Telephone poles stride cliffsides, up and down and impossible. A man teetered at the top, not well-paid as he strung wires across chasms. My eyes follow the poles as they skip up steep hills chained together with lines of communication. They veer off toward a range far in the distance and my eyes lock on the rocks. They are covered in snow. Bushes grow out of cracks.
There are signs that tell us to watch for falling rocks. There are signs with pictures of cars about to be hit by boulders. There are signs that warn of ice, snow, snowpacked roads, blowing snow, bridges, avalanche areas, and animal crossing areas. I look into the brush for elk eyes illuminated by headlights. The road unrolls, every corner turn a triumph against the assault of dire signs.
Ears pop. The baby screams and falls back to sleep, equalized pressure as timberline is reached. It’s abrupt—the line of life and death is startling. Growth halts dead in it’s tracks. The sun setting to the west unleashes a shadow never seen in the flatlands. The shadow creeps up the mountains before us, to the east. Their western faces frown as night exhales a creeping grey veil.
Corners and corners, switchbacks and hairpins, passes passed and passes yet to come. Runaway truck ramps remind us we could runaway, screaming brakeless down and down and down.
The kids count off tunnels ’til home. I have to think—how many have we been through tonight? I lose count. At the tip top of our trip the tunnel is two miles long under the continental divide. Just think, kids, all the water on grandma’s side of the tunnel goes to the Pacific Ocean. All the water on our side goes to the Atlantic. Yes, even when you flush a toilet.
We are a bead on a string of road. The mountains wear us well.
And thankfully you are safely at your home still covered in snow with more on the way! A white beginning for 2007 but we finished 2006 with wonderful family fun celebrating our Lord’s birth.
Neat word-pictures. I’m glad you’re home safe too
Mary
How do you do this? Your writing is so beautiful. Thanks for the Christmas card, by the way. Look for a “Happy New Year’s” card from me in a week or two. I just cannot function without a computer.
Breathtaking.
You’re a poet, G.
This is truly serious material, given some of the stories that have come out of the mountains in the NW, over the past month or two.
No laughing matter.
Wow, what a beautiful rendering of your drive. I relate to those feelings and observations.
Was just there. Wowed by your capturing. That snow was incredible!
For some reason this makes me think Robert Frost —
“The [mountains] are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.”
Was that what you were thinking?