During
the summer break between my junior and senior years in college, when my parents
were living on a US Army base in Germany, my mother took me on a bus tour of
Italy. She had said it was the only thing left she wanted to do, see Italy, and
the way she said it scared me. It went well, although she’d have kept me on a
leash if there’d been one handy, especially in Venice. But by the time we
reached Florence she calmed down and I managed to escape her clutches long
enough to trance out in front of Botticelli’s Three Graces. We had heard a
howling dog outside our hotel window the night before and she, a big fan of
Barnabus Collins on the soap opera Dark Shadows, asked the breakfast waiter about vampires.
Confused by the question, he stared blankly at her until she made fangs with
her fingers. Shrinking back in horror, he sent another waiter with our coffee.
Thinking this was hysterical, she told the story at dinner to our table mates on
the tour. Then I talked about my theory that angels are really aliens. The
other tourists on our bus avoided us from that point on.
After I was back at school, two months later, she killed herself.
Just
before I returned to the States, she took me for a drive along the Rhine. We
stopped at an ancient church at the top of a hill and sat on a wooden bench
just inside the door while a wedding was going on. The bride insisted we eat
with them afterwards at the banquet table they had set up in the courtyard.
Later we parked beside the river to watch the barges go by. A family was
playing ping-pong on one while their dog barked at the mother who, her hair
pinned up in rollers, was hanging out laundry. The sister and daughter of
sailors, my mother declared that living on the river would have been a perfect
life. Still eating our sandwiches from the wedding banquet, we got out of the
car as a pair of swans, so small and pretty on the water, swam towards us. My
mother tore up her sandwich and tossed the pieces at the swans. Their shiny
eyes locked on the food as they plucked it from the water. I handed the rest of
my sandwich to my mother as the swans clamored ashore. Marching over to us,
suddenly enormous, the male snatched the bread from her happy hand as the
smaller female, she was as tall as me, studied my buttons before turning to her
mate hissing and snapped at the food in his beak. Splashing back in the water
without even a second glance, they glided off with the current.
Speechless, my mother stood for a moment before driving us home as the
green hills of the Rhine valley rushed by our car windows. Three days later,
there was a terrible moment when my father demanded she and I say our goodbyes
at the house because she might make a scene at the airport. He had his own
agenda for wanting me alone, which led to an airport scene between the two of
us much worse than one my mother would have ever caused; but as she waved
goodbye from the kitchen doorway, I knew I’d never see her again.
He
buried her at the military cemetery in Arlington even though she’d always said
she wanted to be cremated and have her ashes scattered over water. He also lied
to her brothers, saying it had been a car accident. She did, in fact, die in
the car, after locking herself in and washing a bottle of pills down with some
of his gin before turning on the exhaust. He remarried a few months later and
tried to bribe me into keeping his secret from the rest of the family. I choose
not to speak to him now, but I know he has two grown sons I’ve never met
because that’s the way I want it.
Shortly
before I left New York for Cape Cod, I visited an old college friend in DC and
we spent a couple of hours at the Arlington Cemetery. After a search of the
records, we found my mother across from the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. I
tucked my AA anniversary coin, it was for 21 years, which is how old I was when
she died, into the dirt that edged her stone where nobody would see it. I’d
like to have her exhumed once my father’s gone and honor her request to be
cremated and scattered across water. There are lots of ponds here, or maybe
Herring Cove.
Do swans ever swim in the Provincetown harbor?
beautifully painful yet the hope and strength you have inside is as resilient as steel.
ReplyDeletehanging in there
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