Chapter 1: | Historical Erasure and Recovery in Gretel Ehrlich’s“The Solace of Open Spaces” and Janet Campbell Hale’S “Bloodlines”: “Odyssey of a Native Daughter” |
—Gretel Ehrlich, “McKay” (1991)
Gretel Ehrlich’s short story “McKay” depicts a day in which McKay, a stoic Wyoming cattle rancher, visits his deceased parents’ gravesite after he is abandoned by an old lover and ends up rescuing his horse from a snow storm. These encounters with loss on the thirteenth anniversary of his parents’ tragic death break down McKay’s tough exterior, revealing his suppressed loneliness and grief. The exposure of McKay’s inner pain is suggested by the “[b]locks of snow [that] fell away, exposing” the horse’s body. As McKay digs through the deep snow to uncover the horse, his tough exterior is peeled away, revealing inner wounds that are paralleled with the memory of his father’s “wounded, wistful eyes.” The function of “digging” away protective layers to reveal an essential, “authentic” self is a primary trope in much of Gretel Ehrlich’s work. Moreover, McKay’s final surrender to his grief in the concluding image where “he cried” reflects the tenderness and vulnerability underlying his tough exterior. The function of this sympathetic portrayal is to convey the fragile core hidden beneath the cowboy’s stoic demeanor, an image that resurfaces in Ehrlich’s nonfictional portraits of cowboys in Wyoming.