. She sat in the center of a cheerful
circle and opened gifts as they were passed to her.
She attended to each with ceremony, lingering over its
unwrapping—pulling apart designer papers and ribbons,
digging through boxes of Styrofoam peanuts, unfolding
sheets of bubble wrap, sorting through layers of colored
tissue paper and bleached white cardboard.
Like buried treasure, each present finally emerged
from the depths of its packaging. Lingerie, curling
irons, a disposable camera, an electronic address book,
plastic recipe boxes, Plexiglas picture frames, an electric
juicer—the essentials and delights of married life.
Each was passed around to choruses of admiration and
approval. Emptied boxes and crumpled wrappings piled
higher and higher, filled corners, overflowed the room
into the next, then the apartment into the outside hall.
Suzanne felt faint with happiness.
They had tea and cakes and told of other showers,
weddings, babies, new boyfriends, sales, and the price
of red peppers. Someone recommended a place where the
bridesmaids could have their shoes dyed.
“There he is!” someone said, and they all rushed
to the windows.
On the sidewalk below, the bear was walking,
the dark stripe down his back shifting from side to
side with the sway of his shoulders and haunches. From
five stories up, surrounded by concrete and cars, he
didn’t look particularly large or impressive. The women
watched him step oV the curb into the space between
a new Buick and a minivan and then, when another car
rushed past, retreat to the sidewalk again. He stepped
slowly, almost gingerly, as though the pavement was
hard on his feet. He sniffed at a spindly tree surrounded
by a wire fence and then continued past it, head down.
His fur, in the shadow of the buildings and against
the gray street, looked dusty and dull, colorless.
The women watched and were embarrassed. More
than anything, he looked to them like a street person—dull,
slow, meandering. Finally, Suzanne’s best friend said,
“He certainly looks . . . furry.”
“He looks very cuddly,” another girl said.
“Yes, cuddly!” They all agreed. They went back
to their tea and cakes.
Suzanne
bought a new used car—a big, heavy American sedan with
a powerful engine and an oil leak. It got twelve miles
to each gallon of gas and needed a quart of oil with
every fill-up, but she didn’t mind.
Her mother and sister came to help her finalize
her wedding plans. They stood in the driveway, and she
showed them the car. It started with a varoom, belching
stinky black exhaust. She revved the engine, backed
the car down the driveway, opened and shut the electric
windows, and ran the air conditioner. She made her mother
and sister get into the backseat and listen to the tape
deck, loud, while she turned up the speakers one at
a time so they could hear just what top-of-the-line
quality they were.
“It’s big,” her sister said, when they were standing
in the driveway again.
“We’ll need the room,” Suzanne said. “Family-size.
Besides, I want a safe car. Not one of those little
things that will fold up like a tin can if you run into
something. If I’m in an accident, I want to be the one
to walk away from it.”
They went inside and talked details. Decisions
had to be made about housing out-of-town guests and
which of the girl cousins would be in charge of the
guestbook. Suzanne sent her sister to call the videographer
to make sure he knew what time to come. While her sister
was out of the room, she showed her mother the gifts
she’d bought for her attendants—perfume bottles with
real ivory knobs.
Suzanne’s sister came back and offered to buy
birdseed for tossing after the wedding.
“Are you kidding?” Suzanne made a face. “I’m
not having birdseed at my wedding. I’ve already got
the pouches, monogrammed and everything, for the rice.
This is a class act, you know—strictly traditional.
Strictly white rice.”
“With birdseed,” her sister said, “the birds
can clean it up off the walks. When they eat rice, it
swells in their stomachs.”
“So tell the greedy little buzzards to stay away.
This isn’t their wedding.” She turned to her mother.
“Can you imagine?”
“Whatever you like, dear. It’s your day.”
“Hey!” Suzanne bounced to her feet. “Did I show
you the coffee grinder I got?” She ushered her mother
and sister into the kitchen and ran the grinder. She
left it running while she demonstrated her new coffeemaker,
espresso machine, electric knife, mixer, can opener,
blender, food processor, juicer, vegetable slicer, ice
cream maker, and vacuum cleaner—one and another, all
at the same time, all at top speed.
Outside, the bear stood on the manicured, pest-proofed
lawn and listened to the roar. He watched the electric
meter beside the back door spin around and around. He
paced along one side of the house, turned and paced
back. A low growl rumbled in his throat and then he
shook his head and made a chopping sound with his teeth.
Suzanne wasn’t through. She rushed from counter
to table to closet and shelf, plugging in new appliances,
pushing buttons, turning switches. She popped popcorn
in the hot-air popper, fired up the singing tea kettle,
moved the exhaust fan to high. She turned on the radio,
the minitelevision, the larger television, and the cd
player. Running past doorways, she hit light switches
and threw closed-curtain rooms into a blaze of humming
fluorescence. In the bathroom, she blasted and whirlpooled
a tub of hot water and set the hair dryer, electric
toothbrush, and fan going. She snapped, pushed, and
adjusted every variety of button and dial until the
entire house throbbed.
Finally, she stood taut and trembling in the
middle of it all, arms flung fisted into the air. “Yes,
yes, YES!” she cried.
Had the curtains not been closed to keep the
sunlight from fading the furniture, and had every electrical
appliance and entertainment in the house not been pulsing
at top speed, the women might have seen or heard the
bear beside the house. But as it was, not one of them
noticed him crash through a rhododendron bush and run
across the lawn. He ran fast, as fast as bearly possible,
half again as fast as any human. His body stretched
into speed, propelled by his tremendous muscles and
powerful heart. Divots of torn grass scattered in his
wake.
He looked back just once, a wide-eyed, wary,
hunted look that showed crescents of white at the corners
of both eyes, and then he was gone into the woods. He
ran into fading light, into deep, soft, far forest,
into wilderness.
The
wedding was quietly called off.
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