by Doreen Orion
Contents
Title Page
Dedication
One DETHRONED
Two THE MELTDOWN CRUISE
Three QUEEN OF THE ZARCONS
Four MOUNT POODLE
Five MOOSELESS IN MAINE AND OTHER HAIRY NEW ENGLAND TAILS
Six SOUTHBOUND IN THE FIRE LANE
Seven LORDY, MIZ SCARLETT! I DON’T KNOW NOTHIN’ ’BOUT DRIVIN’ NO BUSES!
Eight MY FAVORITE WINE HAS ALWAYS BEEN “I WANNA GO TO FLOOOORIDA!”
Nine ELVIS HAS LEFT THE BUS
Ten BUSING IN THE BUFF
Eleven BUS-TED AT THE BORDER
Twelve CORONATION
Thirteen TIM’S REBUTTAL
Special Places and People
Books Enjoyed on the Bus and Beyond
Acknowledgments, Disclaimers, and Trip Insurance
Dear Readers
Readers’ Guide
About the Author
Copyright
To anyone longing to pursue his or her inner bus
(It’s not necessary to have your own driver, but it doesn’t hurt.)
Chapter One
DETHRONED
* * *
Prevost Princess
3 parts vodka
1 part peach schnapps
1 part raspberry liqueur
1 robust whine (optional)
Recline on couch; command husband to assemble and shake.
* * *
When my long-dreaded thirtieth birthday arrived, I really wasn’t as upset as I imagined I’d be, for I had achieved a much more important milestone: my sartorial centennial. I owned one hundred pairs of shoes. Then, at age forty-four, I found myself trying to cram a mere half that number into a living space of 340 square feet.
The whole thing was Tim’s fault.
When he announced he wanted to travel around the country in a converted bus for a year, I gave this profound and potentially life-altering notion all the thoughtful consideration it deserved.
“Why can’t you be like a normal husband with a midlife crisis and have an affair or buy a Corvette?” I demanded, adding, “I will never, ever, EVER, not in a million years, live on a bus.”
Something less than a million years later, as we prepared to roll down the road in our fully outfitted, luxury bus, it occurred to me that Tim had already owned a Corvette, long ago when he was far too young for a midlife crisis. While I pondered who he might be seeing on the side (and whether his having an affair might prove less taxing than living in a metallic phallus on wheels), I wedged and stuffed—and, oh my GOD! bent—the cutest little Prada mules you’ve ever seen into my “closet,” which was really not a closet at all, but much more resembled the cubbyhole I’d been assigned many pre-shoe-obsession years ago at Camp Cejwin. How had I let myself go from “never ever” to…this? Both Tim and I are shrinks, but he’s obviously the better one. It took him five years, yet he whittled down my resolve, no doubt with some fancy, newfangled brainwashing technique ripped out of one of our medical journals before I could get to it.
That wouldn’t have been the first time my sneaky husband tricked me into doing something I didn’t want to do. Well, OK. It was only the second time (that I know of), but the first was a doozy: Almost twenty years before, Tim lied to get me to go on our first date.
We met in 1984 when we were both married to other people. I was a fourth-year medical student living in D.C., but doing as many rotations in Tucson as I could, because that’s where my first husband had just moved for graduate school. (He wanted to be an archeologist and put his studies on hold so I could finish my medical training. In return, I told him I’d do my residency wherever he wanted to get his Ph.D., not for one moment thinking he’d pick a city with no Nordstrom.) Tim was a second-year psychiatry resident in the Tucson program, and I was assigned to his team.
Although he was terribly nice and we got along well, I was, after all, happily married and didn’t give him a second thought when the rotation was over. As for Tim, his marriage to Diane (or D1; I’m D2. There’d better not be another upgrade) was already crumbling. Two years later, I was the second-year resident, Tim was about to graduate, and we were both divorced.
Tim and D1 had been high school sweethearts and their marriage was more a function of inevitability than compatibility. As for my ex and me, we just got married too young. Shortly after I graduated from medical school, I could see that our two-year union had been a mistake and vowed not to marry again for a long, long while.
Seven months later, I ran into Tim.
I was at a bar with a group of friends, drinking, dancing, and having a grand ole time. Tim walked in with a friend of his. Since we hadn’t seen each other in nearly a year, we chatted briefly, but apparently enough for him to realize I was no longer married. Again, I didn’t give him another thought—until he called a few days later.
“Hey, Doreen. It’s Tim.” What is this guy calling me for?
“A bunch of us from my class are getting together Saturday night to go back to the bar. You know, me, Mike, Walt, Ann…Dave. I wondered if you’d be interested in coming?” Did he say Dave?
“Uh…sure! See you then.” Seems innocuous, right? But, you see, Tim had dangled Dave in front of me because he knew I was attracted to him. How did he know? Because every woman with a pulse was attracted to Dave. And I snapped up the bait with no more thought than the many times I’d gone home with a designer dress that didn’t fit, just because it was on sale. Tim hadn’t dated much since his marriage had broken up and was not in a place where he wanted to risk rejection. So, you might ask, what’s wrong with arranging to go out in a group? Determine if we’re compatible? Have an out if…? See how good that man is at deception? There was never a group going out. It was always just going to be me and Tim.
That Saturday night, a few hours before we were to meet, the phone rang.
“Hey, Doreen. It’s Tim.” What is this guy calling me for?
“I’m really, really sorry, but everybody’s flaked out. Nobody can come tonight. I thought I’d show up anyway, hang out, have a beer. You’re welcome to join me…if you’re not doing anything.”
“Uh, sure. See you, then.” I couldn’t make other plans that late on a Saturday evening. Guess I might as well go. And that’s exactly what Tim knew I’d be thinking when he’d concocted his evil plan.
We met at the bar (aptly named “The Bum Steer”), where we talked, laughed, ate, talked, laughed, drank, and talked and laughed some more. Hey. This guy’s kinda…wonderful. Of course, I didn’t know that he’d hoodwinked me, yet. He waited a few weeks to tell me. By then, I was so smitten, I was actually flattered he’d gone to all that trouble. If only I’d realized it was the start of a pattern—sure, one that recurs only once every twenty years, but a pattern nonetheless. I shudder to think what he’ll make me do in another twenty.
That first night, I found myself falling. What is going on here? Then I remembered my vow. I don’t want to get involved with anyone. So I strengthened my resolve. I can’t get involved with him. But, all too soon, there it was: How…can…I…not? That first “date,” which wasn’t even supposed to be a date, lasted eight hours. We’ve been together ever since, progressing through the all-important M’s—Monogamy, Moving in, Mortgage, and Matrimony.
And then, unfortunately, motor home.
As a pampered Princess from the Island of Long, I have always been smug in my position as role model for my friends. They marvel at how I get Tim to do:
1. all the ironing (by exiting the house in horribly wrinkled clothes);
2. all the laundry (by washing everything together, so his favorite baseball shirt turned pink);
3. all the dishes (by being incapable of stacking the dishwasher in an en
ergy-efficient manner).
He also walks the dog (I’m a cat person), cleans the house (I’m a pig, but in fairness to me, the first time he suggested we split chores on a weekly basis, I said, “That’s fine, honey, but on my week, I’ll write a check”), and takes out the garbage (are there really any married women who still do this?). But once we announced we were doing the “bus thing,” as we came to call it, my friends started viewing me with disgust. They insisted I’d let them down. As their husbands eyed mine with envy and tried to get him to divulge his secret recipe for spousal capitulation, the wives shunned me as if the decision to chuck everything and live in a glorified tin can was a symptom of some contagious insanity.
The most curious reaction from our married friends, however, was incredulity—not about the bus, but about the amount of togetherness the bus would require.
“How in the world can you spend twenty-four/seven with each other? We could NEVER do that!” they’d say, shaking their heads in a unison of misery at the thought. Tim and I would just exchange knowing looks and try not to smile. Twenty-four/seven was actually the one aspect of bus life we were both looking forward to. I even think there are a few of my friends who believe I’m rather quiet, just because I never have much to contribute on the “let’s bitch about our marriages” front. I know I’m lucky. Unfortunately, Tim knows it, too.
He loves when Joanne, one of my best buddies from residency, calls. She’s one of the absolute nicest people I have ever met (second only to my husband). But she also has the absolute worst luck with men. Tim can always tell when I’ve spoken to her during the day, for as soon as he walks through the door at night, I invariably hurl myself into his arms and beg, “Don’t ever leave me!” He’ll shoot me a smug little smile and ask, “How is Joanne?”
Twenty-four/seven? No problem. Bus? Well…I tried to convince myself (really I did) that my living on one was a natural fit. Although I love the idea of travel, in practice I don’t particularly like doing it; the closets are never big enough and there’s always the risk of ending up on a hotel’s first floor, which smacks way too much of camping for me. I loathe camping. In fact, my idea of “roughing it” is to stay at the Holiday Inn.
Tim and I lived in Boulder, Colorado, for ten years before we hit the road. Boulder is always at the top of every “Most Nauseatingly Healthy/Active Cities” list—though many in surrounding towns refer to it as “Nestled Between the Mountains and Reality”—so sure, I can appreciate natural beauty. I just don’t want to have to walk around in it. Besides, the whole fresh air thing is overrated. I’m a physician. A scientist. Stale air, fresh air, it’s all the same molecules. I had so shunned the “great” outdoors, in fact, that I had never even been stung by a bee until the age of forty-three—and that was in my own house. I just like being inside. I like not getting dressed. I like not putting on makeup. I like not brushing my…well, never mind. Some might call me lazy. I can’t be bothered to disagree.
I’d never even realized how strange my love of the great indoors was until one February, when I heard Tim talking to a neighbor in our yard. I poked my head out the door to say hello.
“Doreen! It’s nice to see you!” she exclaimed, as if I were a burn victim, finally emerging from the hyperbaric chamber. Tim, of course, couldn’t resist singing out, “Guess it’s six more weeks of winter!”
I had even gravitated away from patient care to doing insurance reviews so I could stay home all day, in my nightgown, with a cat on my lap. For years, Tim used to come home and exclaim in amazement, “Don’t tell me you haven’t gotten dressed all day!” But I was proud of my record: 118 hours without leaving the house. Once I perfected the art of not even leaving the bed in the morning, it took Tim a while to get used to this new development. But I figured he’d come around. How could he not be impressed? I found out just how one day when, seeing me sitting up against the headboard, typing away on my laptop, cell phone standing by with papers strewn about, he exclaimed, “Look at you!” At first I didn’t quite get his meaning, and asked with considerable pride, “Yep. Who else doesn’t have to get out of bed to work besides whores?”
“Even whores have to leave their beds to get johns,” he said with disdain.
In fact, however, I always managed to get out—technically speaking—at least once a day: In the neighborhood, I’m known as “the Mafioso” because I’ll venture outside to pick up the mail or the paper in a bathrobe, like Vinny the Chin, who roamed Greenwich Village in his pajamas so if the Feds ever got anything on him, he could plead insanity. I tried pleading insanity when I first told my girlfriends about the bus. Although they agreed with the diagnosis, it didn’t seem to make them any more forgiving.
I also tried to convince myself that on a bus, I could do what I really loved (stay at home in my pajamas), while doing what I thought I should love (travel). How in the world could I ever have thought this was a bad idea? I even came to view it as a promotion of sorts: from Long Island Princess to Queen of the Long Narrow Aisle.
Tim, on the other hand, never had any reservations about the bus thing from the moment he stopped at the local newsstand and happened upon Bus Conversions magazine. He had found his people and his cause.
Ever since he started his private practice nearly fifteen years before, Tim would come home from work at seven or eight in the evening, then make an hour or more of patient calls he hadn’t been able to get to during the day. While he often counseled people to take better care of themselves, it was not something that he himself seemed able to do with any ease, largely because he was working himself to death taking care of them. He also tried to be as available to his patients as possible and if someone asked him to take a very difficult case, he always said yes, just because he believed he could help. His practice was killing him.
As I railed against the bus thing, I accused Tim of wanting to do it just so he could escape psychiatry. If he really needed out, I was all for it, but why should I have to give up my life (which I was perfectly content with) for a year? While he assured me this wasn’t the case, that the bus thing was something he truly wanted to do, I maintained my skepticism, although the most he would admit to was hoping the bus year would help him “mellow out.” Eager to change the subject, he proceeded to ask how I myself might like to be different by the end of the year. I cocked my head and batted my eyes, relishing this rarest of moments when my darling husband was the one to walk into a trap.
“Why?” I asked with all the sweetness I could muster. “Do you think there’s something I need to change?” Tim must have seen his bus dream flash before his eyes.
“N-no,” he stammered. “I-I just thought maybe you’d like to…you know…well…” His eyes seemed to roll back into his brain, desperately searching its contents for a way out of this one. Finally, he sighed.
“It’s just something I really want to do—while we’re young and can still enjoy it. I’ve done everything right all my life, the way I was supposed to do it. Now I want something for me. And I want it with you.” I suddenly had the same gooey feeling as all those years before, when he fessed up about tricking me to go to the bar. I gave him a kiss and said, “I’ll think about it,” but we both knew: Tim had me. Again.
He also had a point. Like many people, until we reached our late thirties, Tim and I went through life feeling rather invincible. Not only was it inconceivable that something bad could ever happen to us, even our very mortality seemed suspect. When we hit our forties, this changed, as our contemporaries experienced sudden, unexpected tragedies: A friend was diagnosed with breast cancer. A colleague died of a heart attack in his sleep. Both of us, for the first time, could feel creaks and aches in bones we hadn’t thought about since anatomy class. Over the years, we each treated people in our practices who looked forward to all they planned to do in retirement but, when the time came, were too ill to travel or too devastated by the death of a spouse to live out their dreams.
Those lessons started hitting home as we officially breached m
iddle age. We knew we were fortunate in that we would always have jobs; neurosis is a growth industry, after all. We could afford to do this now and go back to work later.
All these considerations weighed on me, swinging my decision back and forth like a fifth wheel dragged down the road. In the end, Tim finally got his way when he pointed out, “Look. We didn’t have kids so that we wouldn’t be tied down, so that we could do whatever we want, when we want. I won’t miss out on having kids without getting any of the benefits.”
Tim and I always assumed we’d have kids. It just never felt like the right time, for either of us. Yet, as the years went by, we both came to realize we didn’t miss not having them. And through seeing how much work our friends put into child rearing (particularly the necessity of leaving the house on a regular basis, for things like driving them to and then having to sit through—oh, God—soccer games), I gradually came to the conclusion that maybe motherhood just wasn’t for me. Since Tim didn’t feel strongly that he wanted kids either, at some point we agreed (especially after what we’d seen in our line of work) it wasn’t fair to a kid to have it, if we weren’t motivated to. Instead, our pets have become our kids and through them, we’ve realized that our decision was most definitely for the best. And not just for us, but for all of mankind.
Living in our house is like living with furry little Helen Kellers before the arrival of Annie Sullivan: Our two cats walk all over the table while we eat, grabbing what they can, jump on and off the bed all night, sticking their paws in our faces demanding snuggle (yeah, it’s cute—the first time), and blackmail us with bloodcurdling screams while we’re on the phone (and thus not paying attention to them), resulting in more than one potential Animal Welfare investigation.
As for our standard poodle, he has gotten used to going everywhere with us. If, for some reason, we absolutely cannot take him, he shoots us a glance of utter despair as he drags his curly butt to the couch, which he knows very well he’s forbidden to sit on. Of course we don’t have the heart to make him get off, since he’s already being so cruelly abused.