Authors: Ann Cummins
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Copyright © 2007 by Ann Cummins
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Cummins, Ann.
Yellowcake / Ann Cummins.
p. cm.
ISBN
-13: 978-0-618-26926-6
ISBN
-10: 0-618-26926-6
1. Uranium minersâHealth and hygieneâNew
MexicoâFiction. 2. Family lifeâFiction. 3. Navajo
IndiansâFiction. 4. Conflict of generationsâ
Fiction. 5. New MexicoâFiction. I. Title.
PS
3603.
U
657
Y
45 2007
813'.6âdc22 2006023453
Book design by Melissa Lotfy
Printed in the United States of America
MP
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
Tell me what's the matter with the mill.
MEMPHIS MINNIE
For my mother,
BARBARA CUMMINS
In memory of
my father,
AcknowledgmentsCYRIL PATRICK CUMMINS
I would like to thank the supportive and inspiring readers who saw this book through many drafts: first and last, my husband, Steve Willis. Susan Canavan, editor extraordinaire. Tilly Warnock. Nancy Johnson, Ann Packer, Sarah Stone, Ron Nyren, Lisa Michaels, Vendela Vida, Cornelia Nixon, Julie Orringer, and Angela Pneuman. For their help with the Navajo language and medical details, Ellavina Tsosie Perkins and Warren Perkins. For putting up with me, my sisters and brothers, Mary, Tom, Steve, Trish, and, in spirit, Kathy. Georgia Briggs, whose stories have been a guide for many years. The Lannan Foundation for its generous support and haven in Marfa. The wonderful Jenny Bent.
T
HEY COME AT
ten o'clock in the morning. Ryland's wife, Rosy, is at the fabric store with their daughter, Maggie, who's getting married next month. Ryland goes ahead and opens the door against his better judgment. He always opens the door when somebody rings, though he usually regrets it. He is not afraid of muggers. Muggers, he figures, will leave sooner rather than later. He's afraid of the neighbor lady, Mrs. Barron, who always leaves later, and the Mormon missionaries, who like to fight with his wife, they always leave later. And Pretty Boy across the street, old Hal Rivers, who waters his lawn in bikini swim trunks, parades young girls in and out, day in, day out, lady's man, though he has a gut and a little bald pateâstill, the girls like him, which only goes to show that it's not the looks but the pocketbook. Old Hal stopping by every now and again to chew the fat terrifies him, though Ryland makes sure the man never knows but that he's welcome.
This man and woman, though, Ryland doesn't recognize. He lets them in because of the young Navajo woman with them. She has to tell him who she is. Becky Atcitty.
"You know my dad," she says.
"You're not Becky Atcitty."
"Yes I am."
He stands for a minute and admires the young woman little Becky has become. He tells her that when he first met her she wasn't any bigger than a thumbnail. Now they sit across from him, three of them on the couch, and Becky begins telling him how Woody is sick.
Ryland shakes his head. He likes Woody. "Your dad was a good worker. Every time somebody didn't show up for a shift at the mill, I'd call him and say, 'Woody, got a cup of joe with your name on it,' and your dad'd always say, 'Okay, then.'" Ryland looks over Becky's head out the front window to the ash tree in the yard. The leaves are green-white, dry. Rosy has hung plywood children in plywood swings, a boy and a girl, from the tree limbs. The children aren't swinging, though, because there's no hint of a breeze.
"He has lung cancer," the woman with Becky says. Classy. Dressed like a TV news anchor in one of those boxy suits. Hair any color but naturalâone of those poofed-up, clipped, and curled deals that hugs her head.
"Your dad's a strong man," Ryland says to Becky. "Don't you worry." Becky is sitting between the man and the woman. The man is looking all around, beaming at the pictures on the wall. His hair is pulled back in a little ponytail. Skinny guy in jeans.
Becky says, "We just think that maybe the mill workers should get some of the same benefits the miners got."
"We're just at the beginning of this process, Mr. Mahoney," the woman says. "The mill workers like yourself and Mr. Atcitty are entitled ... Tell him about the air ventilation in the mills, Bill. Bill's a public interest lawyerâ"
"I don't have cancer."
The woman stops. She blinks at him. He watches her eyes slide to the portable oxygen tank at his feet.
"Of course not," she says. "We were wondering if you kept medical histories on your workers, and if by chance you still have..."
"You people like something? I could put on some coffee. Rosy'll be home any minute. She's going to be mad if she sees Becky Atcitty here and I didn't give her anything."
Becky says, "They think if you've got any records on Dad it might give us some place to start."
"Mr. Mahoney," the woman says, "as I'm sure you know, we made great strides when the compensation act passed, but it does us no good if there's no way for victims to collect. The mill workers like yourself and Mr. Atcitty are entitled ... Bill, tell him about the-"
"He doesn't have to tell me anything," Ryland says.
The woman blinks again. She smiles.
The lawyer gets up and walks over to the pictures on the wall. "Is this your family, Mr. Mahoney? Handsome family."
Ryland stares at the man staring at his family.
The woman says, "This is simply about workers who were continually exposed to toxicâ"
"Your daddy doesn't know you're here, does he." He peers at Becky, who leans back into the couch. They had a party when she was born. He brought cigars and cider to the mill. Sam Behan, his old chum, teased him. "During working hours, Ry?" Sam said, and Ryland said, "Who's the boss?" They all raised a glass and toasted this girl's birth.
Ryland leans forward. The girl stares at something over his shoulder. He can't read her. Navajos. Never could read them. But her dad, Woody was a good man. Didn't truck with unions. When they wanted to bring the union in, Woody said he had a family to support. This Ryland knows for a fact.
"Don't you worry about your dad," he says. "He's a strong man." He looks at the news anchor lady. Her eyes are as bright as a child's, and her grinning teeth are blue-white. Her hands, laced in a fist on her lap, are white, too, and the skin pulls so tight it looks like her knuckles are about to bust through.
"One of the best men I know," Ryland says to her. "Woodrow Atcitty. This girl's dad."
Â
But Rosy catches them as they're leaving. Now the four of them sit around the kitchen table drinking coffee. Ryland sits in his chair in the living room."...little chance the Navajo miners with legitimate claims can file. The red tape is prohibitive," the lawyer's saying.
On the TV a fancy man is breaking eggs into a dish. The man uses one hand to break the eggsâegg in the palm of the hand, little tap, then presto! On the egg-breaking hand, the cook wears a Liberace ring. One of those rings that stretches from knuckle to fist.
The lawyer says they've only just begun to organize. He wants to have community meetings. He wants to educate and motivate.
Moneygrubbing lawyer. Ryland would lay bets that guy's on the clock. The man isn't sitting at his kitchen table out of charity.
Liberace says, "Whisk it up good." He's making a confection. Ryland watches him stir sugar into eggs.
Rosy wants them to know about Ryland's handkerchiefs. "All those years that he worked in the uranium mill, his handkerchiefs were always stained yellow from mucus he blew out of his nose. I have many questions and no answers."
"We all have questions," the lawyer says. "Maybe you'd like to join us next week. We're identifying key people in the region who might form a planning committee."
"Sure," Rosy says. "Any day but Tuesday." She says something about a doctor's appointment Tuesday. Ryland strains to hear. He hits the mute button on the channel changer. She's saying he's got some sort of test scheduled.
"What test?" he calls out.
The kitchen goes silent. Ryland can feel them looking at each other. Then Rosy yells, "I told you about it. We scheduled this a month ago, Ryland." He stares at the thick confection as Liberace pours it into a bowl. Now he hears a chair skidding on the kitchen linoleum, and he watches his wife's reflection in the TV screen as she comes into the living room. "You agreed to it," she says quietly. She says that Dr. Callahan recommended this test, that they're going to take a little tissue from his lung. That's all. "It's just a precaution," she says, and he turns, giving her a look "It wasn't my idea," she hisses, her dark eyes fiery. He wonders about that. "Don't you remember?"
He looks back at the TV. He can see her hands, tiny fists in the screen's reflection. He says, "You're my memory."
H
E CAN'T QUARREL
with them. They have their evidence. He's heard all about it for years, what uranium does to people. How could you quarrel? He's seen the pictures: pictures of tumors, pictures of soft-gummed miners whose teeth have fallen out. Maybe it was the uranium exposure. Maybe it was something else, like cigarettes. But nobody was complaining back then, not on payday. It isn't that he wants to pick a fight; it's that the quarrel is beside the point. He doesn't really know what the point is, just that the steady drone of moneygrubbers taking up this cause and that cause makes him sick.
The thing is, it hasn't been a bad life. They've done okay.
Sometimes he dreams he is there. In the heat of the crusher room, midafternoon when the shift was new. On a swing-shift afternoon in the uranium mill, sunlight bored hard through the smeared windows in the room where the crushers split yellow ore for the yellowcake they made. At a certain angle, in the heat of the day, golden dust filled the air above the conveyor belts, and entering the room was like entering an oven. You didn't want to go in. You didn't want to begin. Once there, though, the heat took you. You got the rhythm of the place. The clickety-click of the bearings in the conveyor belts, the steady pounding of the crushers grinding rock to bits, dust the texture of chalk. Mouth and nose coated. Entering the mill when the heat-seared walls and ceiling began to sweat was exhilarating, like moving hard into a fast hot wind.
***
Of the eighteen men who moved down from Colorado to New Mexico with him in 1964 to operate the mill on the Navajo reservation, he supposes some have died. He doesn't know, doesn't keep track. Rosy keeps track. She reads him Christmas letters written by wives, wives who don't seem to die. It's always old Mr. So-and-So died, never Mrs., which seems a little like a conspiracy to Ryland, how the women just live on and on to write their Christmas obituary letters.
Sam hasn't died, though. Against all odds, Sam Behan is still alive. Sam is his oldest friend; they are both sixty-five years old and have been friends for fifty-eight of those years. Sam called Ryland from Florida last week to tell him about a new kind of tin roof. It takes Ryland exactly twenty-two rings to get out of bed, put on his slippers and robe, start the portable oxygen tank rolling. He takes his time getting to the kitchen to answer because he knows Sam won't hang up. Drunk or not, when Sam wants to talk, he's a patient man. Sam had been watching TV in some Florida bar and saw a commercial about the roof. "Twice as durable, half the cost," Sam had said. Old Sam. Sitting in a bar, thinking about hard New Mexico winters and Ryland's roof. Though they talk once, sometimes twice a month, Ryland hasn't seen him in seventeen years, ever since the mill closed. Lily, Rosy's sister, divorced Sam that same year when she found out about Alice. Sam had been having an affair with a Navajo woman, Alice Atcitty, the entire time they were on the reservation. For Sam there always were women in the wings. It surprised Ryland, though, that he let one of them monkey up his marriage. Ryland and Sam had married Lily and Rosy Walsh in a joint ceremony three years after the war. They'd been best man for each other.