Do people here think it is likely that Jack ever discussed with Ennis the cabin they were supposed to build and live in together when helping to run OMT's ranch? Or is it maybe a "pretend place", to use Lureen's term, - a place where, imaginatively at least, Jack could keep alive his dream of living with Ennis?
You bet. One of the mystery of the story is the deafening silence between Ennis and Jack, when it comes to that sweet life. The whole tragedy of Brokeback Mountain is that they couldn't have this sweet life except in the middle of no where, away from everyone else.
Jack was willing to build this sweet life together with Ennis, but Ennis was too afraid to take the risk, to take the plunge, to make a commitment, to get out from his comfort zone, to go further than around the coffee pot looking for the handle...
The idea of living together only comes up twice and, in a sense, forms a bookend to their long affair. The first time it brought up is by Jack during their initial retreat:
What if you and me had a little ranch together somewhere, little cow-and-calf operation,
it'd be a sweet life.
The only other time it is mentioned is again by Jack, this time during the Final Confrontation:
Tell you what, we could of had a good life together, a f....in' real good life, had us a place of our own.
You wouldn't do it Ennis, so what we got now is Brokeback Mountain.
Nothing explicit can be found in the short story or the movie, but I wonder if they didn't talk about it some more. Perhaps Jack might bring up the topic once in a while in the tents, in Don Wroe's cabin that year, or some time before the divorce, which is perhaps the reason for his excitement and happiness driving to Riverton when he got word that Ennis was getting a divorce. He misunderstood, by wishful thinking, that the sweet life is within grasp.
However, in the years that elapse between these two scenes, we never get to hear the subject mentioned again. But was it brought up, I wonder? Did Jack ever mention to Ennis the possibility of living together on his father's ranch? Personally, I can't see Ennis ever agreeing to live with Jack under the watchful scrutiny of OMT. I would have thought, too, that Jack would have realized how unappealing that would have been for Ennis.
So maybe it was a "pretend" place which Jack used to fend of the insistent - and selfish - demands of his father that he abandon his Texas life and come back - along with Ennis - to help him out. One day, Jack seems to be saying to his father, one day, but not today. Nevertheless, even in talking about their cabin, he was keeping his hopes alive.
Even Jack's use of "cabin" rather than "house or "apartment" when nominally sketching out his plans for his father, suggests that Jack may well have been thinking about the original "cow-and calf" operation rather than somewhere in public view on his father's ranch. For cabin, for me at least, suggests somewhere hidden in the woods, far, far away from those prying eyes Ennis so much fears, where the two of them, as on Brokeback, could once more be together again alone. However, in the world in which we - and they - have to live, such a vision, while possible in the real world, can also gather around itself some of the qualities of a mirage or a dream.
I think Jack told the old man that they would build themselves a cabin because he wanted to make clear that he and Ennis were not going to live under his roof. They would pay their own way, and be their own men. Sharing the same house with his old man would be impossible. It is also why Jack talked about getting a divorce from Lureen, and being paid off by Old Newsome to walk away. After the divorce scene, and by that fateful Thanksgiving, Jack reckoned there was no chance of a sweet life with Ennis, so he might as well make the most of what he had in Texas, and laid down the law in his house, putting the old man in his place. It was ironic because after standing up to Old Man Newsome, it became all the more difficult for Jack to leave Lureen, and pursue the sweet life with Ennis.
At one point, when Ennis asked Jack "you ever got the feeling...," he was perhaps ready to hear the proposal for the sweet life again. But Jack already left that dream, and all he could think of was to ask Ennis to "move to Texas." Ennis was too proud to consider that, not to mention he needed to stay close to the girls. That's probably why he got mad at Jack, because he was disappointed that Jack didn't talk about the cow and calf operation again.
In the end, neither the short story nor the movie expanded on this sweet life, and focused instead, on the tragic life destroyed by homophobia in 'em early days in rural Wyoming, the tragic life of dreams worn thin by despair and futility, the tragic life of love lost through fears and lack of courage, the tragic lives of the wives who never knew true love because the men they loved had to hide their true feelings from a society that did not understand.
It is this dramatic tension of the sweet life denied that drove so many to write fan fictions to explore what could have been.
But time has changed, and the sweet life is not only possible, it is real, not just in movies or on television (in shows like Brothers and Sisters, or Verbotene Liebe, etc) but in the real lives of men and women living in developed countries, and in the courageous lives of pioneers living in developing countries yet to affirm the dignity of gay people.
Dreams sometimes can come true.