I grabbed the railing as I headed
down the narrow stairs in the cottage. The phone rang its third ring and Diva
lifted her head to inquire. I pulled on the railing as I jumped to the right of
the landing, into the kitchen. A fourth ring and I grabbed it off the hook just
before it went to the answering machine. I wondered if it was Mom calling back.
"Hello?" I said.
Diva settled back onto her bed in
the living room, her tail taking one ceremonial thump as she assessed that all
was under control.
"Jenny, I want to canoe the Missouri
River before I die. Want to come?" Bill's voice was a
familiar one. I grinned before knowing it.
"Bill," I said,
"that's a great idea."
I had dropped the -ny ending on my name years
earlier, using the shorter "Jen," somehow thinking it allowed me to
escape, at least partially, the taunts of childhood. With Bill, however, it had
stuck, and I didn't mind. I was thirteen when we met, he stealing my mother's
heart a few years after a quiet divorce. He was canoeing the great Mississippi,
and we lived in a small riverside town. The first night he came to dinner was
the only night of my life my mother prodded, "Don't you think it's time to
go to bed, Jenny?" I awoke to find the car gone, Mom and Bill taking in
the Midwest sunrise. They married a year later and my
mother had found her mate; Bill is the only person I know who can fit her
wanderlust-filled life, a life she had passed on to me.
I shifted my weight onto my other
foot, the linoleum cold against my bare feet. "When are you going to do
it?" I asked. Having just gotten off the phone with Mom, I wished I could
have heard the route they had taken to get to this idea.
"Not me Jenny, us. I think
the four of us should do it together, do the whole thing, all the way to the Gulf
of Mexico."
He sounded like a little boy,
anticipation measuring itself against imagination. I could picture him grinning
on the other end of the phone line, his crooked smile giving way to a
full-toothed grin. Bill had watched me grow out of girlhood; he had been the
adult who found a fit into a girl's life, at the most awkward time of
adolescence. Now his seventy-eight years gave way to my twenty-nine, and I
wondered if he was serious.
"So what do you think?"
he said, "How long do you think it would take?"
I heard Donna move from the
smallest bedroom into the bathroom upstairs, her
delicate steps making the floorboards creak. "I don't know Bill, how long
is it?"
"I'm not sure, let's see,
the Mississippi is just over 2000 miles, but the Missouri River starts
somewhere in Montana and then meets the Mississip'
just above St. Louis. If we went all the way to the Gulf, I think it would be
about 4000 miles. Do you think we could do it in a year?"
This is where I began to measure
who Bill thought I was against who I was becoming. The past year had found me
in a new relationship, I was just completing the first month of a new job – the
first job in my life that actually had a salary, not the hourly wages I was
earning before – and Donna and I were just getting to know each other's wishes
and dreams. She had not mentioned canoeing the Missouri River
as one of her dreams, and I was trying to control my wanderlust.
"I think it could be done,
Bill, but would Mom do it, too?"
I knew, and Bill knew, that this
was a silly question. Cate Allen would do anything,
be anything, go anywhere, just because a) she wanted to, b) somebody dared her
to, or c) God forbid, someone told her she couldn't. My mother would be in a
canoe on the Missouri River for a year just because she
knew of no one else who was doing it. That was her way.
"Yes," he said, a smirk in his voice, "I think I could talk her
into it."
Now it was down to me, and Donna.
My life had been measured with a wanderlust yardstick. As I grew older and
moved out of the house I realized that not everyone moved every year, and most
families didn't sit down together during Christmas break and wonder where they
would be next Christmas, asking each other what adventures the coming year
would bring. Donna had been reared in three houses, all within thirty miles of
each other. She was the yin to my yang, and somehow it was working. The first
year we spent together taught me that I could build a career, that maybe the
wandering was more costly than I knew, and that indeed,
it was with Donna that I wanted to be. There was, however, a glint of doubt in
me, that longing to make it over the next hill, just to see what was there. My
wanderlust was a part of me that brought me many adventures, and a sense of
pride. I was more my mother's daughter than I wanted to admit.