There were
two bonuses that year.
The first arrived
at the regular time, though quite unexpectedly. 2001 had been a devastating
year for many large construction firms. For
Gallagher Electric, which was a smaller company, the first quarter was so light, Bill’s boss released him
for six weeks to take the children and me on an extended camping trip
throughout the Mid-Atlantic States. This was unprecedented freedom for a
project manager working in commercial construction. It was a sign of lean economic
times, so we had had no expectation of a bonus.
Yet the first
bonus came anyway. It was a welcome additional check that retired a chunk of
debt and gave us some breathing room. We were a family of eight by then, living
humbly by choice on one income in
less than twelve hundred square feet with no basement. Every dollar mattered,
and we were thankful.
The second
check arrived in defiance of the horrors that transpired on
9/11. Bill had brought another large job in on time and well under budget that
fall. “You’ve made me a rich man again this year,” his boss said
appreciatively. Bill gratefully folded up the additional check, tucked it into his back
pocket and shook Jim Gallagher’s hand.
We thanked
God for providing additional funds and set the money aside for a few weeks
while we prayerfully considered the possibilities. After much discussion, we
agreed to tithe off the top and divide the remainder in half. The first half
would go to savings. The second half would be a down payment on a more reliable
used vehicle.
Since Bill
endured a long daily commute in a beat up Chevvy S-10 truck with 400,000 miles
and no air conditioner, I was more than ready to go truck shopping with him.
He, on the other hand, never questioned our need for a larger, safer van for
the kids and me. Bill was immovable in his decision to buy one.
After much
research, we located a used fifteen passenger van at a dealership up in Tennessee.
It was a year-old fleet vehicle with forty thousand miles and a reasonable
price tag. Bill dubbed the forest green van, “Ranger,” dropped a hitch and
electronic brakes on it for the pop-up, and we were ready to go camping in
style. All that was missing was a tag.
Bill swung by the DMV after work one afternoon to register the van and pick up the new license plate. He burst into the kitchen afterwards, barely able to contain his excitement.
“Kay, come outside
and see the new tag I got for the van!” he exclaimed with a huge grin.
I dried my
hands and joined him with a puzzled expression. We had bandied about the idea of a
custom tag, but they aren’t a same-day item. You have to fill out a form
and wait weeks for it to be delivered. What on earth?
“Close your eyes!” Bill insisted with barely
contained glee. He stood in my way until I complied, then became an escort for
my blindness until we were in the driveway.
“Now look!”
I opened my
eyes. All I saw was a standard Georgia wildlife tag with quail and some
greenery on it, sporting the motto, “Give Wildlife a Chance.” While the green nicely
matched the paint job on the van, and the motif would fit when we hauled our camper,
it seemed pretty ordinary to me.
I turned to
Bill, puzzled.
He grinned
back. “Don’t you see?”
I shook my
head.
He gently
turned me around and pointed at the tag. “Look again. See what it says?”
I studied
the tag…
4AQ61
…but was
still clueless.
Bill’s
excitement was uncontainable.
“4AQ61!” he
exclaimed. “’For a queen, six kids, and one man who loves them!’” he chortled,
swinging me around in in the driveway as the children looked on and giggled.
Four weeks later, Bill was gone, but his legacy lives on when we tell stories like this one. So, Happy Valentine's Week, my children. Your daddy sure did love you... and so do I.
What a wonderful memory!
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing it with me, Nancy. :)
DeleteWow, Just one more reason I wish I had known him.
ReplyDeleteI love that the children and I can talk with you so freely about Bill. You are a wonderful and generous audience, Dear.
ReplyDelete