55 Miles to the Gas Pump by E. Annie Proulx
the short story, in its entirety; found on page 450, in the text
Rancher Croom in handmade boots and filthy hat, that walleyed
cattleman, stray hairs like curling fiddle string ends, that
warm-handed, quick-foot dancer on splintery boards or down the cellar
stairs to a rack of bottles of his own strange beer, yeasty, cloudy,
bursting out in garlands of foam, Rancher Croom at night galloping drunk
over the dark plain, turning off at a place he knows to arrive at a
canyon brink where he dismounts and looks down on tumbled rock, waits,
then steps out, parting the air with his last roar, sleeves surging up
windmill arms, jeans riding over boot tops, but before he hits he rises
again to the top of the cliff like a cork in a bucket of milk.
Mrs.
Croom on the roof with a saw cutting a hole into the attic where she
has not been for twelve years thanks to old Croom's padlocks and
warnings, whets to her desire, and the sweat flies as she exchanges the
saw for a chisel and hammer until a ragged slab of peak is free and she
can see inside: just as she thought: the corpses of Mr. Croom's
paramours - she recognizes them from their photographs in the paper:
MISSING WOMAN - some desiccated as jerky and much the same color, some
moldy from lying beneath roof leaks, and all of them used hard, covered
with tarry handprints, the marks of boot heels, some bright blue with
the remnants of paint used on the shutters years ago, one wrapped in
newspaper nipple to knee.
When you live a long way out you make your own fun.
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