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    Loon Lake

    Page 6
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      And this party of visitors were really romantic gangsters

      thieves, extortionists and murderers of the lower class

      and their women who might or might not be whores.

      The old man welcomed them warmly

      enjoying their responses to his camp

      admiring the women in their tight dresses and red lips

      relishing the having of them there so out of place

      at Loon Lake.

      The first morning of their visit

      he led everyone down the hill

      to give them rides in his biggest speedboat

      a long mahogany Chris-Craft with a powerful inboard

      that resonantly shook the water as she idled.

      He handed them each a woolen poncho with a hood

      and told them the ride was fast and cold

      but still they were not prepared when under way

      he opened up the throttle

      and the boat reared in the water like Buck Jones’ horse.

      The women shrieked and gripped the gangsters’ arms

      and spray stinging like ice coated their faces

      while the small flag at the stern snapped like a machine gun.

      And one of the men lipping an unlit cigarette

      felt it whipped away by the wind.

      He turned and saw it sail over the wake

      where a loon appeared from nowhere

      beaked it before it hit the water

      and rose back into the sky above the mountain.

      Annotate boat reared in the water like Buck Jones’ horse as follows: Buck Jones a cowboy movie star silents 1920s and talkies early 1930s. Others of this specie: Tom Mix, Tim McCoy, Big Boy Williams. Buck Jones’ horse palomino stallion named Silver. Others of this specie: Pal Feller Tony.

      The old man rode them around Loon Lake, its islands

      through channels where beaver had built their lodges

      and everything they saw the trees the mountains

      the water and even the land they couldn’t see under the water

      was what he owned. And then he brought them in throttling down

      and the boat was awash in a rush of foam

      like the outspread wings of a waterbird coming to rest.

      Two other mahogany boats of different lengths

      were berthed in the boathouse

      and racks of canoes and guide boats upside down

      and on walls paddles hanging from brackets

      and fishing rods and snowshoes for some strange reason

      and not a gangster there did not reflect

      how this dark boathouse with its canals

      and hollow-sounding deck floors

      was bigger than the home his family lived in

      when he was a kid, as big as the orphan’s home in fact.

      But one gangster wanted to know about the lake

      and its connecting lakes, the distance one could travel on them

      as if he was planning a fast getaway.

      Just disappearing around the corner out of sight

      was the boathouse attendant.

      And everyone walked up the hill for drinks and lunch.

      Drinks were at twelve-thirty and lunch at one-thirty

      after which, returning to their rooms,

      the guests found riding outfits laid across their beds

      and boots in their right sizes all new.

      At three they met each other at the stables

      laughing at each other and being laughed at

      and the stableman fitted them out with horses

      and the sensation was particularly giddy when the horses

      began to move without warning ignoring them up there in the saddle

      threatening to launch with each bounce like a paddle ball.

      And so each day the best gangster among them realized

      there would be something to do they could not do well.

      The unchecked walking horses made for the woods

      no one was in the lead, the old man was not there.

      They were alone on these horses who took this wide trail

      they seemed to know.

      They were busy maintaining themselves on the tops of these horses

      stepping with their plodding footfall through the soft earth

      of the wide trail.

      By and by proceeding gently downhill they came

      to another shore of the lake, of Loon Lake,

      and the trees were cut down here and the cold sun shone.

      They found themselves before an airplane hangar

      with a concrete ramp sloping into the water.

      As the horses stood there the hangar doors slid open

      there was a man pushing back each of the steel doors

      although they saw only his arm and hand and shoetops.

      And then from a gray cloud over the mountain

      beyond the far end of the lake an airplane appeared

      and made its descent in front of the mountain

      growing larger as it came toward them

      a green-and-white seaplane with a cowled engine and overhead wing.

      It landed in the water with barely a splash

      taxiing smartly with a feathery sound.

      The horses nickered and stirred, everyone held on

      and the lead gangster said whoa boy, whoa boy

      and the goddamn plane came right out of the water

      up the ramp, water falling from its pontoons

      the wheels in the pontoons leaving a wet track on the concrete

      and nosed up to the open hangar

      blowing up a cloud of dirt and noise.

      The engine was cut and the cabin door opened

      and putting her hands on the wing struts a woman jumped down

      a slim woman in trousers and a leather jacket and a silk scarf

      and a leather helmet which she removed showing light-brown hair cut close

      and she looked at them and nodded without smiling

      and that was the old man’s wife.

      Annotate old man’s wife as follows: Lucinda Bailey Bennett born 1896 Philadelphia PA. Father US Undersecretary of State Bangwin Channing under McKinley. Private tutoring in France and Switzerland. Miss Morris’ School for Young Women. Brearly. Long Island School of Aviation practicing stalls tailspins stalled glide half-roll snap roll slow roll rolling eight wingovers Immelmann loops. Winner First Woman’s Air Regatta Long Island New York to Palm Beach Florida 1921. Winner Single-Engine National Women’s Sprints 1922–1929. First woman to fly alone Long Island-Bermuda. Woman’s world record cross-country flight Long Island to San Diego 1932, twenty-seven hours sixteen minutes. First woman to fly alone Long Island to Newfoundland. Winner Chicago Air Meet 1931, 1932, 1933. Glenn Curtiss National Aviatrix Silver Cup 1934. Lindbergh Trophy 1935. Member President’s Commission on the Future of Aviation 1936. Honorary Member US Naval Air Patrol 1936. Lost on round-the-world flight over the Pacific 1937.

      She strode off down the trail toward the big house

      and they were not to see her again that day

      neither at drinks which were at six-thirty

      nor dinner at seven-thirty.

      But her husband was a gracious host

      attentive to the women particularly.

      He revealed that she was a famous aviatrix

      and some of them recognized her name from the newspapers.

      He spoke proudly of her accomplishments

      the races she won flying measured courses

      marked by towers with checkered windsocks

      and her endurance flights some of which

      were still the record for a woman.

      After dinner he talked vaguely of his life

      his regret that so much of it was business.

      He talked about the unrest in the country

      and the peculiar mood of the workers

      and he solicited the gangsters’ views over brandy

      on the likelihood of revolution.

      And now he said rising I’m going to
    retire.

      But you’re still young said one of the gangsters.

      For the night the old man said with a smile

      I mean I’m going to bed. Good night.

      And when he went up the stairs of halved tree trunks

      they all looked at each other and had nothing to say.

      They were standing where the old man had left them

      in their tuxes and black ties.

      They had stood when he stood the women had stood when he stood

      and quietly as they could they all went to their rooms,

      where the bedcovers had been turned back and the reading lamps lighted.

      And in the room of the best gangster there

      a slim and swarthy man with dark eyes, a short man

      very well put together

      there were doors leading to a screened porch

      and he opened them and stood on the dark porch

      and heard the night life of the forest and the lake

      and the splash of the fish terrifyingly removed from Loon Lake.

      He had long since run out of words

      for his sickening recognition of real class

      nervously insisting how swell it was.

      He turned back into the room.

      His girl was fingering the hand-embroidered initials

      in the center of the blanket.

      They were the same initials as on the bath towels

      and on the cigarette box filled with fresh Luckies

      and on the matchbooks and on the breast pockets of the pajamas

      of every size stocked in the drawers

      the same initials, the logo.

      Annotate reference the best gangster there as follows: Thomas Crapo alias Tommy the Emperor. Born Hoboken New Jersey 1905. Hoboken Consolidated Grade School 1917. New Jersey National Guard 1914–1917. Rainbow Division American Expeditionary Force 1917–1918. Saw action Chateau-Thierry. Victory Medal. Founder Brandywine Importing Company 1919. Board of Directors Inverness Distribution Company. Founding partner Boardwalk Amusement Company 1920. President Dance-a-dime Incorporated. Founder Crapo Industrial Services Incorporated, New York, Chicago, Detroit. Patron Boys Town, March of Dimes, Police Athletic League New York, Policeman’s Benevolent Society Chicago. Present whereabouts unknown.

      ——

      Annotate reference his girl as follows: Clara Lukaćs born 1918 Hell’s Kitchen New York. School of the Sisters of Poor Clare, expelled 1932. S.S. Kresge counter girl (notions) 1932–1934. Receptionist Lukaćs’ West 29th St Funeral Parlor 1934. Present whereabouts unknown.

      The gangster’s girl was eighteen

      and had had an abortion he knew nothing about.

      She found something to criticize, one thing,

      the single beds, and as she undressed

      raising her knees, slipping off her shoes

      unhooking her stockings from her garters

      she spoke of the bloodlessness of the rich not believing it

      while the gangster lay between the sheets in the initialed pajamas

      arranging himself under the covers so that they were neat and tight

      as if trying to take as little possession of the bed as possible

      not wanting to appear to himself to threaten anything.

      He locked his hands behind his head and ignored the girl

      and lay in the dark not even smoking.

      But at three that morning there was a terrible howl

      from the pack of wild dogs that ran in the mountains—

      not wolves but dogs that had reverted

      when their owners couldn’t feed them any longer.

      The old man had warned them this might happen

      but the girl crept into the bed of the gangster

      and he put his arm around her and held her

      so that she would not slip off the edge

      and they listened to the howling

      and then the sound nearer to the house

      of running dogs, of terrifying exertion

      and then something gushing

      in the gardens below the windows.

      And they heard the soft separation

      together with grunts and snorts and yelps

      of flesh as it is fanged and lifted from a body.

      Jesus, the girl said

      and the gangster felt her breath on his collarbone

      and smelled the gel in her hair, the sweetness of it,

      and felt the gathered dice of her shoulders

      and her shivering and her cold hand on his stomach

      underneath the waistband.

      In the morning they joined the old man

      on the sun terrace outside the dining room.

      Halfway down the hill a handyman pushing a wheelbarrow

      was just disappearing around a bend in the path.

      I hope you weren’t frightened, the old man said, they took a deer

      and he turned surprisingly young blue eyes on the best gangster’s girl.

      Later that morning she saw on the hills in the sun

      all around Lake Loon

      patches of color where the trees were turning

      and she went for a walk alone and in the woods she saw

      in the orange and yellowing leaves of deciduous trees

      the coming winter

      imagining in these high mountains

      snow falling like some astronomical disaster

      and Loon Lake as the white hole of a monstrous meteor

      and every branch of the evergreens all around

      described with snow, each twig each needle

      balancing a tiny snowfall precisely imitative of itself.

      And at dinner she wore her white satin gown

      with nothing underneath to ruin the lines.

      And the old man’s wife came to dinner this night

      clearly younger than her husband, trim and neat

      with small beautifully groomed hands and still young shoulders and neck

      but brackets at the corners of her mouth.

      She talked to them politely with no condescension

      and showed them in glass cases in the game room

      trophies of air races she had won

      small silver women pilots

      silver cups and silver planes on pedestals.

      Then still early in the evening she said good night

      and that she had enjoyed meeting them.

      They watched her go.

      And after the old man retired

      and all the gangsters and their women stood around

      in their black ties and tuxes and long gowns

      the best gangster’s girl saw a large Victrola in the corner

      of the big living room with its leather couches and

      grand fireplace

      the servants spirited away the coffee service

      and the gangster’s girl put on a record and commanded

      everyone to dance.

      And they danced to the Victrola music

      they felt better they did the fox trot

      and went to the liquor cabinet and broke open some Scotch

      and gin and they danced and smoked

      the old man’s cigarettes from the boxes on the tables

      and the only light came from the big fire

      and the women danced with one arm dangling holding empty glasses

      and the gangsters nuzzled their shoulders

      and their new shoes made slow sibilant rhythms

      on the polished floors

      as they danced in their tuxes and gowns of satin at Loon Lake

      at Loon Lake

      in the rich man’s camp

      in the mountains of the Adirondacks.

      He was a whistling wonder with his face and arms and legs in bandages and bandages crisscrossed like bandoliers across his chest. Every now and then they looked in on him with the same separation of themselves from the sight as rubes looking at the freaks. They all wore green.

      They told him the dog packs were well known in the region, several of them told him that
    , as if it were a consolation. He had difficulty speaking through his pain and swollen tissue, so that they could not be exactly sure what he thought of them and their fucking dogs.

      The elderly country doctor was eager to see what complication might set in to try him beyond the resources of his medicine.

      There were pills for the pain but I took as few as I could. It seemed important to me to stay awake, to know what was going on. Maybe I would come back. The room was damp. There was a small window high on the wall. I was in the basement of one of the log buildings I’d seen and it seemed to me not a very safe place to be. Also it was as bad as the original event to dream of it again drugged in a kind of dream prison and struggling for consciousness. Pain was better. It came in spasms and with the sharp point of imprinted teeth, it tore along in clawing sweeps down my chest and seemed sometimes to raise the bandages from the skin. I tried to consider it objectively, like a scientist sitting in a white coat looking through a microscope. Ahh, peering at each little cellpoint of pain. Remarkable!

      And since I was in pain, I thought of my mother and father. I thought of myself bedridden in Paterson. They look at me lying there flushed and wheezing, a boy impossibly exercised just by the act of living, and go off to work at their machines.

      A man looked in on me each morning and made a grunt of disgust or scorn just like my father had although heavyset not at all like my thin and gaunt father but in the same role, with the same wordless eloquence. He wore a kind of uniform of dark green shirt and matching pants.

     


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