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Black Angus
Black Angus
Black Angus
Ebook281 pages4 hours

Black Angus

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

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An Ozarks rancher takes a desperate gamble in this searing novel from “one of the truly great American writers of the 20th century” (The Guardian).
 
Bob Blanchard spent his entire inheritance on a cattle ranch in the Missouri Ozarks—but it hasn’t turned out the way he’d hoped, and he’s now being threatened with foreclosure. The cattle are sick, and the herd can’t survive, so Blanchard agrees to a reckless scheme to sell the cattle before their illness is widely known. But when a faked cattle rustling and an insurance scam goes wrong, the plan begins to crumble from the inside out.
 
“A commanding writer of unusual delicacy and power.” —The New Yorker
 
“A born storyteller.” —St. Louis Post-Dispatch
LanguageEnglish
Release dateApr 7, 2015
ISBN9781626817531
Black Angus

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Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    In short, this is yet another masterpiece by Thornburgh. As with many other Thornburgh novels, it's a story of rootlessness, disconnectness,
    loneliness, and pain. It paints a picture of cloudy skies and sad
    defeats.

    Blanchard is a rootless man, who left his well-paid job in advertising
    and plunked down his small inheritance on a ranch in the Ozarks. He
    sees it as a taste of freedom from traffic jams and endless urban
    frustrations and takes his wife his son and his mentally disabled
    brother there.

    But they are like fish out of water. The locals don't want them there.
    Ranching doesn't come naturally to Blanchard. The farm is mortgaged
    to the hilt and the money is all gone. A big drunk troublemaking
    houseguest joins them. And the slow sordid collapse continues. And
    everything is a metaphor for ruin from the failed empty marriage to
    cattle disease to the bank threatening to foreclose.

    You know without being told the cattle rustling scheme with an ex
    convict making the arrangements is doomed to failure but it's like
    watching a car wreck about to happen. You can't look away.

    This is wonderful writing that just captures the dry dusty sadness of
    the story and the characters all determined to do what they have to
    even if they don't really want to.

    Thornburgh is one of those great writers few have heard of, but you
    always finish his books feeling lucky to have found them. They are that good. They are that powerful.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I really felt for this guy. Tired of city life, Blanchard and his wife use his inheritance to purchase a farm in the Missouri Ozarks (Thornburgh apparently had a farm there also — I truly hop this is not autobiographical.) , hoping to raise cattle. Beset by weather problems and low cattle prices, he's unable to get an extension on his bank loan, and soon his wife has had enough. To make things more difficult his wife, decides to return to St. Louis with their son leaving him with his brain-injured brother and ner do well farm hand. Bang's Disease is a constant worry, for if any in the herd test positive, they will all have to be destroyed. In his case, that could be a negative or perhaps a positive. Or perhaps there is another way out.... In the end he’s betrayed by everyone, his wife, his girlfriend, his best friend, the government, the cattle, the weather, God, as it all collapses. Thornburg is a good writer, though, so I’ll read more of his books.

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Black Angus - Newton Thornburg

1

It crossed Blanchard’s mind that from the road everything must have looked nice and peaceful: Tommy sitting on the top rail of the corral watching him and Clarence as they worked the cattle along the fence perimeter and into the chute at whose far end Doc Parnell and his son would lock one of the cows in a headgate and draw from her a specimen of blood before letting her on through, to lock another in her place. But nowhere was there peace, not in Tommy’s slack and wounded look and not in Blanchard and especially not in the cattle, which were walleyed with terror, plunging and crowding, fouling their black coats with a founting olive diarrhea. At the headgate, after the younger Parnell would force a clamp into the cow’s flaring nostrils and lash her head to one side, his father would drive a needle into her neck vein and then the beller would come, like a death cry, a feral trumpeting that Blanchard felt in his own bowels, almost as if he were one of the herd.

It was a weakness Clarence did not share. If anything the old man was enjoying himself. Squinting and chawing, he gimped about the corral with his heavy cattleman’s cane, whacking any animal that stalled or turned or threatened escape. Yet he was careful not to stampede them, not to crowd them so tight they would have no choice in their panic except to turn and run, run right over the men. Nevertheless Blanchard was prepared at any moment to dive for the safety of the corral fence—especially because of the bull, the huge young purebred Angus he had bought to upgrade his herd, to give him fine productive females in the years ahead, but which now, irronically and irationally, threatened the herd’s destruction instead. The bull was of the Emulous bloodline, long and broad and deep, a ton of carefully bred muscle and bone. But he did not know his pedigree or excellence, only his maleness, his bullness. And bulls did not like to be driven. They did not like to be crowded or frustrated. They did not like men.

This one, however, was in the midst of the herd, going along with the surge of the females and calves. Still, his great black head, held high above the others, kept whipping menacingly back and forth, especially when one of the cows would beller from the headgate. And his anger seemed to have infected Tommy sitting on the corral. Helpless, Blanchard watched as his brother began to sway in unison with the bull, at the same time pressing his fist against his mouth to keep from crying. Though he was in his early thirties, just four years younger than Blanchard, he cried often, and like a child, smearing his face with tears.

In time the last of the herd was in the crowding pen, a semicircle through which Blanchard and Clarence began to swing a twelve-foot steel gate, squeezing the cattle into the chute itself, which was only thirty inches wide, a dirt alley running between two-by-ten oak planks bolted to railroad ties sunk three feet into the ground. Once in it, a grown cow or bull with others crowding behind had no choice except to move forward. So Blanchard felt a sharp sense of relief as he saw the bull enter the chute. From behind, the men kept the pressure on, Blanchard pushing on the gate while Clarence prodded and whacked the cattle with his cane. And one by one, they kept moving toward the headgate, there to beller and lose blood and then plunge on through, free again, kicking up their heels like calves as they dashed for the far end of the pasture behind the corral. And finally it was the bull’s turn. For long seconds he stood in the chute staring at the headgate, which was partially open, falsely promising freedom. And he breathed; his breath came like the roar of ocean surf. He pawed the ground and tried to back up, squeezing the cow behind him up out of the line so that she briefly had to ride him. Cursing happily, Clarence clambered up onto the chute and, cakewalking it, balancing there, he began to pound his cane against the bull’s haunches. When the animal still failed to move, the old man tossed the cane aside and twisted the bull’s tail brutally forward, oblivious of the fact that if he fell he could have been trampled to death. But the bull moved, tentatively, sniffing at the headgate, and finally pushed his head on through—just as it closed on him, trapping him. Immediately the Angus exploded forward, with a high keening trumpet, and there was a sound like a rifle shot as one of the railroad ties anchoring the headgate split in two, and the headgate came away, came free, still clamped on the bull’s head, a hundred-pound collar of tempered steel, but apparently weightless for him, an irritant at best, a face fly. And he tried to shake it off as if it were a fly, whipping his head back and forth as he plunged free. With one swipe he smashed in the door and window of the veterinarian’s pickup; with the next he tore up the back pasture gate and fifty feet of barbed wire. And then it seemed to get through to him that the headgate was something more than a fly, something terrible and frightening, and he began to beller wildly and to lunge about, trying to shake it off. He lowered his head and plowed the sod with it, he pawed at it, he raked it against a tree.

Behind the bull, the remaining cows and calves had thundered through the opening left by him, scattering across the pasture. And Clarence had the look of a kid at a party. On the ground now, he did a little jig in honor of the event.

I told ya! he yelled at Blanchard. I told ya to have the doc bring his squeeze chute.

Parnell nodded grimly, looking at his battered truck. Yeah, a headgate just can’t cut it with a bull. ’Specially one that big.

Blanchard said nothing. He did not know what to say or for that matter what to do except just stand there and watch—watch a three-thousand-dollar bull not yet paid for leaping and twisting and plunging in the wooded pasture, about to destroy itself as well as anything else that got in its path. And even as Blanchard was thinking this the bull whirled and caught a young heifer with a corner of the headgate, dropping her bleating into the grass.

But if Blanchard did not know what to do, Clarence and the Parnells had no such problem. Wearily, as if he were picking up a lunch bucket and heading for a factory job, the old man got his lariat off the corral. At the same time young Parnell got one out of the pickup and started after him, toward the bull.

Now hold on, Blanchard cautioned. You can’t do that. You’ll get yourselves killed.

Clarence and the youth ignored him. Parnell meanwhile was filling one of his gun syringes with a cloudy liquid.

We get him still for a minute, I’ll shoot him up with this, he said. Thorazine. Maybe calm him down enough to get the blood sample.

In his four years of ranching Blanchard had seen much and learned much, but this still struck him as incredible, a pair of little men with ropes heading out to subdue a two-thousand-pound bull on open ground, while a third prepared to draw his blood, just as if they still had the animal immured in the chute. But Blanchard also knew he had no choice finally except to go along with them and share their madness, for it was his ranch, his bull. So he found himself falling in with them as they moved toward the animal, exposing himself to the same danger as they were, though with the difference that he would not be able to do anything to end that danger. A lariat to him was still just a rope, a stiff and unwieldy length of rope.

The pasture, only ten acres square, was more a holding lot than anything else, used mainly for moving the various groups of cattle back and forth between the four large pastures. As such, Blanchard had left it unimproved, still in native grass and covered with cedar, hickory, and white oak, with a small pond near its center—a peaceful and beautiful place where Tommy daily played his child’s games. Now, though, it was more like a battlefield as the bull raged and trumpeted through the brush, breaking saplings and thudding into trees, gouging and tearing them with the headgate, pawing the ground up into geysers of dirt and rock and grass.

But he could have been a goat for all the respect Clarence gave him. Limping and yelling, the old man got in close enough to throw his lariat time after time, until finally it was his, that great black barrel of a head, and immediately he was scrambling to get the rope around a tree, to begin cinching the animal in tight. A flick of the bull’s head sent him sprawling into a cedar, however, gashing his face and making him come up lame, hopping on one leg, but cold-eyed furious now, outraged at the bull’s temerity. Hopping and stumbling, he went straight for the animal and snatched up the end of the lariat, somehow got it around a small oak, all the while screaming at Parnell’s son to use his rope.

On his hind foot, boy! Git it! Git it!

Unbelieving, Blanchard watched as the wiry old man worked the bull, winding and rewinding the rope around the tree, stepping quickly to keep the trunk between him and the animal. Every time the line went slack he would cinch it tighter, twice getting his arthritic hands out of the way a millisecond before the bull pulled back and the line jumped taut, quivering into the flesh of the tree, crushing the bark and sawing into the green wood. And each time Clarence yelled with delight. He was winning. He had bigger balls than the bull.

Parnell’s son finally got his lariat around the animal’s right hind leg and, using another tree, began to cinch him tighter from that end. And somehow, within minutes, the bull was standing there immobilized, splayfooted, half-strangled, his breath coming in a mighty bellows, his black coat curly with sweat, as sopping as on the hour of his birth. Even in the heat of the Ozark spring morning, he steamed.

Doc Parnell moved in gingerly and injected him with the tranquilizer, then a few moments later drew the sample of blood. Clarence started to move in to take the headgate off the animal, but Blanchard waved him off.

No, you stick with the rope, he said. I’ll get this.

He knew that if one of the ropes suddenly gave, his life would be on the line. But he felt he had to do something, could not just stand around forever watching them like a dumbstruck tenderfoot. Carefully he took hold of the handle and tripped the release, and as he lifted the gate off the bull’s head he was amazed at the animal’s docility, the cool brown-black eye with which it regarded him.

Okay now, git ready, Clarence said to young Parnell. You keep an eye on me, and the second I git my rope off him, you loosen yours and git the hell back. Understand?

The young man nodded. For some reason, he did not look frightened at all, just cautious and alert. And Clarence was not even that. Grinning and working his gums, he moved in upon the bull’s head and roughly loosened the lariat, yanked it free.

Now! he yelled, scrambling back.

Immediately young Parnell tried to loosen the noose of his rope, so it would fall off the bull’s leg. But the animal moved too suddenly, whirling sideways, somehow snaring the youth’s hand in the rope and dragging him almost underfoot. At the same moment his father dropped his vet’s kit and flew straight at the bull, screaming like a ripsaw. And the bull jumped back, spinning away from Parnell and his son and abruptly plunging in the opposite direction, right over Blanchard, who had no idea what part of the animal struck him: head, shoulder, leg. He only remembered the suddenness of it, the shock of the impact and the sensation of being airborne, the sapling snapping against his shoulder and raking his back with the jagged teeth of the break. And still he tumbled, flopping through the grass like a caught fish. Dazed and bleeding, he heard Clarence cackling his approval.

Holy hell, now ain’t he somethin’ else, that critter? He shore give you a lick.

The old man was standing over Blanchard in the grass, grinning and wagging his head. And Blanchard divined that he, himself, was still alive, and evidently going to stay that way. The pain in his back confirmed his diagnosis. Touching it, his fingers came back bloody.

Clarence reached down and pulled him roughly to his feet. Come on, you ain’t hurt, he drawled. Bull was jist teasin’, that’s all. He was serious, you’d of knowed it.

Through the trees Blanchard could see the animal moving among the herd with his slow and ponderous dignity, as if to show all of them that he was still around, that he still reigned, their great black king and sire.

Wasn’t as big as he thought, was he? Clarence crowed.

Blanchard took out his handkerchief and mopped his face. He was surprised to see, amid the sweat, another smear of blood.

Big enough, he said.

Back at the corral Tommy was waiting for him, anxiously clutching with one hand the bulging United Air Lines tote bag he was seldom without, while the other smeared the tears still running down his face and into his whiskers. Blanchard shaved him only once a week.

Blackie all right? he asked. You didn’t hurt him, did you?

Blanchard could not help smiling at that. Naw, he’s fine, Tommy. You couldn’t hurt old Blackie with an ax.

Spot, he run away. And Kitty too. They all got scared and run away.

They’ll be back. They’re okay.

It was one of life’s more mischievous ironies that the pets Tommy loved so much, and which he invariably tagged with one of his Dick-and-Jane storybook names, would have almost nothing to do with him, probably sensing in his unrelenting devotion a flawed humanity, a lack of true anthropic arrogance. With the bull, whose real name was not Blackie but Emulous Prince of Moorland, the indifference was predictable, a function of its nature. But with the dogs and cats it seemed a matter of choice: they were forever running off and hiding from Tommy’s smothering embrace.

Let’s go look for ’em, he said now.

You look, Tommy. I still have things to do.

Doc Parnell, having pried open the battered door of his pickup, placed the bull’s blood sample with the others, in a rack of crimson vials.

I sure hope he don’t turn out a Banger, he said. When a bull gets it, sometimes you lose a whole herd.

Blanchard smiled ruefully. Thanks for the thought, Doc. That’s all I need.

I just want you to know what to expect, that’s all. If him or any of the females turn out reactors, then we gotta test the whole herd every month. And every reactor you gotta ship for slaughter, it’s that simple.

It’s simple, all right.

Well, Bang’s just ain’t something you can fool with, Bob. If the government didn’t quarantine and slaughter—

I know—the disease would be everywhere.

Parnell nodded gravely. But that don’t make it any easier, I guess. If I was you, though, I wouldn’t worry too much. This is just a referral case. You’re probably clean.

I hope so.

Blanchard already knew from the state vet all he wanted to know about Bang’s—or brucellosis. One of the most feared of all bovine diseases, it caused infected cows to fail to breed or to abort their fetuses. And it was highly contagious, able to sweep through whole herds and even neighboring herds in a short time. So wherever it was diagnosed the cattle were quarantined by the government and bloodtested every thirty days until they showed clean four consecutive times. All reactors were immediately destroyed, sold as marked-down meat. And every cattleman who had bought animals from the infected herd, or sold animals into it, he too had to have his herd tested. That was how Blanchard had come under quarantine, simply because of the bull he had bought, ironically the most expensive animal he had, and the only registered one, bought from the famed Moorland Ranch in Texas. But famed or not, the Moorland herd somehow had contracted Bang’s, and passed it on—possibly to Blanchard. Within three or four days he would know.

He shook Parnell’s hand now and thanked him for coming. Sorry about your truck, he added. I’ll call my insurance agent about it.

Never mind that now. Let me check that back of yours.

Blanchard obliged, turning away from him. The initial searing pain was gone, but he could feel blood trickling down his spine still, soiling his underwear and jeans.

Parnell gently pulled the shirt away from the wound. Yeah, just a nasty abrasion, he said. Gonna be hell to keep a scab on it, though, unless you lay on your belly for a week. Could you do that?

I’ll ask my wife.

Laughing, the vet got a tube of salve out of his kit and gave it to him. Have her clean the wound good. Then smear it with this ointment. It don’t work for pinkeye, so maybe it’ll work for this.

Clarence and young Parnell were coming up now. Both had their lariats back.

Critter stepped right out of the rope, the old man announced. Jist like I knowed he would.

Cattle could never get ahead of Clarence. He always knew exactly what they were going to do and why, though he often withheld this information until after the fact.

You finish up here, Blanchard told him. I’m going in and get this bandaged.

The old man made a face. Hell, I wouldn’t bother, little old scratch like that. Jist let it be. It’ll heal up before ya know it.

Blanchard made no reply. Four years ago he would have said something, tried to get through: Humor me, I’m a tenderfoot. Or one man’s scratch is another’s surgery. But he knew better now. There was no getting through. You didn’t argue with Clarence any more than you did with cattle.

All the way to the house Tommy loped along beside him, commiserating over his wound, which he had not noticed until the vet looked at it. Now it filled his world.

Does it hurt, Bob? Does it hurt? You be all right? You think you be all right?

It’s okay, Blanchard assured him. I’m fine, Tommy. You go find Spot, okay?

At the back door Tommy finally let go of his arm, probably anticipating the way Susan’s gaze would fall to his muddy boots inside and stop him in his tracks, like some futuristic ray gun, rendering him speechless and immobile. Only Blanchard—and sometimes Whit—would be able to get him started again, helping him off with his boots and prompting him on into the house, into the bracing air of Susan’s sanctum santorum. Four years earlier he had been her very special love and concern, poor retarded Tommy, one more aspect of the true and beautiful lives they were all going to live here in the hills, away from the sickness of cities and commerce. Somehow, somewhere, Tommy too had lost his specialness.

In the living room Whit did not look up from the television, which showed a fat woman leaping up and down like a manic kangaroo while the young game-show host with her tried valiantly to hold his shiteater’s grin. Blanchard thought of saying something to the boy—You should’ve been outside; the bull tore off the headgate—but he did not want to see the feigned show of interest or the look of guilt that would quickly follow. Whit was twelve years old, a small male version of his mother, pale and blond and good-looking in a fine-boned, fragile sort of way, with the same cool gray eyes and the same look of listlessly concealed condescension. But in the boy’s case there was also the guilt, for he was sickly, an asthmatic who seldom ventured from the house’s conditioned air out into the swarming heat and pollen of the ranch. He rarely complained, however. In fact, he rarely even spoke except to Susan, and then usually in anger, both of them railing impotently at each other over such matters as his failure to throw his dirty clothes in the wash hamper. Blanchard often wondered why he was exempted from the boy’s recriminations, for he after all was the author of most of their problems, the reason they were here, tied down in the Ozarks like exiles without passport.

As usual he found Susan reading in the sunroom. Showing her his wound, he asked if he could borrow her for a few moments.

She took off her glasses and put a placemark in her book. What happened?

Bull broke out. The Angus. He followed her upstairs.

So what did you do, wrestle him to the ground?

Something like that.

And Clarence?

Banged up his leg. But I don’t think he knows it.

Good old Clarence.

In the bathroom, Blanchard took off his shirt and pants and boots.

Your shorts too, she said. They’re bloody in the back.

As he slipped out of them she turned away and busied herself getting a clean washcloth and bandages. Better get in the tub, she told him. No sense getting the floor dirty.

He did as he was told.

Using the washcloth with warm water and soap, she cleaned and rinsed the wound, so roughly Blanchard had to look away to hide the tears of pain that came briefly to his eyes. But he said nothing. Finally she patted it dry, put on the ointment, and bandaged him.

As

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