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Jennifer Stevenson's "Solstice"
  
This story is about a small-time rocker full of
ambition and careful big plans. She lives for the day when she
can come up like thunder on the rest of the herd, so she's a
little stunned to find herself fighting with her boyfriend on the
night of the big gig, slamming out of his van and marching across
a frosty prairie outside Madison, Wisconsin, her guitar in her
hand and her hot, angry breath making her scarf all scummy with
ice crumbs as she curses him and her stupidity at coming so far
in his company. Why should she have to dump him tonight? Only a
doofus breaks up with her boyfriend in a moving vehicle. She vows
here and now to make a new start, while she is alone, nowhere,
storming across the empty fields, suspended between her humble
origins and her destiny. Under the colorless starlight she looks
to herself like a stick-drawing person, white parka, grey jeans,
black stubble, drawn but not yet painted. The ground is parched
for moisture, the loam frost-heaved, last summer's daisies and
black-eyed susans and sweet grass killed by frost and just now
crisp with it, though tomorrow under a pale sun they will warm up
enough to make her slip with every step, especially if she stays
mad enough to stomp all night long the way she is doing now. That
would mean spending the night in the fields, however, not, as she
would prefer, finding a road to follow to a roadside bar, not, as
she expects she must, sleeping in a barn next to some smelly cow.
She swears and stomps and swings her ax in the frozen air,
scattering sibilants (his name is Stassen, which is a good name
for hissing angrily) and gouting steam without regard to the
threat of the cold. Her name is Dawn.
Slip she does. She lands on
her bottom, her wind knocked out, and lies back in her parka
feeling the heat bleed out of her into the throbbing ground. What
a world of stars is up there, she thinks, fields and fields of
them, sheep for days. She remembers sheep pouring over the
Nebraska plains in galaxies, white on black. The land back home
is much flatter than this boggy, lumpy prairie, yet the sheep eat
these same stale grasses with their backs to the same stars.
These stars. A wave of vertigo swamps her. She sees the heavens
turn. This is how stars must feel, she imagines, opening her eyes
deliberately as they spin. So big, so slow. Only we frenetic
particles can't see how they run hump-rumped over the vast
prairie. We're moving much too fast.
Her fingers tingle. Way too
pissed off for my own good, she thinks, and calms instantly. She
has that sensible streak that lets her suddenly take command of
her emotions, letting go once they've done their work. She
smiles. That bum Stassen will stay mad for a week. She is at
peace. Still the ground throbs. She feels it through her whole
body. Good grief, what have I done to my ass?
It's slippery stone under
her, and she crawls cautiously to her hands and knees.
A mitten appears before her
face. She takes it without thinking and is hoisted upright.
"Hello?" A hearty
fat farm-wife complete with red mittens and stocking cap looks
her up and down. Dawn looks around for the sensible car that goes
with such biddies, or, hopeful thought, a farmhouse with yellow
light. Ah. There's the yellow light. She warms up again. "Lost?"
says the farm-wife.
"Half," says Dawn
ruefully. She picks up her instrument. No damage to the case,
good sign.
"On a night like this!"
says the other, and waits. Jolly potato-faced type. Dawn likes
her immediately. The stars light her with a strange clarity. It
is the sort of night when chance-met faces look dear and
familiar, and time plays tricks with memory. It's a nice face,
full of generosity. This dame is simply panting to do her a
kindness.
Dawn looks at the sky again.
The Pleiades totter and shiver like new lambs. She remembers the
gig she is supposed to play oh miles away by now with the
unforgivable Stassen, and is suddenly sad. "Darkest night of
the year," she says, checking her watch. "The longest,
too." Cold soaks into her again, chilling her bones.
The older woman beams.
"Righty-rooty! Hey? Can you play that? Tune for your
supper?" She beckons at the yellow light, as if it must come
to Dawn and not she to it.
Dawn picks up her feet
willingly. Her behind complains. "Well, if you don't mind.
I'm sort of stranded." Snatches of many voices distract her.
There's a party going on in there, and how warm and wonderful the
smells coming out! She shrugs apologetically. "I don't have
my amp with me."
"Don't fret. I'm sure
we can scrape something together," the old biddy says, and
stumps to the doorway. The walls are thick limestone, one of
those old hillside dairy barns, deep as a mine, done over inside
with the maximum of modern luxury. She pauses, blocking the
opening, her round face ashimmer now with candlelight, lamplight.
"If it's not imposing." She means it. "I'm not
dragging you into this."
Dawn can now hear music
ramping and stamping somewhere deeper, rockabilly with a coarse
metal twang. She brightens.
"No prob. I should--I'm
up for playing tonight anyway--"
All at once she cannot get
out any words to tell. She holds up the guitar as if the story of
her fight with Stassen is written on it. Down inside the house
somewhere a bass player is making the walls throb. She smiles.
Her hostess nods, again
delighted. With a broad red hand, she yanks the door shut. It
swings ponderously, made of stone as thick as the unhewn walls
and floor. The foyer closes up like an egg. She leads the way
toward the golden center.|
Dawn walks into the party.
She accepts a drink without thinking: glogg, hot and spicy, that
stings her mouth and fills her head. Her parka sheds cool air
like a chunk of dry ice. It's the host's birthday. Everyone is
dressed for winter, layers and layers of velvet and padded satin
and furs as for an Elizabethan snowball fight, although this
chintzy Midwestern winter has offered no snow yet, Dawn thinks,
remembering Decembers in Nebraska. She is introduced a few times,
handed off, kissed, introduced again, and brought at arm's length
like a bride (_Horrors child you are cold!_ with a giggle) to the
great table loaded and pouring forth welcoming smells.
The table stretches the dim
length of the room. What amazing bounty. Ribs, roast beef, roast
piglet, roast lamb, an astounding goose with a chicken in her
cavity, and a grouse inside of her, and a quail inside of her,
and far in the fragrant center a hard boiled egg with a gem in
the middle like a pomegranate seed, perfectly divided just this
minute by a grinning chef waving a whacking great cleaver. Glazed
fish, their scales picked out in jelly. Fish in cream, fish in
wine, red-fleshed fish shaved thin, smothered in capers and
heaped with grainy caviar. Hot vats of noodles Swedish style,
noodles with sauerbraten, noodles layered between pork chops,
noodles tossed in sesame paste and ginger and red hot peppers.
Fruits in and out of season: musk melon, honeydew, pears and
alligator pears, mangos, pineapple, a dozen kinds of apples:
golden green orange crimson scarlet blueblack and white and their
piebald miscegenations. Breads shaped like suns, breads studded
with raisins. Doubled buns steaming indecently, with butter
running in their crevices. Dawn isn't hungry yet but she clutches
her mug of glogg, grinning mistily.
She's looking for the music.
She can hear it but she can't find it. There are candles
everywhere. Some parts of the room are low-ceilinged and
high-cushioned, just right for kissing and gossip and splitting a
bottle. Some parts are ballroom-size. The floor slopes down, away
from the stone ceiling. Dawn trips a little, blames the drink.
The bass gongs through her blood, a fiddle skirls, the faraway
downbeat (alone of a tinny fusillade) cracks two glasses
touching, a false blow, ting! Not in this room. Nor the next.
Finally it occurs to her
that the sound is in the floor, and she takes her hiking boots
off and stands on the cold body of the stone, feeling the beat.
She bounces. "Yep." One step at a time she feels her
way to it?]-someone whirls by, pauses with a steaming pitcher,
and she says "Yep" again, holding out her mug. She
cocks her head to the faint lure. She is still zipped into her
parka and warm all through by now, but it feels delicious to
drink hot glogg, smell the icy breath of the night on her
shoulders, take a pheasanty kiss on the fly from a stranger in
spandex, and walk barefoot on the cold, cold stone floor letting
the music lead her by feel, one step at a time. She laughs,
giddy.
The room where the dancing
is going on is completely packed. She can barely see past the
backs of standees at the door. This song ends and the millwheel
of bodies turns, but there's no room for them to let her pass,
even if they were to notice her. Anxiety grips her. It's not my
party, she thinks, daunted, but. The drummer whacks into a noisy
backbeat, the fiddler lays a guttural double-stopped drone over
it, oh so he's electrified no wonder it's so darn loud, and the
bass lifts her clean off her feet like a church bell. Dawn can't
help herself. She touches the shoulder in front of her.
"Here." She
smiles, handing over her mug as if awarding a prize, and then
motions him aside, holding up her holstered guitar in the other
hand. Magic musician's password. It works. She thinks, Gotta play
for my supper, my hostess wishes, and is jostled and squeezed
(slower than a melon seed but with as much force) and finally
carried the last twelve feet, barefoot and laughing, over plumed
heads and winking jewels, to the stage.
The fiddler and bassist put
their equipment down and the drummer flails with renewed frenzy,
alone at last with three hundred merry-makers and a lot of things
to pound on. Her hostess appears. Over the battle noise she
shouts introductions, Dawn, fiddler, Dawn, bass player, Dawn,
host, which last is an incredibly thin man in yellow velvet, with
butter-colored hair and an eyeglass that catches every candle in
the room at once, so that Dawn can hardly stand to look at it.
He smiles at her as they
shake hands, such a frail hand. She is reminded of her first pet
rooster, just so chinless and gay, and awards him the
chicken-love at once. He is a vigorous dancer however and with
his lady puts up a hell of a fight, pursued foxhound-wise by the
remorseless drummer with a flying beat through false casts,
back-doublings, and sudden disappearances which Dawn finds
hysterically funny. Meanwhile the fiddler has rounded up some
cable and the bass player shows her how to jack into the floor,
good grief the whole stage is the sound system. Then they turn
their faces to the crowd and take up the cry.
Dawn touches her strings.
They are warmer than she is, much warmer than the wooden stage
floor. She bends her ear, trying to get a pitch, but it's no use
in this racket, may as well get a bang on. And she does.
They play oldies, things
they can count on everybody knowing. The fiddler seems to be from
another planet, all he can do is jam, but he's got the gift, and
nobody is more surprised than she when the bass signals the
opening for Proud Mary and suddenly that fiddleboy is _there_.
Dawn falls back and lets him do the lead guitar part. Different,
goofier, like it could turn any moment into something weird. Two
minutes later it does. She shrieks to the bass player:
"What the hell is
that he's doing?"
"Corelli chains,"
he shrieks back, and signals a break. Soon the two of them step
down and reluctantly the drummer follows. The fiddler stands
alone crooning out a swoony slow-dance to the swaying crowd.
Over white lightning on ice,
the bass player tells Dawn, "Really, really glad you're
here. I love this party. Never have to worry what to do with my
New Year's Eve," he says. He puts his tongue into her ear
and then withdraws it with a thoughtful expression. "But God
you need new tunes now and then. We get stuck." His accent
is funny, like a Welshman who's been to Australia on a slow boat
from Texas.
She puts one finger on his
wrist, as if taking his pulse. It feels silky. "Don't you
guys play other gigs together?"
"Nope," he says.
His eyes are a light speckled brown, like a wren's egg. Stassen's
are blue. The jerk, she thinks, and forgets him again. The bass
player says, "It's just me and the fiddle, really, and you
know what his tunes are like."
"Wherever did you find
him?"
"The missus finds,"
he shrugs. "It's staying power that counts. Shouldn't you
put some shoes on? This floor is freezing."
"I like to feel the
beat."
He kisses her, slips a piece
of ice between her lips. "You're all right."
Their host and hostess
appear. She looks if anything fatter and jollier. The host has
shrunk. Dawn can barely see him sideways. Curved at his wife's
ample side he is an old moon to her fullness, a sliver of yellow
velvet and butter-colored hair. She thinks with pain of her
rooster in his dotage, gone too old to mount hens and too scrawny
to eat.
The bass player shakes his
hand cheerfully.
"Ready, sir?"
"Ready!" her host
says gaily. The candles wink, dimmed, in his eyeglass. When he
puts his hand in Dawn's she is afraid to squeeze. What bones,
like a bird's. This close she can now appreciate his wistfully
sweet, pointy smile.
"I'm very glad you're
here. My wife tells me you're going to play for me tonight,"
the host says to her.
Moved she cannot say by
what, Dawn covers his hand in both of hers. "Staying power,"
she says, as for a toast.
He smiles tremulously,
repeating, "Staying power." Dawn's heart fills, heated.
The hostess leads him away.
The drummer whacks out a
marching summons. The party, sunk in place as if the air is
falling out of it, reinflates, bouncing. Dawn exchanges her grain
alcohol for water and puts away a quart, quick.
"Got a feeling this
one's going to be the marathon," she smiles at the bass
player, and he nods agreement, though he's still drinking booze.
He seems down.
Then they're back onstage.
For a ragged minute the four of them tussle over the next number:
is it to be one of the fiddler's embroidered jigs, or something
noisy and fast by the Spudboys voted in by the bass player, or
will Dawn and the drummer have their way with I'm So Glad? They
compromise, and in a few bars Dawn realizes she's in that lucky
lucky place a musician rarely finds, where four strangers are
making it up as they go along and it works. Her leg-bones begin
to tremble. Can we keep it up?
Confidently they turn from
one another as if hinged. They face the dancers. She feels their
agreement at her back, one organism making a wave of sound.
Floating in it, she concentrates on staying in that good place
where she knows what each of them will do for the next sixteen
bars. She finds that she has been watching the dance, which
gradually loses its air of a beehive at rush hour and shapes into
a beehive with something on its mind, look, there are the little
circles, now a line dance, ooh don't they look like they're
fucking, no, now she's going to kiss the next one, and around
they go! Together she and the fiddler sweep the circles into the
lap of the tireless drummer, who chops up the patterns so they
can make new. The bass player signs for a key change, one thumb
jerking up.
Their host and hostess sort
themselves out in the center, close to the bandstand. A little
clearing opens around them. They whirl and step, stamp and skank,
she bouncing rounder and rounder, her nostrils snorting like a
comic steam-engine in the cold air, he a mere sketch of himself,
a dancing, flickering stick puppet. Dawn remembers how his frail
cheery voice says, "Staying power," and an iron rod
forms in her backbone. All night, she vows, all night. She can.
She feels a change in the band, the others drop back, and she
lets the voice of her guitar slide free and soar, clawing its way
to the highest point of the ceiling, then juddering and hacking
its way down again, a jacob's ladder of bright sound fracturing
into splinters of one true thing.
On the dance floor at her
feet, her host falters. He stops, turns, as if the music has
disappeared suddenly and he cannot hear it. His eyeglass darkens.
It springs from his face and falls. A look of great tenderness
comes into his face. He topples into his wife's arms.
Dawn feels her own heart
falter, but her hands cannot stop. The iron rod in her backbone
will not dissolve. The dancers likewise cannot stop. They clear
the area round the motionless pair but the mass of spangled
velvet and feathers still shivers. They stamp, and all begin to
clap, clap, clap. The drummer pounds on. The bass player and the
fiddler have let their instruments down for Dawn's solo. Everyone
looks at her. Clap, clap, clap, clap, stamp, stamp, stamp, stamp.
Her ax wails of its own accord.
She looks at the couple in
the clearing. His face is half-sunk in his wife's great cloven
bosom. The old lady turns her face up, grief and pleading in her
eyes. Dawn panics. Her hands still. The drummer slows. His foot
twitches, thump. Thump. Thump. Thump. Thump. Each beat sounds
like the last. Thump.
The revelers clap and stamp.
They know what they want.
Dawn can't move.
The other musicians exchange
glances. The bass player hoists his Fender sorrowfully and,
stony-faced, hauls a slow minor chord out of it, one note at a
time. The drummer picks up behind him, brushing silver rain out
of his cymbals as if he is unconvinced that this tune has a
pulse.
It has, barely. The clapping
does not slow, but the bass can only seem to make half-speed. His
severe little tune telegraphs its ending almost as soon as it as
it has begun. He plunks his way across it like a mammoth
one-finger harpsichord all weepy with vibrato and an occasional
angry fuzz on the lowest notes, a drunk coming apart in the
middle of a sad song. On the last lugubrious drone the drummer
comes awake again, thump, pause, thump, while the fiddler looks
at Dawn and she looks back blindly over the clap, clap, clap,
stamp, stamp, stamp of the crowd swaying before them, all the
eager faces lit with anticipation. Her host lies wilted over his
wife's huge body. Clap, clap, stamp, stamp. Dawn feels she has
fallen among horrifying aliens. The fiddler nods and tucks his
chin.
His music is formless, a
whirling darkness full of flashing wings and sharp things you
might cut your hand on. For a while it sounds arabic, a
repetitive ululating cry like widow-prayer or a harlot calling
for a deeper thrust. The drummer makes up his own mind about that
one. Definitely sex. They have at it bump and grind, screwing the
downbeat with the single-minded smack of a headboard against the
wall. The fiddle double-stops, braids in threes, tangles,
rejoints itself. Turkey in the Straw pokes its head through.
Dawn takes a deep breath,
her first in hours it seems. Stamp, stamp, stamp, stamp, clap,
clap, clap, clap.
She thinks she knows what
she must do now. She leans over to the bass player and bellows
"Zarathustra!"
The fiddler overhears, loses
his course in that moment. His fiddle skids, ki-yi-ing like a
stepped-on dog. Startled, the drummer halts.
And the bass player, at a
glance from Dawn, lays down the bottom of the world's biggest
chord. It goes on and on, never louder, never fading. Dawn
breathes a prayer of thanks. She realizes now that the dancers
dare not stop. They clap and stomp over the bass drone, keeping
their part of the faith. She's pretty sure she remembers hers.
The fiddler sends his bow
skittering over the strings, a flight of bats. Ah, he does know
this. But the drum's the important part. She gathers the eyes of
the band, drummer, fiddler, bass. The bass note steps up
suddenly, a loud warning drone.
Dawn breaks in, one clear
trumpety crow-call rising tonic to dominant to octave. Gathers
their eyes. Crash! a crack of stringed lightning falls off to a
boding minor chord that fades, then swells hugely. The drummer
rolls over the skins of his biggest toms and whacks the thunder
out of them, boom-boom, boom-boom, boom, boom, boom, drawls it to
an impressive halt, a pause only. Her heart flies, oh thank god.
The bass player steps up the volume a notch and the floor seems
to rise under them, bearing them upward to the distant ceiling.
Dawn's guitar sings out again, and the answering lightning splits
the other way, into a major chord. Again the drummer carries them
across the bass drone, boom-boom, boom-boom, boom! Dawn can feel
the hairs parting from the back of her neck, lifting off her
forearms. The bass player doubles his string into octaves of
solid power. The floor rises again. Dawn repeats her summons,
this time as loud as the guitar will shout and, when the fiddle
screams in at last, they jam that chord straight into the
ceiling, through the floor, straight out the walls on every side.
The drummer goes nuts on his cymbals, his set, the stagefloor,
his toms, the cymbals again, and when Dawn lifts her chin and
points her guitar neck at the ceiling the three of them roar out
the last of that huge noise, and stop.
But the bass is hanging on,
still giving them the whole chord. Dawn turns with a dirty look.
He's grinning. She sees movement on the dance floor below. The
revelers set up a cheer and she looks down.
Her host is standing. His
wife is holding his hands. He beams at her. The revelers close in
around them, shouting and laughing, all their hands stretched to
touch him, and the thin man with butter-colored hair turns with
chicken steps, nodding to them all. Jauntily, he puts his glass
in his eye and it catches a thousand candles, throwing yellow
light everywhere at once.
Dawn blinks. The drummer
smacks into a backbeat, and the bass player keeps pretending he's
an organist for two bars, and Dawn's hands move over the strings
of their own accord into a Santana number. The dance floor
seethes. She can't stop laughing, or crying.
She doesn't remember the end
of the party. They play at least two more sets, rest, play again.
Out of the muzzy night she remembers how the bass player helps
find her hiking boots, remembers eating?]-god, eating everything,
and the way the fiddler tries to tell her in some language
certainly not English but not possibly anything else how
wonderful she is and how they must do this again next year, and
drinking eggnog "for the protein" the bass player says
seriously, how he laces her boots on for her wrong-foot-about and
makes her dance with him, and then a turn each with her host and
hostess, how the drummer puts her guitar into its case for her
and they all squeeze out the door together giggling and shoving
to stand on the bare prairie looking east at a pale, overcast
sky.
"Surely you want to see
the results of your handiwork," the bass player murmurs in
her ear, his arms wrapped round her from behind. They watch the
horizon redden, a thin line of color between the black earth and
the leaden sky.
Dawn notices they are alone
on the hillside. "Where'd everybody get to?"
The bass player nibbles her
ear. "When, not where. Speaking of which, have you a watch?"
She puts up her wrist, her eyes on the sunrise, clutching his arm
to her waist, feeling absurdly pleased. He says, "Ah,
digital, very good. The year and everything." This is
obviously the answer to a question that's been eating him all
night. He's very happy about it.
She giggles. "What
_are_ you talking about?" She twists to look into his face.
He kisses her sideways.
"What I'm talking about is, not only can you come back again
next year, but," another kiss, "_and, I_ can take you
home."
She glances back at the barn
door and finds instead an enormous boulder half-buried in the
hillside. No door, no windows. No barn. She shakes her head.
"God, am I drunk?"
The boulder reddens while
she watches. Gooseflesh ripples over her. The whole prairie
reddens. She shudders once, and looks back at the sunrise. "How
do I find it again?" she says, wondering.
"The missus finds us."
The sun flashes across the
curve of the planet like a thousand candles, shooting yellow
light everywhere at once. Then it disappears into the cloud
ceiling.
She turns around in the bass
player's arms and kisses him properly. "Are you real?"
she says, tangling her hands in the back of his coat.
"Of course I'm real,"
he says indignantly. "What's your name, anyway?"
She tells him.
  
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“Solstice”
In wealthy winter time she dwelleth
underground her husband waneth thin she waxeth round
and round
In wealthy winter time her music is
renowned for rhythm or for rhyme there is no richer
sound
In wealthy winter time she gilds the iron
ground and all her kin she welcomes in when blossom
pear and blossom lime are nowhere to be found
On wealthy winter's night she dwelleth
underground her kin therein do raise a din it is a
merry sound
On wealthy winter's night the hostess waxes
round and in his skin the host wanes thin from dancing
up and down
On wealthy winter's night she gilds the iron
ground and wassails in the year again that now is brown
and white and once was green and brown
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Copyroght reserved by the writer, Jennifer Stevenson.
Online rights to both the audio and text versions of this story
are exclusive to Green Man Review as per our
legally binding agreement with the author and may not be re-used
in any manner what-so-ever without the express written permission
of Jennifer Stevenson.


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