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Gladys was now a very old widow living out in the tall uncut practically by herself — she had a hired man, Dale, equally if prematurely decrepit, a hundred cows, eleven bulls, and three swaybacked horses. Dale, my sort-of-moronic playmate when I had worked for Gladys and Wiley, was the one who had called the clinic to say that he thought she might be dying. She had spent eighty-three years under the south-facing rimrock that formed the edge of her grazing land, a great plateau of native grass where ravens built nests in low trees. She was a clever old woman whom I was always ready to serve, on house calls and otherwise; she was canny about what would become of her ranch after she was gone, but all alone and, from the drift of today’s report, dying. Gladys had seemed to be quite old the whole time I’d known her; I think she was older than my mother and father, whom she outlived. But now she was genuinely very old.

I was standing in the corridor trying to puzzle out my day, gauging just how much caffeine it would take to get through it, when Alan Hirsch sidled up and accorded me a long gaze in which I thought I saw some affection. “I hope the detachment you exhibited at this morning’s meeting was simulated.”

“It comes and goes.”

“Because if it wasn’t, your problems are even bigger than I feared.”

I was having a hard time following this. We had, between how I was perceived by my colleagues and the ways in which I saw myself, true cognitive dissonance. That was enough to piss anybody off. Of course I understood what he meant, but I had to occupy some middle ground as a strategic matter. Groups that are of one mind, like the gathering this morning, are really only content with weeping confessions. It was time to throw Alan off the trail, and so I told him about a crow that had turned up on my flagpole several times this past month and addressed me in various combinations of caw-caw-caw in a way that made me understand it was an invitation for me to become a crow too. “Obviously I’d love to turn into a crow. Wouldn’t you, Alan?”

“No, Berl, I feel no need to become a crow. Cardiologist seems to work at the moment.” Alan had in fairness always been on my side, but I was unwilling to take on one more disturbing bit of self-knowledge.

Gladys was unable to come to the hospital. We’d been through this before — it was clear that she understood death was near, and her ranch was the place she intended to meet it. We’d had a couple of years of close calls, but each year’s calf crop reinvigorated her. Nevertheless, I’d had to make several diving catches to keep her on the planet a bit longer. Her neighbors, me included, branded for her, and as she looked out on the massed pairs in the drifting smoke, the horsemen moving slowly among them with the loops of rope pinned under their elbows, she always seemed to find enough life for another season. But today when I talked to Dale, I got the impression that this was it. “I doubt you’ll get here in time, Doc.” I started to put together a kit, but in the end just brought the electronic stethoscope. It was amplified and I could hear a pin drop anywhere in the body. I really trusted it to hunt down the faintest murmur, and auscultation was my personal juju: heart, lungs, intestines — just let me listen! Those turds at this morning’s meeting couldn’t hear a diesel backfire through their stethoscopes. I seemed to know that I was bringing it along for the moment when I heard nothing. You name it, Gladys had it. As to the clinical information, the on-site stuff I had just gotten from Dale: Gladys was a goner. In the long run, and without unwarranted credulity, you need an eyewitness. Dale had been studying Gladys for a quarter century and Dale thought she was about out of here.

Gary Haack caught me just as I left the building. I had farmed out all my afternoon patients and was ready to go. I was tired of his hyper little performance already, but it looked like I was in for more as he bounced around in his high-tops. “What’s this you’ve left me with? A twenty-five-year-old anorexic potter?” Sherry was not an easy case. I was glad he stopped me.

“Talk to her, Gary. I don’t know what to do with her. She needs counseling, really inpatient would be best. She thinks she has a tapeworm.”

“And you want me to talk to her about her tapeworm?”

“Yeah, talk her out of it. Get her some help. You’d be a new voice.”

“Here’s the only thing I know to do for tapeworms: You bring a candy apple every day for three days and shove it up the patient’s backside. On the fourth day you bring a hammer and no candy apple. When the tapeworm comes out of the patient’s behind and hollers, ‘Where’s my candy apple!’ you hit him over the head with the hammer. That’s the only cure I’m aware of.” I stared at him.

“Gary, the tapeworm is imaginary. If you start believing in the tapeworm, we can’t help this girl.”

I departed before Haack could object, leaving him, I hoped, with the impression that I thought he was as deluded as the patient. In any case, he’d have plenty on his hands: Sherry claimed to know all she needed to know about her body. When I told her she should get a little counseling about the tapeworm, to which I thereby lent inescapable credence, she snarled that she wasn’t about to walk into that trap. She placed one hand on her throat and the other on her buttocks to indicate the home of the parasite, and said, “He’s there. It has to be dealt with.” Since Sherry was an utterly beautiful young woman, I was sure plenty of people had bought into the worm.

Anyway, off to see dying Gladys at last, I took the road northeast over Tin Can Hill, off toward all those coarse and evocative features, “Dead Man,” “Hangman,” “Lone Indian,” “Sourdough,” gulches, draws, benches, coulees in a rangeland that on first look seemed tortured and on second, vigorous, confronting sky and grass and threadbare human occupation. Here, Gladys Bokma, child of settlers who cooked over buffalo dung, stood it all off in the little kingdom she called White Bird, which she herself had named in childhood, generating a persistent mystery to everyone, including her late husband, Wiley, who with a nicotine-stained hand always waved away the White Bird question and said it was something “she don’t share.” But inside the ranch gate, a hanging sign said “White Bird,” and I of all people who wished to be a crow had no intention of asking her about it.

The road to the house followed a dashing creek, and the sun shone down through the streamside brush, igniting parts of the running water and small pools where clouds of gnats danced in the shadows. Just shy of the ranch yard, the stream had hollowed a sandstone face into a tall, deep shell, its roof layered with the nests of cliff swallows.

Dale waited for me in the stand of windblown hollyhocks that surrounded the doorway. A straw hat shaded his gaunt face and concealed his ever shifty eyes. I could note that he still wore Wiley’s shirts, as they were a good deal too big for him. A sprinkler made its weak attempt to keep twenty square feet of lawn green, but it was in a bad fight with the west wind. Dale had started here so long ago, an incongruous figure in a ducktail haircut, Lucky Strikes rolled in the sleeve of his T-shirt and a hot-rod Ford coupe. He wasn’t worth a shit then and he’d gone downhill ever since, but Gladys liked him. He had grown children in town with various mothers from the hot-rod Ford days. Right up there with White Bird as a mystery was the fact that Gladys and Wiley had never run Dale off. They acknowledged that he didn’t do much but answered all queries with, “Where would he go?” He’d try at the brandings, all right, but he always got knocked down and Gladys would have to make him a poultice of some hallowed if useless sort. When I thought about Dale post-Gladys, I foresaw my ending up with him in some way. I kind of hated that.