Presence ^^^^^^^^ "There are people who come around here and they bring butterflies with 'em." Jeremy fought his lungs to keep the smoke in as he spoke. "What?" Dez laughed as she received the smoldering glass pipe. "Like, pets? The butterflies are their pets, er, what are you talking about?" Dez took her hit and passed the piece to Erin, who hastily drew in a lungful and passed it on to Bert. "No, they're like, well, I guess maybe they're pets, I don't know. They come and stay for a few days and a ton of butterflies always show up. That's their thing, you see?" Jeremy's explanation had the stranded friends giddy with confused laughter. "What do you mean that's their thing? How do you get into butterflies in the first place?" Bert chuckled as he stoked the fire in the stove with an old cast iron poker. The heat from the lemony flames was intense on his face. Times like these were what it's all about, he thought as he reclined eagerly back into the dusty tweed couch. "It's this couple, and sometimes a companion or two, but they come every now and then. They go up the creek just past that Indian plot, where that RV is, and they put up this dome. And the butterflies just come. I mean swarms of them." Jeremy knocked out the ash from the bowl of the pipe and began reloading it from a large bag of buds in his lap. Jeremy was the caretaker of the Springs, and had invited Dez and the boys to come up and stay while the rest of the staff was on vacation in Brazil. Of course, their stay was off the record. They had come up the weekend before with a half-dozen other friends. Everyone with a job or somewhere to be drove back down into the valley, leaving Dez, Bert, and Erin behind. The plan was for Jack and Rae to come back up with supplies after a couple of days. But no one returned. The night after everyone left, a heavy snowstorm blew through, knocking out the power and closing all the narrow mountain roads for miles. Jeremey had brought over a bag of frozen french fries along with some other staples like pre-packaged oatmeal. He gave the band a key to the wood shed and a whell barrow to haul firewood back to their cabin. However much they needed. "So they summon the butterflies, is that it? With this dome? They don't actually bring them then, as pets at least" Dez plucked on Erin's unplugged Telecaster, daydreaming about the kind of power one must have to summon butterflies--the kind of self-discipline it must require. This whole place was filled with mystery for her. She had first come up with her brother Rae the previous fall to visit the sweathouse. She had experienced her first deep and sustained meditation then. The Springs was an old resort, built in the 40s among the cedars and pines of a narrow creek canyon, right on top of a very rich mineral spring. There were a dozen old cabins and a lodge connected by wooden footbridges spanning the creekbed of serpentine and granite boulders. The mineral springs were sacred ground for several local religious groups. Pilgrims and peace-seekers sought the Springs as a rare haven. The nearest settlement was 20 miles by car through a single lane of winding dirt road. There were no neighbors; no through traffic. "What's special about this dome?" Bert asked. "What's it made out of?" "Well that's the other weird thing about this. You're not gonna believe it, though." Jeremey passed the freshly loaded pipe to Dez, who, feeling somewhat honored to receive the green hit, laid the guitar down across her lap and leaned forward in her seat as if to express a lack of doubt in Jeremy's tale. "Crystal. Crystal and cast iron." Dez glanced at the ceiling for a moment, imagining what such a structure would look like, how it would be built. She lit a corner of the bowl and watched the sticky herb bubble under the flame. Jeremy had surprised her with a little hash. In a coughing fit, Dez stumbled into the unlit kitchen for a glass of water. "Crystal? How big is this fucking thing? They haul that all in here?" Bert rejoined skeptically, partly in disbelief, and partly just to stoke the flames of their host's mysterious anecdote. "They backpack in," Jeremy replied, grinning with wild firelit eyes. "Probably hitchhike, but all they have with them is their gear. No domes, for sure." Jeremy sparked his lighter and held the flame near the hash, puffing heartily on the pipe until it began to smolder. He drew in a lungful and held out the piece to Erin. "I'm good, I think I'm gonna crash actually." Erin stood up without emerging from his burrow of blankets and started for the bedroom. "Why don't you just sleep in here by the fire?" Dez asked in a coarse voice as she returned from the kitchen. Her throat was hot with spicy tar. "It's cold as fuck in there, and dark." "I'll be alright. Just wanna get some sleep." The crew said goodnight, and Erin disappeared into the void beyond the bedroom doorway. He felt for the edge of the creaky old bed and climbed in. He was eager for the morning and for this all to be over. Unlike Dez and Bert, he had not enjoyed the past three days stranded at the Springs. Erin had expected this trip to the Springs to be their chance to produce some material for their debut album, which he expected to be a hit. It had to be. He lugged along his entire home studio--computer, interface, keyboard, monitors, guitars, microphones. The day the rest of the crew left, he had stayed behind while Dez and Bert hiked up the creek and then up to the snow-capped peak of its mountain shoulder. While Bert and Dez descended the mountain to beat the unexpected snow storm to the cabin, Erin was oblivious of the weather and the world outside his impromptu studio. He had spent the weekend working on making hits, emerging only to smoke and eat. Once the power cut out, the cabin was nothing but a cold and dusty prison of boredum. He was a victim of his company, he felt. They should be doing everything they can to get the demo together, but here they were wasting time in the woods. He was bitter at the fact that Dez and Bert had enjoyed themselves so much. Their enjoyment was a lack of dedication to the band, he concluded. The sound of their jovial conversation in the next room spun his busy thoughts further into spiteful rationalizations of his misery's cause. "So where does this dome come from then? Is it big?" Dez took Erin's place beside the stove, and noticed how much the heat radiated from the thick, old iron. She thought maybe that's why Erin had insulated himself within so many blankets. "Ya know the gazebo thing out on the footbridge? It's about that size. You can go inside of it." "Have you been inside?" Bert asked before promptly hitting and passing the pipe to prevent the hash from burning itself out. "I have." Jeremy gazed out of the window to his right a moment, realizing that the dying fire had made the stars and silhouettes of towering cedars against them visible. He started to get up to tend the fire, but Bert was already stirring the coals. He threw on another piece of splintery pine, and soon the world collapsed again around the walls of the small sitting room. "There's this other guy who lives down in town, he comes up here every once in a while. He's some kind of homeopath or spiritual healer or something. But he claims he's from the future." "Wait wait wait, I'm still on the dome thing," Dez said. "What's inside? What's it for?" "Butterflies. Swarms of them. Just hanging out all in there, in and around it. Fluttering around. They say the butterflies just follow them wherever they go. The dome attracts them they say." Dez took her turn of the pipe. "But where does the dome come from? That's the thing." "They told me it just appears. Like it was already there. Well, what they actually said was that it comes for the butterflies. It's some kind of healing thing, I think. They used to camp where this old Indian guy lived, in that camper that's up the creek. He used to be really sick, that's why he came up here apparently. I don't know how they knew each other. But he's not around anymore. I haven't seen him or the butterfly people up here for a while now. Nobody has. I went to check on him a while back and there was no one there. The door was unlocked, and all of his stuff was inside, undisturbed. He might be camping out somewhere up the creek, I guess. But if he is he hasn't been lighting any fires. I keep an eye out for campfire smoke, but so far, no signs of him." Dez and Bert were suddenly a little spooked by the dark edges of the room. The mystery of the story inspired an exciting kind of fear in them, causing them to shudder against its electricity. Dez picked up the guitar again. She felt vulnerable in the seat facing the curtainless window behind Jeremy. "Maybe that mountain lion got 'em," said Dez. "Nearly got us." The day of the storm, Dez and Bert had discovered large cougar tracks in the snow next to their own as they descended from the peak. The spotting hastened their already quickened pace, having seen the massive storm blowing in from the summit. "Maybe the mountain lion was him," Jeremy half-joked. "Well him or not, he must have stalked us up from the creek. I doubt he would have attacked us out in the open up there above the tree line. I wish we could have enjoyed it a little longer. That view..." Bert sleepily gazed into the crackling fire, remembering the intensity of the shock from first beholding the vastness of Mt. Eddys. Its massive snow cap had made them feel small atop their own high peak. Under different circumstances, the two siblings would have continued along the ridge to Eddys' summit. Dez's glazed-over eyes stared into the spent ashes of the pipe. "It felt timeless up there. Like time itself is so vast that it turns in on itself, or something. I can't explain. That kind of stuff always makes me think of pre-human times, like when dinosaurs were around. But it feels more like a memory than a thought. Like everything overlaps, like everything is always happening all at once." The winter weary group mused and speculated, passing the pipe around and around, taking turns strumming the guitar. They let the fire die down and began nodding off with it. "I'd better get some shut-eye. Long day tomorrow, and I'm pretty pooped from walking through all that snow today." Dez yawned as she stretched her long legs forward. "And you've gotta do it again tomorrow," said Jeremy. Earlier that morning, she and Jeremy had walked through a foot and a half of snow for several miles down the road until they were able to get some reception. Luckily they had gotten a hold of Pop, who would take a detour on his route to pick Dez up further down the road the next day. Dez would have to drive all the way back up from the valley on her own to get Erin and Bert. Jeremy quietly stumbled back to his own cabin. Bert was already asleep on the moss green couch, still wearing his coat and beanie. Dez stirred the subdued embers in the stove, readying them for one last stab of pine for the night. She reached toward the stack and realized that kindling was all that was left. She considered letting the fire burn out while they slept, but the little cabin was already cold enough even with a fire burning. She wouldn't have time to build another in the morning and knew she'd want one before her trek, so she decided to do a quick firewood run to the shed. Dez put on her coat and sneakers, and jerked the stubborn front door open as quietly as she could. Stepping onto the porch, she felt slightly disoriented by the deafening silence of the night. The snow-encumbered woods absorbed what little noise was stirred up in the noir. The sound of the stubborn old door closing behind her seemed to travel barely as far as her own ears, which felt like they had been plugged with cotton balls. She extended her jaw instinctively to try and pop them. She felt vulnerable being unable to see and hear clearly, as if she were being observed by the night itself. She was overcome with the curious feeling that she'd interrupted something, walked onto stage in the middle of an act. She stood against the wall of the cabin a moment to let her eyes adjust and get her bearings. Dez stared into the darkness, letting her eyes seize upon the details in her surroundings. The only light in the canyon was that of the stars reeling overhead. They were so numerous that it felt as if she were wrapped up in them; a blanket of distant cosmic bodies. Their needle points began puncturing the silent glare of the night, dominating the scene. Their being so prominent yet inaccessible inspired a frightful awe in Dez as she pondered the scale of everything present in that moment. They appear so close and clustered together, she thought, but they are all isolated in their own corners of the universe. She wondered how old the light was that was beginning to illuminate the features of the woods around her. Some had travelled for centuries, millenia. At least one of those stars must be as many light years away as she was old, she told herself. Some of this light was born with her, and had travelled unfathomable distances only to meet her here in the depths of an alpine ravine. She wondered about the light from that star travelling in the opposite direction. Whose night was it illuminating? Feeling more acquainted with the night, Dez started for the wheelbarrow only to discover that it was nowhere in sight. Jeremy must have taken it to bring wood up to his cabin, she assumed. She decided that she'd carry back just an armful of wood for the night and morning. She carefully descended the frozen slope down to the lichen-riddled footbridge. The band had all helped Jeremy shovel the snow from the bridges the morning after the storm. The wood underneath her feet felt springy and soft, like the spongy remnants of a termite-infested log. The gentle murmur of the creek grew to a steady roar as she approached the main flow. The minerals encrusted on the rocks around a springhead below were clearly visible in the starlight. Steam spilled over the top of the rocks, and drifted downstream atop the modest rapids of the swollen creek. Dez followed the shovelled path off the bridge and into a large clearning bordered by the main lodge, a few small cabins, and the woodshed. As she approached the shed, she could see a dark figure near the doorway. It was the wheelbarrow. Dez paused for a moment, alert and slightly confused. Maybe Jeremey was getting some wood, she thought. But the door was closed, and she hadn't heard any noise from inside. She concluded that they must have smoked too much and that someone had dumbly left the wheelbarrow and all the wood behind on the last firewood run. Still surprised by her discovery, Dez approached the door of the shed cautiously. "Hello?" she called, wondering if Jeremy hadn't come out for wood afterall. The sound of her voice disturbed the calm silence of the night, and she suddenly felt conspicuous, like it was observing her again. She slowly opened the door to the shed, feeling naked in its darkness as it poured out into the night. She reached for the lantern hanging on the inside of the door and turned it on. Cords of wood were suddenly staring her in the face, their intense shadows grimacing meanly. Dez stared back at them a moment, unsure what to do next. She grabbed the lantern from off the hook and held it into the open night behind her. The unfocused light illuminated her immediate surroundings, drawing a boundary between her and the world inaccessible beyond the lamplight's radius. Dez realized the folly of her decision, and feeling uneasily conspicuous, quickly disengaged the switch on the lantern. Everything was black. The lantern light had ruined her night vision, and she stood for a beat letting her eyes readjust. She returned the lantern to its hook, and as she closed the door to the shed, she felt the weight of the night upon her shoulders. The presence of something within it was palpable--she was sure that she was not alone. Too scared and blind to look, she quickly grabbed the handles of the wheelbarrow and began pushing it back to the cabin at a steady but brisk pace. Holding something made her feel less vulnerable, and she squeezed the handles to dissipate the fear that was swelling within her. She heaved the wheelbarrow up a small slope and onto the footbridge. Its wheel against the planks of the deck created a rhythmic whir that made her feel more conspicuous and impeded her ability to perceive what was happening in her surroundings. Dez hurried her pace to build enough momentum to push the barrow up the embankment to their cabin, rounded the peak, and quickly parked under the main window beside the front door. She proceeded to remove a few blocks of wood with a forced steadiness and calm as if to convince herself and whoever was watching that she was not afraid. With her hands full, Dez shoved the door open with her shoulder, causing it to swing open and bang loudly against the wall. Bert jumped up startled. "What the fuck, what's going on...what are you doing, Dez?" "Just bringing some wood in, sorry. Had my hands full." She dropped the wood in a pile on the floor, and went to close the door. She paused for a moment looking out into the soft blur. "It's cold as fuck dude, you're letting the night in," Bert complained as he begrudgingly got up to stoke the fire. Dez shoved the door tightly shut, and considered locking it. She glanced back at Bert shoving a fresh block of pine into the coals. He left the stove door open a moment to enjoy the heat. He noticed Dez staring blankly at him. "Wanna smoke a bowl? A little night cap?" he asked. After a quick toke, Dez nodded off and was up again before the sun. She built up the fire from its remaining embers and boiled a kettle of Ceylon on top of the stove. In the gray hour of dawn, Dez started down the road--in that calm window when all the nocturnal creatures have retreated to their burrows and before all the diurnal crew has yet to emerge from theirs. It was even quieter than the night, she thought. And perfectly still. She trudged bravely through the snow as the morning brightened. Her stiff leg muscles quickly thawed as they stamped along the tracks they had made the day before. After only a short distance, she was fully awake and alert--and hot. Dez peeled off her jacket and tied it snugly around her waist. Her cloudy breaths puffed out into the morning air like exhuast. As Dez pushed on, the morning began to thaw the world around her. Soon the gentle trickling of snowmelt and the subtle music of the forest resettling itself broke the lingering hush of the frozen night. The farther down the canyon the road meandered, the greater the flow of the creek became, and by the time she reached the point where she and Jeremy had stopped the day before, the crunch of snow under her weight was obscured by the rushing rapids and clambering cascades to her left. Dez paused for a moment to listen and catch her breath. She reached into her pocket for Jeremy's phone, realizing she had forgotten to get it from him before she left. She had no doubt that Pop could find his way through the mountain labrynth up to the plow point, but it was a long way to walk in deep snow. What if the trek took longer than they had figured? What if Pop started back down the hill before Dez could make it to the main road? She would have no way to contact him or anybody if something happened along the way. Realizing how fatigued she was, Dez decided to clamber down the bank to the creek where she and Jeremy had stopped for a smoke the day before. She kneeled down and scooped up a handful of icy water from an emphermal eddy and splashed it across her flushed face. She scooped up another handful and gulped it down hastily. Laying back into the snow on the bank, Dez admired the detailed ribbons of steam escaping from her sweat-soaked clothing as they twirled and contorted themselves into obscurity. She amused herself with the thought that humans bleed clouds if you get them hot enough. The creek had become a river of fog as the morning sun slackened the grip of winter over the canyon. Steam appeared seemingly from nowhere and everywhere all at once. A gentle current of newborn clouds accompanied the snowmelt downstream, dragging itself through the canopy of the densely wooded ravine. Fixing her gaze upon a cedar limb above her, Dez was overcome with the sensation that she was floating upstream. The illusion made her feel dizzy after a while, and she sat up to regain her bearings. "Who are you suppoed to be?" In the middle of the creek stood an impressive rock person made of a dozen or more precariously balanced large cobblestones. "Wow, how did we miss you yesterday?" Dez wished she had brought along her sketchbook to draught its peculiar form. Its body of oblong boulders seemed impossibly stacked; like the slightest breeze would send it tumbling downstream, let alone a snowstorm. "Sure don't look like someone who's been out in a storm," she muttered to herself, noticing that no snow had accumulated on or around the rock person. It seemed unlikely that anyone would be out building rock people way up an unplowed road, she thought. She looked around for tracks to find only her own. Dez left the rock person and continued down the road. Her legs had stiffened again slightly after stopping to rest, and for the first hundred yards she started to doubt whether she could really make it all the way to the plow point. The remoteness of the Springs, which had always made it feel like a sanctuary, was beginning to intimidate her. The deep snow was unforgiving, but Dez hadn't any choice but to press on. The fog grew thick as the day ripened. In the deep shade of the steep ravine walls, it was difficult to discern what time of day it was. Morning had broken then spilled back into dusk, she thought. The creek roared along below the road, but was now invisible. The treeline along its border extended into nothingness ahead of her. Successions of indistinct figures emerged from the fog as she approached, revealing themselves to be harmless flora, but still Dez remained alert. She found a bit of courage in the repetitive crunch of snow and the pulse of her shallow panting. The rhythm of her gradual progress absorbed her stray throughts as she continued down the narrow lane. Dez rounded a sharp corner in the road and found herself in a particularly narrow section of the canyon. It was colder, and exceptionally damp. The fog seemed to soak right into her clothes. She untied her coat from her waist and hastily redressed herself. For a moment, her wet shirt felt cold against her bare back, sending an intense chill up her spine. She fought to hold back the shivers as she continued trudging through the show. Dez fumbled with frozen fingertips at the drawstring of her hood. She drew it in tigthly around her face, and stuffed her gloveless hands into her coat pockets. Dez was startled by a cold, hard object in her left coat pocket. She wrapped her brittle fingers around it to discover that somehow Jeremy's phone had ended up in there afterall. She quickly removed it and struggled to command her fingers over the tiny mechanical buttons. The LCD screen welcomed her with a flourescent green glow. There was no service in this narrow corner of the canyon it appeared. She held the phone above her head as she walked, watching hopefully for an indication of signal. Dez pressed some buttons to reilluminate the screen, accidentally engaging an unwanted menu. "No, not you, dammit..." She sighed humrously, and as she lowered the phone down to eye level, she noticed movement on the road ahead of her. She focused her eyes on the haze and realized it was flashing orange. She eagerly stomped through a length of snow and rounded a bend in the road to discover two orange lights piercing through the fog at some distance. It was Pop. Dez shouted in relief, and sloppily threw herself through the snow toward the flashing emergency blinkers. The red bead of Pop's cigarette appeared as she approached, and soon she could see his figure half-sitting on the hood of his battered brown Nissan. He still had his sunglasses on. Pop just smiled almost mockingly as Dez struggled toward him through the last length of undisturbed snow. "Well, look who's here," Pop teased as Dez threw her arms around him. She shuffled her feet noisily across the pavement to the passenger side of the old truck, noticing the door had no handle. Pop was already opening it for her from the inside. She flopped herself down on the springy seat and cupped her hands around the heater vents as Pop gently maneuvered the gearshift into first. "You gotta really be easy on it, remember. It won't go in if you force it. Just gotta kind nudge it in." The engine purred as Pop turned the truck back down the road, then rose to a beleagured whine as they gained speed down the grade. Pop engaged the clutch and gingerly coaxed the shfiter out of first and then carefully into second. "It's like that for every gear. Except reverse. You can really smash it in reverse, it doesn't matter." Dez felt dazed seeing the world move so quickly all of a sudden. It felt surreal that she could be still in her seat--still as a tree even--yet the world would whirl away behind them. "Why don't you sit back and relax? You forget something?" Dez allowed herself to relax into the seat, realizing she was tensely watching the scenerey appear and disappear around them. "There's a sandwich for ya there, and some tea," Pop said, pointing at an ancient green canister on the floor. Dez picked it up and poured some into the cap. It was too hot to drink, so she held it carefully in her hands as the rickety truck careened around the curves of the mountain road. She felt uneasy to be driving so fast in such thick fog. "I got this, Dez," Pop reassured her, "just have some tea." Pop reached for his lighter and lit a fresh cigarette. "It's gonna flatten out in a sec here." The farther down the hill they went, the more daylight penetrated the thick fog. Soon Dez was squinting to cope with the blinding glare that resulted. Pop jerked open the glovebox and handed her a spare pair of sunglasses. As she put them on, Pop turned onto the main road, and soon they were crossing the valley floor to the freeway. The fog completely obscured everything. Dez always loved the view of Mt. Shasta from this angle, but it was not there. Nothing was, except a few yards of tarmac and fencing extending ahead of them. Everything was luminous, flat white. "Wow..." Dez glanced over at Pop in astonishment as he nudged it into fifth and flicked some ash into the ashtray. "Pretty cool, huh?" Dez stared at the road appearing from the void just feet in front of them. Fence posts materialized, hurled past them, and were then gone again in an instant. A whole lifetime in a flash, Dez mused. It felt like they were running in place almost; suspended in time even. Dez looked around the cab at all its familiar features. Its overflowing ashtray, the gaping hole where a stereo had once been, the cigarette burns on the dash, Pop's cologne and Binaca in the center console and his clipboard wedged between it and his seat. She looked over at him out of the corner of her eye. He took a drag from his cigarette, like he always had and like it seemed he always would. He reached for his coffee and took a big gulp of it, like he always did. Dez admired her dad for moment. His atmosphere made her feel safe and certain, made her feel like herself--made her different selves feel continuous. She admired how steady and almost stoic he was. He seemed changeless to her, like a distant star, gesturing something profoundly familiar yet infinitely inacessible and always watching the way ahead. CC-BY-SA-NC 4.0 mieum@rawtext.club