Passages By Autumn Writer © Copyright 2006
"I hope that you remember that this was not my idea at all, Jeff."
"It will be okay, Barbara. Please, just let me keep my mind on the road."
He could feel it building, the familiar tension, as the Explorer crept forward on the snow-covered road. Throughout their twenty-nine years of married life she had always lashed out at him whenever stress arose for any reason. After all their years together he could foresee the warning signs in the far-off distance.
She sunk down in her seat, unsatisfied. She had delivered the first salvo, measuring the range and bearing. He had not fired back, just a half-hearted parry. She wanted to anger him so that she could cloak herself in justification. If he would strike back she could enjoy the dual roles of victim and assassin. Progress on the road was slow, so she would have more opportunities. She reloaded.
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Actually, the trip had been Jeff's idea. He had called Sid, a business contact and friend, early in November, asked him for the loan of his corporate cabin in the North Woods. It would be a chance for Jeff and Barbara to get away for a weekend. They would be alone together for three days. He wanted renewal, re-contact with her. They could do it ahead of Thanksgiving and the Christmas rush. Jeff and Barbara's business was important to Sid's, and he readily agreed. Sid and Jeff were buddies, anyway.
Jeff knew the way to the cabin because he had been there during the prior summer. Sid had hosted a golf outing at the Thendara course for his best customers. That had been a good time. Jeff thought the cabin might yield up another good time for Barbara and him. It was an impulsiveness that was unusual for him. The inspiration just wouldn't let go, so he grabbed the phone and made the call to Sid.
"Sure thing!" Sid yelled to him over the phone. "Help yourself to anything there that you find. There's a lot of canned and dried food. Just bring the perishables and dress warmly. There are a couple bottles of Canadian Club left from the golf outing. Just be sure to check the firewood, I can't remember what's left. You'll need it because there's no power in the cabin and it gets cold up there."
"Thanks, Sid. Do you think that there'll be any snow?"
"Probably only a dusting in November. If it does get heavy, don't go. You'll be deep in the woods and no one comes by at this time of year."
"Okay, no problem, Sid."
"I don't know what you're going to do all weekend. There's nothing happening up there in this season," Sid added after a pause. "Or, maybe I do know, after all."
"Hey, you dirty old man." Jeff and Sid laughed.
"Just don't sue me if you get her pregnant, Jeff! I'll send someone over with the keys"
They laughed again. Jeff thanked him and they hung up.
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As Jeff hung up the phone he felt good. The banter with Sid made him feel optimistic about the expedition. He and Barbara needed this respite, he thought. In September the last of their three children had gone off to college. Raising teenagers is stressful in any situation. Jason, their youngest, had been particularly difficult.
The recession following the 911 tragedy had been especially hard on the retail business that Jeff and Barbara owned together. It strained their finances and confidence in one another. For two long years the business struggled to recover. They repaired the business; it was healthy now. Jeff and Barbara were not going forget the hard times very soon.
Jeff was fifty-four, Barbara fifty-one. He had put on a few pounds, but not many. He looked very much like he had when he and Barbara got married, except that his hair was graying. He really didn't care about the gray, but kept fighting the battle of the waistline. She felt the signs of menopause approaching. She was not much heavier than her wedding day; perhaps with some slight shifting. Her dark hair was taking on a salt and pepper look.
Especially compared to others her age, she was still in good shape. To Jeff, it was a non-issue; he didn't care. He was satisfied that she did what she could to care for herself. She still looked good to him. He was glad that she did not color her hair. Barbara interpreted Jeff's lack of concern as indifference. She was self-conscious of her aging. She woke up one morning, looked in the mirror, and found that she was no longer a blushing maiden. It made her rage internally. Jeff sensed her displeasure, but misjudged the depth of her torment.
All of these factors had combined together to create an atmosphere that was unpleasant and tense. At times things would improve, but some issue would arise and they would revert back to the stifling limbo into which their lives had fallen. Neither of them understood their condition completely. They didn't discuss it for fear of opening wounds deeper. No one outside of themselves knew this, except for Barbara's mother, to whom Barbara confided all.
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In November, when the cold winds over Lake Ontario shift slightly, and the waters of the Lake are still warm and pregnant with moisture, the Adirondacks become a table. Nature sets a banquet with an impenetrable table cloth of snow, and a silver service of ice. The weather moves in fast, measured in feet, not inches; the cold measured in fingers and toes. On the menu are the unwary and unprepared; the wilderness devours them.
It was only after they had made the turn at Eagle Bay that Jeff realized that they were heading into trouble. They were a long way from any help. There was no choice except to keep going to the cabin at Big Moose before the weather stranded them. There, they would find shelter and food. Jeff said nothing to Barbara about this. The earlier barb had put him off, but he would not have done so, anyway. He would guide them through danger. Everything would turn out fine. He would not give up.
"And what were we going to do on this weekend getaway? Was it to be some sort of romantic rendezvous in the woods? Were we to prance around naked in the cabin with the hots for each other? We're not newlyweds, Jeff. You could have asked me. What would have been wrong with a nice hotel in the city? I haven't seen my parents in three months. No, here we are getting ready to freeze to death in the forest." As she spoke the words spat out of her like the hiss of a serpent. The aim of her second salvo had been precisely on target.
Jeff felt the bitter pall of smothered hope descending upon him. He banished any remaining hopes for their weekend retreat. Optimism and energy died in the sinking of his romantic plan. Only adrenalin, charged by the weather conditions, kept him moving steadily on.
Jeff absorbed the verbal assault. He kept his outward silence. Internally he answered her, "If they find us as frozen ice cubes, we won't be any colder than your cold heart right now." He felt shame at the thought. He could not despise her, but he was struggling to love her.
He spoke calmly, because he had to tell her of their situation.
"Barbara, there is hard weather moving in. If we don't make it to the cabin we're going to be in big trouble. I think we will make it. It's only three miles ahead. We'll find the passage. I know where it is. Please just work with me until then. I didn't know this was going to happen."
She fell silent. She had known the tone of voice that he had just used only a few times. Barbara knew it meant a serious situation. Fear evicted the sense of disgust and venom that had possessed her moments ago. Now, her husband seated next to her, erstwhile object of her contempt, was her lone vehicle for safety. She knew her husband, he was resourceful and tough. It was a difficult situation, but he could handle it. She just sat silently now, focusing on their situation.
She knew that she had gone too far, regretted her words. She just had to vent herself on him, but she asked herself why she had chosen him as her target. He was at the source of few of her troubles. Maybe it was the close range and that he had no camouflage that her keen senses couldn't penetrate. Perhaps the answer lay in the toughness that she had always known in him. He was one of the few people she knew that could take such a pounding. "He'll get over it", she assured herself. She didn't understand how deeply Jeff felt the pain. As high as the excitement of his inspired plan had crested him, it measured the depths that the apparent failure sank him.
"I let this happen every time," he said to himself. He was tired of high hopes coming to worse than nothing. This would be the last time, he resolved.
The narrow road had now become a path, just a passage in the snow. Barbara looked out over the reservoir. The snow fell too hard and densely to allow her see the opposite bank. Jeff had not exaggerated. This was the real thing.
The Explorer soldiered on. A sedan would have been out of service long ago, but another thirty minutes of marching brought them to a roadside gate.
"We're here. Reach back and get the boots and coats."
While she did so, he went on, "Leave the food here in the Explorer. It will act as a big refrigerator. We'll just bring in the clothes."
The Explorer couldn't get close to the cabin because of the snow. They stood outside the vehicle, loaded down with backpacks and suitcases. Atop a hill, about three hundred yards away stood the cabin, silent without light or smoke from the chimney. The snow had already risen to eighteen inches and covered any trails. A cut in the tangle of trees and shrubs indicated a route in. It was their passage to safety.
Plodding up the grade loaded with their gear wasn't easy, especially for her. She was never an "outdoor girl". The wind coming off the hill was against them. It drove snow into their faces. It was already deep. They could hardly see. The cold was gnawing at their resolve to save themselves. The cabin was so far away. She didn't know how they were going to make it. It might as well have been a mirage in the desert. She fell, covering herself with snow. Jeff helped her up.