In the late summer of
1975, a restaurant called Sound Food opened a couple of miles south of town on
the Main Highway. The restaurant was funded by several partners, of whom the
most visible was Frank Miller, who worked in the restaurant.
Linda Miller, Frank’s
wife, also worked there. She had long hair and wore long skirts. Many women
wore long hair and long skirts in those days.
Then, and I do not
know the time frame or the order of these events, Linda came out, cut her hair
short, stopped wearing skirts, announced that her name was now Lotus, and left
Frank.
(She once told me
that men were okay, but when it came to the quality of a relationship, women
were beyond compare. When Rick and I married, Lotus told me that Rick was a good
guy and all, but it was kind of a shame, because I would have made a great
lesbian. I took it as a compliment.)
As a single mother
she needed a means of support, so she became the best contractor on Vashon
Island.
Seriously, she was.
In 1977 I came to
live in the dilapidated former mess hall of what had been the Beulah Park
church camp and Chautauqua grounds. The property had passed into private hands,
and the mess hall and the little cabins on the property had become cheap
rentals.
The mess hall had many
deficiencies as a living space.
No bathroom. You had
to walk up the hill to another building where the toilets and a shower were
located.
No heat except the
brick fireplace. Rick plugged several airtight stoves into the fireplace over
the years. Remember airtights? All the structural integrity of a beer can and
they burned out fast, but they were cheap, and they worked.
The building had two
electrical circuits. There was a four-socket box with a breaker next to it on
the kitchen wall. Two sockets, on the left side, were one circuit. The two
sockets on the right were on the second circuit, and that circuit supplied
electricity to the entire building.
If the lights were on
in more than one room, and I was cooking on the electric stove, the breaker
would snap, and the lights would dim. At which point I would go over and push
the breaker back up. We lived with that until the night I pushed the breaker
up, and sparks flew.
So I applied for a
couple of King County loans, and in 1987 we signed a contract with Lotus to
remodel our house.
Lotus had Kimmco come
down and put a concrete foundation under one side of the house. Meanwhile,
Lotus and her assistant Kate (mea culpa, Kate – I have forgotten your last
name) got into the crawl space on the ravine side and put in supports that went
down to bedrock.
Once the house was
stable and level, Lotus and Kate stripped the interior of the building down to
the studs and outer walls. Then they built a new house inside that shell,
listening to loud country music on the radio while they worked. Lotus hired
subcontractors to do the wiring, sheetrock, taping and mudding of sheetrock,
and plumbing. Once Lotus and Kate started the job, they worked straight through
to the finish. There were no “contractor gone missing” episodes.
The transformation
took about four months, ending in January 1988.
Lotus and Kate did
meticulous work. Everything was level and plumb and sound. There were no
mistakes, no need for do-overs. Nothing turned up months or years later.
The house had all new
wiring.
It had baseboard
heaters. After relying on wood heat for ten years, Rick set down his chainsaw
and never looked back.
It had insulation.
We had an indoor
bathroom, with toilet, sink, and tub. Wahoo!
It was a great place
to live and bring up the kids.
I do not know how
many houses Lotus built or remodeled or what other projects she did on the
island. I only heard good about her and her work and a lot of us were
disappointed when she hung up her tool belt and started teaching at a community
college.
I look around the
house now and think what a fine builder she was, and what fine work she and
Kate did.
She was a good
friend. She was a person of integrity. She was practical, but she knew how to
laugh. She was a fine farmer/gardener. She did a lot of volunteer work with
several island organizations to make Vashon a better place to live.
A couple of years
ago, she became ill.
A couple of weeks ago
her bright light blinked out.
Deepest condolences
to her wife, Barbara; her son, Sonam; and all other family and friends. Virtual
hugs, and peace, and grace, to you.
Rest in peace, Lotus.
You done good.
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