Our Maine Street's Aroostook Issue 25 : Summer 2015 | Page 55

my mother’s big orange Maine Coon cat, so they can dress him up in their dolls’ clothes. Their voices are calling, and I’m no longer enveloped in a memory my mother shared with me, but instead, watching them run around the old twostoried house I’d heard so much about, I feel as if I’m running with them. of long ago. The trail we tread, freshly groomed for the modern day snowmobile, is no longer a snowmobile trail but the footpath once taken by my French grandfather who trapped the wild creatures I now fight to save. I follow his footprints, for though they’re no longer visible, I can surely feel them beneath my feet as they take me off the well-worn path and lead me into Here in Guilford, I’ve caught a glimpse of her the woods where I am the only human beinglife as she knew it, and am able to connect with where I can hear his voice whispering to me in her in a way most children never get to connect French, guiding me deep into the lush seclusion with their parents, and before I leave I have the of the forest. Within the trees, the ever-present privilege of being able to visit my mother’s friend wind is buffered into a gentle breeze that carries who, these seventy-some years later, still lives in my grandfather’s voice to me and the scent of the house next door. the wild creatures to my dogs. They take off, bounding through the trees, and while I may My Native American ancestors were the first be chasing ghosts, they are not. I follow them people to leave their footprints in the St. John to places where God and his creatures thrive. Valley where I now live, and where their spirits Where a bull moose steps onto the path I have still walk. From my back deck, across my little just left, coyotes seem unaware of my presence, plot of wilderness stretching to the beautiful St and black bears peer from their hiding places. John, known to my ancestors as the Wolastoq, Where chickadees fearlessly flutter around my the sunlight filters through the poplars and shoulders and squirrels scurry about my feet. pines, their shadows playing across the river. Where I can hear my grandfather’s voice more I watch the ghosts of my native grandfathers, clearly, and though I don’t understand the their canoes silently cutting a path through French still spoken in my little town on the top the tranquil water, their voices traveling to me of Maine, here on this path- in these woods-I from the primordial past. Landing their boats, understand it very well. longbows in hand, they make their way onto the Canadian shore and, one by one, vanish into the trees along the riverbank. Staring past the red raspberry bushes and wild roses, beyond the field of Joe-Pye weed to that distant shore, I’m beguiled into believing there’s no highway on the other side of those trees. On the American side of the river where my house sits on U.S. Route 1, one of the oldest roads in the United States, I’m just steps away from another time, and with my dogs I cross the ancient road, newly paved, and set my feet on the path that will begin my journey to a Maine SUMMER 2015 53