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Chapter 47
Gravity Always Tells the Truth
Edna Parker pulled on the yoke of
her Cirrus SR20, leaving Waterloo and the last meeting of
the day behind. She banked the small plane east toward the
bulge on Iowa's Mississippi coast where she would then point
it south toward Saint Louis and home.
The two strands of the Wapsipinicon
passed beneath as her fingertip pressure on the controls wound
the altimeter upward. Below, in one eye sweep, she could count
dust trails of seven, eight, nine combines. Residue -- husks,
leaves, stalks and corn cobs -- spun off the backs of the
slow moving harvesters. The dust plumes floated west over
rows both standing and churned into little yellow postage
stamps of grain, one pasted atop each machine.
Something about that meeting...what
was it? Edna Parker pondered. She withdrew her long legs from
both rudder pedals at once to get comfortable. Gray hair,
manageably short, framed an outdoorswoman's lined face. Wraparound
aviator glasses shielded gray-blue eyes. Like many directors
on corporate boards, Edna was beginning to pay more attention
to what her executives were telling her. Not that she hadn't
before -- she had always taken seriously her responsibilities
toward the family's money, to her mother, her aunts, her grown
children, grandchildren, and suddenly, great-grandchildren.
Yet, lately, she also looked elsewhere than at the numbers
in spreadsheet forecasts of highlighted rows and columns.
Now, she asked herself, what is this muted powerpoint not
presenting?
Bill Vine was a little tic off in
his delivery today. That was it. Why?
Letting that thought steep for awhile,
Edna settled into further into her seat and leveled off at
plan altitude. She squinted across the ridge ahead at the
twin treelines of the Maquoketas as they paralleled southeast
to the big river. She let herself play for a moment at the
childhood game her father had taught her as they flew up this
way and back years ago in the Piper Apache. Today, that name
seemed out of place, yet the excitement in her dad's voice
as he shouted about the land before settlement seemed to modulate
in the steady hum of the engine. He would hold the stick between
his knees and gesture with both hands to get her to imagine
unspoiled prairies lying between long green paths of timbered
river bottoms, dotted here and there with oak openings on
savannas that stretched beyond even their high horizon.
The game was harder to play these
days. Perhaps her adulthood -- the continually hard choices
rising from running a family foundation in unrosy times --
restrained it. The black rectangles and flat sided, grand
piano-shaped ponds, the regular rows of waste lagoons below
were all now harder to mentally alter into free and meandering
wetlands and boggy places with tall grasses and shrublands
thick with birds all around them.
Less than a tenth of a hundredth part
of the Iowa prairie itself remained today. That thousandth
lay scattered in tiny gems, in the edges of cemeteries, remote
section corners, old rail line right of ways, in a few guarded
forties. The rest was gone, never to return. Sure, the prairie
and wetland restoration movement was gaining momentum, thanks
to Neal Smith and many others.
Yes, there were more and more places
where a person could walk below the brow of a little ridge
and stand among big bluestem and indiangrass with forbs at
your feet, and with both eyes wide, look through the tall
seedheads at pale gray prairie sky. You could let millennia
fall away and expect to see a hundred thousand bison blacken
the prairie like a slow swarm of huge ants if you'd just walk
over that ridge.
William Vine was nervous, Edna suddenly
realized. What was it? What had he not said? She thought hard,
yet she just could not quite get it. There was something in
the line of his mouth when the finance guy talked that Edna
couldn't shake.
The Cirrus almost flew itself as Edna
leaned south to cross the Mississippi into Illinois airspace.
She settled on the new course and counted the ribs of the
small rivers hinged to the backbone of the continent. Each
one carried the diminished waters of a dry summer, here and
there with rippled by little crests of higher water from a
spotty wet fall. Gravity gathered them all into the nexus,
into the cradle of Midwestern civilization, toward the heart.
Gravity does not lie.
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Next...
Chapter 48.
Thanks
for these resources:
Prairie
Rescue 2003; Iowa Natural Heritage Foundation
Iowa's
Wetlands and Riparian Areas, Iowa State University
Iowa
Prairie Network
Cirrus
Design, Duluth, MN
New
Piper Aircraft
The Upper Basin Chronicles,
Chapter 47 was written and edited by John Gabbert.
Upper Mississippi Basin
Stakeholder Network and The Upper Basin Chronicles © 2003
Saint Mary's University of Minnesota. Your comments are invaluable.
Please email feedback to (mailto link) The
Upper Basin Chronicles, Chapter 47.
The
characters presented here are purely fictional, and neither
bear resemblance to persons living or dead, nor represent
the views or opinions of Saint Mary's University
of Minnesota.
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