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I
read an article in the newspaper a few days ago, you know the kind,
really an obituary of sorts, famous man dies, and then they tell you
about his life, the slice of it for which he was famous. I didn’t
recognize the name, but the photo framed within the words of the
article was startling. The moment, captured in the visual format of
the photograph, had defined the photographer’s career, won him the
Pulitzer Prize. I hadn’t seen the image when it was first published,
probably too young to be shown a photograph of a man with a gun to his
head and about to die, his face squeezed with fear, stripped of all
else but the realisation that this is it, death, no where to go, no
escape. The man was young, Vietnamese - and he did die seconds later,
brains blown out to the horror of the American war photographer, who
hadn’t expected execution in the next frame, but interrogation by
the captor. The captor was also Vietnamese, much older, face unmoving,
taut, grim. He stood with his arm outstretched, pointing the barrel at
the young man’s temple, about to pull the trigger, about to blow his
brains out. That’s how I remember it anyway, sitting here at my
laptop writing.
Although
I hadn’t seen that photograph before, I had seen others that had
become part of a universal psyche. That child fleeing down the road,
stripped naked, body burned by napalm, horror on her face. That other
young girl, from Afghanistan, maybe thirteen, a woman in her culture,
face covered with scarves - mouth, cheeks, nose, forehead hidden from
the infidel. She looks out at the photographer, and therefore looks
out at us. Her eyes are arresting, beguiling, unknowable. They can’t
be forgotten.
Then
that Buddhist monk, sitting calmly on the ground, legs crossed in
lotus position, cityscape all around him, body engulfed by flames,
dunked in gasoline and set afire - a suicide protest of the Viet Nam
War. I first saw the photograph in my introduction to psychology
textbook at university. I can’t remember its context within the
course, but the photograph took on a new context for me, one that is
painful to recall. A young woman I knew disappeared when she was
nineteen. We had worked together as lifeguards and, on this particular
evening, she left work alone after the public swim was over, at nine
o’clock or so. She must have done the usual things that lifeguards
did during their shifts and upon closing, since no one reported
anything out of the ordinary when questioned by police. She must have
blown one long whistle blast when the session was over, cleared the
water of swimmers, corralled them toward the shallow end and off to
the change rooms, scanned the pool bottom, took a pool test, dipped
the test tube under the surface and scooped up water, checked the
concentration of chemicals, the chlorine levels, the pH, squirted
disinfectant around the deck and under the concrete bleachers where
the lifejackets hung, squeege-ed the suds towards the drains, locked
the doors to the viewing gallery with the Allen key. She would have
worn her whistle tucked under the bathing suit at the side of her leg,
like all of us, so not to be choked if executing a rescue. She would
have climbed the steps to the staff locker room, changed out of the
green uniform Speedo, white stripe down the side, hung up her yellow
guard tank top, and left. She was never seen alive again. Two weeks
later, they found her remains on an isolated trail in the woods behind
the sports complex. A Canadian Tire can was empty beside her. She had
doused herself with flammable liquid, sat down on the path, and lit a
match.
I
met her when I ran away from my small hometown as a teenager and got a
full-time job teaching swimming lessons in the big city of Ottawa.
Janey was physically strong, and smart, and pretty, not in that
fragile petite way, but in an unbreakable way. She took me to her
house once when her parents working, and I wandered about the rooms in
awe of upper middle-class suburbia, particularly in awe of her
bedroom, everything little-girl perfect, the rugs, the curtains, the
bedspread, the Pointe shoes dangling over the doorknob. She was amused
by my awe, especially about the ballet. She told me she had taken
lessons since she was a little girl. I couldn’t imagine.
My father worked in a factory, never earned more than $10 per
hour his whole life, five kids to feed and a wife. Ballet never
entered the equation.
I
didn’t believe the police deduction when I heard it, didn’t
believe it for years later, that Janey could kill herself, and in such
a violent way. But my thoughts kept circling back to the fact that she
had taken the same introduction to psychology course as me, read the
same first-year textbook. The police had found the textbook in her
bedroom, the photo of the Buddhist monk, highlighted.
Near
the end of his life, the photographer who took the photo of the young
Vietnamese man about to be shot at gunpoint wouldn’t hang it in his
studio, even though it had made him famous and won him the Pulitzer
Prize. He said the image didn’t tell the full story. He felt badly
for the man who held the gun, a conclusion impossible to reach by the
photo alone. This man, the killer, was a South Vietnamese officer, now
retired and living in the United States. His life had been made
difficult because of the infamy resulting from the photograph. The
other man, the killed, was a Viet Cong soldier who had infiltrated the
village and hours earlier, slaughtered a family that the officer had
loved and freshly grieved. The context was war.

A
faint beeping occurs at the same time every day in my living room.
The time is exactly eight fifty-five a.m. The beeping lasts for
one minute and then stops for exactly twenty-four hours. And then it
starts again, like clockwork, which is precisely what it is.
The
beeping is an alarm from a baby blue sports watch my husband brought
home as a gift for our daughter from a trip.
The watch came with a set of instructions folded up into a neat
little square about one inch by one inch. The instructions themselves
were written in a font much smaller than the one you are reading now,
which by the way, is 12 Times New Roman. We fiddled to set the watch
with its three little buttons that had to be pushed in a specific
sequence to program the second, the minute, the hour, the date
(mm/d/yr), and who knows what else – well, obviously an alarm.
Somewhere along the way, we admitted defeat, but not enough defeat to
toss out the watch. Instead it sat in some corner of the house,
beeping away every morning at eight fifty-five.
It
must have beeped through a winter, and a spring, and a summer, and
then an autumn - one full revolution of the planet around the sun
before I heard it. Beeped through snowstorms that marooned our house
waist-deep in snow, through spring monsoons that left a lake on the
crescent big enough to paddle. Beeped through the blooming of the
Japanese Silk lilac in my front yard, planted to replace the dead
crab-apple tree that the neighbours loved and sent dagger looks in my
direction as if I had somehow killed it, rather than the tree just
rotting, the natural order of things, living and dying. Beeped right
through the early summer death of my mother and the sorting of her
last paltry possessions, her keepsakes and bank savings given away in
the final few years of her life in that free-floating manner in which
she gave everything away.

It
is late summer before I gather the strength to face my mother’s
room, face her possessions. Sort through the Goodwill clothes that, in
the end, were much too big for her. Bag them for the return journey to
Goodwill. Then the hats, and more hats. I keep the black velvet tam
with the little embroidered flowers scattered joyfully across it like
stars in the night. Give the rest to an artist relative, Jo-Ann, who
loves hats, wears them well – isn’t her hat lovely, my
bed-ridden mother would say when Jo-Ann came to visit.
I
throw out the crumpled Kleenexes stuffed into the dusty black purse,
the old receipts, the candy-striped red and green mints still in their
twist wrapping, sort through the many pairs of black frame reading
glasses by the bed (although she hadn’t been able to read for a long
time along), the Jackie-O sunglasses, the costume jewelry, divide them
into little piles for her grandchildren, her great-grandchildren.
Throw away the plastic bedpan that she somehow managed to maneuver
beneath her, even in the last week of her life. Throw away the
half-empty pill packages, the opened package of adult diapers that
were put under her to catch what the bedpan didn’t. Keep the Magic
Johnson basketball shoes, the bright wraparound Tahiti skirt, the
Richard Simmons exercise tape she gleefully bought for herself at
Giant Tiger on our last crazy shopping spree
- her ankle broken and in a cast from a fall, oxygen canister
slung over the arm of her wheelchair.
I
come across the black leather wristband that looks like it belonged to
Madonna, instead of my mother, or at least to Wendy, the nose-ringed
grandchild in the sea of grand-children, the wristband meant to
support the hand broken while getting out of bed in the middle of the
night, when she thought she could still do those things. Swinging her
useless legs over the side of the mattress, pulling herself up by the
bedrail, feeling her way to the bathroom, hand clumsy on the dresser,
reaching for the wall, the edge of the sink, the night light dim,
somewhere along the way falling, crumpled and frail on the linoleum,
crying for help, don’t let me die, please don’t let me die, I
don’t want to die.
My
sister-in-law, Nancy, and I sorted throughout the day, and in the
evening, we drank until we were drunk. Told each other things in that
wine-soaked way that happens when the bottle is uncorked, and you are
alone together, and you’ve just finished something, like packing up
a dead mother’s last possessions.

And
still that little watch just kept marking time.
Right
into the fall, the tree in my yard crying leaves until it stood there
naked, nothing left to cry, nothing left to do but hibernate. It
wasn’t until then, while sitting in the rocking chair in my living
room, sipping coffee, the house silent, that I noticed the beeping.
Listened curiously to identify the source of the sound. Then it
stopped. Just like that.
A
few mornings later, I heard it again. Followed the faint beeping,
discovered the baby blue sports watch discarded in a small dish of
odds and ends. Realised with a start that the watch must have beeped
like that for a full year, one minute each day, the people in the
house oblivious to it. I thought to throw out the watch, but it seemed
wrong to get rid of it now, after all that time, so I left it there in
the dish.
Now
it is December, the narcissus and crocuses and tulips in my garden a
faint thought that mixes with memory. The flower of the Japanese Silk
lilac, the colour of old lace, are more distant still, in both mind
and matter, for there is a particular order to blooming, always the
narcissus and crocuses and tulips before the lilac, never the other
way around.
Christmas
arrives, and we pack the car and drive the six-hour pilgrimage to our
hometown, where my husband and I both grew up, and where we haven’t
lived for thirty years, but visit in a
hit-the-target-and-get-out-of-there fashion. For the first time in
those thirty years, I am not visiting a parent at Christmas. My
hometown no longer holds a member of my immediate family, not my
parents, not my grandparents, not my brothers and sisters. We visit my
husband’s parents.
I
think my grief is put away, but it hits unexpectedly as I curve off
the 401, drive the exit that leads to a house-lined street. It is
night, that deep black hole where you can only trust that the rest of
the world exists in the dark as you remember it, that it exists at
all, since you can’t see it. That this particular road, North
Augusta, leads to King Street, with its row of old stone mansions, the
once-homes of millionaires built along the bluffs of the St. Lawrence
River. Trust that the river is still there, still flows from west to
east, that the Three Sister Islands still huddle side-by-side, forlorn
juts of rock and sparse trees, home to seagulls, and nothing else.
It
is the first time I make the connection with the name of the islands.
I am one of three sisters, the middle island between Alice Elizabeth,
“Alice from Buckingham Palace,” and my younger sister, Angela
Marie, Angel Mary. Why we called her that, I don’t know, although I
do remember why we called her Tiny Whiney as a little girl. The
moniker is linked in my mind, for some lost reason, to my oldest
brother’s nickname of Big Bear. He gained the nickname by rearing up
from the cave of his bed like an angry bear aroused from hibernation,
sleep disturbed by ghosts perhaps, the old lady who had once owned the
house having died in the corner of the room.
It
is cold even for Canada, sub-zero if you use Centigrade, sub-32 if you
never adjusted to the metric system, and think in Fahrenheit. The
windshield wiper fluid, made to endure temperatures to minus 40, has
frozen, refuses to squirt up and clear away the glass, hibernating
itself. Everything is hibernating. The bitter cold leads me to an
absurd thought that I know is absurd, even at the time, but logic
doesn’t matter. I can’t stop the thinking. Driving off the 401,
turning into my hometown, surrounded by night, I start to cry,
thinking of my parents in the ground, not far away from here. I hope
they don’t feel the cold, panic for a horrible moment that they do,
want to put a blanket around them, to keep them warm.
~
This memoir/creative non-fiction is a work-in-progress.
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