1 The alarm rings. It's 5:45. He could linger under the covers, listening to the radio and a
weatherman who predicts rain. People would understand. He knows that.
2 A
surgeon's
scar cuts across his lower back. The fingers on his right hand are so twisted that he can't tie his shoes. Some days, he feels like surrendering. But his dead mother's challenge echoes in his soul. So, too, do the voices of those who believed him stupid,
incapable of living
independently. All his life he's struggled to prove them wrong. He will not quit.
3.And so Bill Porter rises.
4 He takes the first unsteady steps on a journey to
Portland's streets, the
battlefield where he fights alone for his independence and
dignity. He's a door-to-door
salesman. Sixty-three years old. And his enemies -- a
crippled body that
betrays him and a changing world that no longer needs him -- are
gaining on him.
5 With
trembling hands he assembles his weapons: dark
slacks, blue shirt and matching jacket, brown tie,
tan raincoat and hat. Image, he believes, is everything.
6 He stops in the
entryway, picks up his
briefcase and steps outside. A fall wind has
kicked up. The weatherman was right. He pulls his raincoat tighter.
7. He
tilts his hat just so.
8 On the 7:45 bus that stops across the street, he leaves his briefcase next to the driver and finds a seat in the middle of a pack of bored teenagers.
9He
leans forward, stares toward the driver, sits back, then repeats the process. His nervousness makes him laugh uncontrollably. The teenagers stare at him. They don't realize Porter's afraid someone will steal his briefcase, with the glasses,
brochures, order forms and
clip-on tie that he needs to survive.
10 Porter senses the stares. He looks at the floor.
11His face reveals nothing. In his heart, though, he knows he should have been like these kids, like everyone on this bus. He's not angry. But he knows. His mother explained how the
delivery had been difficult, how the doctor had used an instrument that crushed a
section of his brain and caused
cerebralpalsy, a
disorder of the nervous system that affects his speech, hands and walk.
12 Porter came to Portland when he was 13 after his father, a
salesman, was
transferred here. He attended a school for the disabled and then
Lincoln High School, where he was placed in a class for slow kids.
13But he wasn't slow.
14 His mind was trapped in a body that didn't work. Speaking was difficult and took time. People were
impatient and didn't listen. He felt different -- was different -- from the kids who rushed about in the halls and planned dances he would never attend.
15 What could his future be? Porter wanted to do something and his mother was certain that he could rise above his
limitations. With her
encouragement, he
applied for a job with the
Fuller BrushCo. only to be turned down. He couldn't carry a product briefcase or walk a route, they said.
16 Porter knew he wanted to be a
salesman. He began reading help wanted ads in the newspaper. When he saw one for
Watkins, a company that sold household products door-to-door, his mother set up a meeting with a
representative. The man said no, but Porter wouldn't listen. He just wanted a chance. The man gave in and offered Porter a section of the city that no
salesman wanted.
17 It took Porter four false starts before he found the courage to ring the first doorbell. The man who answered told him to go away, a pattern
repeated throughout the day.
18 That night Porter read through company
literature and discovered the products were guaranteed. He would sell that
pledge. He just needed people to listen.
19If a customer turned him down, Porter kept coming back until they heard him. And he sold.
20 For several years he was Watkins' top
retailsalesman. Now he is the only one of the company's 44,000 salespeople who sells door-to-door.
21The bus stops in the
TransitMall, and Porter gets off.
22 His body is not made for walking. Each step
strains his
joints. Headaches are constant visitors. His right arm is nearly
useless. He can't fully control the
limb. His body tilts at the
waist; he seems to be heading into a strong, steady wind that keeps him
off balance. At times, he looks like a
toddlertaking his first steps.
23He walks 10 miles a day.
24 His first stop today, like every day, is a
shoeshine stand where employees tie his
laces. Twice a week he pays for a shine. At a nearby hotel one of the doormen buttons Porter's top shirt button and slips on his clip-on tie. He then walks to another bus that drops him off a mile from his
territory.
25He left home nearly three hours ago
26 The wind is cold and raindrops fall. Porter stops at the first house. This is the moment he's been preparing for since 5:45 a.m. He rings the bell.
27 A woman comes to the door.
28"Hello."
"No, thank you, I'm just preparing to leave."
Porter nods.
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