โJesse is a dirty hooker,โ my daughter Steph shouts over the blaring car stereo. โThatโs going to be the theme of this trip.โ
My son Jesse, 16, pushes his feet into the back of her seat.
We havenโt driven far from Sparks. My 18-year-old daughterโs writing in her journal: โWe are at mile 3.7 and weโve become restless. We wonder: Do they have cars in Ely, Nevada? Do they have electricity? Do they have all their teeth?โ
The smartass offspring and I are on an odyssey across the Silver State.
We lived in eastern Nevada for two years in the early 1990s, moving there from Wisconsinโa place Iโve called โhomeโ though I havenโt lived there in more than a decade.
My kids grew up singing the Nevada state song. They appreciate wide open spaces and the post-rain smell of sage.
Weโve driven our 2005 Chevy Aveo (named Gabbo after the evil clown on The Simpsons) across the nation. But weโve not seen Ely since these two were toddlers.
โThose are your memories, Mom,โ Jesse said when I suggested the trip. โNot ours.โ
My goal was to fall in love with here.
โI believe we can be adequate to the earth if we are adequate to our neighborhoods,โ writes essayist Scott Russell Sanders in Staying Put: Making a Home in a Restless World. โMy nationโs history does not encourage me, or anyone, to belong somewhere with a full heart.โ
We buy Nevada Adventure Map and Stan Paherโs Illustrated Nevada Ghost Towns & Mining Camps Atlas at Sundance Bookstore on Keystone and Fifth and peruse them. My road-trip companions buy in.
โBecause you seemed so excited,โ Steph later explains. โWe didnโt have the heart to say no.โ
Expectations of fun run low as we exit Interstate 80 in Fernley. My son looks out the window and quotes the TV show, The Family Guy: โAwful lot of honkies.โ
Steph records this, along with an inventory of supplies: โWeโve got Swedish Fish and green tea. Our trip to Ely, though random, has begun.โ
We crank up the music, sing along with Rancidโ”Destination unknown!”โand take a roundabout to Nevadaโs โloneliest road.โ
โHighway 50,โ I announce. Weโre laughing when a cop car approaches, lights on. I pull over to let him passโso he can catch the bad guys.
He pulls up behind me. I am the bad guy. Accelerating too quickly, he says. Do I know what the speed limit is? Do I know how fast I was going?
Steph and Jesse snicker.
โIโve never gotten a speeding ticket in my life,โ I say.
Unmoved, the officer writes me a $107 ticket for driving 10 miles over the limit.
I pull away slowly and proceed like a half-blind octogenarian on sedatives. Steph writes: โAll fun ends when Momโs gets a speeding ticket at mile 34.7. Will she learn from this? Probably not.โ
Steph will graduate in June. She plans to move away.
To cheer me up, talk turns to prostitution, legal in this rural county.
โJesse, you dirty hooker,โ Steph says, โweโre going to sell you as a sex slave.โ
After Fernley, we come to Hazen where bulldozers grumble along next to the highway, plowing the desert into plateaus for homes and strip malls.
โMaybe theyโre building a big new brothel,โ I suggest. โA theme-park brothel with a water park. So you can drop your kids off and enjoy adult stuff.โ
โThatโs just wrong,โ my daughter says.
โWhatโs wrong with that, if itโs legal?โ Jesse wonders.
โYouโre right, thereโs nothing wrong with that,โ she replies.
Our trip to Ely, though random, has begun.
Next stop: Searching for mutant cave dwellers at Grimes Point Archaeological Area.
