Friday, March 29, 2013

3.29.13 On Into The Night - A Touch of Memoir



Our house was lodged far into Eastern Massachusetts woods, huddled within the South Shore of Boston, situated along  dark Forest Street, further plummeted down an old lane, old as the 1800’s and probably older, its rutted paths providing shaded solace on oppressive, sweat slicked summer days, transformed into an ice  skating puddle replete with  face-prickling cold  on  dark winter afternoons . Our towering Pine forest finding itself shrouded with its glistening greens or heavy snow by seasonal turn.

Along this lane I would run, then leap my small self into the dark woodland quiet, years of golden, soft pine needles  underfoot, legions of thick aged bittersweet vines inviting a leap and a swing, as you pulled your body into a propelled weight that created some loft, its bark sharp beneath your tender child palms, the height a view of a few feet of difference, gazing over the thick forested land that opened before you and you swang, suspended in the sun filtered forest air.

Living in the woods  became a vital part of life for my siblings and myself- one’s blood and bones, necessary for survival into adulthood. That it was a Pine forest was all the more fortunate.  Have you truly known a Pine forest, yourself?

They have characteristics which change according to the season, as all forests do. Always there are the impossibly thick masses of lithe, brilliant green needles, sour to the taste, pungent to the nose, soothing to the eye, and the sound is akin to some great number of caring ones, all clamoring gently and applauding your existence. That essential, loving murmur, as you wander through after school, or early in the morning, or after a particularly impossible day, or when you sense that one of your young siblings simply needs to be listened to. Off you go, the two of  you, aimless, the sap pockets dappling the broad, protective trunks, the remaining branches so far overhead, ranging in the winds, while down below, in their protective realm, you lay at their feet, a pillowed aromatic needle strewn humus beneath you, rich with insect and microbe and as a child, you simply know all of this is life giving. 

Wandering round a forest, you slowly come to know each small deer thicket, every  old downed tree that can be run along, horizontal, the deep roots ripped out of the ground, revealing life beneath with its own stark and delicious smells of earth and creatures …a place you can nestle into on a cold winters day, or whose soil cools and embraces on a difficult summers night.

Down this path I would go, at age 8, finally inured to woods and fears and darkenings… and at the far end of the Lane came an opening into the small town’s Main Street, a quiet paved affair, with open fields bordered by the stone walls that crept into sight everywhere one turned…built by some unknown person, huge rock by rock, at some unknown time.

Cars would come by now and then, to your left   simply forest and grass, while the right side  showed the very beginnings of the town…some largish rather nice old homes in this intentional WASP outpost…as it  slowly made its way two or three miles down into the small town square of tiny ancient library, the police station, the  Town Green with its ubiquitous monument to those who fought and died in wars, the stately Town Hall with its smartly turned , vast windows , site of dreaded obligatory piano concerts, a  small ,one engine Fire Station, and finally a  modest row of stores and one office, lined up politely, replete with sidewalk , Jocelyn’s Market hunkered down in the midst of them all.

Mr. Jocelyn was a kind man, tall and old, gleaming gold wire glasses, a broad true smile beneath his thoughtful eyes, vigorous yet stiff as he ventured along his aisles in search of requested items. 

Being from a family of eventually seven children, often I was sent running in for this much hamburger, that many bags of frozen beans, some dishwasher soap, and a few other things, while the huge station wagon idled outside, squabbling brothers fresh from swim practice or tennis lessons or back from the crabby piano teacher’s insistent lessons. 

We had a tab at the grocery store in those days, which would build and build,until my parents would then erupt, and somehow it would  be paid down once again. We did drive by one day to pick up a case of Escargot, the intended order being for a small box, and summarily had escargot at Sunday dinner each week for months thereafter, which delighted us all,  the garlic and herbs and butter sautéed into those poor snails, then stuffed back into someone else’s shell for presentation.

Once, at age 5, I stole a 5 cent Chiclet gum from Jocelyn’s and was made to bring it back and apologize. The mortification I experienced is an acute memory even today, as my big brother looked me silently in the eye, took my recalcitrant hand, and led me in to say my sorries to a very pained Mr. Jocelyn, who promptly tried to give the candy back. But I knew, I knew I should not take it, my brother squeezing my hand a bit and giving me another silent look, and I managed a ‘No Thank you, Mr. Jocelyn.”, as we ran out the door, task over and done with.

Growing bolder at age 8, I learned to selectively  grab some but not all of the change from my father’s bureau top, and just as my much martini’ed mother began to announce pending dinner for her large brood at around 7 or 8 , or sometimes 9 pm, I would launch myself out the back door, down the sometimes blackened lane, through the now rather frightening expanse of nighttime forest, out the other side onto pavement, screech down the road, panting, past homes lit against the coming dark, down to Jocelyn’s Market, where I would buy a gum and a candy, stuff them into my mouth as I began the flight back along the Main Street, swallow the gum, chew up the candy, begin to detect the growing sense of utter sick-to-stomach-ness  as I finally  loped into the back yard, sweat shined face bright with cold or heat, slipped quietly into the never-used back door, and faked a make-believe saunter down the stairs, to arrive at the usually rather gourmet meal that was put upon the long pine table, alas, a dinner too late for children full of pilfered crackers. Too late for parents simmered in alcohol while circling their evening’s vitriol.

There I would find my big sister self, perched on my chair, filled to the brim with my own style of back lash, quietly sickened, as I pushed food about on my plate, stealthily changing it’s appearance, let a few bites make their way onto my fork, into my mouth, as requisite camouflaged activity that would be noticed and pass muster.

Across the evening kitchen table would be salad or vegetables beautifully prepared, some unusual main dish that most children would not tender, with complex ingredients and preparation guidelines, the children of all ages lining the sides of the table, parents on either end, tired children taking care not to bicker and risk setting off a parent.

As the meal went on, it would become evident that even the adults would not actually eat…a thing….some baby fed with a spoon in an old beautifully painted wooden highchair, cigarettes maybe relit and brought to the table.

As we grew older, we would begin to take note of the increasing rancor, the disparaging remarks, as the small ones shuffled, tired and cranky in their chairs. It was then that my older brother and I , and later my younger brothers, would stand, and take our places behind a parent, slowly beginning to massage their shoulders, slowly eclipsing their capacity for immature idiocy, as their sodden eyes slowly dropped, their hands left their cigarettes, and they  began slowly to relax. 

We would motion to the next younger ones, to quick bring some plates over to the counter, then to the even smaller ones, to quick go on upstairs and get ready for bed. Of course they would bicker and fight their way up to the bedrooms, but no matter, we were that closer to the day being done, to getting the adults past the perilous parts of the evening’s path.

Having evaded disaster, I would grab a baby to change, to bottle, to put to bed, pulling their beautiful small baby selves to me, quietly talking to them as if all was truly well, while leaving  my older brother to press  the younger ones to get some of the dishes done , and quickly, before she came to her senses, and then quickly  scuttle themselves off to bed too.  They would finish up a bit of work, silently pull open the low freezer drawer to grab themselves fudge bars and popsicles, to be seen and heard no more, safely off-stage for the night.

And they knew this. Don’t need anything downstairs. Don't’ ask for school notes tonight. Don’t say you have no clean pants for tomorrow. Clean sweep of kids upstairs, leave the adults to whatever they then bring upon themselves, and see if it can simply stay down stairs.  Sometimes we managed this. And sometimes it worked.

Upstairs was the pulling of small arms and sweet legs into pajamas, the tooth brushing, the stories read, then the tucking in (Can you please tuck me in??), the back rubs (Can you please rub my back??) and then the lights darkened, save the older ones quietly reading or sitting with the Guinea Pig who would sleep beneath their covers with them,  or the small quiet drawings  being made until I would make a round again, hissing that she will be up soon and to turn off the lights!  

The mother would yell up the stairs and we would yell down, “Oh no, everything is fine up here”, as she unhappily returned to the uneaten dinner spread like so many carcasses across the long wooden table, the partially done dishes, as she fired up her martini and upped the volume of some Dvorjak symphony loud enough to shake the windows, pursuant of some sort of comfort, I suppose.

As the father crept off to the living room to read the paper, smoke his cigarette, hoping against hope to avoid the erupting distress that more often than not will pursue him, relentless, guileless, and endless, in a little while.  

Or possibly tonight she lingers in the library, moving on now to Frank Sinatra, immersed in the tragedy of her own maligned life,  while by the stairs, her husband now slips undetected up  and falls into bed, quickly, to side-step rancor and tumble into his own unhappy dreams.

Myself, I move silently into the bedroom I always share with the newest baby, small room, my ridiculous double bed squeezed in with a crib, a strange elaborately framed portrait of Queen Josephine of  France above the headboard, with her incongruously heaped of curls of hair, her delicate clothing and demeanor of ultimately tragic disdain.

I am so quiet so as not to awaken the baby, now softly snuffling just feet away. I change, and slide between cool smooth sun-dried sheets, the skies outside my paned windows filled with stars or falling snows or the calls of summer insects. My flashlight is held carefully as I revel some novel, entering with ease a far away world, emerging into a far different life, as the sounds and smells and circumstance of another existence gradually  bleed into my own.

Yet, finally there are the awkward steps  upon the staircase, and ,that abruptly, I am back, into this present life. Clicking off the flashlight, pulling the book to my side, I turn, and feign my sleep, until that sleep truly does arrive.  


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