The light went out again, then came back better than ever
as I was fitting the spare over the lugs. "Much better," I said
There was a flood of dim orange flickery light. But when I
turned to find the lug nuts, I was surprised to see that the
flashlight the boy was holding was dead. The light was com-
ing from two bears at the edge of the trees, holding torches.
They were big, three-hundred-pounders, standing about five
feet tall. Wallace Jr. and his father had seen them and were
standing peffectly still. It s best not to alarm bears.
I fished the lug nuts out of the hubcap and spun them on.
I usually like to put a ii tde oil on them, but this time I let it go.
I reached under the car and let the jack down and pulled it
out. I was relieved to see that the spare was high enough to
drive on. I put the jack and the lug wrench and the flat into
the trunk. Instead of replacing the hubcap, I put it in there
too. All this time, the bears never made a move. They just
held the torches, whether out of curiosity or helpfulness,
there was no way of knowing. It looked like there may have
been more bears behind them, in the trees.
Opening three doors at once, we got into the car and
drive off. Wallace was the first to speak. "Looks like bears
have discovered fire," he said.
When we first took Mother to the Home almost four years
(forty-seven months) ago, she told Wallace and me she was
ready to die. "Don t worry about me, boys," she whispered,
pulling us both down so the nurse wouldn t hear. "I ve drove
a million miles and I m ready to pass over to the other shore.
I won t have long to linger here." She drove a consolidated
school bus for thirty-nine years. Later, after Wallace left, she
told me about her dream. A bunch of doctors were sitting
around in a circle discussing her case. One said, "We ve
done all we can for her, boys, let s let her go." They all
turned their hands up and smiled. When she didn t die that
fall she seemed disappointed, though as spring came she for-
got about it, as old people will.
In addition to taking Wallace and Wallace Jr. to see
Mother on Sunday nights, I go myself on Tuesdays and
Thursdays. I usually find her sitting in front of the TV, even
though she doesn t watch it. The nurses keep it on all the
time. They say the old folks like the flickering. It soothes
them down.
"What s this I hear about bears discovering fire?" she said
on Tuesday. "It s true," I told her as I combed her long white
hair with the shell comb Wallace had brought her from
Florida. Monday there had been a story in the Louisville Cou-
rier-Journal, and Tuesday one on NBC or CBS Nightly News.
People were seeing bears all over the state, and in Virginia as
well. They had quit hibernating, and were apparently plan-
ning to spend the winter in the medians of the interstates.
There have always been bears in the mountains of Virginia,
but not here in western Kentucky, not for almost a hundred
years. The last one was killed when Mother was a girl. The
theory in the Courier-Journal was that they were following I-65
down from the forests of Michigan and Canada, but one old
man from Allen County (interviewed on nationwide TV) said
that there had always been a few bears left back in the hills,
and they had come out to join the others now that they had
discovered fire.
"They don t hibernate anymore," I said. "They make a
fire and keep it going all winter."
"I declare," Mother said. "What ll they think of next!"
The nurse came to take her tobacco away, which is the signal
for bedtime.
Every October, Wallace Jr. stays with me while his parents go
to camp. I realize how backward that sounds, but there it is.
My brother is a Minister (House of the Righteous Way, Re-
formed) but he makes two thirds of his living in real estate.
He and Elizabeth go to a Christian Success Retreat in South
Carolina, where people from all over the country practice
selling things to one another. I know what it s like not be-
cause they ve ever bothered to tell me, but because I ve Seen
the Revolving Equity Success Plan ads late at night on TV.
The school bus let Wallace Jr. off at my house on Wednes-
day, the day they left. The boy doesn t have to pack much of a
bag when he stays with me. He has his own room here. As the
eldest of our family, I hung on to the old home place near
Smiths Grove. It s getting run-down, but Wallace Jr. and I
don t mind. He has his own room in Bowling Green, too, but
since Wallace and Elizabeth move to a different house every
three months (part of the Plan), he keeps his .22 and his
comics, the stuff that s important to a boy his age, in his room
here at the home place. It s the room his dad and I used to
share.
Wallace Jr. is twelve. I found him sitting on the back
porch that overlooks the interstate when I got home from
work. I sell crop insurance.
After I changed clothes I showed him how to break the
bead on a tire two ways, with a hammer, and by backing a car
over it. I like making sorghum, fixing tires by hand is a dying
art. The boy caught on fast, though. "Tomorrow I ll show
you how to mount your tire with the hammer and a tire
iron," I said.
"What I wish is I could see the bears," he said. He was
looking across the field to 1-65, where the northbound lanes
cut off the corner of our field. From the house at night,
sometimes the traffic sounds like a waterfall.
"Can t see their fire in the daytime," I said. "But wait till
tonight." That night CBS or NBC (I forget which is which )
did a special on the bears, which were becoming a story of
nationwide interest. They were seen in Kentucky, West Vir-
ginia, Missouri, Illinois (southern), and, of course, Virginia.
There have always been hears in Virginia. Some characters
there were even talking about hunting them. A scientist said
they were heading into the states where there is some snow
but not too much, and where there is enough timber in the
medians for firewood. He had gone in with a video camera,
but his shots were just blurry figures sitting around a fire. An-
other scientist said the bears were attracted by the berries on
a new bush that grew only in the medians of the interstates.
He claimed this berry was the first new species in recent his-
tory, brought about by the mixing of seeds along the high-
way. He ate one on TV, making a face, and called it a
"newberry." A climauc ecologist said that the warm winter
(there was no snow last winter in Nashville, and only one
flurry in Louisville) had changed the bears hibernation
cycle, and now they were able to remember things from year
to year. "Bears may have discovered fire centuries ago," he
said, "but forgot it." Another theory was that they had dis-
covered (or remembered) fire when Yellowstone burned,
several years ago.
The TV showed more guys talking about bears than it
showed bears, and Wallace Jr. and I lost interest. After the
supper dishes were done I took the boy out behind the house
and down to our fence. Across the interstate and through the
trees, we could see the light of the bears fire. Wallace Jr.
wanted to go back to the house and get his .22 and go shoot
one, and I explained why that would be wrong. "Besides," I
said, "a twenty-two wouldn t do much more to a bear than
make it mad.
"Besides," I added, "it s illegal to hunt in the medians." |