All of the books I write reflect things from my life. It was
time to write book #5, Timothy’s Home. Someone recommended a wonderful
book for writer for me called The Art of War for Fiction Writers. There
are a lot of exercises to hone writing skills in this book. One of them went
like this (more or less):
Suppose there is a truck driver driving really fast down
the highway. (Are you thinking of a hairy guy right now?
Now, the truck driver is a woman. (Tough gal?)
What if she is in a wedding dress or a formal and in full
makeup?
When I read this, I searched my mind for how to apply
this to a book set in the 1800s. What were the ‘trucks’ then? Who would be my
victim-woman driving? After a brief period of contemplation, I decided that the
biggest of the ‘big rigs’ of that time had to be the Twenty Mule Team. That
thought took me down a road I had travelled fifty years before.
I was three and my nephew was five. We were inseparable
and usually into some kind of trouble. Of course, wasn’t most of it the nephew’s
fault? (That’s my story and I’m sticking to it.) Anyway, my fifteen year old
brother had a magnificent model of the Twenty Mule Team Borax. Somehow, the
reins got all twisted up and it was destroyed. For fifty years my brother was a
little bitter about this. Once in a while he mentioned that he saw one at an
antique store or on eBay. This niggled at my mind a lot.
One summer we were in Denver and visiting our oldest
son’s in-laws. The grandfather showed us the house he had built. In the
basement there was a twenty Mule Team Borax model. I was so excited and
remarked that I needed to find one for my brother. Our son’s father-in-law said
he had one he would send to me. The problem was that it needed to be put
together. I told him I thought that would be fine.
A couple of weeks later I got a really small package in
the mail. It was half the size of a shoebox. I couldn’t guess what it was. When
I opened it, I almost cried. It was a model ready to be put together. Even the
mules came in two pieces. I had never put together a model in my life, so I
called my brother and told him I found a model. He said that he would
appreciate it if I would put it together for him. (?)
I begged Terry to help me put the thing together. He gave
me one whole day. He put together all twenty mules. The wagons were detailed
and there were even little men that went with it. Terry also routed a pretty
board and put the recommended finish nails every so many inches to hold the
mules in place. The day was over and I was on my own.
There were documents in with the model and when I studied
the instructions, I found some interesting facts about the twenty mule teams
and how they worked. After reading the short study there, I looked up a lot of
things on the internet. It was very interesting. While I painted and distressed
the wagons and put everything together for a few weeks, I contemplated the
lives of the people who worked on these wagons.
Some of the plot of Timothy’s Home unfolded there
on my dining room table. When I finished the model, I wrote the book and felt
blessed that I could share the wealth of information I had learned and not let
it go to waste. As it happened, we went
to New Mexico to see my brother and present him with the finished product. It
was fifty years late, but he was touched by my efforts. I love my brother so
much. It was worth the time and effort to see the look on his face that day.
The next book was a glimpse into my dad’s life. (He was
born in 1909)