I was sitting in the living room looking out the picture window that dominates the front wall when I heard a commotion coming from the outside. It was the sound of metal being scraped against rock and it shot chills up my spine the same way chalk does when it squeals as it is raked across the chalkboard. I shuttered as I tried to shake off the iciness that was strangling my insides and after three attempts, I was successful.
The sound was coming from the north and was a mile or so from the house. I sat there listening as the noise grew louder and louder. “So, the snow plow is out and about at this time of morning,” I thought to myself as I looked at my watch. It read six-thirty-eight.
Within a minute or two, it sounded as though the whole house was quivering from the vibrations created by that metal blade being pushed over the asphalt. I watched as the truck passed by the house. I could see the sparks dance in the air as the plough passed by my parents’ front window. I was saddened as I saw the virginal white snow that covered the ground like a loving mother warming her child become soiled by the muddy brown slush that was being spat from the blade attached to the front of the salt truck.
I had been planning on gathering up some snow so that I could give Kieran his first taste of snow cream and I had assumed that the best place to gather up the icy mix we’d need would be the driveway, but now, that idea had been destroyed. Even though the snow in the drive was deeper than the rest of the yard, it had now become contaminated by the filth that had been regurgitated from the cutting edge of that black and white state truck.
As the vehicle made its way up the tiny hill that started just past my parent’s house, it passed under an overhead light and I could see it spitting out marble sized chunks of salt. “Well, that’s that,” I croaked hoarsely as I thought about the slushy delight my son and I would make later on that day.
I sat there lost in thought for the next thirty minutes or so. I remembered a time when I was not much older than my boy. I was staying with my grandmother when a big snow had hit that morning. Granny was a tiny wisp of woman that still possessed a full head a of jet black hair when she passed away at the age of eighty-eight. Granny had sent one of my aunts out in the snow to gather up as much of that fluffy white ice as she could. My aunt was given a large mixing bowl and a measuring cup. She was instructed to scoop up the top layers of the snow only and she was to do this until she had filled the metallic bowl to the brim.
Within a few minutes, my aunt had returned. Grandma met her at the front door. She allowed my aunt to enter the house, but instructed her to leave the wash pan on one of the chairs sitting on the front porch. Granny was carrying a smaller bowl that contained a large open can of sweet cream, two cups of sugar, a bottle of vanilla extract, an egg and a tin of Hershey’s cocoa.
I watched as she poured the content of her bowl into the washbasin. Once she emptied all her stuff in to the metal basin, she began to stir it with a large wooden spoon. She stroked it about twenty to twenty-five times before she stopped to look at it. Satisfied with the way it looked, she then scooped up a large amount and plopped it into her mouth. I could see her smile as she tucked the smaller bowl and its contents under her left arm. Then she grabbed the larger bowl and made her way to the front door. My aunt was waiting for her and opened the door as granny approached.
“One of the best batches I ever made,” stated grandma as she entered the house.
“How much do you think we have?” asked my aunt.
“Enough for every one of us to have two bowls at least,” replied granny.
I smiled as I wondered if my child would enjoy his first bite of snow cream as much as I enjoyed mine. Nearly forty years later, I still remembered the taste of that first nibble. It tasted like chocolate ice cream but it crunched in my mouth. I’d never had ice cream that “talked to you,” as my granny, explained. Ice cream only melted in my mouth, but this stuff actually sounded when I bit into it.
I sat there waiting for the plow to return. I grew up less than two miles from the county line. Therefore, I knew that the truck’s return trip by the house would be only a few minutes away.
I looked at the clock and noticed that it was almost seven o’clock in the morning. I then looked at my cell phone to see if I had service available. As expected, I didn’t. The mountains of Eastern Kentucky can and will play havoc with a cell phone’s reception. They’ll be coming into work within the hour, I though to myself. I’ll wait and call then.
I picked up the remote control and flipped on the television to see what was playing. I surfed through the channels for a few minutes before settling on ESPN-2. I started watching the college basketball scores roll by on the underscore. I began focusing on the full tube when I saw people celebrating the defeat of the Duke Blue Devils at the hands of the West Virginia Mountaineers. As I was watching this highlight, I heard that familiar scraping sound coming in the distance.
“It’s about time,” I whispered as I looked at the clock and noticed that nearly forty minutes had passed since he had made his initial run by the house. I began to ponder what had caused him to take as long as he did. I came up with four theories. The first and least likely was that he got stuck when he tried to turn at the county line, but given the fact that there was a service station less than a hundred yards across the line, he could have turned there with ease. My second theory was that he stopped to make a bathroom break and given that, the service station was open twenty-four–seven that was a good possibility. The other two were that he was taking a coffee break or goofing off.
I listened as that grating sound got louder and louder. Again, it seemed as though the whole house began to quake as that big monstrosity passed. The scraping sound was echoing off the hills and that only added to the noise level. As it passed, I was shocked that he hadn’t awakened the entire house.
I clicked off the television and waited in silence for a few minutes before I switched it back on. I was half expecting to hear somebody else stir, but after a few minutes of silence, I pushed the power switch on the remote control and then muted the television so as not to disturb those sleeping.
I began channel surfing again but stopped when the door to the bedroom located next to the living room began to swing open. I looked up to see who it was and noticed my six-year-old son Kieran exiting the room. He was rubbing his eyes and his brown hair was sticking straight up in the back. He looked like Alfalfa from the Our Gang series.
“Good morning seepy head,” I said as he walked towards me. He didn’t speak a word but held his hands out in front of himself, which meant that he wanted me to pick him up and take him into my arms.
I obliged and then slowly walked over to close the door. “We don’t want to wake momma,” I whispered as I pulled the door together as quietly as I could.
He snuggled in closely to me as I took my place in the Easy Chair. I began to gently stroke his back. This was a ritual that he had pursued most of his life. I would hold him in my lap with my left hand and scratch his back with my right. I’d do this until my right arm got tired and then I’d switch. This routine would continue until he got tired or hungry or both.
I rubbed on his back for about ten minutes before he spoke. I was about to change hands when he took my face in his right hand and said, “I’m hungry.”
“Don’t you need to go potty?”
“No, hungry.”
“What would you like to have; cereal, eggs, pancakes, waffles or toast?”
“Eggies if they’re runny. And, some biscuits. And, some sausage. And, some juice.”
“Is that all? Don’t you want any caviar or perhaps some truffles?”
“I don’t know what those are. I’ve never had them before.”
I began laughing. Unsure of what I was laughing about, he gave me an odd look and asked, “Are you okay, dad?”
“I was only teasing with you. We don’t serve caviar and truffles at this house. That’s why it was a joke.”
He gave me that odd look again. He took a couple of seconds to reflect on what I had just said and then he came back with his own attempt at a joke. “Can I have some pachycephalosaurus or stegosaurus for breakfast?” Once he said that he began to cackle as though he had just made the funniest comment in the history of mankind.
“Get it?” he asked. “Stegosaurus for breakfast.”
I began to laugh but not at his comment, but rather at his actions. As I began to laugh, this only added to his merriment and he began to clap his hands in his excitement. “Stegosaurus,” he repeated and began to cackle even louder.
“We don’t have any dinosaur, but we do have everything else,” I said.
“I guess that’ll do.” He tried to fake disappointment, but that big gap-tooth grin of his belied his actions.
“How come you know so much about dinosaurs?” I asked as we made our way to the kitchen.
“I just do. I like dinos.”
“That much is obvious. How do you say that one again? Pachy-o-saurus?”
He sounded frustrated as he corrected me. “Pachycephalosaurus, it’s the dinosaur with the helmet like head and it uses its head as a weapon against carnivores; that means meat-eater.”
“I know what carnivore means.”
“But, you don’t know what a pachycephalosaurus is.”
“You know it’s hard on a middle-aged man when he’s outsmarted by a six-year-old. Even if he is as cute as you.”
He smiled and I nearly choked as I thought about how lucky I was to have such a wonderful child for a son. I winked at him and his smile got even bigger.
As we walked to the kitchen, I turned on the light and opened up the refrigerator. As I was rambling through the frig, I came across a couple of things I hadn’t seen in over a decade. The eggs were in the old-fashioned cardboard box instead of the Styrofoam style box. “Colliers eggs,” I said as I grabbed them and placed them on the deep freeze located beside the Frigidaire. I rubbed my son’s head and then began to look for a couple of more items I knew my mother stocked. As I looked in the bottom of the refrigerator, I found what I was looking for; Cranehill and Combs Biscuits and Fischer’s Bologna.
“Triple C and Fischer’s,” I said as I put them on the deep freeze. Those three items had been a staple of my breakfasts since childhood. My mother bought no other brands. She’d go without before she’d buy anything else.
Colliers Eggs was a local company that was owned and operated by relatives on my dad’s side. They were organically grown because the members of that family were all devout environmentalists and were eco-friendly even before it was sheik to be so. Their eggs cost a little more but they had a better texture and a richer taste than other brands.
Fischer’s Bologna was known throughout the tri-state area. They outsold even mighty Oscar Mayer in our section of Kentucky. Nearly every house in that area of Appalachia kept that familiar green and white package in the cold cut drawer of their refrigerators.
Lastly, there was Cranehill and Combs Biscuits or “C and C” to their customers. The company was headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina and had been started in the late thirties by two former University of North Carolina basketball players. The Tar Heel influence on the two was obvious to anyone who purchased their products. The biscuits were wrapped in a canister painted “Carolina Blue.” Even their web site had enough Tar Heel references to make any non-Carolina fan nauseated.
I turned on the oven to let it warm up as I began to search for a couple of frying pans and something in which I could bake the biscuits. The pans were easy to find, but I couldn’t find the large square pan my mother used to bake biscuits. She’d had it since I was Kieran’s age and I knew it had to be around there some where. I was about to give up on it when my child found it.
“Dad, why does granny leave pans in the oven? You told me that was dangerous.”
“It is,” I said as I grabbed a dishtowel and used it to remove three different pans from her oven. I put the first one in the sink and run water over it. It barked out a hiss as the initial drops of water splashed against it. The other two would also hiss as they hit the water.
Over the next twenty minutes, I fried each one of us two eggs and a piece of bologna. Kieran, like his dad, enjoys his eggs over easy and runny. I had to refry his because I broke one and he absolutely refuses to eat the egg when that happens. As I was finishing up the bologna, he looked at me.
“Aren’t we going to have any gravy? I’d like to have some, wouldn’t you?”
“Not really, I hate gravy.”
“But, I like it.”
“But I don’t know how to make it, especially, in a cast iron skillet.”
“Can I have some jelly then?” he asked.
“Of course, you can. Grape?”
“Yep, grapesee. It’s my favorite.”
Once we finished eating, I put up the dishes and began to run some hot water into the left hand side of the two-bowled sink. As the basin was being filled, I looked at my son and smiled.
“Are you thinking what I’m thinking?” he asked and then shot me his patented adorable grin.
“If you’re thinking that we can go out and play in the snow and make a snow man and snow angels, then I am thinking what you’re thinking.”
“That’s not what I was thinking. I was thinking about playing with the dinos, but I like your idea better.”
“We can still play with the dinos. We won’t be going out for another couple of hours or so.”
“Good.” He smiled at me and began to run into the living room.
“Where are you going?” I asked.
“To get the dinos.”
“Slow her down or you’ll wake granny and momma.”
“I forgot.”
“You run along and get the toys and I’ll finish the dishes. Once I’m finished, we’ll play all you want.”
He grinned, nodded his head, turned and ran into the living room ignoring everything I had just told him about waking the others.
We spent the next two hours playing with his dinosaurs. His favorite game was meat-eaters verse plant-eaters. He called the plant eaters gloop-duh-gloooooooooes, because that was the sound he made when he pretended they were walking in herds. He always has to be the meat-eaters, which means his animals eat mine. It never fails to amaze me that no matter what game he plays, he has to win. Not even I was that competitive as a child.
Two hours later, at about ten o’clock, my wife came dragging through the living room. “Hello,” she called as she made her way to the bathroom.
“We’re in here,” replied Kieran.
“How long you two been up?”
“Couple of hours,” I said.
“Momma, we’re going to go outside and make a snowman and snow angels.” My child was smiling and his eyes positively beamed as he looked first to his mother and then to me.
My wife smiled back at him. “That’s nice. When are you going to do it?”
Kieran shrugged his shoulders and then looked at me shocked that he hadn’t thought of that already. “When are we going to do it?”
“As soon as granny wakes up and tells me how to make snow cream,” I replied.
“Yummy,” shouted Kieran even though he had never had snow cream in his life. “I love snow cream.”
“Really?” I asked. “Do you even know what it is?”
“No, but I know that I like it.” We all three laughed.
When mom awoke, Kieran asked her were we could find a large tub so that we could make some snow cream. She gave us an old washbasin and told us to scoop only the top few layer of snow because they were the freshest and least likely to contain grass or dirt. She also gave us and old water dipper to use to scoop up the snow.
I put on my winter clothes; telling Kieran that he could come out when I was finished clearing a path. He didn’t like it, but he obeyed all the same. Over the next thirty minutes, I cleared off the sidewalk and made a path to the mailbox what time the two women were dressing Kieran. By the time I finished, my son was so bundled up he looked like a midget Sumo wrestler wearing a cheap blue tent.
“Do you have enough layers on him?” I asked. “How’s he supposed to move?”
“I don’t want him to get cold,” snapped my wife. It was obvious that she wasn’t happy with my question.
“I’m more worried about him being able to breath underneath all that.”
My wife frowned at me. “If he gets sick the road is too dangerous for us to be getting out on it. We’d never get to the ER in time.”
“Yeah, I can see us taking him in for a heatstroke in the middle of the worst blizzard we’ve had in fifty years.”
She didn’t say a thing, but the look she gave me sent chills racing down my spine. I couldn’t help but think that were she able to harness the heat in her stare, she could melt all this snow off the ground in eight seconds flat.
Not wanting to push anymore of her buttons, I grabbed Kieran’s hand. “Let’s go before daddy gets into anymore trouble.”
“Too late,” snapped my wife.
My son grabbed my hand and began to drag me towards the snow. “Don’t fight dad, play.”
We spent the next two hours playing in the snow. During that time, the two of us made an eight-foot tall snowman and at least a dozen snow angels. My brother Alex and his two boys, Edward and Tanner, joined us as did another nephew, Jody.
My brother and I took an old box used for carrying four six-packs of soda and used it to pat out bricks. Once we had enough of them, we began to make an igloo like we did when we were children. With all six of us working together, we were able to build it in about an hour. We hung and old nylon curtain in front of the door to keep out the wind. We went inside and the boys were amazed at how warm it was on the inside. About the time, we crawled out of the igloo, mom called us into her house for hot chocolate.
“You boys cold?” asked mom as we entered the house.
“Freezing,” Alex replied.
Mom hugged him and his two sons as well as Jody. An honor I noticed that she hadn’t bestowed upon anyone in my family and we had been there over three days. “I made you fellas some hot cocoa. I know how much you like it. Well, everybody but Randy, and God help me, he’s always been my problem child.”
“Don’t pick on my daddy,” shouted Kieran.
“Don’t sass me,” returned my mother harshly. “You’re just like your father.”
Before I could respond, my wonderful child diffused the entire situation with his response. “Thanks granny. I want to be like my dada.”
My mother’s eyes began to knit as she thought of a response. When she was unable to come up with an appropriate one, she let it go; at least she did for the moment.
“Didn’t Unc say we could make snow cream?” Edward asked.
“Sure did,” Tanner replied.
“Unc ain’t the boss in my house,” interrupted my mother. Everyone could hear the venom in her voice. “I’m the boss here and what I say goes. I’ll decide when we make it.”
I stood there lost as to why she went through this sudden change. Only a few hours ago I thought she and I were on the verge of a break through, but now she had completed a hundred and eighty degree turn. Earlier this morning, she had been tender and kind to me; a side I hadn’t seen from her in years. Now, she was treating me like the proverbial redheaded stepchild. This was the mother I had known all my life. It was at this exact moment that I realized any hope I had been harboring for reconciliation between she and I was nothing but a childish fantasy.
My throat tightened up and my heart began to race as I realized this was her way of telling me that it was time for me to go. Even though I understood what she was trying to do, I still wanted to take this opportunity to try and put our past behind us. After all, I thought, if we can’t do it now, then we’d never be able to do it.
Unsure of how to proceed at this junction, I did what I always did in such situations involving my mother. I tried to appease her. “Nobody said anything any different.”
“They don’t have to!” She shot back.
“Did I say or do something that angered you?” I knew it wouldn’t work, but I was hoping to try and ease her anger.
“No, you didn’t.” She was now hissing at me. “I just don’t like people trying to run my house. I hate it when someone tries to tell me how to run my own place. As if,” she paused. “I’m an old broken down fool.”
“I didn’t mean it that way,” I rebutted. “If it came across that way, then I apologize for it.”
“You’ve been that way all your life. You’ve been nothing but trouble since the day you were born. My daddy told me that I’d regret having you, but I was foolish enough to believe otherwise!”
“Mom,” shouted my brother. “That’s enough! Randy didn’t mean it the way you took it and you know it.”
“You stay out of this,” she snapped. “He knows what he said.”
I held up my hands and struggled not to respond in kind. “Okay, you win. Give us a few minutes to pack our stuff and we’ll go back home. We’ll be out of your hair as soon as possible.”
“You can’t get out in weather like this. You’ll be killed and kill the boy and Jennifer as well. Is that what you want?”
“No, but it is the hand I’ve been dealt.”
“Go on then. You’ll get no pity from me. I’ve raise five kids and you’re a bigger fool than the other four combined and you’re going to raise that child to be the same way.”
That arrow had hit the mark and it took all the strength I could muster not to let her have it. As I shook to keep from saying something, I knew I’d regret, I shrugged my shoulders and smiled out of indignation. I wanted to fight back, but decided to take the high road. “I’m leaving. I’d appreciate you leaving my family out of this.”
I had to bite my lip to keep from saying something retaliatory, but realized that it would only add fuel to the fire already burning. Once when I was in my early twenties, I retaliated against her. Over twenty years later, she still held a grudge against me for that. I was not about to make the same mistake twice.
She didn’t speak to me the rest of the time I was there. My brother on the other hand begged me not to go. He offered to let us stay at his house. When I refused his invitation, he pleaded with mom to stop me. When she refused, he snapped at her and then stomped out of her house without even taking the time to put on his coat.
“Come on boys,” he called as he exited the back door. “We’re not staying here and let grandma act like a fool.”
Once the boys left, my mother looked at my wife and said, “See what he caused.”
My wife started to say something but I stopped her. My mother was notorious for holding a grudge. Any slight, even tiny ones, was to be taken to the grave. I didn’t want her on some future day taking her anger for my wife out on my children.
It took us less than fifteen minutes to pack. Kieran cried the whole time. He wanted to stay and eat snow cream and couldn’t understand why we couldn’t stay and spend more time at his grandma’s place. I tried to explain to him that we weren’t welcome anymore, but his mind couldn’t wrap around what I was trying to tell him.
Eight hours later, the Jeep pulled into our driveway. The trip had been slow and arduous and we hadn’t eaten since that morning. Once we brought in the luggage, my wife made her way straight to the refrigerator. She began to make sandwiches as I listened to the voice messages left on the machine. There were twelve: five were from friends at work wanting to know if they could do any; four was from our church; two were telemarketers; and the last was from my mother.
“Randy, this is your mother. If you want to apologize for what you did this morning, I’m perfectly willing to listen. But, I know how you are. You’re an ungrateful child that has been nothing but trouble since the day you were born. I really don’t expect your call.”
My wife began to fume. “One of these days I’m going to let her have it and she’ll regret that she ever got to know me. I’d love to snatch her by the hair of the head and shake her until she’s gets some sense.”
“She’s still my mother,” I interjected. “Remember the fifth commandment.”
“I don’t think you should honor anyone that treats you the way she does.”
“She’s still my…”
“Mother!” spat my wife.