The
screen door on the back porch leads directly into Grandma's kitchen, and she
gets there before me, even though I'm the first out of the car after the
lengthy road trip from our home in Alabama to western Pennsylvania. I'm going
to Grandma's. Clutching a fat little suitcase that says as much, I conquer the
steps in clumsy stride and see the screen door open wide. So does her embrace,
which I pull from too soon to ask her to read me a story—Woody the
Woodpecker, please. She heeds my urgent request, drying her hands on the
towel on the stove where our dinner awaits.
In
the afternoon Grandpa takes his oxygen tank into the den. He has something to
show me. In one corner is what looks to six-year-old me like a very large,
tilted desk. One day it will be replaced by a computer station, but right now
it contains brushes, oil paints, photos and a canvas. Grandpa's working on an
outdoor scene with a river winding back to the horizon. I smile up at him,
impressed. He points to two portraits placed above the closet full of board
games.
"Do
you know who that man and that woman are?" he asks me. I pause a moment,
noting the suit jacket and bowtie on the man and the pink dress and familiar
smile the woman is wearing.
"You
and grandma?"
"That's
right."
"Did
you paint those, too?"
"I
did." Grandpa turns on the TV, and soon we are watching PBS's Bob Ross
paint a happy little tree here and a happy little tree there. It's a really
quiet show; all I hear is the whisper of the artist's brush and his occasional
comments. He sure makes painting look easy. But the picture he's creating on
the screen pales in comparison to the ones around the house, the ones by my
very own grandfather.
After
dinner Grandma and Grandpa watch the NewsHour with Jim Lehrer and then
head out to the back porch for fresh air. The fireflies are blinking, and I
have a jar in my hands. But when I catch one I wimp out, shaking the alarmed
little fellow off my fingers. Watching them is best, the way you see the flash
of light floating and then try to guess where the same lively bulb will light
up next. It's like looking at the sky on a clear night, except you're right
there among these unpredictable constellations.
-----
In
the morning Uncle Bill arrives. He's my dad's older brother, and he's here to
visit too, like ten-year-old me, and to redo the bricks on the back patio. I'm
shy with him, but he fascinates me. He has sandy red hair—that's where my
brother probably got his—and he doesn't have kids. He does things like give
hang-gliding lessons and live along the beach. One time he gave me a
hang-gliding lesson of sorts.
He's
rather quiet himself and seems all right with me not saying much. So while he
prepares the sand foundation for newly placed bricks I sit on the gray-blue
steps of the porch, providing him an audience while enjoying a little of
Grandma's rhubarb with my bowl of sugar. Somehow the bowl is always empty
before the stalk is half gone.
-----
Grandma
has agreed to let me interview her for an oral history project I'm doing for a
college course. We're seated across from each other at a dining-room table that
is as old as her marriage. Today I'm asking her about life-changing events, and
one of the experiences she mentions is no surprise, because it had an impact on
me, too.
I
remember Dad was away for a week visiting Grandma and Grandpa when Mom got the
call. Mom's face fell so far as she held that phone to her ear that I couldn't
wait for her to hang up and pass along the message to us kids. What
happened? What happened? I begged her. She finally covered the receiver for
a moment and told me.
"Oh
Evie, you know how your Uncle Bill likes to hang-glide, how he's so good at
that?"
I
nodded slowly, breaking with anticipation and somehow wanting her to finish and
to stop the story at the same time.
"Well,
he was in an accident today, and … oh, Evie, he … he died."
My
throat tightened, the tears welled up, and I wept for my uncle, his brothers,
his parents, the people I love. Meanwhile, Dad was back with Grandma and
Grandpa when the news came.
I
think of Uncle Bill and the patio of bricks and the rhubarb, and I wish I'd
told him more often that I loved him, and that I really, really liked him, too.
And I think of that vacation in Kitty Hawk, where he once took my siblings and
me for mini-hang-gliding flights. I had a broken arm that summer, meaning I
couldn't go swimming in the ocean, but Uncle Bill found a way for me to fly. He
strapped me in and showed me how to hold onto the kite-like contraption with my
good arm. And then he ran along the white beach as fast as his distance-runner,
Green-Beret physique could take him, all the while pulling the colorful glider
and me above his head.
-----
We
climb the steps to the attic above the workshop to inspect the items there. Not
much is left to do, but we open one ancient-looking chest in a far corner. This
chest was all that came with her here to college in the late '30s. Grandma
unlatches the dusty black lid and pulls out a quilt made by her mother. Next
comes a stack of running magazines, then a big wool coat. I spot a faded green
cap.
"And
what's this?" I ask. "Not a green beret as in the Green Beret,
is it?"
"Oh,
yes, it is," Grandma says. "It was Bill's."
As
has happened more than once during Grandma's moving process, I find myself
shaking my head and speechless. And I'm not even the one moving, the one who
must leave behind this estate.
"I'm
not really very helpful as far as encouraging you to get rid of things," I
tell her. "May I keep the beret?"
She
gladly bestows it upon me. As we creak our way down from the attic I tell her I
don't know how she does this—how she embraces this change—with such joy and
overall chipper-ness, but I am glad she is happy. She laughs a throaty laugh
that I love her for, locks the padlock on the workshop and turns to look at her
much-beloved home.
"Ready
for some supper?"
5 comments:
Evie, this is beautiful! May I use it with my college students? We're studying the power of story. Hugs and purrs, Lois
Lois, you are more than welcome to use it! I'm flattered. Thanks so much for reading.
I remember running with Bill. His quiet stoicism was an inspiration to many of us.
Thanks for writing this, Evie. Your words give color to many good memories :)
Thanks for reading, Jay and Lindsey. Love to you both.
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