My dad was dead, and I was hurriedly planning a trip to the Deep South.
Do you think Uncle Duckie will be there? I asked my sibling.
I hadn’t even thought of him, was the reply. I don’t want to see him.
Neither did I.
However, when I spoke to my aunt, I found out Duckie had been by my father’s side in the days leading to his death. He’d been helping my dad’s wife with arrangements. Hell yes he was going to be there. We’d certainly see him.
My dad had three brothers.
Stewart, the oldest, was stillborn or died very soon after birth. He was never counted when we spoke of my dad’s siblings, however. Apparently a baby who died so soon was barely part of the family. I only wondered about this as an adult. Was this loss of her first child what made my grandmother so mean, or had that happened long before she was a grieving mother? Did her fear of losing another baby cause her to throw up walls around her heart when dealing with her other kids? Grandma has been dead for over a decade, and I’ll never know her truth.
The oldest child to grow up in my dad’s familty is Uncle Ronnie . He was a career military man. My father often characterized him as so smart, he’s stupid. He’s in his 80s now, and, I discovered at my dad’s memorial service, as deaf as a post.
Uncle Duckie is next in the line of children birthed by my paternal grandmother. He’s been a sleezeball and a racist and a pervert as long as I’ve known him. I grew up hearing stories of how my grandmother beat him. Well, she beat all her kids, but particularly Duckie. At least once, my grandfather had to intervene because he was afraid she was going to kill the boy, who was a toddler at the time. He says he still has the scars. I don’t doubt it.
There was one girl child in the family, born a couple of years before my father, who was the baby.
No one expects to lose their youngest sibling first. He cut in line, my aunt said.
The only material possession of my fathers I could contemplate wanting was a ring that had belonged to his father, the grandfather who died before I was born. One of us should have that ring, I wrote to my sibling as we made plans to travel to the homeland. My sibling thought the ring should go to my dad’s only grandchild, and I readily agreed. I didn’t need the ring, but I wanted it to stay with someone who had a tie to it, someone who’d appreciate it.
When my sibling and I arrived at my dad’s house the night before his memorial service, his wife had a handwritten when-I-die letter he’d composed several years ago. In the letter he said he wanted his grandchild to have the ring.
Duckie asked me for the ring, my dad’s wife told us, and I told him yes, but that was before I found this letter. She said she would tell Duckie my dad wanted the ring to go to the grandchild. It was my dad’s last will and testament, after all.
Later, when we got in the car, my sibling said, Can we talk for a minute about that motherfucker Duckie trying to get the ring?
I allowed how since our grandfather, the original owner of the ring, was Duckie’s dad too, I could understand he would want it. However, you could have let my dad be dead a week before he started asking for family heirlooms.
The next day, when we pulled up in the driveway of my dad’s house, Duckie was standing outside.
There he is, I said.
Time hasn’t been kind to Duckie. He looks like an old version of Gonzo from the Muppets. What am I talking about? Duckie is literally 80 years old. It would be weird if he didn’t look old, but his nose…Gonzo. I’m not kidding.
As my sibling would be the one to deliver the ring to the grandchild, I said before we got out of the car, Be sure you get the ring before we leave. I didn’t want Duckie weaseling it into his possession at some later date.
My dad’s wife broached the subject of the ring before my sibling or I could bring it up. She summoned us to the room with the closet housing my dad’s safe.
Did you tell Duckie he wasn’t getting the ring? I asked.
She said she had.
What did he say? I asked.
He didn’t say nothing, she said with her Tennessee twang. He wasn’t happy. I could tell by his face. But he didn’t say nothing.
Conflict averted. Thanks for putting it in writing, Dad.
I didn’t see Uncle Ronnie until he arrived at the church for the memorial service. He looked good. He looked younger than either my dad or Duckie. If I hadn’t known better, I would have guessed his age as early 60s, not his real 80+ years. However, as soon as he started talking embarrassingly loudly, I knew his hearing was gone.
He told my sibling, I don’t hear women’s voices.
Maybe he has high-frequency hearing loss, making it literally more difficult for him hear female speech (http://www.hearatlanta.com/inability-to-hear-womens-voices-is-a-symptom-of-high-frequency-hearing-loss/), but I had to wonder when he was ever in the habit of listening to what women had to say.
Although he was sitting in the pew behind me, I clearly heard Ronnie tell Duckie how he had basically raised my father. My grandmother wasn’t there to refute the statement.
Ronnie then told Duckie our ancestors were royalty and there’s a castle with our name on it back in the old country. It seems a bit strange to keep such information a secret for all these years, but I suppose Ronnie has his reasons. (I suspect one reason it that this royalty and castle idea is a figment of Ronnie’s imagination, as are the alien abductions he tried to tell us about later.)
Then Ronnie approached me.
You’re the oldest, he announced loudly enough for most everyone in the church to hear.
When your daddy changed his religion, he continued, he gave me his Bible. Would you like to have it?
Oh, no, you should keep it, I said brightly but quietly.
Good, he said loudly. We’ll exchange addresses and I’ll send it to you.
I guess he couldn’t hear my woman’s voice.
Before the night was over, Duckie had invited a married fundamentalist Christian woman from my dad’s church to sit in his lap. When someone asked him if his 54 year-old niece was his wife, he said, I wish! while sitting right next to his actual wife of five decades.
When one of the people from my dad’s church asked Ronnie something about his wife, he responded for all to hear, We’ve been married 57 years. We’ve tried everything!
Later he tried to give me a bed built by one of our ancestors soon after his arrival in the New World. Ronnie has not only the bed, but a list of everyone born in it. Apparently, I am the only one of my cousins qualified to own the bed because since I’ve never married, I still carry the family name. When Ronnie mentioned offering the bed to a museum, I enthusiastically endorsed that idea. I’m sure there is no room in my van for an ancestral bed.
And then it was done. My dad was dead, and his memorial service was over. I’d never have to see those men again, dead or alive.
That’s just about how I feel about my family… they’re weird in all directions. My mother was the only really decent person on her side. I’ve moved around enough that most of them have lost track of me. Fortunately. It would also be handy if I happened to win the lottery.
When my father died, everyone seemed to say the same thing: “It was probably for the best”. (IMO, it should have happened a lot sooner.) There was no funeral or memorial, because no one would have attended. If there HAD been a funeral, the only reason that I would have gone to it would be to stand beside the casket, look down into the hole and say, “Couldn’t you dig it any deeper?”
It’s pretty bad when you grieve more for a beloved pet than you do for the members of your family.
great writing! love this. Some people talk about horrible stuff in a way that makes me feel horrible. You talk about horrible stuff in a way that feels deep and real but helps me feel okay.
Oh, Laura-Marie, thank you. What a great compliment! Thank you. I’m glad I can convey the truth in way that feels “deep and real,” but without making my readers feel horrible. I don’t want to make anyone feel horrible!
Thank you for reading and commenting and for being a good friend.