Across the room her grandmother was making up the two double
beds. plumping the feather pillows and setting them to air in the wide windows
at the far end of the big room. As the sun warmed the cotton pillowcases, the
clean smells of starch and ironing joined the sweet green grass smell.
Soon the child would go downstairs; her grandmother would go
outside and cut pink and yellow and coral Gerbera daisies to arrange in an
etched glass bowl that stood on a table in the front hall. An old lady, a
friend of her grandmother’s would come to lunch, smelling of talcum powder and
Jergens lotion and wearing a flat little hat with a silly crumpled veil. Miss
Glennie and her grandmother would eat chicken salad and potato chips and peach
pickle and talk about people the child didn’t know. She would get bored and go
into the sitting room where she would kneel on the sofa, arms stretched across
its back, staring out the front windows at the street beyond the yard and
sidewalk. Squirrels would dart to and fro, flirting their bushy tails, and the
rough upholstery would scratch her knees.
Later she would go play in the backyard. It was bounded by a
low hedge but the rolling greens and fairways of the golf course beyond seemed
to go on forever. Frankland’s Lake was out there in the far blue distance,
hidden by trees. Sometimes, when it was really quiet, she would listen for the
guns. A war was going on and her daddy was overseas in a place called Burma. That’s
why she and her mother lived with her grandparents. So she listened hard and
wondered if the sounds she heard were guns and if tomorrow she and her
grandfather would walk all the way to Frankland’s Lake.
In the late afternoon, when long shadows slanted across the
grass and the heat hung heavy in the air, her mother’s friends—the ladies—would
sit under the trees in the backyard, sipping iced tea from the tall sweating
glasses the rested on the broad arms of the wooden lawn chairs. The ladies wore
crisp linen dresses and chalky white pumps with fat high heels. Sometimes they
had on stockings with black seams running up the backs of their legs. They
talked and smoked cigarettes, leaving bright red lipstick smudges on the
cigarette ends and fastidiously picking occasional crumbs of tobacco off their
perfect lips.
At night, after their supper of Campbell’s tomato soup and
saltines, her grandfather would pull the window shades down, making a cozy
inside world. Around the tall cabinet radio in the sitting room, they would
listen to the hiss and crackle that was news about the war. She would wait
sleepily till it was time for bed. Then they would climb the stairs, past the
clock on the landing and to the big room where she would snuggle into the
little cot placed between the two big beds. After she had said her prayers, she
would stretch out and fall asleep, her grandfather holding her left hand while
her grandmother held her right.
I wrote this maybe thirty years ago, remembering
my charmed childhood. Where was my mother? She had a room over the attached
garage. I expect she preferred the independence of a separate schedule. Before
my father returned from the war, she’d bought a tiny little house in another
neighborhood and we moved there—though until I went off to college, I would
continue to spend many days and nights with my grandparents. See THIS POST for more on the subject.
3 comments:
Lovely, but a bit sad.
What a sweet memory! And it's great that the house is still there too! Sometimes I look fo r old houses where I lived, to no avail...most are gone. There is memory of place, even for a wanderer such as myself. This childhood setting and memories are knit so well together.
You wrote well then … and now.
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