I was sitting at a picnic table, gazing up the river and smoking a cigarette, when suddenly a hand touched my shoulder.
It was a good thing I was wearing brown pants.
But it was just my house-guest, who’d walked down from there after seeing me in the distance.
It’s a very hot, humid, day, this Memorial “Day†(the real one’s the 30th, remember), and I’d driven down there, but she’d walked. It’s not a short distance, from the back porch to there.
“What are you thinking about?†she asked.
Nothing in particular, I said; “just random things.
“For example, I’m thinking about my early childhood on the Platte River, where my three older brothers took my younger brother to camp, to fish, to cook out.
“I went one time, when I was about four years old, but as it wasn’t my thing to do, I didn’t do it again.â€
I lit another cigarette.
“You know, every year the week before Labor Day, a big carnival used to come to town.
“And every year, my younger brother and I used to each be given a long string of tickets; not half a dozen, not a dozen, but
many more than that.
“I never thought about the source of the tickets; if given something, I simply accepted it without question.
“It wasn’t until they were all gone, and by random chance I mentioned it to someone else, the tickets, and was illuminated that beginning the week before the carnival came to town, the three older brothers and their friends, then in high school, used to spend a great deal of time fishing on the Platte River, putting the carcasses on ice, and then when the carnies showed to set things up, traded the fish for tickets.
“Apparently they fished well, and got miles of tickets.â€
She poured herself some orange juice from a one-gallon thermos jug I’d brought down.
“You take Memorial Day differently than most do,†she commented.
Yeah, I admitted; “for me, it’s always been a religious holiday, a time to solemnly remember all those who went before me. And it seems every year, I suddenly remember yet another reason to be grateful for them.
“After my younger brother died, a year after our mother and two years after our father, the surviving seven of us agreed to go back to the Sandhills every Memorial Day, for some sort of family reunion.
“I was all for it; it was on neutral ground, as none of us lived there any more, and this once-a-year meeting would alleviate me from having to devise excuses to not go to one of their homes other holidays.â€
I rubbed sweat off my forehead. “Ah, there were problems between the older six and this seventh one.
“It was more than a great gulf in ages; they’d turned out hippies, Democrats, and liberals, although fortunately none of them ever reached the primitive stage. And I’d turned out the way I had.
“There was a joke, told outside of our family, that the first six, all of them born close together in New York, had been raised by the book of Dr. Benjamin Spock. And then there was a gap of many years, which included the family moving to Nebraska.
“It was assumed that was the largest the family’d ever be, and so the book was thrown away.
“But then I showed up, and two years later, my younger brother. Not having the book to guide them any more, the parents raised the two of us purely by instinct.
“It was like two different families, two different pairs of parents.
“But great as the problems between all of them and me, they also had problems between each other--in hindsight, this was a very contentious family--whose nature of which I was never clear, because these were events and people long before my own time.
“And so that’d be the damper on these Memorial Day reunions.
“However, I remembered that my older brothers and sisters behaved in front of company, and so the first year, I brought company, four of my college classmates and roommates.
“It was great; there were no squabbles, no arguments, no fights. Everybody was mellow.
“The second year, I came with the same four friends again, and everybody behaved.
“But that was the last time; when the third year rolled around, much to my confusion I learned nobody else in the family was interested in having the get-together.
“It wasn’t until years later that it struck me--I’m a slow learner--they weren’t used to this, everybody being mellow and having a good time, and it made them uncomfortable. They were accustomed more to squabbling, arguing, fighting amongst themselves, and with me.
“What does one do with such people?†I asked as I lit another cigarette.
“But at the same time, they all could be kind, very kind, kinder to me than what I really deserved.
“My father died when I was 17 years old, and just as his estate was getting settled, my mother died, and for whatever reason, both estates were rolled up into one.
That was almost settled when my younger brother died, and for whatever reason, his estate was combined with theirs, into one.
“Settlement was held up from my graduation from high school clear until my graduation from college.
“When I got my check--four or five weeks after graduation from college--I deposited the check and threw away the accompanying papers. I already knew what the papers involved anyway; the assets and liabilities of the three combined estates, what bills were paid, what was left over, and
assumed things had been split seven ways equally among all of us.
“It took me twelve years to spend all that money, and that was about the time the brother who’d been executor of all three estates died. When I was going through his papers, I found the originals of the photocopies I’d been sent twelve years before, and this time I read them.
“This brother had absolute control over everything, and in fact could’ve taken the whole thing, and it would’ve been legal, but had given me to understand that it all would be split equally among all the children of our parents.
“It hadn’t been, though; he’d divided it
eight ways, including our deceased younger brother, and given me not only my share, but the share devoted to him. I’d given one-quarter, not one-seventh.
“When I inquired of my last surviving brother about the matter, I learned the issue had been discussed and agreed upon by all of them (minus myself, of course). Apparently their attitude was that they were all mature, established in good careers, and financially stable.
“And then there was me, 20-21 years old, the youngest, and not thought likely to have an easy life.
“They were always worried whether or not I was going to make it.â€
to be continued