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Grandma never told us what happened to the women. The Apaches were at war but had no warriors, so perhaps she thought the ending too bleak to say aloud. The word ā€œslaughterā€ came to mind, because slaughter is the word for it, for a battle when one side mounts no defense. Itā€™s the word we used on the farm. We slaughtered chickens, we didnā€™t fight them. A slaughter was the likely outcome of the warriorsā€™ bravery. They died as heroes, their wives as slaves.

As we drove to the trailer, the sun dipping in the sky, its last rays reaching across the highway, I thought about the Apache women. Like the sandstone altar on which they had died, the shape of their lives had been determined years beforeā€”before the horses began their gallop, their sorrel bodies arching for that final collision. Long before the warriorsā€™ leap it was decided how the women would live and how they would die. By the warriors, by the women themselves. Decided. Choices, numberless as grains of sand, had layered and compressed, coalescing into sediment, then into rock, until all was set in stone.

ā€”

I HAD NEVER BEFORE left the mountain and I ached for it, for the sight of the Princess etched in pine across the massif. I found myself glancing at the vacant Arizona sky, hoping to see her black form swelling out of the earth, laying claim to her half of the heavens. But she was not there. More than the sight of her, I missed her caressesā€”the wind she sent through canyons and ravines to sweep through my hair every morning. In Arizona, there was no wind. There was just one heat-stricken hour after another.

I spent my days wandering from one side of the trailer to the other, then out the back door, across the patio, over to the hammock, then around to the front porch, where Iā€™d step over Dadā€™s semiconscious form and back inside again. It was a great relief when, on the sixth day, Grandpaā€™s four-wheeler broke down and Tyler and Luke took it apart to find the trouble. I sat on a large barrel of blue plastic, watching them, wondering when we could go home. When Dad would stop talking about the Illuminati. When Mother would stop leaving the room whenever Dad entered it.

That night after dinner, Dad said it was time to go. ā€œGet your stuff,ā€ he said. ā€œWeā€™re hitting the road in a half hour.ā€ It was early evening, which Grandma said was a ridiculous time to begin a twelve-hour drive. Mother said we should wait until morning, but Dad wanted to get home so he and the boys could scrap the next morning. ā€œI canā€™t afford to lose any more work days,ā€ he said.

Motherā€™s eyes darkened with worry, but she said nothing.

ā€”

I AWOKE WHEN THE CAR HIT the first utility pole. Iā€™d been asleep on the floor under my sisterā€™s feet, a blanket over my head. I tried to sit up but the car was shaking, lungingā€”it felt like it was coming apartā€”and Audrey fell on top of me. I couldnā€™t see what was happening but I could feel and hear it. Another loud thud, a lurch, my mother screaming, ā€œTyler!ā€ from the front seat, and a final violent jolt before everything stopped and silence set in.

Several seconds passed in which nothing happened.

Then I heard Audreyā€™s voice. She was calling our names one by one. Then she said, ā€œEveryoneā€™s here except Tara!ā€

I tried to shout but my face was wedged under the seat, my cheek pressed to the floor. I struggled under Audreyā€™s weight as she shouted my name. Finally, I arched my back and pushed her off, then stuck my head out of the blanket and said, ā€œHere.ā€

I looked around. Tyler had twisted his upper body so that he was practically climbing into the backseat, his eyes bulging as he took in every cut, every bruise, every pair of wide eyes. I could see his face but it didnā€™t look like his face. Blood gushed from his mouth and down his shirt. I closed my eyes, trying to forget the twisted angles of his bloodstained teeth. When I opened them again, it was to check everyone else. Richard was holding his head, a hand over each ear like he was trying to block out a noise. Audreyā€™s nose was strangely hooked and blood was streaming from it down her arm. Luke was shaking but I couldnā€™t see any blood. I had a gash on my forearm from where the seatā€™s frame had caught hold of me.

ā€œEveryone all right?ā€ My fatherā€™s voice. There was a general mumble.

ā€œThere are power lines on the car,ā€ Dad said. ā€œNobody gets out till theyā€™ve shut them off.ā€ His door opened, and for a moment I thought heā€™d been electrocuted, but then I saw heā€™d pitched himself far enough so that his body had never touched the car and the ground at the same time. I remember peering at him through my shattered window as he circled the car, his red cap pushed back so the brim reached upward, licking the air. He looked strangely boyish.

He circled the car then stopped, crouching low, bringing his head level with the passenger seat. ā€œAre you okay?ā€ he said. Then he said it again. The third time he said it, his voice quivered.

I leaned over the seat to see who he was talking to, and only then realized how serious the accident had been. The front half of the car had been compressed, the engine arched, curving back over itself, like a fold in solid rock.

There was a glare on the windshield from the morning sun. I saw crisscrossing patterns of fissures and cracks. The sight was familiar. Iā€™d seen hundreds of shattered windshields in the junkyard, each one unique, with its particular spray of gossamer extruding from the point of impact, a chronicle of the collision. The cracks on our windshield told their own story. Their epicenter was a small ring with fissures circling outward. The ring was directly in front of the passenger seat.

ā€œYou okay?ā€ Dad pleaded. ā€œHoney, can you hear me?ā€

Mother was in the passenger seat. Her body faced away from the window. I couldnā€™t see her face, but there was something terrifying in the way she slumped against her seat.

ā€œCan you hear me?ā€ Dad said. He repeated this several times. Eventually, in a movement so small it was almost imperceptible, I saw the tip of Motherā€™s ponytail dip as she nodded.

Dad stood, looking at the active power lines, looking at the earth, looking at Mother. Looking helpless. ā€œDo you thinkā€”should I call an ambulance?ā€

I think I heard him say that. And if he did, which surely he must have, Mother must have whispered a reply, or maybe she wasnā€™t able to whisper anything, I donā€™t know. Iā€™ve always imagined that she asked to be taken home.

I was told later that the farmer whose tractor weā€™d hit rushed from his house. Heā€™d called the police, which we knew would bring trouble because the car wasnā€™t insured, and none of us had been wearing seatbelts. It took perhaps twenty minutes after the farmer informed Utah Power of the accident for them to switch off the deadly current pulsing through the lines. Then Dad lifted Mother from the station wagon and I saw her faceā€”her eyes, hidden under dark circles the size of plums, and the swelling distorting her soft features, stretching some, compressing others.

I donā€™t know how we got home, or when, but I remember that the mountain face glowed orange in the morning light. Once inside, I watched Tyler spit streams of crimson down the bathroom sink. His front teeth had smashed into the steering wheel and been displaced, so that they jutted backward toward the roof of his mouth.

Mother was laid on the sofa. She mumbled that the light hurt her eyes. We closed the blinds. She wanted to be in the basement, where there were no windows, so Dad carried her downstairs and I didnā€™t see her for several hours, not until that evening, when I used a dull flashlight to bring her dinner. When I saw her, I didnā€™t know her. Both eyes were a deep purple, so deep they looked black, and so swollen I couldnā€™t tell whether they were open or closed. She called me Audrey, even after I corrected her twice. ā€œThank you, Audrey, but just dark and quiet, thatā€™s fine. Dark. Quiet. Thank you. Come check on me again, Audrey, in a little while.ā€

Mother didnā€™t come out of the basement for a week. Every day the swelling worsened, the black bruises turned blacker. Every night I was sure her face was as marked and deformed as it was possible for a face to be, but every morning it was somehow darker, more tumid. After a week, when the sun went down, we turned off the lights and Mother came upstairs. She looked as if she had two objects strapped to her forehead, large as apples, black as olives.

There was never any more talk of a hospital. The moment for such a decision had passed, and to return to it would be to return to all the fury and fear of the accident itself. Dad said doctors couldnā€™t do anything for her anyhow. She was in Godā€™s hands.

In the coming months, Mother called me by many names. When she called me Audrey I didnā€™t worry, but it was troubling when we had conversations in which she referred to me as Luke or Tony, and in the family it has always been agreed, even by Mother herself, that sheā€™s never been quite the same since the accident. We kids called her Raccoon Eyes. We thought it was a great joke, once the black rings had been around for a few weeks, long enough for us to get used to them and make them the subject of jokes. We had no idea it was a medical term. Raccoon eyes. A sign of serious brain injury.

Tylerā€™s guilt was all-consuming. He blamed himself for the accident, then kept on blaming himself for every decision that was made thereafter, every repercussion, every reverberation that clanged down through the years. He laid claim to that moment and all its consequences, as if time itself had commenced the instant our station wagon left the road, and there was no history, no context, no agency of any kind until he began it, at the age of seventeen, by falling asleep at the wheel. Even now, when Mother forgets any detail, however trivial, that look comes into his eyesā€”the one he had in the moments after the collision, when blood poured from his own mouth as he took in the scene, raking his eyes over what he imagined to be the work of his hands and his hands only.

Me, I never blamed anyone for the accident, least of all Tyler. It was just one of those things. A decade later my understanding would shift, part of my heavy swing into adulthood, and after that the accident would always make me think of the Apache women, and of all the decisions that go into making a lifeā€”the choices people make, together and on their own, that combine to produce any single event. Grains of sand, incalculable, pressing into sediment, then rock.












The mountain thawed and the Princess appeared on its face, her head brushing the sky. It was Sunday, a month after the accident, and everyone had gathered in the living room. Dad had begun to expound a scripture when Tyler cleared his throat and said he was leaving.

ā€œIā€™m g-g-going to c-college,ā€ he said, his face rigid. A vein in his neck bulged as he forced the words out, appearing and disappearing every few seconds, a great, struggling snake.

Everyone looked at Dad. His expression was folded, impassive. The silence was worse than shouting.

Tyler would be the third of my brothers to leave home. My oldest brother, Tony, drove rigs, hauling gravel or scrap, trying to scrape together enough money to marry the girl down the road. Shawn, the next oldest, had quarreled with Dad a few months before and taken off. I hadnā€™t seen him since, though Mother got a hurried call every few weeks telling her he was fine, that he was welding or driving rigs. If Tyler left too, Dad wouldnā€™t have a crew, and without a crew he couldnā€™t build barns or hay sheds. He would have to fall back on scrapping.

ā€œWhatā€™s college?ā€ I said.

ā€œCollege is extra school for people too dumb to learn the first time around,ā€ Dad said. Tyler stared at the floor, his face tense. Then his shoulders dropped, his face relaxed and he looked up; it seemed to me that heā€™d stepped out of himself. His eyes were soft, pleasant. I couldnā€™t see him in there at all.

He listened to Dad, who settled into a lecture. ā€œThereā€™s two kinds of them college professors,ā€ Dad said. ā€œThose who know theyā€™re lying, and those who think theyā€™re telling the truth.ā€ Dad grinned. ā€œDonā€™t know which is worse, come to think of it, a bona fide agent of the Illuminati, who at least knows heā€™s on the devilā€™s payroll, or a high-minded professor who thinks his wisdom is greater than Godā€™s.ā€ He was still grinning. The situation wasnā€™t serious; he just needed to talk some sense into his son.

Mother said Dad was wasting his time, that nobody could talk Tyler out of anything once his mind was made up. ā€œYou may as well take a broom and start sweeping dirt off the mountain,ā€ she said. Then she stood, took a few moments to steady herself, and trudged downstairs.

She had a migraine. She nearly always had a migraine. She was still spending her days in the basement, coming upstairs only after the sun had gone down, and even then she rarely stayed more than an hour before the combination of noise and exertion made her head throb. I watched her slow, careful progress down the steps, her back bent, both hands gripping the rail, as if she were blind and had to feel her way. She waited for both feet to plant solidly on one step before reaching for the next. The swelling in her face was nearly gone, and she almost looked like herself again, except for the rings, which had gradually faded from black to dark purple, and were now a mix of lilac and raisin.

An hour later Dad was no longer grinning. Tyler had not repeated his wish to go to college, but he had not promised to stay, either. He was just sitting there, behind that vacant expression, riding it out. ā€œA man canā€™t make a living out of books and scraps of paper,ā€ Dad said. ā€œYouā€™re going to be the head of a family. How can you support a wife and children with books?ā€

Tyler tilted his head, showed he was listening, and said nothing.

ā€œA son of mine, standing in line to get brainwashed by socialists and Illuminati spiesā€”ā€

ā€œThe s-s-schoolā€™s run by the ch-ch-church,ā€ Tyler interrupted. ā€œHow b-bad can it b-be?ā€

Dadā€™s mouth flew open and a gust of air rushed out. ā€œYou donā€™t think the Illuminati have infiltrated the church?ā€ His voice was booming; every word reverberated with a powerful energy. ā€œYou donā€™t think the first place theyā€™d go is that school, where they can raise up a whole generation of socialist Mormons? I raised you better than that!ā€

I will always remember my father in this moment, the potency of him, and the desperation. He leans forward, jaw set, eyes narrow, searching his sonā€™s face for some sign of agreement, some crease of shared conviction. He doesnā€™t find it.

ā€”

THE STORY OF HOW TYLER decided to leave the mountain is a strange one, full of gaps and twists. It begins with Tyler himself, with the bizarre fact of him. It happens sometimes in families: one child who doesnā€™t fit, whose rhythm is off, whose meter is set to the wrong tune. In our family, that was Tyler. He was waltzing while the rest of us hopped a jig; he was deaf to the raucous music of our lives, and we were deaf to the serene polyphony of his.

Tyler liked books, he liked quiet. He liked organizing and arranging and labeling. Once, Mother found a whole shelf of matchboxes in his closet, stacked by year. Tyler said they contained his pencil shavings from the past five years, which he had collected to make fire starters for our ā€œhead for the hillsā€ bags. The rest of the house was pure confusion: piles of unwashed laundry, oily and black from the junkyard, littered the bedroom floors; in the kitchen, murky jars of tincture lined every table and cabinet, and these were only cleared away to make space for even messier projects, perhaps to skin a deer carcass or strip Cosmoline off a rifle. But in the heart of this chaos, Tyler had half a decadeā€™s pencil shavings, cataloged by year.

Are sens