Chapter 11

"You getting along OK?" Phil asked as they left the two-rut and headed up the spur to the North Country Trail.

"No problems," Judy said. "I've done this before."

"I mean, in general. I haven't seen you much since school."

"Phil, I'm just a farm wife with a sunburned nose, any more. With three kids and the field work, I stay busy."

"I mostly remember you from school. Things have sure changed."

Judy smiled. "I'm not the same person I was when I was in school, thank the good Lord," she said.

"Neither is your dad."

"He really hasn't changed much," she said. "He's just finally getting a chance to do what he wanted to do for years."

"Well, you're going to have to catch me up on all the Willow Lake gossip. Since the folks retired and moved to Florida, I don't get down that way much any more."

"Not a lot of gossip. Things don't change much in Willow Lake. What have you been doing with yourself? I know you were going with that girl from Spearfish Lake, but I don't think I ever knew her name."

"Still sort of going with her," Phil explained his relationship with Brandy, and how they rarely saw each other, and liked it that way. "I suppose it's kind of goofy," he summarized. "But we like it that way, and it's the only kind of relationship we could have with our jobs, anyway. Brandy's a sharp girl, and she's not the only sharp one that's come out of her family. Do you listen to Jenny Easton music?"

"Sure, I've got a couple of tapes of hers that I listen to out on the loader."

"She's Brandy's older sister."

"You're kidding!"

"No, I'm not. I've known her for years. I've got to admit, I'd been going with Brandy for months before I found out about it. I've gotten to be pretty good friends with her, and her . . . well, I can't exactly say boyfriend, Blake Walworth. You think Brandy and I have a wierd relationship, well . . ." He changed the subject; that was pretty much supposed to be a family secret, anyway; he wasn't sure even Josh and Tiffany knew the truth. "I don't exactly see them a lot of them. They travel almost as much as Brandy and I do, but we get together now and then, sometimes for family stuff, sometimes just to get together. Spearfish Lake is home base to them, like Brandy and me. Blake even comes out and works dogs with Josh once in a while, like I do. Remember that `Wonderful Winter World' TV show she did a while back, where she was driving a dogsled? This is the sled, and these are some of the dogs."

"Didn't see it," Judy said. "Ken and I don't watch a lot of TV."

"No problem, I'll send you a tape of it. We've got plenty. That was the first production she did on her own. Jenny actually doesn't drive a dogsled, but we made it look like she did. Just a second," he said, then raised his voice. "DAMN IT, CROSSTIE, MOVE YOUR LAZY ASS!" He dropped his voice and continued, "Damn dog is keeping a slack line, thinks she can get away with it with me mushing. We spent a couple of days taping the dogsled scenes. Brandy wasn't home, so I sort of got volunteered to be a dog handler. That was a real zoo."

"Why?"

"Like I said, Jenny doesn't drive a dogsled. You see the tape, it's like she's out on the trail by herself. Usually, there were a dozen people and three or four dog teams around, just mass confusion. Whenever you see a distant shot, where you can see the whole team, it's actually Tiffany driving the team, wearing a wig. Where it's a close shot, it's only two or three sets of dogs in front of her, and what you don't see is the second sled cut into the gangline, with Josh or Tiffany driving., outside the frame. It's all short cuts, so you can't tell. Actually, it would have been easier if she'd learned to do it, and she was willing, but her insurance company had a hairy fit. At that, all the music and singing is dubbed in, and I guess they had a hell of a time cutting and dubbing that bit where she's got Hobo Jim in the sled basket, playing the guitar, doing a duet on "Iditarod Trail". It was so cold that he couldn't keep it in tune, and he had to play the damn thing so it was looking like he was playing it when they dubbed it, and it was absolutely the most horrible sounding thing that you ever heard in your life. There were a lot of takes where he's actually playing the guitar with gloves on. CROSSTIE, GET MOVING! That was a scream! We only did about five clips that were actually recorded in the field. Fun to do once, but I'm glad I don't have to do that sort of thing for a living."

"I never figured it out of you, back when you were going with Alison," Judy snickered. "You two were always so, well, close."

"Best thing that ever happened to me, when Alison went to Western, and I went to Tech," Phil said. "We discovered that Alison didn't do well unless she was clinging to somebody, and it didn't take her a semester to get to clinging to someone else. Then, I got to going with Brandy, and discovered that I didn't need to have someone clinging to me. I haven't heard a thing about Alison in, oh, maybe five or six years."

"You'll have to come to the class reunion next spring," Judy said. "She'll probably be there, with I think her third husband."

"Has it been ten years already? Guess so. I'll be there if I'm in the country. Tell me about some of the other kids. You used to hang around with Lori, you know, that got married to Bob Watson."

"I see Lori a lot," Judy said. "Bob's brother Merle decided he wanted to drive truck full time, so Bob and Lori moved out to his dad's farm. We trade work back and forth a lot. Two kids, they're doing fine. I took her to the hospital and held her hand when she delivered the second one."

"What about the rest of the old crowd? I never get much contact with them any more. Say, Keith Worden?"

"Doing seven to ten for embezzlement."

That was a surprise. "I figured if he ever did time, it'd be for dealing drugs."

"So did I," Judy smirked.

"Jennifer Savage?"

"Don't know, and don't care."

Phil shrugged, even though Judith couldn't see him. "Well, can't say as I blame you." Jennifer had been, well, `predatory' would be the word to use if you had to sum her up in a word.

"Candy Howard?"

"Married some guy down in Camden, works in an office or something. Lori would know more about that than I would. Actually, with the exception of you, I guess that everybody turned out pretty normal. You sure didn't turn out like I expected."

"Well, neither did you," Phil replied.

"All I ever wanted was to be pretty normal," Judy said.

"Yeah, but you managed it. CROSSTIE, HIKE! HIKE! HIKE!" Phil glanced back over his shoulder; Norm was keeping up pretty good. Josh wasn't exactly setting a racing pace, with only five dogs. "What's the deal with your dad, anyway? I always figured he'd be at the farm center until he retired."

"He was at the farm center until he retired," Judy said. "They were cutting back, and they offered him an early retirement, and he took it. Then, he discovered that staying home with mom all day was driving him nuts. Grandpa used to have that cabin, and came up here hunting and stuff until he died, and Daddy decided to come up here and stay a while until he figured out what he wanted to do. I guess he hasn't figured it out, yet -- that was four years ago." That was really the shorthand version of the truth, Judy knew, but it was the version she used with anyone that asked.

"I'd heard about him from Josh and Tiffany, but I never figured that it was the same Norm Niven that I knew."

"The funny thing is that he really hasn't changed a lot," Judy said. "He has the time to do what he always wanted to do, and doesn't have the responsibilities that kept him from doing it. I sort of envy him that, in a way, but I'd be the one to go crazy if I wasn't doing something all the time. I learned that from Ken, I guess."

"Does he spend all the time out here?"

"Most of the time," Judy said. "He comes down to the farm once or twice a year, and Ken and I try to get up and see him now and then when the snow isn't on the ground. He likes it, and if it makes him happy, it makes me happy for him."

"It's still strange, how much things change in ten years," Phil said. "I mean, one thing just sort of naturally leads to the next, and after a while, you look back, and say, `How the hell did I get here?' Maybe it's like that for everybody."

"Could be," Judy said. The subject was boring her, and getting a little personal, to boot. It was time to change it. "How did you get to running dogsleds, anyway?"

"Just one of those things that sort of leads naturally to the next, but Spearfish Lake style. Back when he was in school, Josh used to hang around with Danny Evachevski -- that's Brandy's younger brother, so I got to know him a little then. That was about the time he was getting into running dogs. Well, I saw him every now and then for two or three years, and then when Brandy and I started hanging our hats here, sometimes I'd be here when Brandy wasn't, and it would be kind of boring. Well, Brandy's mom, Carrie, works with Tiffany's mom, and somehow or other, it wound up that I got to helping out with the dogs now and then, and it got me hooked, too."

"I can see how it could do that," Judy said, "I'd almost be tempted to give it a try."

"Well, Josh could start you off easy," Phil replied, then continued, "The only reason I'd want to leave my job is to have a team of my own, but Josh and Tiffany sort of let me borrow their teams once in a while, so I can get a fix. If they've got enough extra dogs, they're going to try to put together a team so I can run the Pound Puppies race this weekend. CROSSTIE! MOVE YOUR LAME CARCASS! It'll be mostly a scratch team, and running to give the dogs some exercise, but I don't mind. Someday, I'll have the time to have a team of my own, and I'll do better, then."

Their conversation continued for the next hour, mostly with Phil telling stories about his travels, punctured every few minutes by another verbal blister of Crosstie's fur. Each time he yelled at the dog, she'd pull for another few minutes, then start slacking off, until Phil caught her at it. Well, the Pound Puppies wasn't a whole lot longer than he'd wind up running the team today, so it probably wouldn't be that bad. Maybe if he let Crosstie know now that he wasn't going to let her give him any shit, it might go better on Saturday. After a while, they stopped near 919, to give the teams a rest, but it was a short one, as the sun was dropping fast, and they weren't equipped to run the dogs at night, this time.

They stopped again, on the trail just outside of Mark's place, to swap Baldwin and Crosstie again, and the sun had already set by that time, and the light was fading fast. By now, it wouldn't matter; the dogs knew where home was. Phil stopped quickly at Mark's, to help Judy out of the sled and into her truck; she said she'd meet the rest down at Josh's. Josh and Norm went on ahead, and were getting dogs picketed at their houses by the time Phil got there with the big team. Judy pulled the truck in a couple of minutes later, and helped where she could to put the dogs away. Even though she wasn't used to working with the dogs, she'd spent a day around them, and had learned a few things.

Right in the middle of the whole show, Tiffany pulled in after an extended after-school run with her team, so there were ten more dogs to care for. While Phil and Tiffany put her dogs away, Josh ran the water out to the barn enough for it to start running hot, and started mixing dog food for the teams. Josh and Tiffany were used to doing the chores by themselves, but having the extra hands was welcome, and soon they had the teams taken care of. As they finished up, Tiffany told them, "I'd better be getting home for supper, but I'll be back later."

"We'd better get going, too," Judy said, peeling off her snowmobile suit; it would be too warm for the truck; Norm pulled off his parka and overpants.

"Hang on a second," Phil said. "Josh, have you got an extra copy of `Wonderful Winter' we can give Judith? I've got plenty; I can make it up to you."

"Yeah, I've got to have one," Josh said. "I'll go get it."

"You don't have to do that," Judy said.

"My pleasure. Judith, Norm, it was good to see you again. A little surprising, under the circumstances, but good."

"Well, good to see you again, Phil," Judy said. "Except for Bob and Lori, and Ken, of course, I don't see much of the old crowd any more."

"I'd like to see Ken, again," Phil said. "I'll still be around this weekend, probably, unless I get a call. Bring him up with you, if you can."

"Not much chance of that," Judy said, throwing her snowmobile suit behind the seat of the truck, as Norm got in the other side. "Somebody's got to do chores. But you make it down for the reunion, if you can."

"I'll try, but the odds are I'll be out of the country someplace."

Josh came outside, carrying a copy of the video. It was a commercial copy that Jenny's production company had made up, still in its plastic wrapper. "I suppose Phil told you all about this," he said. "I still laugh when I see it. It looks so good on tape, and it was such a screwed up mess to make, but Jenny says they're all like that. We'll see about that; she's talking sequil this March."

"I'll try to get a chance to look at it," Judy promised. "Probably not tonight, but maybe tomorrow."

"Norm," Josh said. "I don't know when you're going to get back, but if nobody's here, your dogs will be here and the sled will be in the barn. I'll see that they get fed right with the other dogs."

"Thanks, Josh," Norm said. "I really appreciate it. I owe you one."

"Naw, I owe you one," Josh said, "For keeping the coffee hot when I'm out your way. Judy, you get up this way again, don't be a stranger."

In another minute, Josh and Phil were watching the pickup's taillights head down the road. "You know," Phil said conversationally, "There goes one of the people I admire most in this world."

"Norm?"

"Judith."

"What's the deal with her, anyway?" Josh asked. "All day, I thought she was just stove up a little, what with those crutches, but that's a hand controller she's got in the pickup."

"She'd be proud to hear you say that," Phil said. "She's the next thing to a paraplegic. Not quite; she still has a little use of her legs and hips, but not much."

"What happened?"

"She was in an accident when she was little, maybe seven or so. I don't really know too much about it; I was a class behind her at the time, but her brother was in my class, and he was killed. She was in a hospital for nearly a year, and she came back to school in a wheelchair. I don't think any of us kids realized it at the time, but she was in a lot of pain all the time. She was burned pretty bad on her back and legs, and she was a long time recovering. It was years before she could use crutches, even a little. Even in high school, she was a shy and pathetic little thing. I suppose we ignored her a lot, and never figured she'd amount to anything."

"You'd never even guess that, the way she acted today," Josh said. "What happened?"

"One of God's miracles," Phil said. Josh was a little surprised to hear him say that; Phil wasn't a religious guy. "She met the guy God made for her."

"Now, you're going to have to tell me this story," Josh said.

"I don't know most of it," Phil said. "The short version is that Ken offered to take her to the senior prom. I don't know if it was a bet, or a dare, or what, but he did. They worked out a way to sort of dance, and they had a good time. The story I heard was that she said that she wished she could ride a horse, but couldn't. Well, Ken took her out to the farm a couple days later. They had this big, gentle old mare, and he lifted her up on the mare's back, and she found out she could too ride a horse."

"So?"

"So, this is where it gets good," Phil said. "She was out dorking around behind the barn on this horse, and Ken's dad was working on a corn planter. Well, somehow, the corn planter fell on him, and crushed his knee. Judith and the horse were the only ones around to help. She got the horse over to him, slid off, got Chet's hand in the stirrup, and, this is the part that gets me. She crawled underneath the goddamn corn planter, got herself into a bench press position, gave a mighty heave like John Henry, lifted the thing off of Chet's knee, and held it there while she had the horse pull him clear. I was there when Ken's brother weighed it later. She cleaned 240 pounds, easy. There wasn't one of us at the farm center that could do it."

"Wow!"

"Josh, none of us knew she could do that. We all thought she was just a pathetic little kid. None of us -- even Judith -- dreamed that after all the physical therapy she'd been through, she was at least Brandy's equal in upper body strength, but you'd never guess it to look at her."

"Hard to believe."

"You think it's hard, it was even harder for those of us that knew her. I don't know a lot of the rest of the story, but she and Ken were like that after that happened. I don't know how to describe the rest of it, except that Ken discovered better than the rest of us, Judith too, that there was more to her than met the eye. And, more than anyone else, he had faith in her, and somehow he built up her faith in herself. A friend told me one time, that back in school, all she ever dreamed about was being a normal person. Well, by God, she made it. Just a normal, hard-working farm wife, level-headed, cheerful, a good neighbor. And, tougher than week-old pizza when she needs to be. She learned that the hard way, harder than you and I can dream."

Josh shook his head. "You never know, do you?"

"You never do." Phil agreed. "Sometimes you find the most interesting stuff in the most surprising places."

**********

Josh had some pasties in the freezer, leftovers from a batch he'd made up over the weekend, and he invited Phil to stay while he threw some in the oven. Though there were a few years of age differential, the two had become friends in their own right, and Phil caught Josh up on his recent travels, and Josh talked dogs and railroading. They were just finishing up when Tiffany walked in the door. "What was that all about when I got back?" she asked.

Josh explained the two trips out to Norm Niven's cabin. "That was his daughter?" Tiffany asked. "I should have stuck around a little longer. He's mentioned her before, and I'd like to have met her."

"She's good people," Josh said, without going into details. "We may get the chance again."

"I hope so," Tiffany said, and changed the subject. "What do you say we harness up and do a little night running?"

"We need to," Josh said. "We haven't given it as much practice this year as we should have, and it's a nice night for it. But, we've got something we need to iron out first." He went on to explain about putting together a team of pound puppies for Phil. "That means we've pretty well got to iron down at least that much of the lineup, so Phil can get out and work with them as a team at least once or twice. I figured on giving him Crosstie to lead, since that's the only pound puppy leader we've got, except George, and Crosstie definitely isn't going to Warsaw with me."

"You're going to run Alco in the lead for the race, then, I take it?"

"I about have to," Josh said, resolving to keep his discovery about Geep a secret, this close to the race, when Tiffany would become a rival. That little secret might pay off, somehow. "He ought to be able to do it. If he's a little flaky, I might double him with Switchstand, and drop Switchstand in Warsaw."

"Have you got your team figured out, yet?"

"Not all the way. Assuming everybody gets up Saturday morning and acts like they want to run, I do know I want all the diesel dogs, except maybe Morse. I'm still flipping a coin on her. Beyond that, there's a couple that I'm not going to take, so it may come down to seeing who wants to run Saturday."

"Well, I'm going to want George and the reindogs, expect probably not Vixen," Tiffany said. "So there's six."

"I figured I could give Signal and Scooter to Phil," Josh said. "I'm sort of figuring on Scooter for the Beargrease, so he could use the exercise. But that's the end of my Pound Puppies."

"If you count out George, all the pound puppies I've got left are Mongo, Pipeline, Hemp and Bingo," Tiffany said. "I'd more or less figured on taking Mongo to Warsaw, but I haven't made up my mind about the others, and whether or not I plan on taking Pipeline or Hemp, they're the first string backup. He could take Bingo, though."

"That's four."

"Well, I guess Hemp," Tiffany said. "Phil, I may have to switch him with Pipeline on you at the last minute."

Phil shrugged. "I don't mind. I just want to get out and screw around for a bit."

"You know," Josh said, "Another year, we may not even be able to get up enough pound puppies for the Pound Puppies race. Crosstie's pretty marginal, even now. If it weren't for the Beargrease coming up, it'd almost be easier to come up with ten dogs, and have you do the Warsaw Run."

"Yeah, but another year, we ought to have more running dogs," Tiffany commented. "Look, I've got to go to school tomorrow, Josh, and if we're going to get in any night training, we'd better get a move on."

"Any chance I could come with you?" Phil asked. "I don't get the chance to run at night very often."

"Don't see why not," Tiffany said. "Josh and I can run teams of ten, more or less the teams we want to take to Warsaw, and you can take the backup dogs and your pound puppies. Let's head down to the crossing, up the grade to the club, and come back on the trail. That's about a three-hour run, and about all the time I can take."

"Fine with me," Josh said, starting to pull on his Carhartts. "Let's give him Switchstand to lead with, though. Crosstie's been out to Norm's twice today, and that really is about enough for her. There's a couple other dogs that were out there twice that should really stay home, too."

It was well past fully dark, now, and it took a while to get three teams laid out. In the end, Tiffany and Josh would up with eight-dog teams, while Phil had 11 somewhat less first-line dogs. That would allow a fast pace, and still keep together. The moon was just coming up when they got the teams ready to go; each put on headlamps. "Tiffany, why don't you take point?" Josh suggested. "I'm not real sure about Switchstand in the dark, so I'll trail in case Phil runs into trouble. That'll give Alco a good trail to follow in the dark." It would also keep Tiffany far enough away, most of the time, that she wouldn't be able to see him working with Geep.

In the moonlight, they made good time out to the back of the airstrip, running without headlamps, but once they hit the trail spur, things were narrow and dark enough that they felt better with them on. Tiffany hawed her team up onto the trail, which they hadn't run on since the last snowstorm, except for Josh's short excursion earlier, so there was some trailbreaking to do, and George was the best leader for breaking trail. Still, it was slow going for the mile or so over to the rail grade crossing.

The rail grade was easy going. Josh hadn't known if Bud or his dad had run out to Warsaw recently -- in the winter, they sometimes took three or four days between trips. In the summer, when he was working, Josh spent what seemed like half his time running up and down the grade, usually running the twin SD-38s. Fortunately, his dad or Bud must have been up the line in the past couple of days, or at least since the storm, since the rails were bare, and there were mounds of snow on either side, where apron plows had pushed the snow back. Even if there weren't more snow in the next few days, Josh knew that Bud or his dad would make a run up the rails again, breaking trail for the first half of the race, then deadline the engines during the race. They'd also stop at the Spearfish River trestle, put snow fence across the track, and break the trail down to the low bridge on snowshoes and back up to the top of the grade. Hardly any dogs liked running over the trestle, and practice gave the locals an unfair advantage, so several years ago, Mark had taken some telephone poles, and with the help of Josh, a couple of other local dogsledders, and the railroad's construction crane, had built a low bridge the dogs couldn't object to alongside the trestle. Once again, Josh was glad he'd decided to become a railroader on the C&SL; if it weren't for the seasonal nature of his job, and the cooperation he got from Bud, his boss, running dogs except for maybe a few pound puppies, would be out of the question. Even now, Bud had him in a couple days a week in the winter, but Bud had promised that he wouldn't call Josh in until after the Michigan 200, unless something really critical broke that only Josh knew how to fix.

Once out on the grade, Tiffany picked up the pace and switched off her headlamp, to save the batteries, and Phil and Josh soon did, too. They ran like that for an hour or more, quietly running through the darkened woods. It was a quiet, mystical ride, with only the swoosh of the sled runners underneath them, and an occasional jingle of a harness strap striking a metal ring, an occasional few gentle words for the dogs, not loud enough for the other teams to hear, with the moonlight casting long, strange shadows down onto the darkened rail grade.

It seemed very quickly that they came up on the County Road 919 crossing. It was empty, no cars for miles, and the snowcovered road was hardly noticable as they passed over it. Not much farther up the tracks, though, they could see a single mercury vapor light through the trees to their left, and that told them they were reaching the turn point for the cutoff at West Turtle Lake.

The trail cutoff wasn't that easy to find; it was normally only used for the Pound Puppies races, where a mandatory half-hour stop was required at West Turtle Lake before heading back up to the north on an old two-rut and joining the North Country Trail about where Josh and Phil had left it, earlier. Tiffany switched on her headlamp, to help find the entrance to the cutoff, but she and George managed it without much difficulty. Phil didn't have much difficulty convincing Switchstand that they needed to be following the other team, and Josh's team followed almost without him thinking about it.

The club at West Turtle Lake seemed to be a good place to stop for a breather, themselves, for a rest, and for snacking the dogs. They stopped far enough apart that they were in contact with each other, but it wasn't easy to talk, and soon they were on their way again. Someone had been up the two-rut crossover on a snowmobile not long before, and that made the run to the top of the ridge easy, and shortly after that, they were back on the trail that they'd broken out earlier in the day.

Even though he'd been over it four times that day, in the moonlit night, it seemed a different place to Josh, now running without headlamp The moon gave enough light to see where he was going, and to warn him of any low-hanging sweepers that he'd have to duck. It wasn't difficult running, but reminded him that he'd see a lot of night running during the Beargrease, not all that far off, now. He was glad the dogs had this chance to get conditioned to it a little. Still, he was yawning a little after they recrossed 919, and ran the rest of the way back to the spur trail behind Mark and Jackie's farm.

From there on, it was easy, and they were soon back on the dog lot, putting the dogs away. Though it hadn't worked out the way he'd planned hours before, most of the dogs had about the training that he wanted them to have on this long day; he'd made a valuable discovery, and worked out a couple things, too. After this most enjoyable evening run, it all added up to a good day.

Tomorrow, except probably for the run out to Niven's, he and Tiffany would get to do it all over again.


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