Read The Snow Child: A Novel Online
Authors: Eowyn Ivey
“Yes. Garrett said it’s a husky, one that could be trained as a sled dog.”
“A dog? For Faina, you say?”
He seemed puzzled at first. Then he grinned broadly.
“A puppy!”
“You think this is a good idea?”
“Of course. She needs a friend.”
“But can she care for it?”
“Oh, she’ll manage fine. It’ll be good for her.”
“Are you sure?”
Jack must have noticed her anxious tone because he looked at her more closely.
“She’s lonesome, Mabel. You must see that. Pulled between here and there—uneasy in our home, all alone in the woods. I’ll bet she’s never even been around a happy-go-lucky pup.”
Mabel was tempted to explain her other reservations about Garrett and his peculiar behavior, but she couldn’t find the words to express them and knew she would sound fretful and silly.
When Faina knocked at the door later that evening, Jack, Mabel, and Garrett were on the floor with the puppy, tossing a knotted rag around the room. At the sound of the knock, Garrett stumbled to his feet.
Mabel opened the door and wondered if Faina would sprint away when she saw they had company, but the girl stood just inside the door without removing her hat and coat. When she saw Garrett, her eyes widened.
Here, child, Mabel said. Let me take your coat. Has it started snowing again?
Though Faina did not answer, she removed her hat and coat, her stare never leaving Garrett.
You remember Garrett, don’t you? Esther and George’s son? He was here earlier in the winter. He… well, he has brought you something.
Garrett had been holding the puppy by its leash, but now he slipped the rope from its neck. The puppy charged toward Faina, tail wagging, tongue flapping. The girl backed away, until she was pressed against the door and the puppy was jumping at her.
It’s all right, child. It’s only a puppy, Mabel said. And I’d say it’s already quite fond of you.
He won’t bite. I promise, Garrett said.
He knelt at Faina’s feet and put his hands on the dog to settle it.
See? He only wants to play. He’s young, just a few months old.
Garrett reached up, took Faina’s hand, and brought it down to the dog’s head.
There. You can pet him.
The puppy lapped at the girl’s fingers, and Faina giggled.
So, you like him? Garrett asked. Faina nodded, smiling, and letting the puppy lick her fingertips.
Because he’s for you.
The girl looked at Mabel, then back to Garrett, her brow furrowed.
That’s right. He’s yours, Garrett said. I know he’s not like your fox. I thought about trying to live-trap one for you, but then I thought a pup might be better.
Faina put her palms to the puppy’s cheeks, and the puppy leaned into her touch so that it seemed to be grinning.
You’ll have to feed it regularly, Jack spoke up for the first time. He stood with an amused expression and his arms folded. Just feed it whatever you’re eating, and it will do fine.
And I was thinking maybe you could sleep with him inside your coat, until he gets a little bigger, Garrett added.
Faina was still petting the dog in pure wonderment. Mabel expected her to say thank you or ask a question, but the girl was silent.
You don’t have to take the dog if you don’t want it.
Even as Mabel said this, she knew it was ridiculous. Faina would not leave without the dog.
You’ll have to think of a name, then, if he’s going to be yours, she said.
Faina nodded earnestly, like a child prepared to make any promise to keep her pet.
That’s a sled dog you’ve got there, you know, Faina, Jack said. He’ll carry a pack or pull a sled. And these dogs love the snow. He’ll go everywhere with you. Take him out in the yard, you’ll see what I mean.
Jack opened the door then, and the dog bounded out into the snow. Faina and Garrett followed, buttoning their coats as they ran. Jack closed the door after them and went to the
window to watch with Mabel. The cabin’s lantern light spilled outside, and near the trees she could see Garrett and Faina tossing snow at the puppy and running as it chased after them.
“So, you’re sure this is a good idea?” Mabel asked.
Jack nodded and squeezed her shoulders. She could see, though, that he was thinking of the dog, and she wasn’t certain that was what she had meant.
Over the next few weeks, Garrett and Faina and the puppy cavorted through the snow and trees outside their cabin. Often Garrett would come early in the day, usually with some excuse of bringing a jar of his mother’s jam or an ax handle he had mended for Jack. Then, inevitably, Faina and the dog would emerge from the forest. The girl’s blue eyes were alight with joy, yet Mabel was apprehensive. She tried to enjoy the afternoons when they all came indoors, the young dog sprawled beside the woodstove, Garrett and Faina eating pie at the kitchen table. This, too, had been part of a life she once hoped for herself—children dancing outside her window, children safe at her table. She tried, just as she had during harvest when she and Jack had worked together, to take every bit of pleasure from that moment, knowing it might not last.
Garrett soon hatched a plan to train the dog, and Mabel teased that this had been his motivation all along, to have a hand in raising a sled dog. He laughed but said he knew this pup was born for the snow. The next time he came, he brought a small wooden sled he had built and a harness he had fashioned out of rope and leather. Since the dog was far from full grown, he said, it would pull the sled empty. Mabel watched as the puppy charged toward the river, the sled bumping along behind it and Garrett and Faina running after. They were gone
for some time, long enough that Mabel began to worry. When Jack came in from the barn, she told him as much.
“They’re fine, Mabel. Those two children know these woods better than anyone I’ve ever met. Did you see that pup run? He’ll make Faina a fine dog.”
Garrett returned alone just before sunset. “Tomorrow we’re going to take the dog for a long run, up the river. We’re meeting here in the morning. Can I sleep in the barn for the night?”
“Sure,” Jack said. “Looks like you found her a good husky.”
“Yep. He’s a fast learner, and there’s nothing he wants to do more than work.”
“Tomorrow then? You’re going up the river for the day?” Mabel was wringing her hands like a grandmother, old and fussy.
The next morning, as she gave Garrett a lunch she had packed for the two of them, including a chunk of moose roast for the puppy, she could no longer keep her silence.
“Garrett, promise me something,” she spoke in a near whisper. Jack didn’t need to hear what she had to say.
“Sure. What?”
“Promise me you won’t build a fire?”
“A fire?”
“Yes. When you stop for your lunch or if you catch a chill. Promise me you won’t build a fire, even just a little one of twigs.”
“But why would…”
“This is important,” Mabel said, and she had to keep herself from reaching up and shaking the young man’s shoulders. “Promise me that you will never let Faina near any kind of fire.”
As her voice climbed, Jack glanced up from the paperwork he was reading at the kitchen table, but then, distracted, went back to it. Mabel quieted herself.
“I know it must sound like a strange request, but will you promise?”
Garrett looked down at her kindly, and for a moment she wanted to tell him the truth. Maybe she and Garrett could laugh at the improbability of it, and then it might never come to pass.
“I don’t understand, but I promise,” Garrett said earnestly. “And I would never let anything happen to Faina. You must know that.”
And in his face, she could see that he believed his own words.
T
he bear den was a gift Faina had given him deliberately and with some understanding of his heart. It took Garrett time to think of a gift of equal significance, and at first he worried the puppy was a mistake. He hadn’t foreseen that she would be frightened of it.
Weeks later, he was more confident in his choice. The puppy was thriving under her care, its black coat thick and shiny. It watched Faina closely with its one blue eye and one brown. When it thought she had disappeared, it would sit and wait somberly like a much older dog. When she reappeared, the pup leapt and yipped. She still hadn’t named it, but called it easily to her side with a whistle like a chickadee.
And Faina—she was transformed. Where she had been quiet and serious around Garrett, she now laughed and danced. She and the puppy would chase each other in tighter and tighter circles until the girl fell giggling to the snow and the puppy bounded on top of her. When she was on her feet again and had shaken the snow from her long hair, she sometimes took Garrett by an arm and pulled him through the trees as she ran after the puppy, and it was as if he were swimming through a snowy dream. In that dream, he sometimes even kissed her cool, dry lips.
Now, as they headed up the Wolverine River, sunlight flashed off the snow and every branch and dead leaf glittered with frost. The air stung Garrett’s lungs, and the exposed skin of his face burned in the cold. Until they began walking in earnest, his feet felt half frozen. Faina and the dog ran ahead and then waited for Garrett to catch up. When they stopped for lunch at a pile of driftwood logs, Garrett thought of starting a campfire to warm themselves but then remembered Mabel’s plea. They ate cold sandwiches from wax-paper wrapping and fed the puppy the bit of frozen moose roast.
We could head back now, Garrett suggested when they were finished eating.
No, just a little farther. Please?
So they continued north, sometimes crossing the frozen channels, other times weaving through the trees along the shore. The riverbed was blown clear of snow, and Garrett could see where the white-blue ice had buckled and froze into great swells and dips. In places he hesitated to walk the ice, but Faina beckoned him across. He believed in her, trusted she knew where it was rotten and sheared and where it was strong and clear as glass, and he always made it safely to her side.
As they came to a bend, Garrett realized this was the farthest he had ever traveled upriver. Around the curve the valley opened up, and in the distance spires of blue ice glowed. It was the river’s source—a glacier cradled between white mountains. From so many miles away, the craggy peaks of ice seemed to waver in the sunlight like a mirage, close and distant, real and unreal.