Marvin
"Marv" Stenberg sat on his five gallon bait bucket staring into the
hole in the ice wondering what in God's good name he was doing with his life.
He jigged his line. Nothing. Fifteen years ago, when he retired, he'd vowed
that he would give up ice fishing and he and his wife, Evelyn, would spend
their winters down in Arizona, living in their camper and soaking up the sun in
Sonoma Junction RV Park right on the shores of the Colorado River near Bullhead
City, an hour's drive north of where his brother lived. He'd maybe go for walks
through Cactus Blossom Nature Center which abutted the river and, in general, just
enjoy his retirement years, motoring around on a mini-bike and reading. But it
didn't turn out that way. Soon after he retired Evelyn had suffered a stroke
and required constant care which was exasperated by the onset of Alzheimer's
the last five years of her life. Their plans to live the good life were not
only put on hold, but never even got close to coming to fruition. Last summer Evelyn
passed away and now Marv was left alone and feeling sorry for himself. A
feeling he hated to admit to, but there it was. So he did the only thing he
felt comfortable doing and that was to withdraw and spend time by himself.
Which, he was finding, was fairly easy to do.
"Dad why don't you come over
for dinner? You know, get out of the house a little. Socialize. Remy and the
kids would love to see you." It was that or some variation of this request
his oldest son would make on his weekly phone calls.
Marv found it was easy to make up
some excuse, like he was busy with the garden, or remodeling the bathroom or
cutting firewood, anything that was easily accepted, like his son and his
family couldn't have cared less anyway. Which certainly wasn't true, but...See,
feeling sorry for himself. Whatever the case was, it worked, and left Marv with
a lot of time on his hands. In retrospect, more time than was good for him,
that was for sure.
This particular fishing shack was
the reincarnation of his very first one, the one he'd built when he was in his
mid-twenties, fifty five years ago, just after he and Evelyn were married and
before the kids started arriving on a regular basis every two years for the
next ten years. That first ice house had been big and heavy and required a
truck to pull it out onto the ice. Everyone called it The Beast. Measuring
eight feet by eight feet square it was comfortable inside but way too big and
ungainly, the half inch plywood siding not helping one bit. He'd learned his lesson.
This new one was lighter and smaller. He could drive it down to the lake in the
back of his pickup, unload it and pull it onto the ice himself, an
accomplishment he was proud of. He'd built it the summer before last, the last
full summer Evelyn had been alive, and, to be honest, he built it partly to
give himself a break from the pain of watching his dear wife fading slowly from
life. His three daughters were over constantly helping out during those last
months, along with a extremely competent and gentle male nurse, giving him a
chance to take a break, a break he used to construct 'Something Useful' as he
called it. It turned out to be an escape from reality in more ways than one,
which was becoming apparent to him now as he sat immobile on his bucket on a
winter's day in late February, staring into this hole in the ice, wondering
what he was going to do with the rest of his life.
Bobby
Johnson and his friends, the twins, Will and Ryder Jamison, lived less than a
mile from where Marv now sat in his lonely fishing shack. They were ten years
old and had more energy to burn than they knew what to do with. During the
spring, summer and fall, they were bike riders and adventurers, exploring the
hills and fields around the outskirts of town. During the winter they skated on
the lake and rode their sleds down the big hill on the far side of the cemetery
just down the street from where they lived, building up speed and sailing way
out onto the snow covered ice, laughing and yelling all the way. Fortunately
for them the town they lived in soaked up their energy like a sponge. Long Lake
was located on the western edge of the metropolitan area on the shore of the
lake that gave the town it's name. With a working class population of just under
two thousand and quiet, shady, tree lined streets, Long Lake was like a small
town cast back in time to the mid part of the twentieth century. Bobby, Will
and Ryder took advantage of the nearby forests, farm fields and ponds to live
out their fantasies, their imaginations working overtime. Sometimes they were mountain
men wandering the woods and hills exploring uncharted and treacherous land.
Sometimes they were professional hockey players, skating on the rink they kept
shoveled on the lake, playing for the Stanley Cup. And everything in between.
In an age of electronic games, diversions and communications, they were
definitely throwbacks. The boy's parents kept their fingers crossed, hoping
their energy wouldn't lead them into trouble. So far so good on that count.
On this particular day Bobby woke up
with a plan. Overnight he'd had a dream that he was an Olympic bobsledder
racing down a steep icy track like the one he'd seen when he'd watched the last
winter Olympics held in Sochi with his dad. He had a quick breakfast and then
called the twins, outlining his plan. They all agreed to meet at the cemetery
hill after school. With the plan set, Bobby got his backpack and headed out to
wait for the school bus. He was tingling with excitement. The afternoon
couldn't come soon enough.
Back on the
ice, Marv awoke with a start. He'd fallen asleep and almost toppled off the
bucket, something that made him feel embarrassed even though no one could see
him, closed up in the confines of the fishing shack like he was. He stood up,
stretching his stiff joints, and looked out the small window he'd thought to
put in toward the end of the building process. The sun was shining and he could
tell the day was warming up. The fire in his small wood stove had gone out and
he decided not to revive it. He was warm enough anyway having dressed in long
under wear, a flannel shirt, jeans, a sweater, two pairs of socks, insulated
boots and his insulated Carhartt overalls. On his head he wore the dark green
wool stocking hat Evelyn had knit for him years earlier before her stroke. If on
the one hand he was sad and lonely, he was, on the other hand, certainly warm
and toasty.
He lived up the hill only half a mile
from the lake on a tree lined street of small but tidy and well kept homes. He
often walked to the lake and on his walk down to it earlier that morning Marv had
bumped into Olaf Johnson. Oh, man, Marv thought to himself, inwardly grimacing
as the old guy limped over to him, not this nutcase. In his mind, Olaf was just
a goofy old man with nothing going on in his life who liked to talk too much,
going on and on about anything under the sun, monopolizing and wasting Marv's
time whether the fish were biting or not. To his way of thinking the guy was
lazy, too, preferring not to go to the trouble to build a nice ice house and be
somewhat warm and comfortable during the winter fishing season. No, instead the
nutty old coot chose to carry a bait bucket out to the hole he kept open in the
ice and plop his line in and sit on his bucket out in the elements, no matter
how cold or snowy it was. What an idiot, Marv often thought to himself, as he
sat on his own bucket in the warmth and solitude of his little four by six foot
shack, poking at the fire burning in his stove and trying not to fall asleep.
What a complete fool.
"Hey there, Marv," Olaf
called out, coming up to him at the stoplight on the corner. "What's the
good word?" God help me, Marv, thought. The guy was so friendly and
talkative...He felt the beginnings of a headache coming on.
"Not much, not much at all,"
Marv said, struggling to be pleasant, hackles rising. The last thing he wanted
to do was talk to Olaf, or Ollie as he preferred to be called by his friends,
which Marv refused to do, definitely not counting himself a member of that particular
group of individuals. Overall the guy was just too much. Too much talk, too
much friendly banter and too much trying to be Marv's pal. And he certainly
didn't respect Marv's invisible boundaries. Sometimes he would actually horn in
on his privacy by coming right into his fishing shack. Just to chat, of all
things. Why the nerve of the guy. "Just out doing some fishing," Marv
said, cryptically, hoping he'd get the hint.
"Good day for it," Olaf
said, looking around, smiling, ignoring Marv's rudeness. The sky was blue and
the temperature was in the low thirties. For the end of February it was a
perfect day to be on the lake. A perfect day to be alone on the lake, Marv
thought to himself, wishing Olaf would just leave. But he didn't. The light
changed and they crossed the street, Olaf limping along as they headed down the
block to the city park where the public access to the lake was. He'd had a hip
replaced four or five years ago, which he was more than happy to tell you
about. A story Marv had heard too many times to count. He had to give Olaf
credit, though, he did move around pretty good for an old guy. Where Marv was
on the tall and thinish side, Olaf was just the opposite, shorter and rounder.
Think of the characters 'Mutt and Jeff' and you might get the picture of the
two of them together. Today Marv just wanted to be left alone.
"See you around, Olaf,"
Marv said stepping onto the lake and picking up the pace. The weather had been
clear for over a week and the snow on the ice was packed down pretty well. It
made walking easy and Marv started following the path out to his ice house he'd
trampled all winter long. He was carrying his bait bucket full of shiners,
little minnows he'd bought at the local hardware store. The air was crisp and
invigorating with no wind. The bright sun reflected off the snow making the ice
crystals dance and sparkle. It was a beautiful winter scene, one Marv was
oblivious to, wanting only to get to his shack and be left by himself.
Olaf
didn't take the hint, following along instead, yakking away a mile a minute as
Marv made his way out across the snow and ice. Long Lake was a narrow, shallow
body of water measuring two miles long by a half mile wide with the deepest
spot being twenty five feet. It was fed with a tiny stream on one end and as
well as natural under water springs. Marv's fishing shack was near the outlet,
a small stream that eventually fed into a bigger lake three miles away. The fishing
was good for crappies, sunfish and bass with the occasional northern or walleye
tossed in. Someone once said they'd seen a forty inch Muskie in the shallow
water near the shore where Marv was now fishing, but the jury was out on that
one. Marv, who considered himself a realist, had his doubts as to the
authenticity of the whole story.
"What you going to be fishing
for?" Olaf asked, oblivious to Marv's desire to be alone.
Marv had clammed up on the walk
across the ice. His fishing shack was about two hundred feet from shore near
where a busy local road ran and about a hundred yards out from the public
access. He was watching a group of three crows hoping around a small hole that
had formed in the ice about a hundred feet past from where he'd be fishing. Probably from an underwater spring, Marv
thought to himself. Then he let the idea drift off. What he really wanted was to
get rid of Olaf. "Crappies." He stated abruptly, in answer to the
question, opening the door to his shack and setting his bait bucket inside.
"See you around." He stepped inside and slammed the door, standing
with his head up against it waiting until he heard Olaf trudge off, crunching
through the snow. Then he cracked opened the door and watched as the old guy
moved about fifty feet away over toward where he kept his hole in the ice open
all winter long. It was even closer to the local road and the stream at the
outlet than Marv was. Olaf used a six foot metal rod with a chisel on the end
to punch the hole open. Then he baited his hook and settled down on his bucket
to fish. Marv quickly stepped outside. On the side of his house he'd placed a
rather large pine tree that he'd scavenged from the street during a city wide
pickup of Christmas trees a few months earlier. He'd been using the branches
for kindling to get his little wood burning stove going. He quickly grabbed a
few branches and stepped back inside, noticing that his pine tree was nearly
stripped clean. He also noticed that Olaf was watching him but had quickly
turned away when Marv looked over at him. Geez, Marv thought to himself. What's
the matter with me? He's just a harmless old guy whose trying to be friendly.
Shaking his head he let the thought pass as he stepped inside and busied
himself lighting his stove, finally getting a fire going. He baited his hook
and settled himself in on his bucket. Alone with his thoughts.
At lunchtime
Bobby and Will and Ryder met up at the table they thought of as their own,
located over by the windows on the edge of the noisy lunchroom. They chowed
down their peanut butter and jelly sandwiches, munched on doritos and eagerly talked
about their plan to go sledding after school. After they finished they hurried
outside to recess, running around the playground chasing each other with snow
balls, burning off energy until an attendant corralled them, admonishing them
to calm down. As they were being chewed out the boys cast glances at each
other, grinning and sweating, eyes bright with enthusiasm, already getting
geared up for their sledding adventure later that afternoon. The end of the school
day couldn't come fast enough.
Marv settled
in to gazing into his hole in the ice. He'd been a machinist his entire life. In
the early nineteen fifties he'd taken some engineering classes at the
University of Minnesota, but school was never something he'd been comfortable
with. He had a quick mind, was adept with his hands and could visualize and
draw any object in three dimensions. Evelyn and he had been married for just
over a year when she noticed an ad in the newspaper for help wanted at Butler
Tool and Die in Northeast Minneapolis. Marv had applied for the job, was hired,
and ended up working there for forty years, retiring at the age of sixty five
with a plaque, a pocket watch and a nice pension. The next year Evelyn had her
stroke and then came the onset of Alzheimer's. He'd taken care of her for
fifteen years until she passed away peacefully last summer, surrounded by himself
their five children, and even some grandkids. Now here he was spending his
eighty first winter alone, sitting in a little shack, ice fishing and thinking
of the past. Not the way he'd envisioned living out the end of his life at all.
Evelyn had always encouraged him to
be more open with his children, something he found hard to do.
"Just talk to them every now
and then," she'd say, especially when the kids were young and vying for
his attention. "Let them know you love them." And he did love them,
he just had a hard time showing it.
If you asked his daughters, Tina,
Sara or Julie what they thought of their dad, here's what they'd say: "Dad
was a master of the three R's. He was reticent, restrained and removed,"
was how Tina, the oldest would describe him. "Dad was certainly quiet,"
Sara, the next oldest would concur, "But he at least was there for us. I
knew I could always talk to him and he'd listen." She paused and added,
"But, of course, I had to bring things up first." Julie, the youngest
had a different take. "I learned a lot from dad. He taught me how to take
care of a car and fix stuff around the house. To this day, I really appreciate
everything I've learned from him." To which the oldest sisters just
laughed. Of the three girls, Julie was the one most like their father, the
other two taking after Evelyn, a family centered, stay at home mom her entire
life, who was as comfortable making bread as she was maintaining a garden. She
was warm and loving, a good counterbalance for Marvin's more reserved nature.
The boys Richard "Rich"
and Flynn exhibited a pleasant mix of both of their parents better qualities.
Rich worked as a software designer for a local engineering company and Flynn owned
his own carpet installation business. Both boys were industrious, a trait they
shared with their father.
"Dad could fix anything,"
Rich would say, if you asked him to name one characteristic of their father.
"And he'd let us help,"
Flynn would be quick to add.
"Remember when he let us help
him remodel the kitchen that one time?" Rich would say, looking at his
brother. "We were like, what, eight and six years old?"
"Yeah. I remembered we learned
how to tear out cupboards and lay in new ones so there were level," Flynn
would say.
"Yeah, and I'm pretty sure he
taught us how to use a table saw before I could even spell the word," Rich
added, laughing. Both boys had a great deal of affection for their father.
Rich was older than Flynn by two
years and they were both older than the girls. The boys were close growing up
and even to this day they were still were, living in southwest Minneapolis only
a few blocks from each other. It was Rich who was taking it upon himself to call
his dad on a regular basis to ask him to dinner. Tina did it too, also getting
nowhere, much to the frustration of both of them.
"I don't get it," Rich said
to Tina whenever they talked, which was often. "He throws up roadblocks
every time I invite him over. He just seems to be withdrawing more and more
ever since mom died."
Tina just smirked. "What else
is new?" To her Marv had been withdrawn her entire life. But she still tried
to stay in touch with him anyway. She knew her mom would have wanted it that
way.
Was Marv aware of any of the concern
his kids had for him? No way. His awareness of the world had turned inward. He
had sunk into a depression that was common for some old people when their
lifelong partner passes away, a dark emotional hole deeper than the one in the
ice he was currently spending this long, cold winter staring into.
Back in
school the clock on the wall finally made it to three forty-five and the bell
rang. The school day was over. Bobby bolted from his chair and was admonished
by his teacher to walk. "Yes, Miss Jorgenson," he said politely, slowing
his pace momentarily before scooting through the door and hustling down the
hall to where Will and Ryder were just exiting their classroom.
"Let's go boys," Bobby
called out excitedly. His two friends fell in step with him as they wove their
way down the hall and outside to the bus. The sky was blue, the sun low on the
western horizon. The temperature felt warm, maybe thirty-five degrees and their
energy leveled cranked up another notch. The bus ride home took fifteen
minutes. Five minutes later they were making their way down the street to the
cemetery. They went sledding there as often as they could. The hill was in the
back on the lake side and so steep that hardly any vegetation could secure a
foothold to grow. What attracted the boys was that the run was almost straight
down, offering a ride of nearly one hundred feet before shooting them out onto
the ice. It was an intense, high speed thrill that brought the boy's hearts
into their throats and dropped the bottom out of their stomachs every time they
ran it. They couldn't wait to get there.
Bobby and his dad had bought an old toboggan
at a garage sale the previous summer and he dragged it along thinking it would
be perfect to use to re-enact a bobsled run. The twins were just as excited to
try it. They pulled the toboggan into the cemetery and through the grave
markers all the way to the back to the top of the hill. They stopped to catch
their breath and looked down over the edge. The hill was so step you couldn't
see the bottom, only the lake stretching out away from the shore, brilliant
white snow gleaming in the late afternoon sun. The boys were so excited they
could barely stand it. Bobby positioned the toboggan and climbed on, kneeling
on the padded red nylon mat. He grabbed the rope handles on either side of the
curved wooden front. He could feel his heart pounding and suddenly experienced
just the briefest moment of fear. But he quickly stuffed that away as Will
climbed on and then Ryder behind him. Then they were all on their knees,
gripping the rope handles along the side, anticipation building.
"Ready?" Bobby called out.
"Ready." Will and Ryder
answered simultaneously.
"Let's go," Bobby yelled,
pushing with his hands as Ryder, in the back, kicked off with his feet.
The toboggan slowly inched along to
the edge of the trail and then tipped downward. In less than ten seconds it was
rocketing down the slope. The boy's world was blurred by clouds of snow
billowing all around them as the toboggan picked up speed, faster and faster, all
the way to the bottom of the hill. Wind whipping past them formed tears in
their eyes that blinded them as they rocketed out onto the lake, unaware of
what lay ahead. In front of them was a hole in the ice. The same hole that the
crows had been gathered around all day. A hole that had become larger throughout
the day as the temperature had become warmer. A hole wide and ominous and
unobserved by the boys who, with their heads tucked down to help reduce wind
resistance, were now racers, running a course, not in their little hometown in
Minnesota, but in the Olympics, on a bobsled tract in Sochi, far, far from
home.
Marv loved the years he'd spent at
Butler Tool and Die. He worked in the design department where he and his team took
in specialty, often one-of-a-kind, jobs. One of his first assignments was to
develop a unique bracket used to secure a turbine to the floor for a local
nuclear power plant north of Minneapolis on the Mississippi River. In addition
to a special size and shape, a particular type of metal alloy was also required.
After nearly a year of testing and numerous design changes they were finally
successful, even winning an award for Butler given annually by the Tool and Die
Makers Association of America. His career was off and running from that point
on. By the time he retired he had been trained in computer aided design (CAD)
and was proficient in the use of computer technology to perform the many
functions his job entailed. His team worked on everything from microscopic
components for cell phones to specialized screws used by a local corporation in
their home security system devices. He even once designed a proto-type cylinder
head for a upper Midwest motorcycle manufacturer. His job was both challenging
and interesting. As technology advanced so did his ability to come up with
innovative designs to meet the requirements of Butler's customers.
But sometimes he missed those olden
days when it was just he, his mechanical pencil and his mind coming up with
drawings of solutions to the problems he was presented with. He remembered when
his kids were young. Usually once a year he would take each of them with him to
work. He'd show them around both the
office where he spent most of his time doing his designs and the shop floor
where the products he designed were fabricated and tested. He remembered how
much each of his kids seemed to enjoy the product drawings that he showed them
as well as the noisy hustle and bustle of the shop floor. In retrospect, those
were good memories for him. And why they were flooding back to him on his
particular day was anyone's guess. But they were. He remembered Rich and his simple
interest in the variety of the pencils he used for his drawings. He remembered
how much Flynn loved being on the shop floor watching the tool and die machines
stamp out parts. Even the girls seemed to like seeing where he worked. Julie,
his youngest, especially enjoyed the pounding of the machines and the way the
conveyer belts carried parts to various areas of the facility. He fondly
remembered her starring with wide eyed wonder, smiling and happy, as a huge,
noisy die machine stamped out rounded covers for thermostats. Those were good
times and as they came back to him Marv realized how special they were, him
being there and spending time with each of his kids. It had been part of what
had made up a good life, one that he wouldn't have traded for anything.
Man, Marv thought to himself, my
mind is certainly jumping all over the place today. What was going on? Had he
been asleep again? Had he been dreaming? He had no good answer but as he
thought about it, he found he actually kind of liked that it was happening and
where those good memories were taking him. Maybe he'd been gloomy for too long.
Suddenly there was a tug on his line and he regained his focus, shaking his
head to clear it. Once again he was back in his fishing shack, sitting on his
bucket. His hand tightened on the pole and he pulled up a little four inch perch,
flipping like crazy at the end of the line. He had just taken it off the hook
and carefully placed it back in the water when there was a frantic pounding on
his door.
"Marv, come quick." It was
Olaf. "Some kids just went through the ice." He pounded again as Marv
got up and swung open the door. Olaf was limping in the direction of the hole
in the ice where the crows had been. "Hurry," he yelled over his
shoulder. "They're in serious trouble."
Marv stepped outside and he looked were
Olaf was headed. A hundred feet away
three boys were in the water and struggling to get out. They were trying to
grab onto what looked like a toboggan and they were yelling for help. Olaf was
limping toward them as fast as he could go. A bunch of crows were in the trees
on the shore cawing madly. Marv took a step to follow and then stopped. He
glanced at the pine tree stripped of its branches laying in the snow next to
his ice house. It was nearly seven feet long and could come in handy. He
grabbed it and broke into a jog, catching up to Olaf in less than a minute.
They stopped fifteen feet from the hole. The kids were panicking now and
screaming as the ice around them broke away, water flooding up out of the hole.
Marv and Olaf could feel the ice they were on start to sink. They didn't have
much time.
"We need to get those kids out
of there," Olaf said, his voice urgent. "Fast."
"Did you call 911?" Marv
asked trying to access the situation, his mind working overtime, clicking
through the possibilities.
"Yeah." Olaf was nervous,
shuffling his boots back and forth. "I don't know if they'll make it in
time. Can we get them out, do ya' think?"
Marv took in the toboggan, half in
the water, half on the ice, and two kids hanging onto it. One other kid was in
the water struggling to get out, the ice breaking away with each effort he
made. Marv made his decision.
"Stay here and wait for
help," he told Olaf. "I'm going to try to get them out."He
flipped the tree out onto the ice so that it touched the near end of the
toboggan and then got down on his hands and knees. "Hold the trunk,"
he told Olaf. "I'm going out there after them."
Olaf nodded, looking grim. "Be
careful." He gripped the base of the tree as Marv started to crawl out
along it. "Watch the ice. It's starting to break up."
"You kids lie still." Marv
yelled as he crawled cautiously along the tree trunk out to the toboggan.
"The ice is giving way. Be still and lay there. Try not to move."
He could tell the kids were scared.
So was and he tried to control his breathing. His heart was beating out of
control in his chest. He could barely catch his breath. He forced himself to
crawl along the tree trunk until he could grab the back end of the toboggan. He
lay out flat on the ice, holding on to the toboggan with his right hand.
"Crawl up to me," he
yelled to the nearest boy, who was only two or three feet away."Go slow
and kept yourself flat." He could see the kids were terrified. He tried to
encourage them. He calmed his voice."You'll be Ok. Just come here to
me." He motioned with his left hand.
Marv was on his stomach to spread
his weight out. Water from the hole was flowing up out of the lake onto the
ice, covering him and soaking into his clothes. He felt a momentary shock as
the freezing water hit his skin. He was half in and half out of the water. He
knew that he only had a minute or two before the boys and maybe even himself
started to freeze. "Hurry," he called. Then he softened his voice and
motioned with his hand, "Come on to me. I'll help you."
First one boy and then the other
pulled himself along the toboggan to where Marv held on, and then up and over
him to the tree trunk. By now Marv was nearly submerged in the icy cold water,
but he stayed where he was, serving as a human bridge for two boys to use to
get to safety. Behind him he heard Olaf yelling encouragement. A quick look
over his shoulder and he could see the boys crawling along the tree truck to safety,
Olaf helping them. They were going to be Ok. He turned his attention to the kid
in the water. He was hanging onto the ice. His face looked pale.
Marv pulled himself along the
toboggan to the edge of the ice and grabbed the boy's hand. "Here you go,
young fella'," Marv said, trying to make eye contact with the kid. The boy
was just lying there, his body probably starting to shut down. Marv felt an
extra shot of adrenaline kick in. He made an attempt to pull the boy out, but
the ice started to give way some more. Marv felt himself and the toboggan sink
a little more into the lake. The boy, however, seemed to revive. He raised his
head, now covered with water that was turning to ice. He looked at Marv.
"Mister...Please...," was all he said.
"I've got you, son," Marv
said. "Hold on to me."
"Ok." The kid's voice was
weak.
More adrenaline flooded Marv's
system. He knew he had to do something. He was starting to freeze because of
the water soaking into his clothes. God only knew how long the kid could hold
out. He made up his mind. He tugged on the boy's arm and the kid looked up.
"I'm coming in for you,"
he said, urgency in his voice. "I'm going to get you out." He took an
instant to gather his courage and then pushed himself forward into the water,
wrapping his arms around the boy. He felt himself sinking and he could feel his
body start to go numb. He fought to stay afloat, kicking with his heavy boots.
He knew he had only moments before he sank. The boy was revived somewhat,
working with the old man, feebly kicking his legs. "On the count of three
I'm going to lift you," Marv said, "You try to get up onto the
ice." He felt, more than he saw, the boy nod. He could feel the kid's
fear, but also his strength, like the kid wasn't ready to die just yet. "Alright
now, one...two...three." At the count of three Marv mustered all of this strength,
propping his left arm on the ice as he lifted the boy with his right, kicking
his feet for additional force. The boy kicked his legs, too, and threw himself
up and out of the hole. He slid a few feet on top of the ice. Marv put his hand
on the kid's butt and pushed with the last of his strength. He saw the boy
scoot forward, grabbing the toboggan, pulling himself along to the end to where
the tree was. Then he saw Olaf, who, after getting the other two boys to safety
had apparently disregarded Marv's order to say back. He was down on his hands
and knees reaching for the kid. The last thought he had before he sank into the
water and underneath the ice was that the boy was going to be safe. Then his
heavy clothes dragged him down, his boots acting like lead weights. He fought
to stay afloat but the weight was too much. He took in water, coughing and
gasping, sinking completely under the surface. He flailed his arms, trying to
swim upward but he couldn't. He was panicking knowing that he was drowning. Suddenly
he hit the muck at the bottom of the lake, maybe ten feet from the surface. He
sank into a squatting position and sprang up toward the light of the hole. He was
out of breath, struggling to reach the surface. Kicking, kicking, kicking,
fighting with his arms, trying with all his might to make it. But his strength
was gone. He was spent. He had nothing left to give. He blacked out, his arms
extended upward, floating in a sea of darkness. Then all was calm. A quiet
settled over him, a comfortable warmth unlike anything he'd ever experienced. All
his frantic activity dissipated and Marv felt at peace, like he was in the most
precious and deepest sleep of his life. Then an image came to him. It was
Evelyn, his lovely wife of so many years. She was smiling at him and waving to
him, maybe even calling out to him. He could tell she was happy to see him and
he was happy to see her. She waved to him again, motioning with her hand,
beckoned to him to come to her. Come to me, come to me, my dear husband, she
seemed to be saying, opening her arms and ready to embrace him, like she was
welcoming him home.
Later, before
he came completely to consciousness, his eyes were closed and he could hear
sounds. Was he dead? Was he dreaming? He didn't know, but he felt comfortable
and warm. Then it came to him that the sounds were voices. People were talking
and the more he listened the more he was reminded of family gatherings so long
ago. He had good memories of those times back then. What was going on? Am I in
Heaven, he wondered? Curious, he opened his eyes. No, it wasn't Heaven. He was
in a hospital room. Light was streaming in from windows to his right.
Surrounding his bed were his two sons, three daughters, grandkids and even some
great grandkids were tossed in for good measure. It was like a holiday
gathering. Everyone was quietly talking and somewhat subdued but became more talkative
and animated when they realized that Marv had awoken.
"Dad, thank God you're alright,"
Rich exclaimed, reaching over to him. He'd been sitting right next to the bed.
He put his hand on his father's shoulder, gently rubbing it. And then it was like
the room exploded with noise as his family gathered around him, everyone
talking at once until it seemed he might swoon away with the noise and activity
of it all. But he didn't. He hung in there, slowly coming to grips with the
fact that not only was he alive, but he was surrounded by his kids and
grandkids and great grandkids, all of whom couldn't wait to talk to him and
offer words of encouragement. After months pretty much living by himself, it
was almost more than he could bear. Almost. When he looked around and saw the
smiles of relief on everyone's faces, he had to smile himself. It felt good to
be around so much energy and enthusiasm. For months his world had felt cold and
gray. Now it felt different. It felt colorful and alive, full of light and
sound. It was a good place to be. He was glad to be there.
He finally he cleared his throat and
mustered some strength and said the only thing he could think of saying.
"Thanks for being here, everyone. I suppose you're wondering why I called
you all together." Which was a stupid little joke , but it was met with
laughs and guffaws. And then the noise level really went up through the roof
with everyone telling him in their own way and in their own words how more than
happy they were that he was alive and back among the living.
He was in the hospital for a few
days, kept under observation by a trio of doctors who, as they told Rich, were
amazed that Marv had bounced back so readily.
"Well, he's a tough old bird,
that's for sure," Rich said.
"He's got a lot of life left in
him," one of the doctors said. "He lives by himself?"
"Yeah, his wife, my mom, passed
away last year."
"Just keep an eye on him, then.
His heart is good, his vitals are good. He's old but in pretty good shape. He
should be fine."
So they got him home and settled,
calling on the phone or stopping by daily to check up on him. But he really was
fine, they realized, like the doctor had said, and soon the calls tapered off,
with only Rich and Tina staying in close touch, taking it upon themselves to
let their other siblings know how their father was doing. Or grandfather in the
case of Jeremy, Julie's youngest, who, at the age of ten was into building
model cars and airplanes and had coerced his granddad into helping him. Marv
gladly accepted his grandson's offer, being it was something he could do with
his hands, bringing him back to his tool and die days. Even if his vision
wasn't what it used to be, that's where Jeremy came in, helping out reading the
instructions and painting and putting the decals on the finished model. But,
moreover, being with Jeremy was getting Marv back involved with the family and
that was a good thing. Like Julie would say, talking to her brothers and
sisters about it, "I forgot how good dad was with little details when it
came to building things. And he's patient, too. Lots more than I am, that's for
sure."
And that was fine with Marv. He was
enjoying his time with Jeremy. He'd drive over once every week or two after
school and spend a few hours with him, working on a model or going for a walk
around the neighborhood, since winter had passed and it was now spring.
"Dad seems to be doing just fine," Julie would say if she was asked.
"I don't think we could ask for anything more."
And he was doing fine if you asked
him. In fact Marv would even insist that he was doing great. Ollie (no more the
formal 'Olaf') had started coming by his house to keep him company, and they
had gotten to know each other better, finding they had a lot in common, both having
had lost their wives, both being old but still active and both liking to fish.
That's why on the first weekend in May, on opening day of the fishing season,
they were found together out on Long Lake's public dock, next to the public
access, getting ready to start casting for bass.
"Nice day for fishing,"
Ollie said, fiddling with the Rapala he was going to be using. The sun was
shining and the air a crisp forty five degrees. The breeze out of the west was
at their backs blowing ripples across the water. Gulls floated above them,
squawking and looking for handouts. Trees were leafing out. A sweet scent of
spring was in the air and the water on the lake looked fresh and clear. Yes, a
good day to be fishing, or to be alive, for that matter, in the larger scheme
of things.
Marv was just going to use a spinner
with a worm attached to it. He looked askance at his friend's rig. "You're
not going to get anything with that get up, you know," he said, chidingly.
"Not a damn thing."
Ollie laughed, looking with derision
at Marv, standing next to him with a worm blowing in the breeze as it dangled
off the hook of his spinner. "Bet ya.'"
"You're on," Marv said,
casting his line out, turning his face away so Ollie couldn't see the smile on
his face.
They had developed a particular
fondness for each other, these two old men, who once were lonely, but now were
not. Life works in mysterious ways sometimes.
Every now and then they would talk
about that day in February when Marv had gone into the water to rescue Bobby
Johnson and Ollie (it turned out he played a significant role in the rescue as
well) had not only had called 911 but then had hurried with Marv across the ice
and grabbed both Will and Ryder, helping them to safety. A Hennepin County
Water Safety Team had stormed out onto the ice and were just behind Marv and
Ollie's rescue. A young rescue guy in a wetsuit had jumped into the water as
Marv was sinking to the bottom of the lake and pulled him out in just in time,
saving his life. The local television stations made it a big story for exactly
five hours, the two old men and their rescue of the boys making both the early evening
and late night news, only to be replaced the next day by a more note-worthy
world event. That was fine with Marv and Ollie. They did what they had to do and
that was that. They didn't need the adulation and were happy that it didn't last
long. And, in the intervening months, it happened they were not only becoming
fast friends, they were even thinking about finally getting that RV Marv has
always talked about and doing some traveling together.
As his oldest boy, Rich, said,
"Stranger things could happen. At least dad isn't depressed anymore."
And that was true. But what no one
knew, and probably would never know, was that there was just a little bit more
to the story. After Evelyn died, being around the house was hard for Marv. If
Rich thought his dad was depressed Marv couldn't say if that were true or not,
but he was sad, that was for sure. Home had become a place filled with memories
that he knew he'd never experience again, memories of his life with the woman
he loved for so many years and was now was gone forever. But was she, really? Was
she really gone? He'd had that first vision of her when he was sinking in the
ice cold waters of Long Lake, drowning. After he survived and made his recovery
it started happening more frequently. Shortly after he returned home from the
hospital she started coming to him at old hours, usually when he was in his
easy chair reading, or sitting in the kitchen with a cup of coffee watching the
birds flocking around the feeder in the backyard.
"Marvin, dear, how is your day
going? Have you done anything interesting? Tell me what's going on." Her
voice sounded so sweet, like the loveliest of birdsongs.
Of course, in the beginning these
visions of Evelyn were disconcerting if not a little bit frightening. But once
he got used to seeing her and accepted the visions for what they were and that
they were really happening, Marv found himself looking forward to seeing and talking
to her, telling her about working in the yard and getting spring cleanup underway.
Or telling her about going fishing with Ollie, relating the tales his new
friend would tell. Or telling her about working with Jeremy on the new model of
a '32 Ford Coupe they were building. Or simply telling her about all kinds of day
to day things he knew she'd enjoy hearing about: how he was keeping the house
clean, or where he was grocery shopping or how he was building a new
birdfeeder. And as he talked to her (and that's what he did, talk to her) he
found that in relaying his stories and putting his day to day life into words,
he realized that his life was full and active. He wasn't morose and withdrawn
anymore. Not at all. The fact of the matter was that he was actively engaged in
living and involved in life and the world again. And, for her part, Evelyn was very
happy for him.
"I'm glad you are doing something
constructive with your days," was usually the essence of what Evelyn would
say. Usually she was smiling and usually she was wearing one of her favorite
flower patterned house dress, a dress she would have sewn herself, colorful
with a pretty floral pattern on it.
"I am, dear," he would
say, pausing and looking out the window, seeing new green daylily shoots coming
up through the rich garden soil, thinking of the years he and Evelyn had worked
out in the gardens together, beginning to miss her until she would say,
"You know, I'm always with you,
don't you? I'm never far from your side."
He was starting to get that. Starting
to see her everywhere he looked, really looked, or opened up his heart and
allowed her to be there.
He once brought it up to Ollie. He
tried to be casual about it, but really, it was impossible to do. After all, he
was talking about seeing visions of a person no longer alive."Do you ever
see or talk to Helen?" he asked. Helen was Ollie's wife who passed away
due to brain cancer ten years earlier. "You know, see her around or have
conversations with her or anything like that?"
But if he thought Ollie would think
he was losing his mind, he underestimated his friend, because Ollie, normally
one to talk on and on about anything under the sun had turned quiet and
reflective before answering. "I do," he said, hesitantly,
"Sometimes." Then he looked curiously at Marv before asking,
"Why?"
"Just wondering," was
Marv's answer, and Ollie looked hard at him, probing before nodding, like he found
what he was looking for and knew exactly what Marv was getting at. And that was
that. It was another thing these two old men shared, these visions of the women
they'd each loved coming to them and keeping them company, and there was
nothing more to say about it.
After spending most of the day down
at the dock on that opening day of the fishing season, Marv and Ollie walked
home together, saying good-bye as Ollie continued down the street toward his
home the next block over. It was the first week in May and the gardens were
looking good, tulips blooming bright colors of red, pink and yellow and the buds
on the lilac brushes bursting forth on their branches. There was a lingering fresh
scent of lily-of-the-valley in the air and house finches were singing in the
trees. He'd seen his first bluebird of the season just the day before. After
winter's long, cold hold on the land, springtime's rebirth was in the air in
full swing. He almost felt like whistling. He carefully placed his pole in the
garage and walked to the back door, taking a moment to wipe his boots on the
outdoor mat. He opened the door. It lead into the kitchen. A faint scent of the
morning's coffee and toast hung in the air. He removed his boots, placing them
on a small braided rug next to the door, and walked through the kitchen into
the living room where he sat in his favorite chair, it's green corduroy covering
looking so warm and inviting. Across from his chair was Evelyn's, a floral
pattern wing-back with a small foot-stool in front of it. He pictured his wife
sitting there, her hands busy with an embroidery project, her wire-frame glasses
perched on the edge of her nose, the late afternoon sun reflecting off her
hair. Next to her would be a mug of chamomile tea and maybe a plate with a
sugar cookie or two on it. Her dress would be worn but pretty, tiny white
flowers on a faded blue background. Just seeing her would make Marv happy, so
happy that he wouldn't know what to do.
"Tell me about your day,
dear," she would say.
Her voice would come to him like a
calming balm reaching into his soul. He would smile at her and relax and whatever
loneliness he might be experiencing would be swept away like a breath of fresh springtime
air and he would suddenly become energized and alive. Then he'd start talking,
telling her about his day and she would listen, smiling and nodding for him to
continue. The hours would pass and they would be together in the quiet of their
living room as the sun's rays faded to evening and another day came to an end. And
Marv's world would be complete and everything would be the way it should be.
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