Tim shuffled
the cards while watching Fred. Or his dad. He still wasn't sure what to call
him. The old man was propped up in his hospital bed, having been moved into the
hospice care wing of the nursing home the week before last. The same week Tim
had been notified of the move. Also, the same week he had also been notified
that the father he thought had been dead all these years was, in fact, alive.
It was fifty years ago that Tim, then twenty, and his mom and his younger brothers
and sisters had been told by Irv Lindenfelter, his dad's best friend, that Fred,
who had divorced their mom and moved to San Francisco, had gone missing.
Vanished without a trace, was the way it was put to them at the time. At first
Tim and his family figured that Fred has just taken off and gone fishing or
camping, his two fondest hobbies. But as time passed that notion proved to be
unverifiable. He didn't return to his job at Tillotson and MaKray, the
advertising firm he worked for. His phone went unanswered. Bills piled up in
his mail box of the apartment where he lived. Finally the police were called
in. Days turned to weeks and then to months with no answers forthcoming. Finally,
the missing person case of Fredrick Clarence Beverly was put on the back burner
and eventually filed away as "Missing-Unsolved". So that was that.
Fifty years was a long time to learn
to forget and that's exactly what everyone had done. Tim and his brothers and
sisters had gone on with their lives, having adjusted to life without their
father anyway because of the divorce. After all, Tim, the oldest, was fifteen
when his dad had left his mother and the life they had in Minneapolis and moved
out to San Francisco to "start over" as he had put it. The year had
been 1964 and the loss of their father had devastated the family. But after
about a week of moping around and collectively hanging their heads, their
mother, Ann, had rallied the kids and told them to pull themselves together and
quit feeling sorry for themselves.
"We are going to get through
this," she had said, directing her fiery gaze at Tim and his brothers,
Steven and Larry, and sisters, Kathy and Susan. "And we are going to be
better because of it."
Their mom went back to work, the
kids adjusted to the change in the household and they learned to live without
having their father around. Life, indeed, did get better. For a while, Fred
maintained contact with his children with the occasional phone call and a card
sent on their birthday with a twenty dollar bill in it. He never visited. Over
the course of the first few years the calls diminished in frequency until they
only came once a year, at birthday time, piggy-backing on the birthday card and
twenty dollar bill. After five years, Tim had pretty much put his father out of
his mind. Then he went missing and Tim found himself strangely unaffected and detached.
"I really don't think that much
about him anymore," he told his mom. "Honestly, I just don't care all
that much." He paused and looked out the window. They'd been sitting in
the kitchen, drinking ice tea together. Earlier, Ann had returned home and shared
the news of their father's disappearance with her children. A detective with
the SFP had contacted her at work that day and told her what had happened. As
she told them the news, all the kids had just sat and listened with a somewhat
detached mood. Then they'd all talked about it for a while before the younger
kids had gone their separate ways. Tim stayed behind with his mom to talk. They
were close and had a good relationship. "I never felt I had the chance to
know him, anyway," Tim added, somewhat cryptically.
Ann nodded. "I never want to
disparage your father," she said, sipping from her glass, "But he was
a hard man to get to know."
Tim looked at her. She was a thin
woman of medium height in her mid forties, her shoulder length auburn hair
streaked with gray. Her dark brown eyes were kind looking and had a tint of
green in them. Her reading glasses were pushed to the top of her head. She wore
a flowered sun dress and comfortable, canvas shoes and was unwinding after a
long day working as secretary for a local manufacturing company. Outside the
birds were singing as the sun settled toward the western horizon. It was August,
the height of summer in Minnesota.
"Do you want to sit out back,
mom?" Tim asked. "Get some fresh air?"
Ann smiled at her son. "Yes,
I'd like that."
Forty one years later, at his mom's
funeral, Tim was asked by his brothers and sisters to speak about their mother.
He had done so, delivering a heartfelt eulogy. Everyone had appreciated his
remembrances but, being honest with himself, he never felt he had been able to
capture her essence, the strength of character she exhibited throughout her
life, as well as the tenderness and compassion she showed to not only her
children and grandchildren, but others as well. She knew many people and her
life was one of giving to friends and family as well as caring for those less
fortunate than her. She had remarried five years after their father had gone
missing, out lived her second husband and died in her sleep in her apartment at
the age of eighty-seven. That was five years ago. He thought of her with
fondness every day.
When Fred's lawyer called telling
him about his father, that he was alive but dying and wanted to see his kids
again, Tim was flabbergasted to say the least. He had gotten a hold of Steve
and Larry, and then called Kathy and Susan. All his siblings still lived within
the seven county metropolitan area and they decided to met and talk about the
news at Tim's house in Long Lake, a small town twenty miles west of downtown Minneapolis.
The meeting took place five days after the lawyer had contacted him so they all
had had time to think about the request and they all had opinions on the
matter. They talked for an entire afternoon. The upshot was that no one wanted
to see Fred.
"I've completely moved
on," was how Kathy, the oldest daughter and now nearly sixty five, had put
it. "I can't tell you how little I think about him and how little he means
to me."
All the others pretty much had the
same opinion except for Larry, the youngest brother, who offered that he'd just
as soon put a pillow over the old man's face rather than talk to him. So there
was still some hurt and anger after all those years, even though, for the most
part everyone had gone on with their lives and learned to live without their
father, or "Biological Father" as Susan put it, clearly distancing
herself from the possibility of seeing the man.
In fact, that's how Tim's siblings
talked about their father: referring to him in their discussions as Fred, not
dad or father or any other term of endearment common in families with a close
relationship to their parents. Nope, Fred it was. A faded, distant memory of
someone who left his family behind, eventually severing all contact with them.
All contact that was until now, all these years later, when for some unknown
and completely unfathomable reason, long lost Fred decided to try to come back
and become part of their lives again. A vote was taken whether to see him or
not: Steven, no. Larry, a resounding no. Kathy, no. Susan, no. The verdict was
unanimous. Everyone looked at Tim who hesitated. The years and their family's
circumstance had drawn Tim and his younger brothers and sisters close together.
Naturally, they didn't always agree, and big topic s like politics or religion
were discussed more for fun than with the hope of changing anyone's views, but there
was a closeness between them and a mutual respect for each other that included
their differences. As Kathy put it once during a family get together, "We
may disagree, but at least we know we have each other and can count on each
other. We'll always have each other's back." Which was true. Tim couldn't
count the number of times he'd helped with moving or baby sitting or what have
you. And the help had be reciprocated. It was just something you did. Because
it was family. Their mother had taught them that.
So why it was that Tim said what he
said, he wasn't really sure. But Steve and Larry and Kathy and Susan all looked
at him at first like he was nuts, but then, like maybe they understood, when he
said, "Well, I think I'm going out there to see him. I can't tell you why,
or what I hope to get out of it, but I just feel like it's something I have to
do. Or should do. I don't know, maybe finally close a chapter or get some sort
resolution or something like that." He stopped and looked around at the
table where they were all sitting. They were in the dining room, drinking coffee
and munching on cookies Susan had made. Tim and his wife Emma had a calico cat
who took this moment to jump up on his lap and when he stroked it's fur the cat
started purring. He smiled and looked around the table. "I guess it's not
really closure I want," he said, amending part of what he'd just said,
"I did that long ago. I guess I just want to see why the guy left and what
he's been doing with his life."
They talked about it for over an
hour. No one tried to dissuade Tim from his decision, but they were curious as
to why he wanted to do this. Kathy was afraid he might open up old wounds. Steve
offered that he didn't realize his older brother had such a masochistic side.
Of course, no one knew what would happen but the general consensus was that
whatever happened, it couldn't be good. Tim, for his part, had no real strong
answer to their concerns. Like he told Emma later that night as they got ready
for bed. "It's just something I feel I have to do."
"Then do it," Emma said,
kissing him and rubbing him on the back. "Just don't stay gone too long,
though. I'll miss you."
Tim contacted Fred's lawyer, the man
who had contacted him in the first place, and arrangements were made. Fred was
being cared for at Aurora Woods, an elderly care facility in Bellingham,
Washington, roughly an hour and a half drive north of Seattle's SeaTac airport.
Prior to leaving Minneapolis, and with the lawyer's help, Tim found a place to
stay at a small but clean budget motel across the highway from Puget Sound and
about five miles from Aurora Woods. He booked himself in for a week, not having
any idea how long he was going to be staying. The visit could be short and he
could be gone in a day, who knew? A week seemed reasonable. The thought of
seeing Fred made him extremely nervous at first, especially in the initial
planning stages, but after a while he started looking forward to it, once he
got used to the fact that it was really going to happen.
Tim was a former school teacher. He
had taught high school English at Southwest High School in Minneapolis for
forty years. He was now retired. In the summertime he loved to garden, but August
was a relatively slow period with all of the plants firmly established, so it
was easy for him to free up the time to make the trip west. Just a few days
after he had made his decision at the family meeting, Tim stood on the front
steps and hugged Emma good bye. Then he got in the cab to the airport where he boarded
his plane to Seattle. Once seated, the thought of seeing Fred caused his nerves
to kick in every now and then, causing perspiration to break out on his
forehead. Other than that, the flight was uneventful. Once in Seattle he picked
up his rental car and drove up interstate 5 trying to adjust to his new
surroundings. The day was sunny and mild. The air felt fresh and dry, not muggy
like summers in Minnesota sometimes were. He'd never been to the west coast let
alone the Pacific Northwest and was unprepared for the congestion and traffic.
Interstate 5 was a crowded, five lane super highway and he forced himself to
focus on his driving, only slightly aware of the scenery passing outside his
window and the Cascade Mountains off in the distance on the horizon to his
right. It had been two weeks since the lawyer had contacted him. One week since
he and his siblings had talked and Tim had made his decision to visit Fred. He
took a deep breath and let it out slowly, surprised that he hands were shaking
slightly. His motel on Puget Sound was called By-The-Bay. His map showed it
coming up on the right in a few miles. He checked it watch. It was nearly
dinner time. He'd see Fred tomorrow. He wasn't hungry at all.
What do you say to the guy who
walked out on you and your mom and brothers and sisters over fifty years ago?
Tim had no idea. Fred's lawyer, Arnold ("Call me Arnie") actually
helped. The next day he met Tim in the lobby of Aurora Woods. All in all the
care facility was quite pleasant. It was relatively new, having be built five
years earlier. To Tim's mind it had a nice aroma inside, not institutional at
all, more like a faint herbal scent. It wasn't bad.
Arnie was about sixty years old, ten
younger than Tim, and fit looking. His head was shaved and he was very tan. He
wore beige slacks with a sharp crease, a white short-sleeve button up shirt, no
tie, sandals with no socks-definitely sporting a casual look. He took his hat
off as he shook Tim's hand. It was a straw fedora and had a madras hat band. He
smiled easily and his teeth were straight and white. He had the lean look of a
long distance runner. Tim was prepared to dislike the guy on sight but couldn't
help being charmed when Arnie said, "I've never in my life done anything
like this before. I can only imagine how you feel." He was both honest and
gracious and Tim found himself not minding him at all, maybe even starting to
like him a little. "Let me show you to your dad's room." He pointed
forward and started walking toward the elevator.
"I'd prefer to call him Fred,
if you don't mind." Tim said, feeling like he was coming across a little
formal and stiff, but wanting to establish some sort of guidelines or
boundaries nevertheless.
Next to him Arnie nodded quickly,
not missing a beat."Yeah, I get that. You're the boss. Fred it is."
The hospice unit of Aurora Woods was
on the second floor of the two floor facility. They took the elevator up, got
off and turned left, Arnie leading the way. The doors were sealed to the
entrance to the hall that housed the hospice wing. "You need a pass code
to get in." He punched in four numbers, the door clicked and he pushed
through, holding the door open for Tim. They took an immediate left and when
through another door. "This is the hospice wing," Arnie said, lowering
his voice to a whisper and looking around. "Mary is supposed to meet us.
She's in charge here and wanted to meet you. Ah, there she is."
A trim woman in her fifties approached.
She dark hair was cut short and streaked with gray. She wore a green tweed
skirt and jacket over a cream colored blouse. She carried a clip board and
smiled as she approached, putting out her hand as she got to the two men,
acknowledging Arnie with a faint nod. They'd obviously met before. "I'm
Mary," she said, looking Tim square in the eyes. "You must be
Tim."
"I am," he said, shaking
her hand. She was confident but friendly. All of a sudden he became flustered. He
realized the meeting with Fred was really going to take place and suddenly the
whole thing seemed to be happening way too fast. Right up until now he thought
he was ready for it. Maybe he wasn't.
"Would you like to have a
little talk before you see your father?" she asked. Whether she was aware
of his discomfort or this was protocol, he didn't know, but Tim gratefully
accepted.
"I prefer to call him Fred, if
you don't mind," he said, as Mary moved a few steps down the hall.
She looked over her shoulder at him,
her eyes probing. Finally she spoke with a slight smile. "I
understand."
They moved to small conference room
to the left of the entryway. Marv and Arnie sat down at a round table leaving
two chairs empty. Mary opened a small refrigerator and took out three bottles
of water which she placed in front of them. Then she sat down next to Tim,
looking at her clip board.
"Your father, er, Fred, has
been at Aurora woods for just over five years," she said, turning to make
eye contact with Tim. She had a firm, no-nonsense voice that also happened to
be soft and pleasant. Tim appreciated her direct manner.
"I know some of his
history," Tim said. "Arnie filled me in."
Mary glanced at Arnie and gave him a
slight smile. Was there something going on between the two? Tim thought to
himself. His eyes moved to the ring hand of each of them, bare on both
accounts.
She settled back. "Do you have
any questions for me, then?"
Tim blurted out what was foremost in
his mind. "How long's he got to live?" Then he caught himself.
"Sorry. I didn't mean it to come out like that." He felt his ears
reddening.
If Mary was shocked, she hid it
well. "Of course," she said, shifting slightly in her chair,
"Let me fill you in on what the situation is with, er, Fred."
"Arnie said he has congestive
heart failure."
"That's correct. His heart is
functioning at about thirty percent capacity and it's very weak. He had a heart
attack eight years ago which has contributed to its weakness."
"Fluid builds up, right?"
Tim had done some reading on the internet.
"That's correct. Among other
things it makes it difficult for his heart to pump the way it should." She
stopped and waited. When she saw Tim had no questions she went on. "He
also has had a series of what we call mini-strokes. They have affected his
thinking capacity. Some days are better than others. He can't walk and has
limited use of his limbs. He can still feed himself. He can still speak
clearly. It's just that sometimes his mind is there and sometimes it's
not." She paused and looked at Tim. Most of this Arnie had told him. It
was good to hear it from Mary, though, the person who now understood the most
about Fred's condition.
"How's he doing today?" Tim
asked, just to say something. He was starting to get a mental picture of Fred.
He was also preparing to see him. After all, he'd come all this way. He might
as well get on with it.
"He's good." She glanced at
her wrist watch, which caused Tim to look at his. 9:30 in the morning.
"He's just finished breakfast and the aid worker has helped him use the
bathroom. He's doing pretty good today." She stopped. "He knows you
are going to be here." She looked at Arnie, who nodded.
"We've talked to him a lot
about you coming to visit," Arnie said, nervously twirling his hat.
"He really wants to see you."
Tim sat for a few moments. He
noticed a framed painting of a seascape on the wall. A wild ocean was crashing
against a barren cliff wall. In the background a tiny boat with two fishermen
was being tossed on the crest of a huge wave. Would they capsize or not? Who
knew, but Tim could sort of relate to their predicament. He took a deep breath
and let it out slowly. "Ok," he said, "Let's go do it."They
all stood up, bottles of water all untouched. By force of habit Tim pushed his
chair in. Suddenly he realized he had to use the bathroom. "Is there a
restroom around here?" he asked.
Mary pointed to a door Tim hadn't
noticed. "Right through there. We'll meet you out in the hall."
Tim thanked her and went in. When he
finished he washed his hands and splashed water on his face. As he dried off he
studied his reflection in the mirror. He looked tired and haggard. His eyes were
sunk from not having slept well the night before. Normally clean shaven, there
was stubble on his chin from where he'd missed some spots that morning. He
rubbed his hand over his bald head. He looked and felt old. Back home his
brothers and sisters would be waiting to hear how his meeting with Fred had
gone. Emma would be looking forward to his call tonight as well as him
returning home. But before any of that could happen he had something to do. He
had to go talk to Fred, his father (long lost?), and try to find out why, after
all those years with no word, no nothing, the man suddenly wanted to contact
the family he'd left behind over fifty years ago. He took a breath and let it
out. Time to face the guy. As he pushed out into the hallway and walked toward Mary
and Arnie he realized he'd not received an answer to the question he'd asked when
he first sat down with her. The question that had been on his mind from the
very beginning. He still didn't know how long Fred had to live.
"He's down this way," Mary
said, walking next to him. Arnie had elected to stay back, preferring, he said,
to give Tim time alone with 'his father' as he put it. Due to his nervousness, Tim
barely heard him and didn't bother correcting him this time.
The hallway was dimly lit. Classical
music was playing, the volume turned so low Tim could barely make out the song.
But then it came to him. Something by Vivaldi, he thought. There appeared to be
five rooms on each side. "He's in the last room," Mary said, as was
they walked slowly down the thickly carpeted hallway. "On, the right. All
the rooms are private, of course." She added, whispering.
Tim noticed only a few rooms were
occupied. As they approached the end of the hall, Mary indicated the room on
the right. A placard on the wall indicated the name, 'Fred Beverly'. The door
was ajar. Tim peered in and could just make out the foot of a bed. He paused,
knowing he had to go through with this but suddenly was unsure of what, if
anything, he wanted to accomplish. Next to him, Mary placed her hand on his
shoulder. "It won't be so bad," she said. "He's pretty weak and
doesn't have much time. A few days, maybe a week at the most." Well, that
answered that, Tim thought to himself. "He's very comfortable here. His
body has just worn out. We are watching over him and treating him for pain as necessary." She
stopped, letting the information sink in. "He's been asking for you. He's
having a pretty good day. His mind is still as sharp as can be expected."
"I won't give him a heart
attack or anything," Tim said, trying for a little joke to break the
seriousness of the mood. He was immediately sorry for what he'd said.
Mary didn't seem to mind. She
probably had seen her fair share of uncomfortable people in her time. People
visiting a loved one at the end of their life and not know what to do. The
'loved one' part of it wasn't necessarily the case with Tim, but still, the
fact remained that Fred was dying. She squeezed his arm and pushed the door
open. It was really going to happen. "Fred," she spoke quietly as she
stepped into the room. "You have a visitor." She motioned for Tim to
follow. He did. "Fred, this is your son, Tim," she said. "He's
here to see you."
As Tim walked into the room the old
man in the bed turned his head toward him. There was a momentary glimmer of
awareness before it appeared the light went out of his eyes. In that moment Tim
realized that this guy, this long lost father, this man who had left his family
behind without out a word for over fifty years, had no idea who he was. Tim
could have been anyone dragged in off the street. He felt like an idiot to
think something good could come from this meeting. He almost turned around and
walked out of the room, but then the old guy blinked once and said,
"Hey there, Tim. How about a
game of cribbage?"
And Tim knew right then that the guy
did, in fact, recognize him. After all, he'd taught Tim the game when he was
ten years old, five years before he'd left home. It was the last thing Tim
expected to hear from the old guy.
"Well, I'll leave you both to
it," Mary said and glanced at Tim as she left, raising her eyebrows like,
'Are you Ok with this?'
Tim just nodded in response. "How
long can I stay?" He asked her.
"As long as you want." She
quietly backed out the door, giving Tim an encouraging smile before leaving him
and Fred all alone.
Fred's bed was against the wall on
the right hand side of the room. Tim pulled up a chair and sat next to him.
Outside the window opposite of him was a view of the Cascade Mountains. They
were in the far distance, covered with green trees, probably some kind of
evergreens. Their presence calmed him. Tim turned to Fred who seemed to be
waiting for him to say something. His face was what Tim would call grizzled.
Worry lines were etched into his skin causing the sides of his mouth to droop
down. A short, scraggly looking gray bead covered his face. Tufts of long white
hair covered the few portions of his head that weren't bald. His eyes had a
bluish-green tint to the iris and Tim was surprised to find that, after all
these years, he remembered their color. Once over six tall and robust, Fred now
seemed shrunken and withered. A sheet and blanket were pulled up to just below
his chin, leaving a wrinkled scrawny neck exposed. Tim had never met a
ninety-two year old person before and had no idea what to expect. But now here
he was. He his heart was beginning to beat rapidly and he felt the slightest
bit of perspiration forming on his forehead. He took a deep breath to try to
calm down. He had spent hours thinking about this first meeting. He'd talked to
his siblings about it and talked to Emma about it too. He'd even stood in front
of his bathroom mirror and practiced things to say. It all went out the window
now that he was actually here with Fred. He said the first thing that came into
his mind.
"How are they treating you
here?"
"Fine, if you don't mind the
fact that you're dying."
Geez, Tim thought to himself, what a
thing to say. He forged ahead. "Are you comfortable?"
"I am," Fred said, and
just stared straight at him.
Tim had so many things he wanted to
ask the guy, like what have you been doing all these years for starters, but
suddenly it occurred to him, sitting right here in this quiet hospice room with
the peaceful view of the mountains out the window and soft classic music
playing in the background, that this guy didn't have much time to live. He
could be gone from this earth at any moment. Tim shuffled in the chair and
scooted a little closer to the bed. The movement caused Fred to look more
closely at him. The guy was so old, so frail, so on the brink of death that Tim
felt an unexpected wave of compassion roll over him. These were the last
moments of the guy's life. Tim's being here counted for something. Plus, to be
honest with himself, he really wasn't sure he wanted to get into anything heavy
with the guy right off the bat. He decided to take an easier path. "So you
want to play cribbage?" he asked. "Tell me where the cards are."
Fred pointed to a drawer on desk on
the wall across from the bed. "Look in there," Fred said. His voice
was rough and dry sounding. Tim stood up and offered him some water through a straw
from a cup, which he gratefully accepted. When he was done Tim put it off to
the side on an end table next to the bed. Then he went to the desk and pulled
out a worn deck of cards (red, Bicycle brand) and an old, two person cribbage
board. Inside the drawer also noticed a small open box with some memorabilia in
it which he figured would be interesting to look through. Maybe sometime he'd
have a chance. He pulled a rolling meal table on a metal stand that could be
swung over the bed into position. He noticed how clean it was and wondered if
Fred was eating. He sat down, shuffled the cards, set them on the bed and then set
up the cribbage board on the meal table. No one said a word while this was
happening. Tim felt both nervous and relaxed at the same time. It was a weird
feeling. Finally he said to himself, well I'm here. I might as well make the
best of it.
"Ok," he said, setting the
deck of cards on the table. It was only a slightly awkward position.
"Let's cut to see who deals first."
Later that night when he talked to
Emma, Tim was as frank as he could be with her.
"I was so nervous when I first
met him, I almost turned around and left."
"But it went Ok?"
"Yeah, it did. Once we started
playing cards and had something to focus on other than each other we both
relaxed. I have to say, though, it was one weird day."
"How long did you stay?"
"I got there around ten in the
morning and stayed through lunch, which is at noon sharp." He chuckled.
"Everything there is very organized," he added, with the emphasis on
'very'.
"Well, I can imagine,"
Emma said. She had told Tim when he called that she was out working in the
garden. "I'm going to sit down in back and have some ice tea while we talk."
He could picture her settling into a comfortable wooden rocking chair in the
shade on their back patio. He was a little envious. "Went did you
leave?" she asked.
"Later in the afternoon. I sat
with him during his lunch. He had a cup of chicken soup, a few bites of a
sandwich and a little scoop of ice cream." He chuckled some more. "He
really likes ice cream, I guess."
"Runs in the family."
"Really," Tim said, picturing
Fred slowly eating his meal. Tim ended up helping him with the ice cream,
spooning it for the old guy so it wouldn't drip on him. Plus, the guy's hand
was shaking. Mary said it was all part of the body shutting down. "After
lunch he fell asleep. I was going to leave, but decided to stay. Mary, the
nurse came in to check on him and we talked out in the hall. She told me that in
the five years he's been there he's never been a problem. He's very friendly.
He had a few friends that used to visit him when he first arrived but over the
years they must have all passed away. The last year or so the only visitor had
been Arnie. So..." Tim said, summing up, "He's been by himself a
lot."
"Sounds incredibly sad,"
Emma said. Tim could tell she had taken a sip of her tea. "What's his life
been like? You know, after he left you and after he dropped out so to
speak."
"Well, he rambles a lot when we
talk. Arnie's given me the best information. He told me that after Fred left
the advertising agency he essentially went underground."
"Why?" Emma asked, noting
that her husband still used 'Fred' to refer to his biological father.
"Arnie said that Fred started
drinking heavily while he was in San Francisco working for the Ad agency. He
wasn't happy at work and with life in general. He left us kids and mom for
another woman, you know."
"I remember. You told me."
"I guess after a while she
dumped him because of his drinking. Plus, she wanted kids and he didn't. This is
all coming from Arnie. He's been Fred's lawyer for over thirty years. I guess
his best friend, the guy I've told you about, Irv, died of a heart attack a
long time ago. Arnie's been his closest friend since then."
"Knows a lot, I bet."
"He knows that Fred just up and
quit work. That was in San Francisco in 1969. He left his car in the parking
lot of his apartment off of Fulton Street in downtown and just essentially took
off. Arnie thinks he may have hooked up with a commune in northern California,
if you can believe that."
"Like he became a hippie?"
Emma laughed. "Wasn't he a little old for that?"
"He was younger than Timothy
Leary," Tim said, laughing with his wife. It felt good to talk to her.
"No one really knows and Arnie could never get it out of him."
"Sound crazy," Emma said,
sipping some more tea. Tim could picture the whole scene back home. The
peaceful backyard. Robins singing in the early evening. The aroma of freshly
turned soil, the scent of flowers in bloom and tomatoes ripening on the vine.
The vision helped him relax.
"Really crazy," Tim agreed
before continuing. "I guess he eventually ended up in Seattle working for
a picture framing shop. He started doing drawings and art work of his own, if
you can believe it. He lived in downtown Seattle for the rest of his life,
working in the framing shop and doing his art work on the side. One of his
paintings is even hanging in a conference room in the hospice wing. It's pretty
good. A seascape. Reminds me of something Winslow Homer would have done if he
lived on the west coast."
"I can't believe it."
"Me neither, but it's true. The
guy's had a pretty interesting life."
They were both quiet for a minute,
each of them thinking. Tim looked out the window of his motel room. Across the
busy road was Puget Sound. There was big barge on the water moving left to
right. He watched it making it's slow progress wondering where it was headed.
Emma's voice interrupted his thoughts. "How'd you two get along?"
"Not bad," Tim said.
"He's actually pretty harmless. He even apologized."
"For what?"
"Everything. He was pretty
sincere."
"I can't believe it."
"Yeah, well," Tim said,
pausing at least ten seconds before adding, "It's complicated, you know. I
haven't seen him for over fifty years. I can't really think of him as my
father, since he hasn't really been in my life. But I sort of have feelings for
him, probably because I'm related to him. Plus, we did have a history together.
He was there for the first fifteen years of my life. I started remembering
times together with him like going hiking together, him teaching me how to
fish, stuff like that. I'm still trying to work it out, but I can tell you
this, I actually kind of feel for him. After all, he's dying. Mary said he has
less than a weak to live. Being with someone at the end of their life is a
strange experience. With mom, it was what I wanted to do because of how much I
loved her and what she meant to me and my life. With him, it's not like that at
all. I don't even know him, yet I'm here," Tim paused and took a deep
breath, letting it out slowly. "Like I said, it's complicated."
"I can certainly imagine,"
Emma said. She and Tim been married forty five years and they were close, they
talked about things and were open with each other. She knew exactly what her
husband was getting at. She had known Tim's mom and had cared about her. She
had never met the man who was Tim's father. She could only imagine what her
husband was going through. Then she asked the question she most wanted to know
the answer to. "Do you like him?" she asked.
Tim was quiet. She could picture him
looking out the window at whatever was outside of his motel room. She felt for
him. This couldn't be easy by any stretch of the imagination. Finally he
answered her. "The jury's still out on that," he said. And suddenly a
wave of fatigue swept over him. He realized how tired and exhausted he was. He
still had to call his sister, Kathy, who would relay the information to the
rest of his siblings. "Look, it's been a long day. I should probably get
going."
Emma told him she understood. They
talked a little longer about what was going on around their home and yard
before they rang off, agreeing that Tim would call the next day. Emma sat in
her chair looking over the beautiful backyard of their lovely home and wished
with all of her heart she could be with her husband on this journey of his. A
journey she knew he had to do on his own, but nevertheless, one she wished she
could be with him for. At least we can talk on the phone, she thought to
herself standing up and heading inside. The evening was beginning to cool and
she had started to get a chill. As she was washing out her glass she had a
momentary thought about calling Tim back. But she didn't, knowing he needed
time alone to get himself re-charged for tomorrow. Her husband was a kind man.
She remembered the first time they ever had bluebirds nesting in their yard.
Tim had insisted they turn a couple of chairs in their sunroom facing out into
the yard. They spent every evening they could that summer, not watching
television or reading, but watching the bluebirds as they first built a nest,
then laid eggs and then hatched four new young fledglings. It had been a summer
she'd never forget. That was the kind of person he was, gentle and loving. But
now this man had reappeared in his life. His father. Emma had no trouble
calling him that, but if Tim wanted to call him Fred that was fine too. The guy
was dying but, to be perfectly honest, she couldn't have cared less. She had
never met the guy and felt what he had done to Tim and his siblings was inexcusable.
What she cared about was her husband and how he was coping with all of this. And
then she realized she'd forgotten to ask him another question that had been
plaguing her. She had forgot to ask him if he was calling Fred dad yet.
Well, no, Tim wasn't calling the old
guy dad or father or even Fred for that matter. It was amazing how much talking
two people could do without calling each other by their name. That's what Tim
had found out anyway. It was just one of the few things that were on his mind
that night after he'd talked to Emma and gotten off the phone with his oldest
sister, Kathy. It was after midnight when he'd finally gone to bed and sleep
did not come easily. He'd lain awake most of the night, tossing and turning,
listening to the whistles of the tugboats out on Puget and mulling over how the
first day had gone talking to Fred. He finally dozed off around five in the
morning only to be awakened by the buzzing of his alarm clock at eight. He
didn't know if he'd dreamt or not, but his mind seemed on fire when he woke up.
He madder than he'd ever been before in his life. He was mad at Fred for
getting in touch with him. He was mad at himself for getting sucked into the
old guy's drama. He was mad thinking about all the times his brothers and
sisters had cried themselves to sleep because their father had left them. He
was mad because his mom had been left alone through no fault of her own to
raise of family of five kids by herself. He was mad that for years and years he
had worked to forget about the guy who had fallen off the face of the earth,
and for all practical purposes was dead and gone, but he really wasn't. He'd
just been living his life, not bothering to contact his sons and daughters, yet
by some strange stretch of the imagination expected them all to fall back into
his arms. Didn't he realize the effort it had taken each of his kids to, if not
totally forget him, at least put him aside so they could go about living
healthy and productive lives? Did Fred not understand the depth of the pain he
caused- that it just didn't go away by wishing that it would? Was he that self centered?
By the time Tim drove to the nursing home and ridden up to the second floor and
let himself in to the hospice wing, he was fuming. He ran down the hall to
Fred's room and pushed open the door with a fury he was unable to control. The
old guy was asleep and awoke startled. He started to smile, like he was going
to give out a pleasant greeting. Tim cut him off.
"You wouldn't believe how pissed
off I am at you," Tim yelled, leaning over the bed, his face only a foot
from Fred's. "You ruined all of our lives. Me, Steven, Larry, Kathy and
Susan and you don't even seem to care." He paused to catch his breath
before continuing. "You're just a selfish, self centered jerk." His
heart was racing and his breath came in short spurts. He stared at Fred, daring
him to say something. He didn't. He just looked at Tim, blinking. Tim was
furious. "Say something you stupid old fool," he yelled, not caring
if anyone heard him. "Are you deaf or what?" He leaned closer, now
only inches from Fred's face.
He felt a motion behind him. A nurse
he hadn't met was pushing through the door. "Everything all right in
here?" she asked, moving to Fred's bed as if to protect him. Tim stood up
and backed away. She was heavy set with her hair pulled back in a bun. Her dark
skin shone. Her eyes were huge and as she looked straight at Tim. He stepped
back from the bed and began pacing back and forth pounding a fist into an open
palm. He was on the verge of losing control. He looked from the nurse to Fred,
who now looked frightened. Then he looked out the windows to the mountains. The
room was still and he felt the walls closing in on him. After a minute he
became aware of the sound of classical music from out in the hall. The notes
soothed him. He felt himself calming down.
He took a deep breath and let it out
slowly."No. Everything's Ok," he finally said, feeling his heart
returning to normal. He rubbed his hand over his head. "I just lost my
temper. That's all."
Though still looking concerned, she
nodded. Her name tag said 'Annie'. "I know. It gets frustrating
sometimes."
Tim looked at her, then at Fred.
Then he looked out the window to the mountains again. The sky was clear and
blue and it looked beautiful outside. He could feel heat from the sun through
the glass. A good day to be alive. "Sorry," he said, to both Annie
and Fred, raising both his hands in what he hoped was a peaceful gesture,
"I had a rough night."
"I'm sure this can't be
easy," Annie said. "But please believe me when I tell you that your
father..." she smiled and motioned toward the bed, "Really wants you
to be here."
Tim suddenly felt embarrassed. He
reminded himself that Fred (not 'father') had less than a week to live. "Yeah,
I know," he said, wiping his hand over his forehead. "I'm Ok now."
He looked past Annie to Fred. The old guy was watching him, but it was hard to
tell what he was thinking. He didn't looked scared anymore, only curious.
Everyone said that Fred wanted him to be here and now he was. Yesterday had
gone Ok. He might as well make the most of today. He moved carefully toward the
bed so as to not startle the guy or frighten him, and asked, "Want to pick
up where we left off on that cribbage game?"
Fred nodded and smiled. "Sure,
just don't yell at me anymore." Was he making a joke? Tim couldn't tell.
He and Annie looked at each other.
She seemed to be saying that it was Fred's way of forgetting that the outburst
had happened. Time to move on. Tim felt like saying, Yeah, easy for you to say.
He was still mad, but had managed to get control of himself. Maybe he'd talk to
Fred about it later. "Ok," he said, giving the old man the weakest of
smiles. "Let's get that game going."
Tim took the cribbage board out of
the top drawer of the small dresser where he'd left it the day before. Annie raised
the back of the bed so Fred was better situated to play cards and then she left
them alone, giving Tim an encouraging smile on her way out. Tim did his best to
smile back, but felt he failed miserably. He turned his attention to the game. Cribbage
is scored by pegging points. The first one to get around the board and score
121 points is the winner. Usually, when a hand is played, ten or twelve points
are scored, meaning most games ended after playing ten or twelve hands.
Yesterday Tim and Fred played three hands before Fred got tired and they quit
for the day. They had agreed at the time, though, to continue the game, so they
picked up today where they had left off. It was Tim's turn to deal, so he
shuffled and dealt out six cards to each of them. Two were chosen to be put
into the 'crib' which was in Tim's possession this hand since he had dealt.
While they played Tim asked Fred a question.
"Do you remember teaching me
how to play, back when I was about ten years old?" Fred studied his cards,
apparently thinking. Tim watched him patiently. Through his mind raced all of
the things he wished he'd asked yesterday. Reliving his history playing cards
with the guy who, back then, called himself his father, was low on that list.
Finally he shook the old guys leg. "Hey, never mind. Why don't you tell me
why you left us instead? And, while you're at it, tell me why you stayed out of
our lives for all these years." He stopped talking and starred at the old
man. Fred coughed a little and looked at Tim. Then his face reddened and he
slammed his cards down.
"I left because I wasn't happy
with your mom, Ok? Marriage wasn't what I thought it was going to be,
especially after you kids came."
"So you didn't have mom all to
yourself, is that what you're saying?"
"Something like that." The
old man lay back against his bed. His grizzled head looked small on the pillow.
He closed his eyes.
Tim's anger reared up again and he
wanted to smash the guy in the face. What a self-centered creep. He clenched
his fists, fingernails digging into his hand. He took a deep breath and willed
himself to calm down. "What do you mean, 'Something like that'?" he
asked, trying to at least be civil. He set his cards down on the bed and looked
out the window hoping the view of the mountains would help calm himself. It
didn't.
"I just decided I didn't want
to be married anymore ," he finally said, his voice so low it was almost a
whisper.
"And being a father..."
Tim said, hoping Fred would finish the sentence. A minute went by, and when it
became apparent he wasn't going to say anything, Tim added, "Being a
father was something you didn't want to do anymore either, was that part of it,
too?"
Fred looked at Tim. His eyes were
filled with more sadness than Tim had ever seen before in a human being. He
looked genuinely contrite. But that wasn't good enough for Tim.
"In other words, you were just
a selfish, self centered, egotistical man, who had no place in his heart for
anyone but himself. Is that it?"
"It's complicated, but, yeah, I
guess that's about it."
Tim was sick of everything being 'complicated'.
He pushed his chair back and stood up. "What a friggin' jerk you
are," he spat out. He turned, shoved the door open and hurried out of the
room, down the hall and into the conference room. He needed to be alone. He'd
often heard the term 'seeing red' and hadn't ever experienced the phenomenon
until now. Yeah, he saw red, that was for sure, and if red signified
out-of-control anger that's what he had. He had it in spades.
In the quiet security of the
conference room he put his head against the wall, trying to calm down. He
should never have come out here to try to reconnect with the guy who at one
time was his father. The trip was more than a waste of time, it was deep down
painful; like a knife cutting out his heart or needles jammed up under his
fingernails kind of painful. It was so intense and overwhelming that he felt
weak and nauseous, like he was going to be sick. He should just leave, cut his
losses and chalk the whole thing up to a misguided idea. Suddenly his mind went
blank. He collapsed on a chair and starred into nothingness, numbness
overwhelming him. When his senses
returned, the first thing he noticed was the artwork on the wall. The painting
Fred had done. He remembered it from yesterday. A seascape. Two guys were
dressed in yellow foul weather gear, working the oars in a wooden row boat. It
looked like they were fighting the elements and the stormy seas for their lives.
Rain was pelting down and ominous cliffs were being battered by huge waves. The
far horizon was dark and foreboding and the demise of the two men appeared to be
imminent, but still, they hadn't given up. Fred had captured the mood
perfectly. Tim liked art. His brother, Larry, the one who was still angry enough
to announce that he wanted to kill Fred, was a landscape painter of some renown
in the upper Midwest. Tim liked his brother's work and the gentle, pastoral
scenes he captured so well. Now he found himself strangely drawn to Fred's painting.
He looked at the title, "Men Against the Sea". Not too original but
it was certainly apropos. Just looking at the painting allowed Tim some time to
calm down. He suddenly felt emotionally exhausted. He leaned back in his chair.
Should he stay or should he leave? He owed Fred nothing. Whatever he thought
he'd get out of the trip, it wasn't going to happen. He honestly doubted Fred
even knew who he was half the time. He was just an old, old man whose time on
earth was coming to an end. Why did he even need to be around to watch the guy
live out the last days of his life? Would Fred have done the same for Tim or
any of his siblings given a similar situation? Not a chance. The hell with it,
Tim thought to himself. He made his decision. He'd just leave, head home and
get back to Emma and all the good things that gave meaning to his life. He was
starting to get up when he glanced at the painting again. Without expecting it
he felt himself starting to get drawn into the scene. There was life and energy
painted on the canvas that was obviously done by a skilled artist. The more he
looked, the more it seemed as if the scene was talking to him. Telling him
something. Touching something deep in his soul.
Later, Tim realized he'd lost track
of time. When he checked his watch he realized he'd sat in the chair looking at
Fred's painting for over half an hour. Finally, he knew what he had to do. He
stood up and left the conference room. Instead of turning right and leaving the
wing and the hospice unit behind forever, he turned left and went back to
Fred's room. He'd never get the answers to the questions he wanted to hear but
at least he could try to understand the man whose genes he carried half of. He
owned himself at least that much. Maybe he owed Fred that much too.
Mary met him as he walked toward
Fred's room. "Everything Ok, here?" she asked, looking at him
carefully. Whether it was concern for Tim or concern for Fred, it was hard to
tell. Maybe both of them. After all, she was a nurse and trained in being aware
things like this, people falling apart.
"No, I'm fine," Tim said,
hoping he sounded confident. "I just needed to get myself together a
little bit."
She nodded, like she understood and
patted his shoulder. "I understand. It's hard. Just let me know if I can
help in any way."
"Thanks, I will," Tim told
her, thinking that she didn't even know the half of it. He gave her a smile goodbye
and she gave him an encouraging look back. Then he went into Fred's room
announcing, "Ok, I'm back. Let's get going with that cribbage game."
Fred had dozed off and awoke with a
start. Tim gave him a minute to collect himself before asking, "Do you
want to play some more?"
"Sure," he said.
"Who's turn is it to deal?
"Yours. Go ahead," Tim
said, indicating the cards. He sat back while Fred shuffled and dealt the hand.
They were half way through the game and Tim was ahead by three points.
The decision Tim made was not
monumental at all. In a conversation with Emma a week later, after he'd come
home, he tried to explain his reasoning, "I just felt I should stay,"
he told her. "To tell you the truth, I kind of felt sorry for the guy.
That was my main reason."
There were sitting side by side in
the backyard sipping ice tea. The sun was setting, the robins were singing and
the flower gardens were blooming, just like the week before when Tim was at
Aurora Woods with Fred, keeping the old man company and sharing the last
moments at the end of his life.
"Even though he'd left you and
your family and had no contact with you for over fifty years?" Emma asked.
She reached over and caressed her husband's shoulder, happy beyond words that
he was safely back home.
"You know, I resolved that
issue years ago," he said, sighing. "Remember when my mom passed away
and we were all there for her? She was loved and she felt everyone's love there
for her at the end of her life."
Emma nodded, "I remember."
"Fred had no one. Just Arnie
and no one else. It was sad. I just felt I should be there for the guy..."
He sighed a heavy sigh, blowing air out. "Just be with him. It was the end
of his life. Someone should be there."
"You said he had Arnie."
Tim was silent for almost a minute,
framing his answer. "I was thinking more in terms of family," he
finally said.
"Even though you didn't know
him from Adam."
"Yeah, even with that. But I
am, er, was you know. I was related."
"Well, that's a change, isn't
it, you thinking of him like that."
"I know. I didn't expect it. It
just happened. In fact I almost left earlier that day."
"What happened?"
When Tim had gone back into the old
guy's room, Fred seemed to have put the incident behind him. Or, more to the
point, thought Tim, he'd just forgotten it'd ever happened. So they played
cards, not saying much. Finally, Fred put his hand up. "Let's take a
break. I'm pretty tired."
"Sure, that's fine," Tim
said, setting the deck aside. The game was close, Fred up by two points. The
old guy closed his eyes. He seemed to be breathing comfortably.
After a few minutes he asked,
"Are you married?"
Tim was taken aback. The old guy had
never asked anything personal before. "I am," he said, recovering ,
thinking about his family. "My wife's name is Emma. I met her when I was
in college at the University of Minnesota. We've been married for forty-five
years." When the old guy just nodded, Tim went on and told him about the
son and two daughters he and Emma had. Then he told him about their grandkids,
eight in all. He deeply loved his family. Of course, they'd had their
challenges like all families but they'd worked through them. They were together
and close and that was all that mattered. But what really mattered was that, as
he talked, Tim realized that Fred was a part of that family as well. Without
Fred there would have been no Tim. And without Tim there would have been... well,
nothing. So he talked on and on, telling Fred about his wife and kids and
grandkids and bringing the old guy some small understanding, he hoped, of the
joy he had in his life and the joy his family brought him. When he finished he
told Fred, "The truth is, one of the reasons I wanted to see you was to
tell you that by leaving us, you missed out on quite a bit, and that's putting
it mildly."
"Life isn't always easy,"
Fred said. "At least after I left I had my freedom. I could do whatever I
wanted to do, and I did. I had a pretty good life as it stands."
"You weren't ever lonely?"
Fred smiled. "No, I had
friends, you know. I wasn't a hermit."
"Did you ever think about
us?"
"A little. In the beginning.
But honestly... after a while... not really... no. Especially as the years went
by. I was happy with my job at the framing shop. With my painting."
"I saw the one in the conference
room."
Fred smiled. "Two Men and The
Sea". Not very original title was it?"
"I liked it. I should tell you
that Larry's a painter. He does landscapes and he's pretty good. People buy his
work."
Fred lay still. Tim wondered what
could be going through the old guy's mind. He and his son had this huge thing
in common, this shared ability to create artwork on canvas. Tim, for one,
thought it was an exceptional gift they both shared. One that Fred may have
passed on to his youngest son. But did Fred acknowledge it at all? No. What he
said was,
"I think I'll take a little
nap." He looked at Tim before adding, "Will you stay a while longer?
I just need to rest."
Tim looked back at him. The guys
eyes were moist. Tears? He couldn't tell. The room was so quiet he could hear
the classical music from out in the hall. Mozart? He looked at Fred who was
waiting for an answer. "Sure," he said. "You rest all you want.
I'm not going anywhere."
Fred closed his eyes. Tim stood up
and quietly moved to the window. He pulled up a chair and sat down, looking out
at the mountains, looking but not seeing, his mind turned inward thinking about
the old man in the bed next to him. The old guy had lived so long but, to Tim's
way of thinking, had missed so much. What is it that made him give up one life
for another? Tim would never get an answer, he was sure of that now. He wasn't
even sure Fred was able to tell him even if he wanted to. But what he did know
was that he felt he should be here with the guy. Why? Maybe it just came down
to it being the right thing to do-to keep an old man company at the end of his
life. He knew that's what his family would do for him when the time came. It
was the least he could do for Fred.
Sitting by the window with his
thoughts, Tim didn't notice Fred open his eyes and briefly look at him, trying
to connect his mind with what he was seeing. Finally he did. That's the guy
who's been playing cribbage with me, he thought to himself. Then he smiled,
remembering that he was winning. He looked around the room. The quiet sterile
room where he'd spent the last few days. He liked how peaceful it was. He liked
how he wasn't feeling pain anymore. He liked talking to the guy who was keeping
him company. Who did he say he was again? He couldn't remember. Well, never
mind. He seemed like a good guy, maybe a little too emotional for him, but a
good guy nevertheless. Then he felt tired again and he closed his eyes. His
breathing slowed and he slipped into a deep sleep. A few minutes later his hand
jerked one last time and then was still. His heart had stopped beating. Fred
had passed away.
Tim and Arnie made funeral
arrangements. Fred has stipulated in his will that he was to be cremated.
"There's a place he liked up on the Olympic Peninsula near the town of
Moclips. That's where he wanted his ashes scattered," Arnie told Tim. Two
days after Fred died they held a brief service in a small chapel in Aurora
Woods attended by Tim, Arnie, Mary, Annie and a few others residents.
Afterward, Arnie and Tim each drove to SeaTac airport where Tim dropped off his
rental car. Then, together with Arnie driving, they continued through Tacoma
and around the southern end of Puget Sound and over to the coast where they
headed north up to the little town of Moclips. Just north of town was a hiking
trail that Arnie knew about that would take them to an overlook on a cliff
above the sea. They parked the car and got out to walk, Tim carrying Fred's
ashes in a box in a brown paper shopping bag. The path lead through a dense pine
forest, needles on the ground softening their steps.
They walked the narrow trail in
pleasant companionship, having become close, bonded by the events over the last
few days. They didn't say much, but at one point Arnie, who was leading, asked
over his shoulder, "Hey, I never asked. You know that cribbage game you
guys were playing?"
"Yeah?"
"Who won?"
"Fred did. He was up by two
points at the end."
Arnie grinned to himself before
saying, "It was a good thing you did, you know, being with your dad like
that and keeping him company at the end. I'm sure it meant a lot to him."
Tim really had nothing to say. Like
so many things with Fred (he still didn't call him dad, but didn't mind Arnie referring
to him as that), whether or not his being with him was of any comfort was
another thing he'd never know the answer to. Finally he told Arnie the only
thing that really made any sense to him, "I just did what I felt was the
right thing to do. That's really all there was to it."
Arnie stopped, turned around and
faced him, "You could have just left, you know, after that first day. In
fact, you didn't even have to come out here."
"If I didn't come out, I would
have always wondered about him and what he did with his life. Now I know."
"So you're glad you came?"
"Well, it was a long way to
come to play a game of cards, I'll tell you that," Tim said, trying to
lighten the mood. Arnie just smiled and didn't say anything but turned and
started walking. Tim followed along, talking, "But, honestly, when we were
playing cards we were the most relaxed of
all the time I was with him. We didn't even say much, just chatted a bit and
were together. It seemed like that was enough. Maybe that's really all it
needed to be. Just he and I playing cribbage, like in the olden days." Tim
walked along, enjoying the day, thinking about Fred. He'd walked this same
trail who knew how many times. Now Tim was walking it, too, and seeing the
pacific ocean for the first time. That counted for something. The two men moved
along the path toward the sound of distant waves crashing against rocks, carried
to them on a fresh ocean breeze. "So, in the long run..." he said to
Arnie's back, "Yeah, I'm glad I came out here." Even though he
couldn't see, he had the feeling Arnie was smiling.
A few minutes later they came out through
an opening in the forest where the trail passed right along the edge of a
cliff, offering a panoramic view of the ocean. The day was bright and cloudless
with sunlight glistening on the water. Gulls and terns soared above them calling
back and forth, dipping and gliding on an off-shore breeze. Waves crashed on
the rocks nearly one-hundred feet below, kicking up a spray, rainbow patterns shimmering
in the mist. There was a scent of salt and seaweed in the air. Tim was reminded
of the scene Fred had painted. He had captured the essence of the ocean in a
way that showed his understanding and awareness of the sea with all of its
force and wonder. He was a talented artist. Tim paused, looking out over the
ocean. Fred had chosen to leave one life behind in Minnesota for a life out
here on the west coast. Arnie told him that Fred would come up to the Olympic Peninsula
often to hike and to paint. "He loved it up here," Arnie told Tim
more than once. "It was a special place for him."
Standing on the overlook, Tim could
get it. He'd lived in the Midwest his entire life. The furthest west he'd ever
been before was the Rocky Mountains in Montana. Seeing the ocean for the first
time like he was now experiencing made him feel a little closer to Fred. The
waves were so powerful and the sea so immense; he felt he could begin to get a sense
of what Fred may have been all about. What may have driven him. He could have
been trying to connect with nature to fulfill a desire to touch the beauty the
world had to offer and to capture that beauty in his own paintings. Tim would
never understand the man's need to separate himself from his family and turn
his back on a wife who loved him and his children who needed him. But he could
tell that within Fred there was a desire to live life in a way that was unique
unto himself and to capture the essence of what life had to offer through his
paintings. Yet, at the end of his life, Fred had reached out to try and
reconnect with the family he'd left behind so long ago. Why had he done that?
What had he hopped to accomplish? Did he not realize that some things once done
could never be undone? Life went on. Tim's brothers and sisters wanted nothing
to do with the guy. Tim had chosen to come out to met him; taken a chance,
really, just to see for himself what Fred was like and if he had any reservations
about what he'd done. He hadn't. Fred had lived his life the way he wanted,
yet, at the end, wanted something more. Maybe Tim had been wrong to journey to
the coast to see him. Fred could have died all by himself with maybe Arnie by
his side. That's probably the way it should have been. But Tim had been there.
He and Fred had played cribbage and talked, and Tim found himself drawn into
the last days of Fred's life, deciding to stay with him to the end. To keep him
company. It seemed like the right thing to do. Did he do it because he suddenly
had developed an affection for the old man? Not really. He didn't really know
him well enough for that. But there was something there. A bond of some sort he
felt toward the guy. It made more sense for him to stay with him to the end
rather than leave him all alone. That much he knew for sure.
Arnie tapped him on his should
interrupting his thoughts. "Look out there." Tim looked. Way out on
the water, ridding the waves was a wooden boat with two people in it. They may
have been fishing, but they certainly reminded Tim of Fred's painting,
"Two Men and The Sea." He smiled at Arnie. He had come to like the
guy who had been such a good friend to Fred for all those years. "You
doing Ok?" Arnie asked.
Tim didn't have to think too hard.
"Yeah. I'm doing fine." Then he asked, "How about you?"
Arnie nodded and smiled. He was Ok.
"I'm good. I like it here."
"Me too," Tim said.
The gulls were calling and the waves were crashing. It was a day he
felt certain Fred would have enjoyed. Then he took the lid off the box and let
the wind blow the ashes off the edge of the cliff out over the water and the rocks
below, spiraling out to sea and forever becoming part of the ocean Fred loved.
After a moment's silent
contemplation, the two men turned and headed down the trail away from the ocean
and into the pine forest. Arnie would be dropping Tim off at the Seattle's
airport and they had a three hour drive ahead of them. He was heading home on
the evening flight and he was ready leave. He had done all he needed to do on
his trip. Fred had his paintings. Tim had his family. Now all he wanted to do
was to go home and see them and be with them. He'd been gone long enough.
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