The Daughter's Walk (18 page)

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Authors: Jane Kirkpatrick

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“Ours isn't to question the why of things, Clara. It takes up too much time and energy without any promise of answers. ‘Why Bertha? Why Henry? Why not me?' No answers in those questions. None.”

Mama stared out the window as farmland blended with industry. “A better question,” Mama continued, “must be, ‘What next? What now does God have in store for me?' These will take you to a new place, moving forward on one's way rather than hovering over the empty hole of
why
, where you can only tumble down.”

In Chicago, we left the train and walked past buildings that had been part of the World's Columbian Exposition of 1893, where reform-length skirts had first been introduced. At the
Tribune
, Mama asked for a clipping of the article written when we'd passed through before. It included a picture of the two of us, and Mama left our Spokane address so they could send a copy of any articles they wrote as a result of this visit.

“The walk will be good for us,” Mama said as we began the next four hundred miles. “Sitting on a train weakens the body. We need the benefit of physical exertion to calm thoughts that ride on sorrow.”

The walk north through the rolling hills of southern Wisconsin was nothing like the route we'd taken across the country the year before. Yes, cornfields lined our dusty trails, and little clusters of trees marked farmhouses, but we also walked past long miles of oak and maple forests. The hill climbs were steeper than in Iowa, and the humidity limped my hair straight as a horse's tail even when I used the curling iron Mama bought for me with a portion of the editor's five dollars.

“When will you write the book, Mama?” I asked. Southern Wisconsin was awash with fresh green and birdsong and little pools of rainwater where yellow butterflies danced about.

“I've been writing it. The letters I sent to Ole are like chapters in my mind. I'll be busy at home, yes, but there is always early morning before the sun comes. Writing our story brings me comfort. I find new ways of thinking about things. It's as though I went on to school myself with the experience of the walk, and now writing about it is another education: what to put in, what to leave out, how I felt at various times. It's easier to … write than speak about how I feel.”

“People won't want to know how you felt, Mama. They'll want to know what we did and how we did it, what we saw, who we met.”

“When I read, I want my feelings touched,” she said. “I want the writer's imagination and his facts. But they're different things, the walk and writing about it. Each gives me … peace. Its publication will bring honor to Bertha. We'll save the farm with it.” She switched the grip to her other hand. “I'll dedicate it to her. You won't mind, will you?”

Dedicating the book to Bertha meant everyone would know that my sister had died while we lived in Brooklyn, separated from our family, victims of the sponsors' withdrawal.

“Must there be a dedication?” I said.

“Of course.”

“Dedicate it to the entire family. We couldn't have made it without them staying faithful at home.”

“You're absolutely right.” She turned around and walked backward as she said, “They supported us. They'll support us too with the writing and your sketching. You'll see. It'll work, Clara. It has to. I'll save the farm yet.”

My mother made her own facts. I remembered the looks on the faces of my brothers and sisters when we'd left them. If I'd learned anything from this journey, it was that to take care of one's family, everyone needed to tell the truth and not make up facts when evidence was lacking.

In Winona, Minnesota, we visited the
Daily Republican
newspaper but got no coverage. Two women walking home had less appeal than brazen western adventurers walking east. At a park bench where we sat to eat an egg and biscuit, I picked up a copy of an old newspaper lying near the trash basket. I read the headline aloud. “ ‘Two St. Paul Women Fined.' They lifted their dresses too high as they crossed a muddy road, or so says a peculiar policeman.”

“The paper called the policeman peculiar?” Mama asked.

“No. They said he was ‘keen-eyed' and that if ‘the simple-minded females had but joined a vaudeville troupe doing barnstorming work around the country or become members of the grand opera company exhibiting in Paris or Chicago, they might have lifted their skirts a good deal higher without incurring official censure.' Mother, are we going to be arrested in St. Paul? Maybe we shouldn't wear our reform skirts there.”

“Nonsense. Our ankles are covered with the shoes, and besides, hemlines will be coming up before long; I'm sure of it. Didn't you get the feel of that back in New York with all the talk of women's suffrage?”

“I was too busy working, Mother,” I said.

“How does the article end?”

“ ‘St. Paul must be set down as one of the rural villages in the country in questions of female dress—or undress.' ”

“There, you see?” Mama said. “The newspapers know that change is coming, and they'd like to push St. Paul along toward a more open view of female outfitting. We'll be inspiration in St. Paul.”

In Minneapolis, we posed at the Anderson Studio on Washington Avenue, wearing our reform skirts so we'd have new photographs to sell. A row of buttons at the top of the side seam added interest to the waistline of the linen skirts. Blousy shoulders with narrow sleeves to the wrist gave a respectable appearance from the waist up. While on the train, Mama had embroidered delicate stitching down the shirtwaist fronts. In the photographic pose, Mama sat revealing the tops of the leather shoes while I leaned on a prop, a tree stump, with my skirt a good eight inches from the floor and my shoe, topped with a canvas overshoe, showing. We gave one print to the reporter at the
Times
and another to the reporter at the
Tribune
. Reporters from both newspapers showed up at the Scandia-Excelsior Hotel, where we sat in the kitchen telling stories to the staff.

Complimentary and thorough articles appeared in both papers the next day. “They liked us, didn't they?” Mama asked.

“I believe so,” I said. I spit on my finger, then tapped the curling iron heating on the coal stove in our room. “It's hot,” I said.

Mama stood and rolled lengths of my fine hair around the narrow rod, holding it until the hair nearly steamed, then untwisting it and
gathering up two more strands before placing it back on the stovetop to reheat. She got better results with that iron than I did.

The articles raved about our feat and wrote that we would receive the ten thousand dollars after we published the book. The reporters praised the future story of a woman's unusual perspective in this time of the “woman question.” “ ‘A settlement has been reached between the two pedestrians and private parties in New York,' ” I read. “I wish I shared their certainty. Your certainty.”

“Set your sights, Clara. No one thought we could make the walk except the sponsors and me. And eventually you. But if we hadn't determined to go, we surely wouldn't have been successful. We went for a good cause, and God blessed our walk. It will all work out.”

I stared at her. How could it all work out? Bertha was dead.

“Mama. It says here that one reason we made the walk was because of your consumption, and your wanting to prove that with good exercise like walking, you could get your health back. When you said that last night, it surprised me. I didn't know you were ‘threatened' with consumption.”

“I suppose that was too strong of a word,
threatened
, but I did want the trip to prove to myself that I could get my strength back, especially after my female surgery, and I didn't really want to talk about that in the paper.”

“We might not want Papa to see this comment.” I pointed. “ ‘Both are enthusiastic over their work and adventures and are satisfied in their own minds, at least, that man is not much the superior of woman after all.' ”


Ja
, well, that one we might not.” She winked at me.

The old Mama was back.

T
WENTY
Another Trestle

I
spread out drawing paper on the table in the train's dining room car. Mama slept at her seat, and so I'd slipped away. Since we'd boarded, she'd slept, and when she woke, her face at first wore a haunted look. I stared out the window thinking I could sketch the skyline along this prairie land, but this route took us much farther north and didn't look like the landscapes where we'd walked the previous year. Remembering the lonely train station of Nebraska, I started to draw, capturing as I could the rails coming together where land met sky. I drew a few more lines, thinking of how to create the sense of an endless horizon. I thought of the Dale Creek trestle instead.

Taking out another sheet of paper, I set to work sketching from memory the sheer rock walls, the canyon's depth, the intricate buttresses of tall, straight, and crossed sticks that held up the railroad tracks.

“Dale Creek, is it?” A woman slightly older than Mama spoke to me as she leaned over my sketch. She dressed as someone comfortable
in New York's society gatherings, with an ermine collar on a stylish jacket and a long linen skirt that accented her slender frame. Porters had lit the gaslights and prepared the meal for dinner, which sent wafts of good smells into the car. The table light warmed even further the silver fur piece that gave dignity and beauty to her wide-brimmed hat. “The Dale Creek trestle, yes?” The woman had a Norwegian accent.

“Yes,” I said. “We walked across it.”

“You mean you took the train. There's no walking across that place.”

I smiled. The woman had the blunt way of stating things common to Norwegians. My aunt Hannah spoke like that.

“No,” I corrected her. “We walked. My mother and I, on our way from Spokane to New York to publicize the reform dress. And to prove that women could endure such a journey.” I didn't mention our financial reasons.

The woman gasped, put her gloved hand to her mouth. She stepped back and I wondered if her actions were in response to the reform dress or the very idea of women walking across the country.

“You're them,” she said. “The globe trekkers. I … read about you in the
Minneapolis Tribune.

“Yes. We're them.” I studied my pencil, tapped it on the table, then set it down, not sure what else to say.

The woman fingered the small set of binoculars that hung around her neck. “I'd love to hear about your journey. May I?” She motioned that she'd like to sit down and I nodded. I wasn't sure what Mama would say, but I suspected it would be fine. A stranger interested in our walk would soon be a friend of my mother's. This stranger would hear the story first from me. Few did.

“I'm O. S. Ammundsen.” She reached out to shake my hand the
way a man might. Many women who attended Mama's lectures did the same. I put my hand out. The woman's gloved hand gave two strong shakes, the small set of binoculars bouncing on her bodice.

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