While your heart still beats
The pavement was slick and
there were potholes and too many trees by the
side of the winding road. The first to go
were two juniors who were cutting school,
doing what teenage boys do, driving too fast,
maybe drinking or passing a bowl while the
tires screeched and the car fishtailed. They
ended up upside down in the creek that snaked
by the road. They died. There were others in
high school who died in car accidents, too,
though at this point I mainly remember the
names of the survivors (thanks,
Facebook,
with your updated images of people from the
past).
Since my grandmother
died, I’ve developed a
strong sense of mortality, of my own, of
other peoples’, of the various cats and
dogs that have been in my life. Sometimes
it hits me more than others, generally
when I’m feeling low and isolated, when
the sun hasn’t been out in weeks. It
doesn't help that I've been spending an
hour or two a day writing out the details
of illness and death for my novel
manuscript. And I’ll have
dreams about
these people, the dead from high
school, usually as represented by David
Anderson, the last one to die, the one who
made it into the yearbook, a ghost by the
time the book was printed.
There are other “deads” as my son calls them,
like Carolin, a friend from college who had
some sort of birth defect that we never
discussed. She’s been gone for seventeen
years, sometimes still visits me in my dream
version of our college dorm. My grandfather
shows up less and less now as I deal with the
past, though I am sometimes reminded of how
much there is to deal with (another nod to
Facebook, where people who knew me
peripherally during one of the darkest times
in my life show up, and I remember just how
bad it was and I want to die with the
memory).
As I was wrestling again with that long-ago
past, something that I keep thinking should
be a “dead” itself at this point, as I was
having a good cry after washing the dishes
Thursday night, Nora, our Russian squirrel
hound, came clicking into the kitchen. She
likes to comfort the sad and inexplicably
lonely, especially if it involves a pat or
two for her. I knelt down to stroke her chest
and was struck again with memory. There I
was, ten years old, in what used to be my
grandmother’s room, petting Greta the
miniature schnauzer. Greta's fur was warm and
soft. She groaned as I scratched behind her
ears, reached out a paw as if to say "Don't
stop." At the time, I was struck with the
exquisite transience of it all, the way a
heart stops and the lungs give out, the
vulnerability of our soft bodies and delicate
skulls. Disease creeps in. A car slams into a
tree and then into you. You ignore the deep
cough until it is too late. No matter the
trajectory of the story, we all know how it
ends.
Greta was killed by a hit-and-run driver when
I was in seventh grade, about six months
after we left my grandfather's house for
Wilmington. He let her out when he was
getting the mail. As he limped to the
mailbox, Greta trotted to a neighbor's yard.
She was halfway across the street when a car
came tearing past and knocked her into a
ditch. Either the driver didn't see her or
didn't care to stop and my grandfather caught
only a glimpse of the car's tail lights. It
was the violent conclusion of Greta's brief
story.
I knelt in the kitchen, my arms around Nora,
and added up the dead. I felt their hands in
mine, the touch of a gentle paw, the sound of
a meow. Greta and I sat together in the dusty
sunlight, her eyes brown and serious, her
heartbeat strong. Sidney played a game of
capture, batted at the pencil I pushed under
the door. Louise
curled up on
the dining room table, a dog pretending to
be a cat. I brushed against a boy in a
hallway as he ran by, late for class. And
my grandmother croaked out "Tie a Yellow
Ribbon" while I giggled from the swing
that hung from the maple tree. Even the
tree is gone now, but like the rest it
exists in my memory, in the stories I
tell.
I held Nora tighter, tried to appreciate the
moment, knowing I would think about it when
she was gone. And the sweetness of it almost
killed me.
Top photo by Jane
Underwood, Writing
Salon mistress and photographer
extraordinaire.
Bottom photo by Mr. T from Nora's first week
with us in 2003.
After writing this prompt and struggling with
various versions of it for the blog, I got
out my senior high school yearbook (theme: "A
Unique Blend." I had forgotten that high
school yearbooks had themes), just to check
on some of the facts. There was David
Anderson, still in with the living seniors,
but at the front of the book was a dedication
to three other people from our class who had
died, two of them in car accidents: Pat
O'Donoghue, Rob Klaczkiewicz, and Joe
Lombardino. There were others who died while
I was at school, specifically those
upperclassmen in the first paragraph of this
post, though I could have some of my facts
wrong about the accident. They died in the
mid-80s, well before our lives were digitally
monitored, before you could have a Facebook
page even after death. The fact that there
was no trace of these young men made me sad.
It was almost as if they had never existed.
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Prognostication

In my dreams, the dead are silent. I’ve never
had a good conversation with a single one of
them, just offer my apologies, bake the
bread, pour the coffee. What is the guilt
about? The dead no longer care about my
transgressions. Isn’t it enough that I hold
them here in my subconscious, treat them as
gently as I would a freshly-laid egg?
But this dream was different. We were going
to visit Kevin, who has been gone for over
seven years now. As in real life, I was
nervous: would I react properly to him? Would
he toss the verbal slings, so subtle and
cutting, if I didn’t pick up on something, if
I reacted too slowly? Or would he sit there,
blue eyes glowing, as my mother and I circled
him like butterflies, flitting here and there
in our attempts to placate?
Kevin spoke. He used the ethereal language of
dreams, of those who are now ashes and light,
but in that nasal New Jersey accent that I
haven’t been able to replicate in my mind for
years. And he was funny, so funny, because
Kevin was
bitingly funny.
I laughed and realized how much I missed him,
how much time had gone by and then I woke up,
not remembering a word of his complicated
meta-joke.
Time flies on and I die a little every day,
lose another connection, feel the pull of a
long-ago past. Yet my grandfather still shows
up at the old house. I smell his cigarettes,
breathe in sawdust, too-sweet coffee and
turpentine. He waits in his cell of a room, a
voiceless old man in a flannel robe, unshaven
and glassy eyed. I rush past the sink filled
with dirty dishes, walk a path of slate to
get to a mailbox that hasn't been opened in
years. Sometimes we take his car for a
complicated drive to Christiana. Maybe we are
heading to the hospital, waiting for someone
to hand me a small bundle, something I've
forgotten.
The dead appear without explanation or
warning. Carolin greets me in a too-bright
dorm basement, fixes me with intense eyes.
David Anderson sits in a classroom, shoeless,
staring at the algebra equation on the board.
Frank the cat meows for food that I don't
have. And my grandmother, the one I ache to
see, is sick of my inattention and has
stopped showing up at all.
Someday, no one will know that I was sixteen
and angry once. They will remember an old
woman deeply lined, forgetful, with
clouded-over eyes, demanding and harmless.
Inconsequential. As though I had been born
without desire, without the power to wound.
Image: Postcard, date
unknown.
Procrastination, B-29 bombers and ball turret gunners
Sometimes, though, when ideas are percolating, our minds lead us in strange directions. (And, of course, that's what's going on here, not really procrastination, but preparation. Percolation. All this will all lead to a wondrous stream of language soon enough. Right??)
Crew members in front of the Enola Gay, the
B-29 bomber that dropped the atomic
bomb.
I don't want to be
loosey-goosey on the details, because that
would give it away, but I've been thinking a
lot lately about the B-29
bomber, nicknamed the
Superfortress. Boeing engineers developed
the plane in the early 1940s as a
long-range bomber, large enough to reach
the shores of Japan, and it was a
technological wonder. It also was a bit of
a rush job, with early models especially
prone to overheating. One 1943 prototype
burst into flames on a test run when an
engine fire quickly spread to the wing,
destroying it. All ten crew members and
another twenty people in a nearby meat
packing plant were killed. By the end of
the war, engineers had worked out most of
the kinks, though the American public was
most likely clueless about its defects
(for example, this
anti-Japanese government propaganda
film on the bomber is all
blue skies and heavy bombs).
Ball turret.
From B-29s my mind meandered to ball turrets, those little bulbs of steel and plexiglass that popped out of the bellies of B-17s and B-24s, two guns loaded on either side for enemy planes. The gunner would be cramped in the ball turret for hours, trapped, rotating, circling, with a bird's eye view of the destruction below and in the air. There are two excellent oral histories by former ball turret gunners on the web. Earl Mills, who flew in a B-17 and was eventually shot down, tells of his experiences, while author Sabine Ulibarri details a particularly frightening mission in an excerpt from Mayhem Was Our Business. Both men were diagnosed with combat fatigue, better known now as post-traumatic stress disorder.The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner: From my mother's sleep I fell into the State, / And I hunched in its belly till my wet fur froze. / Six miles from earth, loosed from its dream of life, / I woke to black flak and the nightmare fighters. / When I died, they washed me out of the turret with a hose. --Randall Jarrell
Stryker bed frame.
Really, though, what led me
to ball turrets (bear with me) were thoughts
on my grandfather's hospitalization. For the
first six months, he was in a Stryker
hospital bed frame (often used for patients
in traction). From what I can tell, his
mid-60s model was made up of a skinny
mattress supported on either side by two
mattress-width steel circles. Strapped in, he
would wait for the moment when the bed would
begin to move, to slowly flip his position
from supine to prone. What would it have been
like to be in that bed, sick, practically
skinless, ears melted away and hearing almost
gone, in and out of lucidity as his body
fought off opportunistic infection? It turned
him at least twice a day and he would often
beg my grandmother to make it stop, to keep
it from happening, in part because he
associated it with the painful removal of his
burn dressings, with debridement.
A man who avoided going overseas in World War
II. A nation soaked in wartime propaganda,
rah rah black and white newsreels, sanitized
war stories of precision and heroism with an
undercurrent of death and chaos. Twenty years
later, fire, destruction, pain, and fear.
Then, guilt and heroic fantasy.
Off to write. Slowly.
Baby, stick around
Thanks to washwords, Koe Whitton-Williams, tricia, Dori, Karen, Bobby Revell, Jennifer D., Melinda, Lorenzo, Candy, Ashe.Selah, lydia, timethief, SmallWorldReads, John Folk-Williams, and Jim for your encouraging words and comments. Your support makes the difference.
Here's a bit of writing inspired by the prompt "Alright, fine. Let's hear your explanation." Well, inspired by that and by reading my grandmother's burn notebooks, written during my grandfather's long hospitalization, where her anger over his vices and infidelities comes through, clear and Mercurochrome-bitter. I couldn't bring myself to change the names; they are too good to be fictional.

I just went to the track to look at the horses, to watch them ripple around the oval, to see their hooves beat the dust into red clouds. But once I got there, the action sucked me in. Before I knew what my feet were doing, I was standing in front of Les’s booth to place my bets. The air was heavy with money and I was feeling lucky. I’d win enough to pay off the rest of Atlee’s mortgage or maybe just enough to buy a smooth fifth of whiskey. Or even score a downpayment on a new washing machine for you, Vi.
Then I ran into Williard, who had a full flask and offered me a swig or three. Maybe the alcohol clouded my judgment. Maybe I couldn't see what an amateur that jockey was, but I think the race was rigged, that somebody paid him out to fall off the horse. Or maybe they slipped the little guy a Mickey, I don’t know. The end result is that I lost. The flask made a few more visits to my lips and I didn’t feel like going home just yet anyways.
You and the girls were at the cottage and I was planning on sleeping at the empty Tuxedo Park house, but then I remembered Molly. Molly with the blonde hair and long legs, Molly from the Tip Top Club in Salem, a nice easy-going girl. The Mustang knew the way from the track to the bar. It’s no coincidence that they call that car a Mustang. It has all the bucking power and smarts of a horse. It knows where to find the watering holes, knows the trail back home, too.
After I left the Tip Top, I was exhausted, so I took a snooze in my ride. That’s where I was last night, sleeping in the Mustang.
You can ask Molly if you don't believe me.
The burn notebooks
Part of the front page of the notebooks my
grandmother kept after my grandfather was
burned.
After my grandfather was
burned over 80% of his body in
a flash fire at the Dupont Holly Run paint
plant, my grandmother started keeping a
diary. I have the copies, four small
looseleaf notebooks with her remarks on
his hospitalization, dating from the
accident on 11 June 1966 until his release
from the hospital on 24 February 1967.
There are tallies of blood transfusions
(38 pints of blood between June and
December), of skin grafts (26; the last
one is on 22 December, with the note "last
- if all take"). I'd missed the fact that
he actually had four operations on his
right foot before they finally amputated
it (28 September: "Little toe came off in
dressing.").
It's slow going. Mom-mom's handwriting is
hard to read and the first six months are a
roller-coaster ride of medical emergencies,
infections, and mourning for what was lost.
Doctors gave him a 50-50 chance of making it.
No one knew that the fire wouldn't kill him
for another 24 years, when he finally
succumbed to skin cancer at the age of 78.
The "girls" -- my aunt, 20 at the time, and
my mother, 16 -- don't get much mention. What
it was like for them? I may ask my mother,
but don't expect to get very much information
and it might not be necessary for my
purposes.
I'd love to talk to my grandmother about that
time for her, too, though the notebooks
conjure her up. Ultimately, though, I'm
looking at these books to get a better
understanding of my grandfather, who went
from being an active man in his fifties who
loved jazz and waterskiing and driving fast
in his '65 Mustang to a dependent,
almost-deaf burn victim. He didn't get behind
the wheel of a car again until 1981.
During his hospitalization, he suffered,
really suffered. Being burned is painful, but
so is the treatment, borrowing healthy skin
to graft onto exposed flesh, having your raw
body immersed in a whirlpool once or twice a
day. Even the necessary turning ("Dressings
wet. Al begged not to be turned."), which
probably happened at least four times a day,
sounds like a horror. And then there is the
debridement, the sloughing off of dead skin
and muscle that had to be done on a regular
basis. Things surely have gotten better for
burn victims since the 60s, but there is no
getting around the pain. It's no wonder that
my grandfather was scared of his hospital bed
in those first six months. It must have
seemed like a torture chamber.
Pop-pop and Greta in 1978, 12 years after the
industrial accident.
Pop-pop suffered and hovered close to death,
lost his hearing and a foot. His once-smooth
skin tightened and scarred. Then he got out
of the hospital, had a home nurse for another
nine months, and went back to work (a desk
job this time). He retired and taught himself
how to build furniture and make
Canada
goose and mallard whirligigs
to sell at
Nickerson's Fruit and Vegetable Stand. He
built the Little House and put a new wood
shop on the beach cottage, as well as a
new family room. His interest in model
trains intensified and the old wood shop
became the setting for a huge train set
with two separate tracks, a couple of
tunnels, and a tree-covered mountain
range. It was the kind of thing that
neighborhood kids and grown-ups would come
over to admire, though he would always
remind me that these small trains weren't
toys.
I'm working on a piece that is about him, but
not quite about him, fiction informed by
imagined experience. I want to figure out
what was forged by flame.
Who are these people and what are they doing in my blog?
DATE: May 1981
OCCASION: My mother's second wedding.
LOCATION: Eastern Shore, MD.
PERSONNEL (from left to right):
Mom: Barely 31 years old. Obscuring new husband's mother.
Grandfather: Looking pleased. The bridegroom had a reputation as a good guy. Even though he had spent the year before the wedding happily unemployed, lifting weights in the Little House, and waiting for my mother to come home from work and make dinner (though perhaps this view is a little one-sided).
Me: Eleven. And a half. Wearing my mother's dress
Best friend (from ages 8 - 14): Total support. Very funny. We went from childhood to rebellious adolescence together, from dancing around her living room listening to "Goofy Gold" to sneaking cigarettes and chugging 7-oz Budweisers. I miss her.
Cousin: Seven years old. Now an Episcopal minister. I haven't seen or spoken with her since my first wedding in late 1995. Our mothers don't speak either.
Oh, and I almost forgot. Here's a better look at ...

The car: Then-stepfather's
1968 (?) Oldsmobile Cutlass, permanently
awaiting a paint job. I hated that #%*&
thing, though it did get us from Point A to
Point B.
Yeah, I've been going through my boxes of
life detritus, old photos, letters,
embarrassingly boy-crazy journals. The
process has has brought up thoughts about
friendship, loss, and connection. This
picture stuck out, less for the time and
situation (which, wonderfully, have lost
their power for me) but for the strange
posed/not posed quality of it, and for the
relationships that have slipped away.
There's the next post, though I'm not sure
where I'm going with it. And hopefully
fiction will be returning when my writing
class starts up again next month, or even
sooner if I can pull it off.
It's not easy being green
Elk River, Winter of 1977-78
The year before, my mother had decided to go back to college. In order to save money, she moved in with Jim, her future former husband, while I went to my grandparents’ house in Maryland. It was a year scented by cigarette smoke and coffee fumes. Mornings were my favorite time of day, sitting in the warm kitchen, a tray of food prepared for me by my grandmother, usually Eggo waffles dabbed with Parkay squeezable margarine and dripping with Mrs. Butterworth’s syrup, cartoon-character shot glass of orange juice on the side. That winter the snow kept coming. It piled up and formed five-foot drifts in the driveway, places to dig out forts and make snowmen. Snuggling in my grandmother’s bed as we listened to the radio school closing announcements became an almost-regular ritual.
Mom scored a one-bedroom apartment in student family housing in the summer of ’78 and I moved back in with her. She took the couch in the living room while I slept on a full-size mattress on the floor in the bedroom, a wooden orange crate for a bedside table topped with a flowery ceramic lamp, a clock radio, and an “I Love You This Much” figurine -- a robed, potbellied man, arms outstretched – that she had given to me in first grade.
1978-79 was the first year
of court-mandated school desegregation for
the Wilmington city schools. We were bused 34
miles roundtrip from suburban Newark, a
predominantly white, middle class community
at the time, to an elementary school in the
middle of the inner city. It was the fourth
school I had attended since kindergarten.
The dark, institutional halls smelled of
ancient gymnasium mats and cafeteria pizza.
Because I didn’t like sandwiches, Mom would
pack things like crackers and cheese or the
occasional hard-boiled egg, cooked until it
was sulfurous and the exterior of the yolk
was green. I’d display the egg to my friends
and toss in the trash can to a chorus of
ewwwws.
After lunch, students were herded over
crumbling asphalt to play outside on ancient
metal jungle gyms and rusty swings. Murals
with selected scenes of black history covered
the exterior walls. At night the surrounding
neighborhood leaked into the schoolyard;
people left behind their bottle caps and
broken glass, empty lighters and plastic
bags. The atmosphere became more unwelcoming
when I acquired the nickname “Kermit,” a name
given after I came to school in a kelly
green, polyester, three-piece suit (worn with
white turtleneck!). Think Saturday Night
Fever meets Annie Hall meets the Muppets, a
well-meaning gift from my grandmother, who
had become accustomed to choosing my clothes.
The teachers weren’t happy either and went on
strike from mid-October through most of
November. Much of that time is lost to me. My
third grade teacher brought me back to
Chesapeake City Elementary for a day or two;
I read a lot of books from the small
children’s section at the University of
Delaware library, spent many hours staring at
the ceiling of the Malt Shoppe. The ending of
the strike coincides in my mind with reports
of the Jonestown massacre, images of children
lying on the ground beside their parents, as
still and peaceful as if they were asleep.

April
1979
By early March, 1979, my grandmother was dead
and Mom, Jim, and I had moved back to
Maryland to watch over my grandfather.
Our grand experiment was
over.
I slip into the night
My first memory of the house is from the summer of 1972. I am three, walking the 20 feet from the cottage to my grandparent’s place, planting my sturdy feet in thick grass and clover. I take off in a run when the ball of my right foot meets something small and sharp. It burns. I begin to cry. Someone – my aunt? my grandmother? – whisks me into the main house, probes tender flesh with pointed tweezers to remove the bee’s stinger. Afterwards, I lie on the family room sofa in cool air conditioning, injured foot propped on a pillow, a thick paste of soothing baking soda drawing out the pain. I watch cartoons, sucking on a straw to get at the last of Coca-Cola over ice.
That was over thirteen years ago. My grandmother has been dead since 1979 and the Little House is now my home. I spend my days waiting for darkness to fall. Bring on the night, I couldn’t stand another hour of daylight.
Inside the main house at 9:30 p.m. sharp, my grandfather takes out his hearing aids and removes his prosthetic foot, trapping himself in bed for another night of muffled sleep. Four houses down the street my mother, blinded by man and money troubles, sleeps in a cocoon of sadness. My father is sixty miles away, a prisoner of debilitating depression; his kindly wife is totally focused on his well-being. Unheard, unseen, and seemingly unimportant, I slip into the night or let the night slip into me.

This is where my power of
description seizes up.
Really, I’m on the road to forgiveness, and I
don’t want to rehash the past in angry
diatribes here.
But – the inevitable but – I am in the midst
of the never-ending stillbirth story,
attempting to write about my time in the
Little House, a companion piece to my
biological grandmother’s experiences and as I
try to get my mind around it I find myself
asking: WHAT IN THE HELL WERE MY PARENTS
THINKING?
When reality broke through, when my pregnancy
became apparent and ended a month later in a
stillbirth, in dramatic labor occurring in
the Little House, when it became clear that I
needed parenting, WHY DID NOTHING CHANGE?
These are not new thoughts, but the
underlying feelings have changed. My anger
before was mainly self-directed, anger at my
family turned inward: what evil in me brought
on their rejection? But now I am reaching a
different conclusion: my mother and father
had so little respect for themselves, for
their power as parents, that they gave up,
figured I was fine on my own, or maybe even
assumed that they would only make things
worse. My mother stopped parenting; my father
never even started. They deserve my
compassion. It's no use getting angry at
those who don't see their own worth.
Now I have to work through the feelings,
unpack the meaning of the Little House, dense
with suppressed emotion, so much a part of
who I am. I’ve left it almost completely out
of most other versions of the stillbirth
story because it feels like an emotional
bomb. As I try to get back into that time of
isolation, loneliness, self-hatred and anger,
my self-protection (or something) kicks in.
It is time to control the explosion through
language, to capture the shards of the
experience on the page.
I'm scared. But if I don't go back, the
experience controls me.
Would you like bloodworms with that?
He sold the whirligig mallards and Canada geese at a produce stand on Route 213. They were solid moneymakers, big sellers with the weekenders who clogged the roads every Friday and Sunday night. Lined up outside the stand, a bank of lures staked to the ground against a backdrop of cantaloupe and corn, the birds would be set off by the breeze, wings turning frantically in a frustrated pantomime of flight.
Wing tracing was not enough to keep sixteen-year-old me occupied for two months, however. That’s how I ended up, after a lot of maternal arm-twisting, as the sole employee at Eastern Shore Boats-n-Things (not its real name), a small marine supply store in Chesapeake City.
Eastern Shore Boats-n-Things was a muddle of motors and Docksiders, winches and water-skis. It didn’t know exactly what kind of store it wanted to be: hardcore marine supplies (motor oil, pumps, pulleys) or day on the water store (skis, shoes, inner tubes). For the fishermen, we had a refrigerator full of packaged live bloodworms. If you wanted to toss some cash at an Evinrude motor, we could get you one. And towards the end, Eastern Shore Boats-n-Things became the local dealer for Motorola car phones, exotic objects with a limited range, toys for the gadget aficionado.
Every day at the shop offered me a new opportunity to feel stupid. I knew nothing about boating. People would question me about sailing pulleys, or what weight motor oil they would need, would quiz me on outboard motor horsepower and I would stammer through a non-answer, look dumbly at the shelves, hope for an epiphany.
The store’s owner wasn’t much help. When he was there, it was mainly to down beers in the back with his buddies, an off-duty Maryland state cop and the rug cleaning guy from the shop next door. From the clenched jaw, one-sided phone conversations I overheard, I could tell that his marriage was disintegrating along with his business. Maybe the responsibility for both was too much for him, too many things to juggle.
Over the two summers I worked for him, the owner became more and more erratic. Though he hardly ever showed up during my shifts, my boyfriend D. and I would sometimes run into him at Bennett's Liquors or at the Canal House, the local boater's watering hole. He'd greet us with a high-pitched hello and a tight grin, insist upon giving us ice or a drink. "Want some iiice?!" became our catchphrase for him, a reference to the night he filled D.'s cooler with an intensity beyond the task.
My boss was a no show for my last week of work, the week before I left for my freshman year in college. Even his wife was calling, trying to track him down. Then another call would come in on the line, his distant voice over car phone static. He'd be at the store by noon. It never worked out that way.
Alone, I’d pace the aisles, line my white MIA shoes heel to pointy toe in a circuitous route around boating supplies. The occasional customer would show, hopefully with a simple request. I waited for business, drank diet Dr. Pepper, ran my finger along the bottles of teak oil. The sailing equipment fascinated me and I would finger the pulleys, try to figure out the knot chart.
When Dan, one of our suppliers, dropped by with beer for a farewell visit on my last day, I didn’t see a problem with cracking one open. We sat in the office and talked over a couple of Coors, had a meandering goodbye conversation about John, my college plans. At the end of my shift, I emptied the cash register, doled out my weekly salary. I locked up and delivered the keys to the rug cleaner, then hopped into my grandfather's waiting car.
Within six months, Eastern Shore Boats-n-Things was closed. I never saw the owner again.
After the fire
As the story goes, he stepped outside, lit a Pall Mall, and popped the huge blister on his stomach. "I think you better call an ambulance."
80% of his body was covered in third-degree burns. He spent nine months in the hospital, nine months at home with a full-time nurse. He suffered through over 26 skin grafts. His hearing was ruined from massive doses of powerful antibiotics. When his right foot was giving up the ghost, its blood vessels cauterized by fire, surgeons took a couple timid swipes, lopping off one toe, then a couple more. It took a third operation to amputate it just below the ankle.
Years later, a doctor told him, "I've seen skin like that on a dead man."
When I knew him, he was demanding and unhappy, a man with a limp and two hearing aids. I learned to hate his call: "Jenny, got a minute?" I was definitely not a Jenny and what if I didn't have a minute? It was the typical stupidity of youth. I wish I could go back and treat him with kindness and empathy, to understand what was destroyed in the fire.
In my dreams he's back in the old house, living off hot dogs and root beer, not yet clued in to his own death. He tries to call me, jamming his thick, arthritic fingers into the phone's dial. No luck.
Missing person

The paneling tacked up against drywall, the damp concrete slab with its thin covering of plywood and carpet. The mildew, the cigarette smoke, the asthma attacks. Hollywood Beach, Christmas 1980.
In this photograph, from left to right: Jim, the unemployed soon-to-be stepfather, who spent his days lifting weights in the Upper Room; my grandfather, demanding, handicapped as the result of an industrial fire, who kept his candy in a cabinet by his porn; and me, a little freak 11-year-old who dragged a Ouija board everywhere and had séance parties, all in the hope of contacting my dead grandmother.
Mom was behind the camera. She commuted two hours round trip to work and came home every night to a hungry, demanding household. Once the plates were cleared, the complaints were served: the meal was too simple or too complicated. Had she gone too far this time, or held too much back? I listened and hated them, wanted to defend her honor. But I just sat there instead. This was not a happy time.
My grandmother collapsed suddenly one February afternoon in 1979. We were in the kitchen putting groceries away when she started breathing heavily. Unable to speak, she motioned in the direction of the sleeping cat on the kitchen chair. I was helpless. Finally she removed the cat herself, sat down, and closed her eyes. I called 9-1-1. The same volunteer fire department that whisked me off to Christiana Hospital six years later took her limp form away. They didn't tell me she was dead, but I knew.
The grief we were all smothering after her death came up in unpredictable ways. Just when we thought we had stamped it out, had ripped up the roots and crushed the last toxic leaf, we would discover another dank tendril wrapped around the front doorknob or emerging from the drain in the kitchen sink. It would not be denied. The only photographic evidence I have of her from my lifetime is a picture of the two of us. I'm playing on the floor, looking off at some distraction, away from the camera. She is a disembodied hand holding a cigarette.
It's been almost thirty years and I still miss her.



