The girl’s bedroom was pink. She did not ask for it to be pink, nor did she like the color. It was her room, though. She did not have to share it with her brothers, and for this reason alone she liked the new house, which wasn’t a house at all, but a singlewide trailer placed on a tiny lot between the two-lane main street and the mountainside.
Carved into the mountainside behind her home was a trail, the Appalachian Trail, and a long span of rock stairs started at the edge of her backyard and climbed up and up into the wilderness. First thing she’d done when they moved in was to run up those stairs and count them. Her mother saw her and cut her eyes at her. “Them stairs are dangerous,” she scolded, “I see you playing on ‘em again your daddy’ll tan your hide.” There were forty-seven stairs, a prime number, and she’d never set foot on them again.
So she’d watch. People were always walking along Main Street, crossing the road just after her house, and then climbing up the steep rock stairs. If she was playing in the yard, she would wave to them, but then her momma reminded her they were strangers, and to keep to herself. She wanted to watch when a hiker came by, but was afraid they might wave to her. Then she would be torn between waving back and getting into trouble. So she just averted her eyes if someone came around, pretending she didn’t see them.
From her bedroom it was different. She could watch folks climbing up the trail with an unrelenting gaze. And if she squatted down and looked up she could watch them climb up to the very top stair before they disappeared altogether. The other two bedrooms faced the street, and the curtains were always drawn in the living room. Only she had this view of the backyard with the trail that stretched all the way to Maine.
At school there was a map of the Appalachian Trail, and she liked to look at it, and imagine what it must be like, to walk all that way. There was a star on their little town, and she could see the exact spot where the trail crossed the road before it went up and up and up, through North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, and on. I’m right there she would think, her finger pressing on the map. She did not know what Maine was like, or Virginia even. The farthest she’d ever been was across the state line into Tennessee to visit her aunt, which she hated to do because her cousins were all boys, and mean ones at that. She would sit in the safety of the living room and watch TV blankly, the air harsh with cigarette smoke.
It was late January. A sparse snow lay on the ground. Her brothers were watching TV with Dad, her momma was making supper. She’d been reading on and off all day, “Little House in the Big Woods.” She thought that might be a fine life, with no electricity and farm animals, and she’d mentioned it that morning to her mother, who’d replied that electricity made life possible, “something you’ll figure out soon enough if the power goes out.”
She looked out the window to see snow flurries starting to fall. There might not be school tomorrow, she thought. That’s when she saw a couple making their way carefully down the stairs. The woman was dressed in a bright purple coat, with lime green gloves and a knit cap with a tassel that matched her coat. The man wore a black leather coat, a black fleece cap , and jeans. They were smiling. The woman looked down at the house, her eyes scanning the windows, then seeing the pale face of a girl looking up. The moment their eyes met, the woman slipped on the slick stairs and fell, down, down the steps, then tumbled off the stretch of stairs headfirst onto the sloping black Earth. The girl put her hand over her mouth. She watched as the man ran down the stairs, and reached out to the woman. For a moment the woman lay still, and a fear gripped the girl’s stomach. She had caused the woman to fall, she was sure of it. Her cheeks burned with shame. But then the woman lifted her head, and stretched out her hand, and the man pulled her to her feet and helped her sit down on the stairs. They sat there quietly for a few moments, the man standing a few steps down from the woman, asking her if she was OK. Then they started to laugh, and she could hear their voices come into her room. The woman turned and looked into her window. She smiled and gave the girl a thumbs up sign before standing up and continuing carefully down the stairs. When they reached the bottom, the man put his arm around the woman’s waist, and they walked on, across the road, and down the sidewalk, disappearing around the bend.
The girl sat in her pink room and wondered at the stairs she was not allowed to climb. Her mother was right, they were dangerous. But they had laughed. She thought about Maine and log cabins and snow. She hoped that there would be school tomorrow. She wanted to look at that map again, to claim again her spot in it, and dream of where she might go.