Andy watched the cars around them puff vapor
as his grandfather’s
Cadillac slid through the Sunday church traffic on Cheltenham Ave.
Pop flicked cigarette ash out the driver’s window. “Lock
your doors when you drive through Olney,” he said. “You
were born in Olney.”
Andy held his breath to keep the smoke out
of his lungs and closed his eyes. His temples throbbed; the backs
of his eyes ached. He’d
had seven shots of airplane gin the night before, on a flight that
landed late in Philly thanks to driving sleet. Four hours of sleep
had done nothing to ease the pain.
Pop swung the Caddy through a gap in the wrought-iron fencing.
The car plowed through a puddle and passed a low stone building
with green landscaping trucks parked outside. A bronze crucifix
stood by the door.
“Holy Sepulchre. Remember that. Lots of graveyards in Philadelphia,” Pop
said, turning to Andy, eyebrows arching above his fishbowl glasses.
The road branched into a network of smaller lanes marked with letters. “Lane
D,” Pop said. They approached a fork and Pop pointed to a
tomb with brass doors gone green from age. “Turn left at
Felix Hanlon. Remember that name – left at Felix Hanlon.”
Andy knew he was only telling him all of this
because Pop thought he was going to die soon. Andy had been doing
the same thing since his mother died three months earlier, covering
all of his bases, even though he was forty years younger than
Pop. He’d even
had the estate lawyer draw up his will. But Pop could have saved
himself the trouble: Andy wouldn’t remember the way to his
mother’s grave. He wasn’t sure if he wanted to.
They passed a line of limestone mausoleums strung along a side
hill. A thin man stood in the middle of a plot by the side of the
road, hands stretching the pockets of his jacket. Pop pulled over
behind a silver Buick and parked.
“There’s Eddie,” Pop said,
and Andy realized that the man standing among the graves was
his great-uncle.
They slid off the leather seats and closed the doors softly. The
grass was slick underfoot. When they reached Eddie, he nodded;
his great-uncle was the tallest person in the family, and he looked
down on everybody.
“How you been, Andy?” Eddie shook Andy’s
hand.
“Still living,” Andy said, shrugging.
He was surprised that Eddie had called him by the right name;
most of the family confused him with his older brother, Josh.
Eddie said hello to Pop and the brothers hugged
awkwardly, as if they were trying to lift each other but couldn’t
find the proper hold.
“Your brother couldn’t make it?” Eddie
asked Andy, frowning.
“He had to work,” Andy said. It was a lame excuse,
but the one Josh had given. Andy knew his brother had stayed home
in an attempt to move on; he was rejecting the family’s protracted
mourning. Andy had considered doing the same, but felt obligated
to see this through to the end: he wanted to watch his mother’s
ashes lowered into the earth. He’d toss the dirt over her
himself, if it meant it would finally be over.
Andy’s eyes drifted to the crest of
the hill, where angels and crosses shared the gray skyline with
apartment buildings and the parapets of Beaver College, the unfortunately
named all-girls school a block over. At least the weather’s
right,
he thought. The storm had passed in the night, and now a dirty
fog lingered at the bottom of the hill, erasing the gravestones.
The December cold had already begun to stiffen his fingers. Living
in Arizona hadn’t prepared him for this.
“He’s late,” Pop said, glancing
at the tarnished watch on his wrist.
“The priest?” Andy asked.
Pop nodded. “He’s going to do a ceremony.” Pop
spread his hands in front of him, as if to illustrate.
Eddie muttered something under his breath.
He was probably still upset that the funeral hadn’t happened in Philly, where the
family had lived for four generations. It was her birthplace, Andy’s
birthplace, everybody’s birthplace. But Andy knew she’d
moved to Arizona for a reason, raised them there, died there. He
didn’t know what reason, but it had taken a crematorium and
a box to get her back.
Andy tried to read the names inscribed behind
the filthy windows of the family mausoleum. Pop and Eddie wandered
the gravestones that lay flat and black in the grass of the family
plot, like windows into the underworld. Pop began to read the
names aloud. It took Andy a moment to realize that it was for
his benefit. Pop pointed to the grave that held his parents. “Cancer,” he said. “Both
of ’em.” He stopped at another and introduced Andy
to the great-great uncle he would never meet. “Japs got him,” he
said. “Sank his boat and let the sharks do the rest.” At
the next stone, Pop didn’t say anything. Andy read the inscription:
BENNETT
John M., Jr.
February 15, 1938 –
Miriam A.
May 13, 1938 – December
29, 2000
Together in life, together at rest.
Pop had already had his name put on, right
above his wife’s.
A few years earlier, Grandma Mary had started to forget things.
Then Pop woke up at midnight to an empty bed and the whine of a
vacuum. He found her in the living room, dressed in an evening
gown and slippers, vacuuming the drapes. She’d died soon
after of a brain disease the doctors couldn’t identify. The
last time Pop saw her, she didn’t know who he was. Andy had
heard the story from his mother before she died. He’d never
talked to Pop about anything other than Philadelphia sports.
“What’s your middle name?” Andy
asked.
“Moylan.”
Andy chuckled, despite himself. “Seriously?”
Pop’s lips moved silently, then words came out. “This
is where I’ll be soon, Josh.”
“Andy. I’m Andy.” It sounded angrier than he
meant it to, and his grandfather looked up with hurt in his eyes.
Andy felt bad for saying it, but he was sick of making arrangements,
sick of spending perfectly good and vital days of his life making
order out of death: who inherited what, where to have the funeral,
where to bury the ashes. It struck him that he still didn’t
know exactly where they were burying her – he hadn’t
yet seen her grave. He asked and Pop pointed to a plot in the back
corner, next to a pathway for lawnmowers, where a canvas tarp stretched
across a hole in the ground. Andy felt a surge of resentment toward
those strange dead relatives who had taken all the good spots.
Pop’s face flickered. “And then you can go above her,” he
said, shuffling his hands in a stacking motion. Andy looked at
Pop in disbelief. They stack caskets, he thought, like
cars at parking lots in Newark. Pop squatted and began
to rub the letters of his own name.
Brakes creaked behind him and Andy turned to see a landscaping
truck pull up next to the Caddy. A priest in a black parka got
out and walked toward them. He introduced himself and apologized
for his lateness.
“I’ll go get her,” Pop said,
and walked to the car. As Pop reached into the trunk, the priest
looked to the sky, as if afraid of rain. Pop walked over holding
the urn, a small pewter-colored box with an inscription Andy
knew by heart:
Deborah Ann Bennett
August 10, 1957 -- September 19, 2001
A loving daughter, a loving mother.
Andy had chosen the words himself, because
his brother didn’t
want to, and neither of them trusted anybody else. He’d agonized
over how to best describe his mother; he wanted to give speeches,
loud long eulogies to crowds full of everyone who’d ever
known her, and everyone who hadn’t, to tell them all what
she was – retired Army, a small-business owner, a single
mother of two from a bad part of a bad city who got by on her smarts
and her sweat instead of a welfare check. How remarkable she had
been, how much better than all the useless people still breathing
everywhere he went. He soon realized he couldn’t sum that
up, so he went with relativity: who she was to those who loved
her. A daughter, a mother. His mother.
Pop set the urn in the dirt next to the tarp. The priest pulled
a prayer card from his jacket pocket and read the prayer of committal.
Andy followed along in his head: We commend to Almighty God
our sister Deborah… Ashes to ashes, and all that.
The priest finished. Andy waited for him
to move the tarp and put her into the grave. The priest stood
there for a moment, expressed his regrets, and shook hands with
Pop and Eddie. He reached for Andy’s hand, and it extended mechanically, but Andy didn’t
let go.
“That’s it?”
The priest nodded. “The prayers of committal have been
read. Now she can be interred.” He tugged against Andy’s
grip, and Andy relented. He looked to his grandfather and pointed
at the tarp, then at the urn nestled in the grass.
“They take care of that later,” Eddie said. He clenched
Andy’s shoulder. “It’s okay, son. You don’t
want to see that, anyway.”
# # #
Andy read the Lee’s Hoagie House menu
while his grandfather and Eddie ordered their usuals. Pop got
a pizza steak, Eddie a cheesesteak. The man behind the counter
stared at Andy from below a dirty Phillies hat. Andy ordered
a turkey hoagie.
They stood by the pickup counter tapping their feet.
“You sure you ought to have a pizza steak, Pop?” He’d
had a heart attack a decade ago, and he was six months removed
from triple-bypass surgery. The whole family had been praying that
his heart would hold up, that he could survive the death of his
only child five years after the death of his wife, that they wouldn’t
have to have another funeral, for him.
Pop shrugged and said he only had one every blue moon. Andy saw
Eddie glaring at him and dropped the subject. They slid into a
green vinyl booth.
“What was she like?” Andy asked. “As
a kid, I mean.”
Pop’s jowls fell, then a wan smile
creased his cheeks. He cleared his throat.
“How you like that new Cadillac?” Eddie
asked. He nodded toward the parking lot, where the Caddy squatted
alone among the weeds poking through the cracked asphalt.
Pop’s head turned from Andy to Eddie, then back again. “Good
car,” he said. “Rides real nice. Lots of power.” He
rubbed his nose where the glasses pinched his skin, then put his
sandwich down and excused himself. As Pop disappeared into the
bathroom, Eddie flicked onion bits from his lips and spoke directly
to Andy. “Jesus, kid, don’t you know what he’s
been through?”
“Yeah, I’ve got a pretty good
idea.”
Eddie wiped his mouth with the back of his
hand. “Why don’t
you two do something to take his mind off it? Go see a game.”
“You know how hard it is to get Eagles tickets, Eddie?” Andy
glanced at the yellowed Yuengling signboard on the wall.
Eddie leaned across the table. “You ain’t got to tell
me. I been here all my life, remember. Sixty-eight years I been
watching that sorry-ass team.” That didn’t keep him
from telling Andy about the old Eagle greats – Van Buren,
Bednarik, Jaworski – until Pop came back to the table. They
made small talk while they finished their lunch. Andy left most
of his hoagie sitting on the grease-spotted wrapper.
In the parking lot, Eddie snuck a few bills
into Andy’s
goodbye handshake, shooting him a wink.
“You kids go have yourselves some fun,” he
said, slamming the door of his new Buick. Andy watched his brake
lights plunge as he drove down the steep curb. They got into
the Cadillac. Andy reached into the center console for a breath
mint to kill the taste of onions.
“So what do you want to do?” Pop
asked. He cranked the key and the Caddy rumbled. Go home, Andy thought. I’d
like to go home. But he couldn’t say that any more than
he could do it. He turned on the radio:
Put your makeup on, fix your hair up pretty…
He’d know Springsteen anywhere; he’d heard his voice
so many times, crackling on Mom’s record player, wailing
through the house every time she broke up with one of her boyfriends,
or one of her husbands. The harmonica came in, screaming, as if
somebody were sobbing into the mouthpiece.
“ Atlantic City,” Andy said.
“Good song.” Pop reached for
the volume knob.
“We should go,” Andy said, and the moment he heard
his own words inside his head, he knew that it was right. He saw
Pop’s face settling and knew what he would say: too far;
he hadn’t been in years; it would all be different now.
“C’mon, Pop. It’s, what, an hour away? It’ll
be fun. You can show me around.” They needed to do something
besides sit and eat and mourn; it had been too long, three months
that felt like his entire lifetime, one long learning curve of
grief. They had to do something to remind themselves that they
were still alive. Their luck had to change.
Pop took off his glasses and wiped them. His eyes were red around
the edges.
“Okay, pal,” Pop said. “What
the hell, right?”
# # #
Andy watched Pop behind the wheel. One of
his grandfather’s
hands held his cigarette up to the cracked window; the heel of
the other rested on the steering wheel, when he wasn’t gesturing.
Pop was telling jokes.
“What do you call a white man in Camden?”
Andy winced.
“Officer!” Pop chuckled.
Andy forced a grin while he wondered how it was ever normal to
talk like that. It was another reminder of the generation gap between
them, the one his mother used to bridge. Now it was just them,
two men who shared blood and nothing else, who hardly knew each
other at all. There’s still time, he thought. They
were young enough: Pop was sixty-five, but he could have passed
for sixty easily, and besides, Andy was twenty-three and he felt
fifty and sixty and seven hundred, ancient, like he was carved
in rock. Together, he thought, they could burn up the blackjack
banks. They could take Atlantic City; make a memory or two that
didn’t involve death or long-distance phone charges.
He was dreaming stacks of green when the car shuddered. Pop had
let it drift onto the rumble strips on the side of the highway.
He whipped the wheel, crossing the dotted line, nearly side-swiping
a Volkswagen. Andy gripped his chest with one hand and shoved the
other against the dash. He closed his eyes and considered saying
a prayer.
“Don’t worry,” Pop said, slapping Andy’s
hand away from the dashboard with his own, which should have been
steering the car. “Safest road in America, right here. They
did a survey.”
The road was the least of Andy’s worries. He had spent most
of the trip envisioning the Caddy blowing a tire, them veering
across the median into oncoming traffic. Their caskets lowering
into the family plot, one on top of the other. Strips of rubber,
lug nuts, Pop’s surgically repaired arteries: their lives
relied on so many things.
Pop pointed to the horizon, where angular
casinos reared above the treeline. They passed a sign announcing
the end of the expressway, rounded a corner, and Andy got his
first glimpse of Atlantic City. It was not what he expected:
no lights or marquees or bright casino entrances beckoning. Bars
covered the windows and graffiti covered everything else. Gas
stations and liquor stores fought for space with fast-food restaurants
and check-cashing centers. A homeless old woman in a little girl’s
coat staggered down the sidewalk pushing a shopping cart half-full
of clothes stained with dark blotches. They drove down the street
in silence, like observers in a war, until they could see the
ocean peeking out between the high-rises on the boardwalk. Their
brief sense of dread dissipated in the winter breeze blowing
in off the beach.
# # #
The table was hot. Pop flicked
chips from the Technicolor puddle in front of his ashtray. Andy
plucked his carefully from neat stacks.
“You gamble a lot back home?” Pop
asked.
“Nope, not much,” Andy said. The woman dealing shot
him a look; for the last hour, he’d been splitting eights
and aces, doubling every eleven. There was no reason to lie. “I
go to Vegas a few times a year.” Actually, there was a
reason to lie – Andy wasn’t going to tell him that
he’d donated most of his mother’s modest life insurance
money to tip jars and chip racks.
“No kidding? We used to go, Mary and
me.”
The dealer flipped her hole card, a king, then dropped a nine
next to the six already showing. Bust. Easy money.
“Always stayed at the Flamingo,” Pop continued. “Ever
been there? That’s a classy joint.”
“Sure is,” Andy said. It once
was, judging by the pictures in the lobby. When he had gone,
the bedspreads smelled like pipe tobacco and the flamingos were
molting.
Pop squirmed in his seat and stretched. “How about we make
things interesting before we head to the boardwalk?” he said,
sliding his whole stack into the circle: four blacks and a ten-stack
of green. Andy had less; a glance told him about three-fifty. He’d
bought in with the three hundred Eddie had given him, taken a dive
right away, then climbed back up during the hot shoe they’d
just finished.
The dealer tapped a long red fingernail against
the felt in front of Andy. “Bet?” she asked, in a
shrill foreign accent that irritated him.
He’d told himself he wouldn’t gamble anymore. The
money in his hand could delay the collection calls for a month,
buy him another two weeks without an eviction notice. Now that
he’d dropped out, the banks were sending letters about his
student loans. He refused to ask Pop for money, because he didn’t
want him to think he was after an inheritance. That wasn’t
why he was there. He had come to settle things. He had come to
start anew.
Andy slid his whole stack into the circle. They were still young.
The cards came quickly: an ace each. Andy’s
chest stretched tight across his ribs as the deal came around
to fill them up: Pop caught a seven, Andy another ace. The dealer
flipped a queen.
“Jeez,” Pop said. “This ought to be good.” He
winked at Andy and tapped his finger. She dealt him a ten that
made his soft eighteen hard. She turned to Andy.
“Twelve,” she said, her accent
butchering the word.
Andy considered for another moment. Always split aces. Always. He
turned to Pop.
“How much cash you got?”
Pop pulled out his money clip and counted
twenties. “ Two
forty,” he said.
“Twelve,” the dealer said again. Twerve, he
thought, feeling a sneer start and scolding himself. It was a ten-dollar
table on a Tuesday afternoon in December, and if they lost they
wouldn’t have anything left to tip her. They were being assholes,
but he didn’t give a shit. The world owed them that much.
More.
He looked at her name tag. “Where’s
the fire, Fong?”
The woman scowled as he counted the money in his wallet: five
twenties, a five, four crumpled ones. He checked his pockets: three
quarters and three dimes. He had a nickel to spare.
“Split ’em,” he said, taking Pop’s offering
and slapping it all down on the table. “You can keep the
change.” He winked at Fong and felt his blood rising for
the first time in forever.
She flipped an eight and smirked; it widened into a smile when
she turned another ace. Nineteen and twelve against a face card
showing. Pop had eighteen. They were going to lose everything.
She pointed her fiery fingernail at the leftmost
hand, the pair of aces. “Split again, Bugsy?”
Andy leaned against the back of his chair
and exhaled. He saw that a small crowd of degenerates had gathered
behind them. That kind of hand didn’t happen every day. The pit boss appeared
behind the dealer, arms folded. Andy doubted he’d give them
a marker for three-fifty after the way he’d been acting.
He had resigned himself to another loss when Pop spoke.
“ Three fifty now, I’ll pay you five or a Rolex in
thirty seconds,” Pop said to the handful of onlookers. He
slid his watch off his wrist and dangled it between his fingers.
It had diamonds on the face and, Andy knew, an inscription on the
back: Thanks for the best twenty years of my life. Love, Mary.
“Pop, what are you—.”
Pop extended a palm. His face was flushed. A tattooed man in
a tank top took the watch and looked it over. The diamonds did
their job; old as it was, the watch was worth a few large, easy.
“My kind of guy,” said tank top.
He dug a handful of chips from his jeans. The pit boss moved
toward Pop.
“You got a problem?” Pop spat. The pit boss blinked
to a stop, surveyed the empty casino floor, and shook his head
before stepping back. Pop was old, but he wasn’t one to back
down. He swept the chips from tank top’s hand into his own
and then dropped them into Andy’s cupped palms like an offering.
Tank top put the watch on the table, and Andy saw Pop’s eyes
linger on it.
“You don’t have to,” Andy
said.
Pop shot him a smile that showed he wasn’t sure about it,
either. “All I’ve got is time, pal.”
Fong’s fingernails massaged the deck
as Andy counted how much was at stake. In his head, Springsteen
again: I got debts
no honest man can pay. He held his breath as the cards came
down.
King of diamonds.
Suicide Jack.
He let it out. He was buying dinner, no matter what she had.
Fong let the slot machines jingle for a long second before she
showed her hand.
Deuce. Twelve, the dealer’s ace, Andy thought.
Then a Queen fell, and the table erupted.
A grandmother slapped Andy’s hand. He looked over and saw tank top put his arm
around Pop. They’d pay him back, keep the watch, and clear
more than fifteen hundred in profit.
“Color us up,” he said to Fong,
but she was watching Pop with widened eyes. Andy turned to see
his grandfather clutching at his chest. Sweat beaded above his
glasses.
“Pop?” Andy said. He shot out of his stool, knocking
it over. He slapped tank top’s arm away from Pop’s
shoulders and replaced it with his own. He felt the group crushing
in around him. The stale smoked clogged his nose and the slot machines
rang in his ears. Should I tell him I love him? Is this my last
chance?
“I’m … okay,” Pop said, wiping his forehead. “Just … out
of breath … is all.”
Andy put his fingers against Pop’s damp neck, trying to
remember the CPR class he’d taken in high school. He felt
a pulse pushing back against his skin and said a silent prayer
of thanks, to God, to his mother, to whoever was watching over
them.
“Let’s get you out of here,” he
said, helping Pop out of his chair.
Two steps from the table, Pop wheezed: “The money.” Andy
turned and stuffed the stack of black and gold chips into his pockets.
He cleared a path for them with a glare and they walked to the
door, the soft red carpet sucking at their shoes.
# # #
The waves crashed along the boardwalk and the wind cut through
their clothes. Pop leaned back against the marble wall and blinked
slowly.
“Scared you, didn’t I?”
Andy giggled, even though he didn’t
find it funny. His head felt light and airy, and his skin prickled
from the cold and the relief. He looked down the boardwalk, past
the T-shirt shops and food booths, to the palatial Taj Mahal
at the far end.
“You ever played a hand like that?” Pop
asked.
“Nope. You?”
Pop shook his head. “Mary didn’t like to gamble.
She was real classy, you know, and even back then A.C. was going
to hell in a bucket.” They watched a homeless man walk by. “I
used to bring your mom down here, when she was just a kid.”
At the mention of his mother, Andy blinked, then smiled, as his
mind reacted in its usual way: picturing her alive, pushing brown
curls behind her ear, and then picturing the urn with her name
engraved on it.
“We were both kids, really.” Pop had his only child
at nineteen; Andy knew that much. He imagined himself with a four-year-old
child. What a disaster that would be. “She loved the water,
that girl. Couldn’t get her to come out until her fingers
were all shriveled up--” Pop clenched his hands “--and
her skin looked like a stop sign.” He sighed. “She
just wouldn’t listen.”
Andy wondered whether Pop had pulled the
watch stunt so that he’d have a similar story to tell about
them. I used to
take him down the shore to A.C. Kid had brass balls – split
aces three times once, almost cost me my watch. Or was it for
Andy’s sake, to give him something to remember about his
grandfather? Next thing I know Pop’s waving his watch
around. He bet a Rolly on me. That’s the kind of faith he
had. A funeral anecdote.
“I’m glad we came down here,
Pop.”
“Me too, pal.” Pop smiled. “Haven’t
been in years. Glad we got a chance to see it —
Andy sensed Pop’s “before” coming and interjected. “You
could come down whenever, Pop. It’s not far.”
Pop shrugged his shoulders and looked around. “With
who?”
Andy followed his grandfather’s eyes to the waves eating
away at the empty beach, the trash blowing down the boardwalk,
the lights chasing each other around buildings. Overhead, flags
popped in the wind like the knuckles of some giant, closing hand.
He realized how terrible it would feel to be here alone, and he
wanted to say that they could go together, he and Pop. He could
come to visit more often, they could come back to A.C. for a weekend
or two. If he could get Pop to fly out, maybe they could even hit
Vegas for a weekend. But he didn’t say it, because he thought
it might sound too much like a promise, or too much like a dream.
“Hell of a place you picked to rest,” Pop said. Andy
looked behind him for the first time. He’d thrown open the
doors of the casino and led Pop to the nearest place to sit, a
low marble slab that he now saw was part of some monument. A huge
bronze plaque of names stretched along a marble wall, and a statue
of an officer stood in the middle of the plaza. The officer held
his helmet at his side and stared down his arm at a fistful of
dog tags, as if he didn’t know what they were.
Pop pushed himself up with one arm, and they walked slowly over
to the sign.
“New Jersey Korean War Memorial,” Andy
read.
“Wonderful spot for it,” Pop
said, looking from the casino entrance on one side to the pizza
joint on the other.
“Eight hundred twenty two dead or missing,” Andy
said. “And this is what they get.”
# # #
Andy had checked twice on the way back from A.C. to make sure
his grandfather was breathing but Pop stopped snoring and stirred
as they climbed the rise of the Walt Whitman Bridge. The city unrolled
before them, its lights cutting through the dusk. Past twinkling
Center City sat the concrete face of the Vet, and behind it lurked
the long, dark arms of the cranes brought in to build the two new
stadiums that would make it obsolete. Between the Whitman and the
Ben Franklin, the dying light curdled the water of the Delaware,
and above the swaying masts at the landing, William Penn straddled
the gold-lit steeple of City Hall.
“There used to be a law that said you couldn’t build
anything taller than the tip of his hat,” Pop said, pointing
at the city’s founder, then at the bank buildings dwarfing
him. “That was a long time ago.”
It was dark outside by the time they parked
outside Pop’s
condo. He had fallen asleep again, cheek pressed against the seat,
his mouth trailing moisture onto the leather. Andy got out of the
car, closed the door softly, and stretched. The lights of the city
seemed far away now, hidden behind the buildings of Pop’s
complex, so he could only see the halo they cast into the sky.
Between the homes, sprinklers threw sheets of water across the
grass, and Andy stood watching his breath escape into the cold
air, not wanting to wake Pop. They would go inside, and Andy would
sleep in his mother’s old room, where the strange metallic
wallpaper kept him awake with its reflections. Pop would sleep
in his recliner, next to the nightstand he’d moved out into
the living room, because his bedroom reminded him of his dead wife,
and the other bedroom reminded him of his dead daughter.
Andy would leave in the morning, go back
to Arizona with the money that stuffed his pockets. It was enough
to make rent, pay the bills for another month. He’d have to find a job, something
to do with himself. Maybe he’d enroll in spring classes at
the local community college.
And Pop would stay right here, Andy knew,
no matter what he said or did or tried to plan to change it.
He’d sleep in the same
empty condo, drive the same old Caddy, until he moved across Philadelphia
to join his wife and daughter. It was just a matter of time, now;
the grave had already been marked with his name.
Andy thought of the family plot, where they
had been that morning. He wondered if his mother’s ashes
had been buried yet, whether the grass had begun to take root
in the raw dirt above her. He wondered how long it would take
to grow over, for the brown earth to turn green.
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