The pure water of Elk River runs turning and leaping down the ancient rocks of Avery County like the last deer wild of the woods flees, not touching a rock or tussock of dark earth, rich with the promise of the new year beneath the slanting rains of spring that soften even the hardest heart. In the turning of the year
of 1940, the people of the valleys of the mountains, in the thin air near to a mile high, waited for the rain to end, so they could clear boggy patches of cabbage and feed shower-pale cattle. But they did not know the land itself was full, saturated as the lightest heart takes love, deep as the rocks of Brown’s Mill Pond, across Proffitt’s Knob, not seven miles as the shrew tunnels, but a life away. The people waited in the
imperfect shelter of roofs, under cedar shakes and bent rafters until they heard the roaring sky river and felt the earth move as a coiled panther, stretching its buried spine and leaping until it cleared itself of all pretense, twisting around the house-high boulders above cabins that had stood for two-hundred years, shaking itself like a wet cat, shuddering mud and trees down sharp hollows. The breath
of this storm from far oceans swept houses clean as the trees of autumn, without the deep colors of death, and wrenched timbers and windows from their places to settle in new ravines where the mud, like a mouth of earth, ate them, leaving only splinters of people to marvel at the new slopes scented with the breath of far, salt seas.. The few who could speak of this had no words, but quietly collected the infant who had been buried head-deep in the spoilings and the father swept three miles to Cranberry where he was found draped on the plank of a bridge just lacking a pipe and rocking chair to make him a home. Others were broken and
battered like the gneiss and granite boulders new to light among the soft droppings of earth black as the mountain’s heart. They took them on trucks to Boone, wading waist-deep roads turned suddenly to streams and battling passages through hells of laurel and hemlock as if the land wanted them too early for its new dust and felt cheated of their flesh. The few were saved, tortured by scars, and returned to the hills as deer to the beds they know, twisting themselves in a coil of familiar sleep, and planting cabbage shoots among rows of corn with snap-beans set to climb the stalks, but the children of children of the land, remembering the fickleness of the beast inside, straining to get out, left the stale hills for jobs in flat cities, returning to dig trenches they filled with gravel and perforated black pipes in the illusion that they could control the meandering of water, the presence of earth, the dark certainty of death.