Quentin Lawrence
Quentin Andrea Lawrence stands beside the Pico Mountain gravestone of her grandparents, resort founders Brad and Janet Mead. Photo by Peggy Shinn

[K]ILLINGTON โ€” Quentin Andrea Lawrence was skiing Pico Mountain one recent morning when, hitting a bump, a long-lost spirit miraculously sprang back to life.

The 57-year-old Virginia visitor, sliding quietly onto the slopes, hadnโ€™t told anyone she was the granddaughter of the 80-year-old resortโ€™s founders, Brad and Janet Mead, or the daughter of its most famous alumna, two-time 1952 Olympic gold medalist Andrea Mead Lawrence.

Ask, however, and sheโ€™ll tell you how the champion, pregnant with her in 1960, skied the Olympic flame into the Winter Games that year in Squaw Valley, Calif., then celebrated a mother and child reunion with the torch when the two relayed it to the 2002 opening ceremony in Salt Lake City, Utah.

She also can recall how she provided hospice care in 2009 when her mother, having moved to Californiaโ€™s Sierra Nevada mountains, was diagnosed with cancer that spread through her body.

โ€œMom was my best friend โ€” her death was devastating.โ€

Quentin Lawrence felt buried for nearly a decade by an โ€œavalancheโ€ of loss and confusion that experts call โ€œcomplicated grief.โ€ Then this winter, her motherโ€™s name returned to the news when Vermont-schooled skier Mikaela Shiffrin headed to the 2018 Olympics hoping to beat the 1952 victorโ€™s two-golds-in-one-games record.

Quentin Lawrence didnโ€™t scoff. Instead, she smiled.

โ€œTo me, Mikaela embodies momโ€™s spirit โ€” a fierce competitor, but a sweet girl.โ€

Shiffrin ultimately grabbed only one gold medal in South Korea, ensuring her predecessorโ€™s place in history. Soon after, Quentin Lawrence, feeling a pull, traveled to Vermont for the first time since she was a teenager.

Andrea Mead Lawrence
Two-time gold medalist Andrea Mead Lawrence was pregnant with her daughter Quentin when she skied the Olympic flame into the 1960 Winter Games in Squaw Valley, Calif. Photo courtesy of the International Olympic Committee

Pico, founded by her grandparents in 1937, now is owned by neighboring Killington, the largest winter sports resort in eastern North America. But as she skied with her husband, Mike Grove, time seemingly wound back to the days her mother grew up on the mountain.

โ€œMy spirit is in the West,โ€ Andrea Mead Lawrence said just before her death, โ€œbut my soul is in Vermont.โ€

Her daughter remembered that quote as, speeding along Picoโ€™s Sunset trail, she felt the wind and sun and a presence comfortingly familiar.

โ€œI used to call Mom the Nureyev of skiing.โ€

Quentin Lawrence had taken to the slopes with a small vial of her motherโ€™s ashes.

โ€œI was laughing and joking and inviting Mom to enjoy the turn with me.โ€

Seeing a bump, she opened the ashes and launched her skis into the air.

โ€œIt felt so right, like this was exactly how it was supposed to be. I was dancing with Mom.โ€

With the arrival of Passover and Easter, Quentin Lawrence recalls a quote from her mother.

โ€œThe spirit of sport is really the essence and ideal of all our human efforts โ€” it is the exercising and joining of our individual energy with those of others in furthering the human race,โ€ the Olympian once said. โ€œEach contribution of spiritual and physical vitality establishes new plateaus from which others may thrust.โ€

Her daughter understands.

โ€œI was not expecting the trip to be as emotional, but Iโ€™m happy it was. Mom needed to come home. Iโ€™m just glad to bring her back.โ€

Andrea Mead Lawrence
A portrait of two-time Olympic gold medalist Andrea Mead Lawrence hangs at Pico Mountain. Photo by Kevin Oโ€™Connor/VTDigger

VTDigger's southern Vermont and features reporter.