What we keep, what keeps us going. |
His Roses He surprised her with roses for no particular reason. Deeply pink and cream -- just to make her smile. Filled a vase with water as she snipped the ends. Together they arranged them just so. Two, she put separately in a vase for her desk. The others, center of the dining room table --that place they shared joys and pain and family dinners and silly conversations about nothing and everything. They opened slow and easy, full bowls of scent, petals spreading wide: like his love, she'd said. Tall and proud, they reigned over the tall blue vase she always loved: the color of his eyes. Four days, then five, the roses lasted, just opening wider. You brought me roses, she'd say passing through the room. She'd smile every time. As did he. That next morning, she woke to silence. No soft snored rumblings next to her, no scent of morning coffee, but she could still smell the roses. Rolling over, a thought to caress, perhaps a nudge into morning sleepy love but no. He'd gone to pick more roses someplace she couldn't follow. Muted sunlight bathed the planes of that face she loved so well. His last words before sleep of love and time and plans. Her drowsy response, I love you, too as they slipped into slumber. Death should be quiet, she'd thought, but no. Too many voices mouthing words she was not yet ready to hear, too many arms bearing endless food and hugs. Too many footsteps, too much food, just too much when all she wanted was him. They couldn't understand, for all they loved and cared and worried, they weren't him and the world was out of step. Balanced precariously on a tilted axis, it spun out of control around her. Don't touch my roses, she'd said, numerous times. Leave them be. She'd sent funereal flowers home with children, neighbors, odd strangers who knew him but not her. She didn't want them. Not those flowers, not the people who hovered and pushed at her. She stood strong, mid-stream and let them flow past her. I haven't room for you now. She wanted quiet, the scared dog who kept looking for Dad. Even as she kept expecting him to walk in any minute. Sitting with a cup of coffee as sun eased in the front window, she watched as yet another petal fell. Silently, as if in slow motion, cream edged now with brown fell to the table. The heads, now bowed as if, as if in prayer for something impossible. Leaves wilting. I'm wilting, she thought, her fingertip tracing a now dusty petal on a dusty table. Don't touch my roses, she said when one of the daughters came. I know, Mom. Soft, gentle response. A season spiraled off to wherever spent seasons went. Her roses, his roses, now dried, the water long since evaporated. No longer soft, the petals brittle as dreams. A gossomer stretch of silken web ties petal to leaf. Dusty mauve moment. The days are empty now, she hadn't realized how much he filled her days even when he was at work. She'd washed his last load of work clothes. They sat in a pile on the chest. Gathering dust. Looking around, she realizes a thin layer of dust garnishes everything. Ashes to ashes. She and her girls went into the woods, his woods. Buried his ashes beneath the grandfather oak up on the hill. Next spring when leaves burst green, he'd be there, a part of new growth. She didn't tell them she'd kept a small bottle of his dust. Home again, once more alone in the quiet, she looked at his roses still on the table. Waiting for something. Rose dust, ash dust isn't that much different. They can't stay there forever. How can they not? Half a year elapses. The roses still sit on the empty table. She doesn't eat there anymore. Drinking her coffee, instead, in the front room. No dust here in his room of mighty ships. The might Mo, the ship, his nickname. Old Ironsides - how they'd joked about his constitution. The doorbell rings. She barks, but the dog doesn't leave her side. When dad's gone it's her job to guard the house; keep Mom safe. Dad never rang the doorbell, and he never came back like he always said he would. An armful of deeply pink and cream roses. She shakes her head, not understanding. Your husband ordered these, said when he passed away that six months later to deliver these roses and this note. Tipping his hat, he returns to his car. "The last roses probably still sit on the dining room table. Time to throw them away, m'love. Put these in their place. Blow the dust away. Have a cup of coffee with me. I love you. Still. She keeps fresh roses on the table now. Still freshly clipped, in the blue vase that is just like his eyes. Smaller place now, different things surround her. She drinks her coffee curled in an Adirondack chair on the back porch. It looks off across a meadow, up a hill crowned by a glorious grandfather oak. Not his oak, but one that was also fed on his ashes. She's better these days. Almost okay. She walks to the tree, sits between knobby-kneed roots and reads him her books, her poetry. Wind-rustled leaves respond and she smiles. |