Written in Stone Read online




  WRITTEN

  in STONE

  ALSO BY PETER UNWIN

  FICTION

  The Rock Farmers (short stories)

  Nine Bells for a Man (novel)

  Life Without Death (short stories)

  Searching for Petronius Totem (novel)

  NON-FICTION

  The Wolf’s Head: Writing Lake Superior

  Hard Surface: In Search of the Canadian Road

  Canadian Folk: Portraits of Remarkable Lives

  POETRY

  When We Were Old

  WRITTEN

  in STONE

  a novel by

  PETER UNWIN

  Copyright © 2020 Peter Unwin

  This edition copyright © 2020 Cormorant Books Inc.

  This is a first edition.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, without the prior written consent of the publisher or a licence from The Canadian Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright). For an Access Copyright licence, visit www.accesscopyright.ca or call toll free 1.800.893.5777.

  The publisher gratefully acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council for its publishing program. We acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund (CBF) for our publishing activities, and the Government of Ontario through Ontario Creates, an agency of the Ontario Ministry of Culture, and the Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit Program.

  LIBRARY AND ARCHIVES CANADA CATALOGUING IN PUBLICATION

  Title: Written in stone / a novel by Peter Unwin.Names: Unwin, Peter, 1956– author.Identifiers: Canadiana (print) 20200238221 | Canadiana (ebook) 2020023823X | ISBN 9781770866003 (softcover) | ISBN 9781770866010 (html)

  Classification: LCC PS8591.N94 W75 2020 | DDC C813/.54—dc23

  Cover art and design: Angel Guerra, Archetype

  Interior text design: Tannice Goddard, tannicegdesigns.ca

  Printer: Friesens

  Printed and bound in Canada.

  CORMORANT BOOKS INC.

  260 SPADINA AVENUE, SUITE 502, TORONTO, ON M5T 2E4

  www.cormorantbooks.com

  To my family,

  Deborah, Dorothea and Alicia,

  for their crucial patience, love and support.

  Contents

  Postscript 1: Forever

  1 - The Canoeist

  2 - The Grand River

  3 - I Want to Marry You

  4 - West of Chapleau

  Postscript 2: The Bridge at Garden River

  5 - Domestics

  6 - Leaving Home

  7 - Joe Animal

  8 - Rendezvous

  9 - The Sleeping Giants

  Postscript 3: The Dark Soo

  10 - Kenora: The Fire

  11 - Loretta Ramsay

  12 - Affairs of the Heart

  13 - Arthur Gratton

  Postscript 4: Into the Mountains

  14 - Dressing Quickly

  15 - Apartment

  16 - End of the World

  Postscript 5: Road Kill

  17 - Erratic

  18 - There's Something Wrong With Your Water

  19 - Who are You?

  20 - Your Ex-Husband

  21 - Loretta Ramsay

  22 - Kettle Creek 1771

  23 - The Burning Church

  Postscript 6: Pit Stops

  24 - The News is the Only Thing in the World That Never Changes

  25 - The Returning

  26 - The Fact Checkers

  27 - Save Yourselves My Lambs and Lovelies

  28 - Turtle Island

  29 - Has the Fire Passed?

  30 - Embarking

  31 - In Other Developments

  32 - The Preparations

  33 - Dreamwork

  34 - Coldwell Penninsula

  35 - Waking Up

  36 - Quo Vadis

  37 - At Home

  38 - In Tears Let Us Smoke Together

  39 - The Commending

  Acknowledgements

  Landmarks

  Cover

  Copyright

  Start of Content

  Acknowledgments

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  *The page links in this ebook correspond to the page numbers in print edition 978-1-77086-600-3, ©2020 Peter Unwin.

  Everything must be made anew,

  and to your hands I commit this great work.

  AS TOLD TO SHAW-SHAW-WA-BE-NA-SE,JOHN TANNER, 1799

  POSTSCRIPT 1: FOREVER

  HER HUSBAND’S VAN STOOD IN the driveway waiting for her. She’d always thought of it that way, his van, Paul’s van, a crepuscular Volkswagen Westfalia of hippy pedigree like him. Of late, it was listing to the passenger side rather like her she thought and now it shipped water when it rained hard. The vehicle had always been entirely faithful to her. It took the metal key at once, even aggressively, the way a snapping turtle had taken a stick out of her hand years ago on a trail with Paul, demanding it, claiming it as its own. That’s my stick, she’d said, but she knew better than to fool with a snapper and gave it up.

  Turning over the ignition she backed away from the house, out from under the church, with its shining new roof vaulting toward heaven, finally re-built now after the fire. Up the street onto the bridge above the Canadian Pacific train lines, turning off by the old industrial section where the Cadbury factory made the chocolate, past the baseball diamond and the high fencing where the multiple train lines ran off into a flickering haze of green and red signal lights, and beyond them to the Arctic, or so it felt like. From the factory the smell of melted chocolate poured in the windows. She steered down a close residential street glossy with recent rain, up Caledonia Avenue, forever it seemed, until the malls were reached, and coffee places, squat brutal buildings, warehouses the size of prisons, empty lots where trucks waited sulking in the dark shadows like bulls steaming from their dark and open nostrils.

  Eventually she was out of the city and into an intermediate zone without men or women, no children at all, or even animals. Not even the darkest of birds tore the sky. Only vehicles and lights. By the time she reached the rock cuts and the pines, the rain had left a black skin on the highway and the odour of earthworms permeated the van. She glanced down at the dash and the Blaupunkt radio that had not worked in several years. Without thinking, she turned it on and was greeted at once by the cough of static and white hysteria. After several moments of that peculiar song she snapped it off, only to have the black knob come away in her fingers. Marvelous, she thought. Absently she reattached it to the metal spar while the incoming road filled the windshield, the road signs flying past her, as she read every one: a long habit established as a girl during the terse car rides of her childhood, her parents forever disputatious and fighting in the front seat, her in the back, alone, barricaded by books.

  Dokis First Nation …

  Waubaushene …

  Soon came the waters of the Magnetawan River, the once-great sturgeon waters, the sloppy shore banks where swooped the mighty kingfisher, places that existed without corruption if only for the sound of their names, Wiikwemikoong and Shining Tree. The French River, black and quiet, trundling forever west, briefly underneath her like a sullen crouching beast, then gone. So many had come and passed and returned on that river. Champlain, the old bird watcher. Brébeuf, who could make it rain, and other schoolroom names. Brûlé who was eaten. She knew so much of it, had read so much of it. It was her father’s fault. Him and his Dictionary of Canadian Biography. The man had given her an additional volume each year, sometimes two, with its yellow creamy covers and the red foxing on the pages like clusters of tiny veins. He had given her history. “It’s history,” he said, and handed it to her. He told her that. “History. You can’t live without it,” he said smiling. She had them still. Every one. Her father, however, was gone. Everything real happened in those books. Only there. Nowhere else. Brûlé was boiled and eaten there. What a little prick he was. She imagined a hunk of his obscene body held to the lips like side dishes in a Greek restaurant on the Danforth. Maybe it tasted like chicken? Everything tasted like chicken, they said. Perhaps Paul. She wondered if her husband tasted like that. She wondered, not for the first time, what sort of a sick woman she was.

  The river was gone, far behind her, and had been replaced by another, also gone. And another. Now every
few miles the railway intersected the highway and the long trains slanted against the green land, rolling with dignity through the vast swamps from which rose a primal fog. Their black sooty sides showed graffiti brought back from the city blazing with purple swashes, weirdly angular, festooned with coloured and unfathomable tags. The painted language of urban tribes.

  Wabagishik, White Cedar …

  The sign bolted by her …

  Land Of Whispering Pines, another insisted soothingly. But she didn’t believe it.

  On her right side a donut place shone with neon signage, the parking lot crowded with cars like cows jostling at a salt lick. She spotted more than a few white surgical masks on the people getting into the cars or getting out. Fewer than before, she thought. People were taking their masks off. A few of them.

  For the first time, she allowed herself to glance at the oblong tablet that vibrated on the passenger seat beside her; the dented, gold-coloured tin that once held a bottle of Aberlour twelve-year-old single malt scotch. She turned her eyes away from it immediately. Then the great rocks were directly on top of her, their veined and scarred faces painted with declarations of love. Eddie loves Liz always/99. Brand new, she realized, the paint still fresh and red. So many declarations of love had been written on those stone faces that flashed by the windows of a million cars. She didn’t want to see them. She didn’t want to look upon the passionate pictographs of the very young. She wasn’t passionate any longer. She wasn’t particularly young anymore, not in any zway that mattered. She had no idea what she was, except that she was someone who didn’t want to be exposed to a foolish love that had no awareness of anything except its own selfish certainty. Jen and Dave, their union circled in a red woozy heart. Where were they now? Jen and Dave with their woozy red hearts? High up on a remote rock face she saw that someone had ungraciously painted I love Phat Chicks.

  Five minutes later, the writing that she knew was coming — the writing she had no desire to see — appeared in front of her. The words, the characters, that Paul had painted years ago with a can of red lacquer and a barbecue sauce applicator employed as a paintbrush. The rock was four billion years old. He had insisted on that. Four billion. As many years as there were loves. Paul loves Linda he’d written in red and, then, appraising his work and her, he said, “Paul loves Linda. Forever? Or for a while? You decide.”

  “For fifty bucks?” she’d answered saucily.

  He frowned at her and wrote forever.

  1

  THE CANOEIST

  They are a small race of people who talk fast.

  CHIEF NORMA FOX, COCKBURN ISLAND, CIRCA 1985

  SHE MET THE MAN A million years ago at a time when she was sleeping with men who practised yoga and wore beards that were not convincing. She had just finished a tetchy major research paper, “The Function of the Interior Vocabulary in the Works of Malcolm Lowry,” and, as a master, or rather a mistress of the arts, she slipped easily into a bohemian half-world of theatre, ritual, and drinking too much. At the time she was living the unregulated life of her body, the El Mocambo on a Friday night, lines of cocaine vanishing off the sink in the bathroom, wearing black tights, ankle bracelets, and heels. There were nights she arrived with Pete, danced with Tony, got felt up by Leonard, smoked a joint with Perry, and finally went home with Phil. It was easy. Men were easy.