by Jim Bates
Ice Cold Spring Water
My doctor was at least half my age and very formal and
direct, which I liked. He sat next to me in his office and said, "I'm sorry,
Steve. The tumor is close to your hypothalamus. It's too dangerous for
surgery."
I got
the message. "How long?"
"Less
than a year."
He
talked some more, but I wasn't listening. A year to live. Two things immediately
came to mind: First off, I was going to keep the news to myself for as long as I
could. Second, I was going to go back to where I'd grown up. Back to Montana.
The
doctor's voice droned on but my mind was already in the mountains, deep in the
Stillwater River valley and my earliest memory, back to one summer day when I
was five and Mom and Ellen had taken those two men on a trail ride. I remembered
the four of them talking:
"We
could bottle it," one of them had said.
"Yeah,
we'd make a mint," the other added. Both men had taken a quick drink out of the
clear mountain stream. "We could call it Abahoochie Spring Water. That's what
the little lady called this place, didn't she?" They looked at each other,
grinning. "Has a nice ring to it."
Then
they turned and looked at the 'Little lady' and their smiles
withered.
My
mom's friend Ellen was a leather tough third generation Montana rancher. She
stared back at them and said, quietly, with a hint of a threat in her voice, "I
don't think so."
What
Mom and Ellen had thought was a simple sight-seeing trip had turned into much
more. The two soft looking men were not interested in taking a leisurely
horseback ride into the mountains. No. Instead, they were businessmen from
Minnesota on the hunt for new ways to make a quick buck. Like bottling spring
water.
"This
is my family's land," Ellen added. "I'm taking you both back down the mountain
right now. We don't want you coming back again. Ever."
Next to her, Mom nodded her head in agreement.
They were both deadly serious. The businessmen took one look at them and knew
arguing would get them nowhere. They were right. Mom and Ellen lead them away
and the spring stayed hidden to all but a few locals.
I
remembered the scene like it was yesterday. Now I had the itch to return. Bad.
A few
days after I'd left the doctor's office, I called my son to invite him along. He
said, "Sorry Dad. I've got a ton of work at the office. Tell you what, I'll ask
Benjamin."
My ten
year old grandson and I were as close as you could be. Benji didn't bat an eye.
I heard him in the background yell, "Tell Grandpa, yes!"
So
later that summer he and I drove west from Minnesota for two days to southern
Montana and the eastern slope of the Rocky Mountains, stopping at night at small
motels along the way. On the afternoon of the third day we parked at the trail
head of Boulder Canyon, shouldered our day packs and hiked the trail that lead
us into the Stillwater River valley. I wanted to show him Abahoochie Spring but
my brain tumor had muddled my memory. After an hour of searching, I couldn't
find it and I was getting frustrated. I'd been with Mom that day so many years
ago but I'd only been five or six at the time. A few years later we'd moved to
Omaha so she could take a teaching job and I'd never been back. Until
now.
I
stopped, took off my baseball cap, wiped my sweaty brow and looked around. In a
few moments, my agitation immediately vanished. "Man, I'd forgotten how
beautiful it is up here," I said to Benji, smiling, taking a moment to breathe
in the clean, sage scented mountain air.
"It
sure is." He stood next to me, in awe like me. This was the first time he'd ever
been in the mountains.
Overhead, a golden eagle soared. Nearby, the Stillwater River was
tumbling over boulders the size of compact cars, the rapids filling the air with
a roar that just about drowned out our voices. A windblown river mist settled
over us, cooling our skin. The valley was dotted with green pines and golden
leaved aspen. It had been carved out millions of years earlier by glaciers and
was surrounded by mountain peaks, the highest of which was Granite Peak, at over
ten-thousand feet the highest mountain in Montana. Even though it was late
August, there was still snow covering the top. Far up the side of the valley,
Woodbine Falls cascaded hundreds of feet in silent splendor. The entire scene
was breathtaking beyond belief, right down to the female moose and her calf we'd
come upon half an hour earlier during our climb to the spot where we now
stood.
Benji
took my hand. "Let's go, Grandpa."
He was
right. It was mid-afternoon and the sun set fast in the mountains. We had to get
a move on.
We
hiked for another hour or so, moving up away from the river and along the foot
of the mountain. "I'm pretty sure the spring was here somewhere," I said
stopping and gazing at the rocks, gravel and pine needles that covered the floor
of the forest we had begun walking through. Frankly, I was starting to curse my
lack of memory. I didn't see any indication of anything even remotely resembling
a spring. Nothing.
Benji
had a quicker eye than me. It took him less than a minute to find the
percolating stream about fifty feet further up ahead. "Here it is, Grandpa," he
called out, bending down and looking behind a some fallen logs stacked up
against a granite boulder. "Look."
I
hurried to him and there it was, bubbling out from the ground, framed by a few
small boulders, a crystal clear rivulet trickling along a narrow winding path on
its way to Woodbine Creek and then to the river.
Excited, he asked "Can I taste it?"
The
pristine water came right out of the ground and had no way of becoming
contaminated. "Sure," I said. "I'll join you."
I
crouched next to him and we cupped our hands and drank. As we did, it all came
back to me, how wonderful the spring water tasted, as cold and sweet and pure as
the mountain glaciers that produced it.
I turned to my grandson. "This will
be our secret," I told him. "Just the two of us, okay?"
He
smiled a smile as wide as the deep blue Montana sky above us. "You can trust me,
Grandpa."
I
hugged him. "I know I can."
On the
hike back, the shadows of aspens and pines lengthened as the sun set behind the
mountains. Benji put his hand on my arm to stop me and asked, "Grandpa, can we
come back here someday? I'd really like that."
I
didn't have the heart to tell him the truth. Instead, I smiled. "Sure," I said.
"Absolutely." Who knew? Maybe I'd still be alive next year and would be able to
fulfill his wish. After a day like today, I was willing to believe in anything,
even that I could live for a long, long time, no matter what the doctor
said.
"Next
time we'll explore further up the river. How's that sound?"
"Sounds good to me," he said.
We
hiked on, the aroma of sagebrush and pine needles filling our senses. We were
quiet, soaking up the scenery and letting the cool, fragrant mountain air drift
over us, working it's magic. Soon the peaceful trickling of Abahoochie Spring
faded into the background, lost to the wind whistling down the granite walls of
the canyon. Lost but never forgotten. By either of us.
About the author
Jim
lives in a small town twenty miles west of Minneapolis, Minnesota. His stories
have appeared online in CafeLit, The Writers' Cafe Magazine,
Cabinet of Heed, Paragraph Planet, Nailpolish Stories, Ariel Chart,
Potato Soup Journal, Literary Yard, Spillwords and The Drabble, and
in print publications: A Million Ways, Mused Literary Journal and Gleam Flash
Fiction Anthology #2. You can also check out his blog to see more: www.theviewfromlonglake.wordpress.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment