Season of Open Water

Season of Open Water

by Dawn Tripp
Season of Open Water

Season of Open Water

by Dawn Tripp

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Overview

BONUS: This edition contains a The Season of Open Water discussion guide and an excerpt from Dawn Tripp's Game of Secrets.

From the critically acclaimed author of Moon Tide comes a mesmerizing novel of love and violence, family and betrayal. The Season of Open Water is the passionate, searing story of a young woman coming of age in a New England seacoast town that is swept up in the dangerous trade of rum-running.

It is October 1927. Bridge Weld is nineteen, headstrong and beautiful, working in her grandfather Noel's boatbuilding shop. When Noel is approached by a local bootlegger to refit a boat for smuggling, he feels in his gut that he should not accept the work, yet he takes the job for the money it offers and for the chance it gives him to build a future for his beloved granddaughter, Bridge, and her brother, Luce. What Noel doesn’t count on is that Luce will be lured into the rum work himself and will try to pull Bridge into it with him.

But Bridge has embarked on a different course. Caught up in a passion for Henry, a veteran of World War I, Bridge is propelled beyond the confines of her known world, and ultimately she must choose between the man who loves her and the brother to whom she has been loyal all her life. As Bridge strikes out on her own, Luce's fierce attachment spirals out of control.

Exquisitely written, haunting in its rendering of place, The Season of Open Water is a superb novel about a family and the lawlessness of the heart, a love story that explores the often inescapable connections between violence and desire.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307432605
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 12/18/2007
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Dawn Tripp’s fourth novel Georgia was a national bestseller, finalist for the New England Book Award, and winner of the Mary Lynn Kotz Award for Art in Literature. She is the author of three previous novels: Game of Secrets, Moon Tide, and The Season of Open Water, which won the Massachusetts Book Award for Fiction. Her short story Mojave was published in Gay Magazine. Her poetry and essays have appeared in the Virginia Quarterly Review, AGNI, Conjunctions, and NPR, among others. She graduated magna cum laude from Harvard and lives in Massachusetts with her family. She is currently at work on her fifth novel.

Read an Excerpt

Bridge

Bridge first meets Henry Vonniker at the gathering after her cousin Asa’s funeral. She does not see him right away. She does not notice when he comes into the room. She sits on a chair against the wall, a plate of food resting on her knees. She wears a white blouse, a wool skirt, and hard black shoes. The yellow glow of the kerosene light plays across the top edge of her plate, and she slides her knife through a boiled potato, splitting it in half. Steam rises from the flesh.

It is early evening, after candlelight. The room is crowded. The dead man’s mother and his sister cry quietly in one corner. Two men, dairy farmers from Blossom Road, stand in front of Bridge, their backs turned toward her. They talk about Asa—how he had made quite a name for himself in the rum-running trade, then double-crossed the wrong man.

“Went all the way to Texas to get out of trouble,” one remarks. “And trouble followed him all the way out there.” The man speaking is a big man, a gray wool jacket tight across his shoulders.

“Did Asa find work out in Texas?”

“Yeah. Hauling water to the roughnecks at the oil wells. Talk was, someone wanted the job and killed him for it. Hard to believe—the guy slips out of the booze here, slips out by the skin of his teeth, then gets knocked off selling water.”

The other man, black-haired and smaller, in a pinstripe suit, doesn’t answer. He digs one hand into his pocket and glances over his shoulder. He notices Bridge sitting behind them. His eye trails down her leg. Then he catches her eye on him. His face flushes and he looks away, ashamed. He draws his handkerchief from his trouser pocket. A folded ten-dollar bill falls to the floor. He does not no- tice it.

Bridge stays with her knife and fork poised, staring at the dropped bill that lies less than six inches from her shoe. The two farmers go on talking about the dead man, one saying how he remembers when Asa was a boy, his uncle took him to the first World Series in 1903, the year the Boston Pilgrims beat the Pittsburgh Pirates. When slugger Buck Freeman popped one high into the crowd, Asa—nine years old—reached up and caught that ball with his bare hands.

“He caught a ball alright—small shiny bullet kind between the eyes. Black luck runs through that whole brood.”

Bridge bites her lip as the smaller, dark-haired man clears his throat and jerks a slight nod over his shoulder at her. The big man turns and takes her in. He smiles. She smiles back and goes on cutting up her food.

“Just saying the way I see it, Leo,” the man says, turning back around. He pauses, then remarks, “Pete Lowry came in earlier. Did you see that? He’s short on brains to show up here.”

Bridge slices off a piece of turkey and spears it with her fork. Without looking down, she slides her right foot across the floor and covers the ten-dollar bill with her shoe.

“Who’s the natty dresser over there?”

“Where?”

“In the corner. Standing with Millie.”

“Oh that’s Vonniker. Forget the first name. He’s Millie’s boss at the mill.”

“Never seen him before.”

“Lives down on West Beach. The big house near the causeway. Was a doctor once. War ate him up.”

“War’ll do that.”

“To some.”

They fall silent for a moment, looking toward the corner of the room. Without taking her shoe off the bill on the floor, Bridge leans slightly forward in her chair and follows their gaze.

Across the room next to Asa’s mother stands a man in a dark suit. Bridge has never seen him before. He wears glasses. The bones of his face are strong, and he is tall, a few inches taller than Bridge’s brother, Luce. As Bridge watches, the man sits down in the empty chair next to Millie Sisson. He says something to her and takes her hand, and Bridge can sense a sadness flow between them. Millie begins to weep again, her old eyes swollen, and the man does not bend closer; he does not try to say or do anything to mute her grief; he just sits there with her, quietly, holding her hand.

Bridge sits back in her chair. She does not think of them again. She is thinking of the ten-dollar bill under her shoe. She cuts up another potato and eats it, killing time as the two farmers talk. After a while, they move outside for a smoke, and when they do, she lays her plate on the small table next to her, bends down, and with her napkin, pretends to rub at a smudge on the side of her shoe. She lifts her foot, slips the bill into her hand, then into the pocket of her skirt.

She straightens up again and looks around the room. The crowd has begun to thin. Millie Sisson is still in her corner, more composed now, her hands folded in her lap. The chair beside her is empty. Against the wall by the doorway that leads into the kitchen stands Bridge’s grandfather, Noel, yarning with his old shipmate Rui. Her eyes soften as she watches them. They will be grumbling about the scallop season, she guesses, how the catch has been skinny so far—the fault of a too wet summer. Rui might mention the busted gunwale on his skiff. He will try to talk Noel into fixing it. Her grandfather holds a mug of coffee, his broad weathered fingers wrapped around it. Beyond them, in the kitchen, Bridge’s mother, Cora, is washing dishes in the soapstone sink. White crockery heaps, rinsed and glowing, on the wooden counter next to her.

Bridge stands up and walks outside onto the back porch.

The night air is damp and cool on her legs. A knot of men stand around a fire in the yard, her brother, Luce, among them. They feed the burn from a pile of scrap—boards and shingles, chunks of punk wood. They laugh and talk and pass around two canning jars of homemade gin. The heat wrinkles the air. Bridge watches Luce’s face, flushed and wavering in the flames and smoke. He has loosened the collar of his shirt. She walks over to him. He smells of the drink and the fire.

“Tell Ma I’m going home,” she says.

“Had enough?”

She nods.

“You gonna walk?”

“Yeah.”

“Smells like rain.”

“I’ll be fine.”

“Wait a bit. I’ll get Billy to drive us.”

“When?”

“Half hour or so.”

“Alright then. I’m going to take a walk down to the pond.”

He grins and bends toward her, his breath near her ear. “Watch out for Asa.”

She walks away from him across the sloped yard.

“Little sister’s looking fine, Luce,” she hears someone say behind her.

“Put a bung in it, Mills,” Luce snaps.

Bridge climbs up onto the dirt path that borders the millpond and walks toward the woods. The grass is tall and wet. The smell of the fire fades out behind her, replaced by the sharp clean scent of trees. There are rings around the moon, glowing yellow and blue in the fog. The moon is heavy on the surface of the millpond. The water seems to bend under the weight of the light.

She hears voices ahead of her on the path—men’s voices, angry. She sees a flash of white behind the old pump house. She slips into the trees and strains her eyes—shadows moving—a white shirt—two men, no, three. She continues walking toward them, slowly, quietly. She keeps behind the trees.

She recognizes two of Asa’s older brothers, Mike and Jude Sisson, and a third man, blond and thin, who she knows by sight as Peter Lowry from the north part of town. Jude is holding Lowry by the arms, and Mike, a good six inches shorter than Lowry but wide as a bait barrel, is right up close to him, his finger in the other man’s face.

“Telling you, Mikey, Asa was my friend,” Lowry says, his voice slurred.

“Hell of a friend,” says Mike. “You show up just to be sure we put him in the ground. Show up in the bag to boot.”

“Telling you, Mikey, it wasn’t me who snitched—”

Mike hits him hard in the gut. Lowry crumples, but Jude holds him up, and Mike hits him again. Lowry gags.

“Shit, he puked on my shoes.” Mike takes a step back and drags his feet through the grass. He runs his other hand over his knuckles. “He’s a bony one, Jude.” He steps back in again toward Lowry. “No room for blue jays in this town.”

“It wasn’t me—”

And Mike begins to work him over, the punches thrown slowly, evenly paced, intentional, his fist sinking into the other man’s body. Bridge watches them from behind a tree. She does not take her eyes off them. What they are doing does not feel wrong to her. It does not make her feel anything. It is an act of reliable violence, clear- cut and justified. The order of things. Mike deals Lowry one swift, stunning punch to the head, and Lowry’s face snaps sideways, his chin falls forward toward his chest, a small sound whining out of him, then silence. Mike steps back. He nods. Jude lets go. Lowry drops to the ground.

Mike wipes off his hands on his trousers. He takes out a cigarette. “You got a match, Jude?”

“Nope.”

“I got a box somewhere.” Mike fishes through his pockets.

“He’ll sleep it off, you think?” Jude asks.

“Well, he’s not close to dead.”

“Won’t be as pretty for a while.”

Mike has found his matches. He strikes one against the box. The flame illuminates his face as he draws in on the cigarette. He throws the spent match at Lowry. “He will get dead by somebody one of these days. He’s marked for it. But that somebody won’t be me.”

Jude gives Lowry a small kick in the thigh. He doesn’t move. The two men start back toward the house. They pass close by Bridge without seeing her, and continue on the path around the millpond. Their smells drift back to her, sweat and fresh smoke. She breathes softly in the shadow of the tree. She watches them until they have passed down the knoll and she can see them crossing up the yard toward the fire. They fold in among the other men. Behind them, the house glows—smooth yellow light through the windows, the curtains curved inside them. Her heart beats strongly in her chest. Her hands are damp. She looks toward the man lying on the ground. His hair is thick and fair, and there is mud in it. He stirs, groans. He tries to push himself up, and she goes to move toward him, to help him. She catches herself, stops. He folds his arm under his head and slumps back down again. She looks away, toward the millpond. The beauty of it startles her. The water, the light wind scattering across it, the woods deep, untouched, and still—all of it so serene, it takes her breath, and for a moment she feels that the hardness of her world has softened. A sadness sweeps through her, for Millie, for Jude and Mike, for Asa. He was young to die—just a few years older than her brother, Luce—too young and it had happened. He had fled the earth or got kicked off the edge of it. Either way, it didn’t matter. It was done.

She walks slowly back toward the house to look for Luce. But he is not outside by the fire. She sees Mike and Jude Sisson, and they stare, seeing her walk out of the woods, knowing, perhaps fearing, what she saw. She stares back at them. Mike gives her a weak smile. She nods at him. He looks away.

She walks into the house and scans the room, but there is no sign of Luce, no sign of her grandfather Noel, or her mother. She sees Millie, still sitting in her corner, her hands still folded on her lap, eyes closed, as if she has resigned herself to that chair. But apart from Millie, the room seems full of strangers, people she might have known an hour ago, they all seem distant to her now. Again she feels a slight wrench in her heart, and she turns to leave the room, the house, to get back outside into the cool and open air. She notices him then—the man Vonniker—standing alone. On the wall behind him is a crude sketch of a ship drying sail. Without intending to she stops, her eyes on his face. He is close to her, looking away, across the room, but close enough that she can see the smooth planes of light across his cheekbones, the fractured lines at the corners of his eyes. Her hand goes to the pocket of her skirt, the folded edges of the stolen ten-dollar bill, crisp and dry against her skin. He glances at her suddenly, and for a moment—it only takes a moment—his eyes touch hers.

He smiles. She feels her face flush. She turns on her heel, walks out the door and runs straight into Luce.

“I was looking for you, Bridge.”

“Then let’s go.”

“You look queer.”

“I’m fine.”

“See a ghost down there by the pond?”

“I saw nothing. Come on, let’s go.”

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