memory
I am seven, smack in the middle of my brothers and all the
boys on our street. My brother Rob and Bruce come with me when I go door to
door to ask the women of the neighborhood if they have any clothes in their
closets that they can part with. We need clothes to play dress up. They smile and say, let me take a look, returning a short while later with a flowered dress, darts
in the bust, draped over their arm, or with a navy hat with a veil to pull over
your eyes.
*
We are playing Army, crawling on our bellies across the yard, over pale
pink petals of the crabapple. Rob is wearing an army helmet. It is smooth and
round. He looks like a real soldier, with the dirt streaks across his cheeks.
Out of the corner of my eye is my mother, knees in the dirt of her garden;
snapdragons, roses. She is wearing pale yellow garden gloves, her head bent as
she pats the soil.
*
Near the garden gate, in the driveway, my father is hosing down his brand new car; a deep blue convertible Volkswagen bug. After
he has rinsed it clean, he’ll roll the black roof down and let us sit on the
top of the backseat. I sit tall and wave, stiff-handed, like the Queen of
England, or Miss America, while he drives slowly through our neighborhood, tall
spotted sycamores standing like the crowd at a parade.
Great memories Betsy, love them...
ReplyDeleteOooo Bets!! So wonderful!! Such great imagery, I love peeking back into your life :)
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