Read Yom Kippur as Manifest in an Approaching Dorsal Fin Online
Authors: Adam Byrn Tritt
phone ring at any time but still less at this
hour. Anyone we want to talk with has our
cell numbers. Those phones are off now and
this call is either a wrong number or
important.
“It was your father. It sounds serious. He
wants you to call him.” I do.
“I wanted you to know your grandmother
is in the hospital. She is catatonic and the
funeral will be anywhere from two days from
now to two weeks. I’d like for you to be there.”
I expect to hear more of her condition but
he talks only of the funeral. I will be there and tell him so. I will go for him. There is no other reason.
A day passes and I look at my calendar,
mark all the days a funeral would be an incon-
venience in the next two weeks. There is state-
wide testing at our school on Monday and
Tuesday, and then two days of the same the
week after. A writing conference the next
weekend. I will miss what I miss but would
rather not. I’d rather not go at all.
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Monday comes and I ask about the bereave-
ment policy of our school board. There is
none. One takes sick leave. I fill out the forms in advance and leave them with the secretary.
She gives me her home number in case I find,
in the night or early morning, the need to
drive south to Delray instead of to work or,
when away, if I need to let them know I need
extra days. Candy asks if I don’t want to leave
now, to be there when my grandmother dies.
No. That is not necessary. I don’t explain. She
is kind, soft, and I would guess knew her
grandmother well.
Wednesday morning. Early, and I am at
school, as usual, by eight-fifteen. Monday was
the first day of statewide testing. All day.
Tuesday was the second. The next day for
testing is the Monday to follow and finally I
have the chance to teach. I have planned to
introduce the concepts of archetypes and
archetypal themes, characters, and symbols,
and have the students search these out in a
film before delving into written literature. I
am teaching the first of five classes today and
have barely finished one day of a four-day les-
son when my phone rings.
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My wife has called, the front office secre-
tary tells me, and it is important I call her
back. Lee never calls me at work. I know what
this is and, excusing myself to my students,
call her. My grandmother died at eight-fif-
teen that morning.
I pause, wait, nothing. I expected not to feel
much but nothing was much less than antici-
pated. There just wasn’t anything there. I say
thank you, tell her I’m going to go to the office and let them know I need to leave as soon as
is practical. I tell her I love her and put down the phone. My students are listening. The bell
for second period rings and I leave the room,
as the students do, to find the assistant
principal.
Arrangements are quickly made and the
AP, a kind, helpful soul, follows me back to
my class where students are waiting outside
my door. They know something must be up.
We enter, I gather my things while I hurriedly
discuss with Mr. Kaminski how to explain
the lesson, written on the board, to the sub. I
know I will have to redo this. He tells me not
to worry and I grab my things and leave.
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Off to my son’s high school five minutes
away. I check him out and we head home to
pack. We have no funeral clothes. What we
have will do. Black dungarees, a black shirt
and shoes for me, the same for Alek. All into
bags. Bags into the truck. Truck onto the road
south. It is barely edging toward eleven in the
morning.
We drive. Alek asks me for no stories of her.
He knows there are few to hear and he has
heard them all. He has met her on a few occa-
sions, his great-grandmother, but she knew
little about him. She would talk to us contin-
uously of her other grandchildren, the won-
ders they had produced and challenges over
which they had prevailed. Alek would listen,
politely. Always politely, quietly. She once
offered him ten dollars to talk. What did he
have to say? That is his memory of her. He is
her second great-grandchild.
When my daughter was born, in 1985, my
grandmother grilled my wife. There is no
other word for it. It was the type of question-
ing often reserved for congressional hearings
or associated with cop movies where the sus-
pect sits, uncomfortable, in an interrogation
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room, under a bright bare bulb. What did she
need, how much are such things? How hard
was I working and why didn’t we have
enough? In the end, she sent my grandfather
out to the car to get the checkbook, wrote for
a moment, enclosed it in a card, put it into
an envelope and sealed, it handing it imme-
diately to Lee. It was one hundred dollars.
The total Sef received over time, given in one
lump sum. All she’d ever give for her first
great-grandchild.
My father would insist I visit, and we did.
He would ask me to call and always I did,
whether asked or not. The conversations were
short, brusque. I would ask questions and she
might answer or not. She would ask how we
all were and the response to all my answers
were either “That’s nice” for things that had
gone well or “Well, what can you expect?” for
anything that had not. As the years passed I
learned never to mention anything that was
not perfect and the conversations became
deep with lies and façades.
“Call,” my father would say, and then would
tell me all about the land and buildings, the
factory owned by my grandmother. He would
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explain of the inheritance and how much I
could expect. That is one of my earliest mem-
ories involving her, in truth: his talk of inheritance and wills and the wrangling among him,
his elder sister, and younger brother.
I expected no inheritance. I never did. But
I called and visited anyway because it was
right to do so. I brought the children against
their protests to sit in the uncomfortable,
hard chairs, avoid the expensive antiques.
I do have some earlier memories of her and
my grandfather. Some. I think of these as we
drive to Delray on 95 and then the turnpike.
The long childhood drive from New Jersey.
Perth Amboy or Somerset. Interminable to
a four-year-old, a five-year-old. Up to Rock-
land County, New York. To a large house on
a hill. Steep, shallow slate steps up to a door
on a wide porch. A kitchen door that swung
either way. A closet with a door in the back
and, behind that door, steep steps of stone
through a narrow wood stairwell leading up
to the attic and books. I sat up there, think-
ing I was in a secret place. It smelled of mold
from the wooden walls, from the slate steps,
the books. Moist and dank like a cave. Dark
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and quiet above the house, feeling I was
beneath it all. Today, I recognize that scent,
that specific smell of mold from old books
and wood. I smell it in caves. It is a comfort
I cannot express and I don’t understand com-
ing from the deepest part of the human brain,
deep from the limbic system; the scent is
warm and comfortable. My fondest memory
of my grandmother is the smell of mold.
It was in this house, my mother told me
again and again, that she was offered ten
thousand dollars to stop dating my father.
Perhaps she should have taken it. It was in
this house that my aunt, my father’s older sis-
ter, accused my mother of wanting nothing
from them but money. A strange accusation
considering she could have taken the ten
thousand and still dated my father but did
not. My mother responded by slapping her.
That is all I know of that house.
My grandmother came from Austria. That
is nearly all I know of my grandmother. She
had money. She owned a furniture factory,
and she came from Austria.
At some point they moved to Israel. Then
they moved to Delray, Florida, into a condo.
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My father would go up often on errands of a
surreptitious nature. Anytime my grandfa-
ther wanted to buy something, he would have
to ferret the money away and slip it to my
father. Then my father would buy it and bring
it over as a gift. A computer. A boombox. All
were “gifts” from my father.
If I were out with my father, regardless of
the reason or destination, I would have to be
quiet if my grandparents called on the cell
phone. I do not know why this is. My father
would mouth silent words. I cannot see well
enough to read lips. He would not repeat
what he said, ever, in any audible form, so still I have no idea what he was telling me.
If we, my father and I, my parents and I, all
of us and my children—regardless of the
combination—if my father was there and we
were going out to dinner, to a store, and his
parents called, he would lie about our loca-
tion or destination. He would tell me later his
mother was never to know we spent money.
How did she think my father’s house was fur-
nished? Where did she think the multiple
matching computers or identical matching
half-dozen cell phones and the latest of what-
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ever gadget was hot came from? She could
not know money was spent and any money
spent was a secret. Things purchased for my
grandfather became tangible constant lies.
Their condo was full of them. Nothing was
his unless it was a gift.
Their relationships seemed always to con-
tain this evasion. My father and his father.
My father and grandfather and grandmother.
Grandmother and grandfather. By extension,
myself and my grandparents. Money was a
thing to be hidden, not spoken of above a
whisper. In their world, if you showed you
had money, people would give you less. If you
admitted to having spent any, they would
withhold their gifts. From grandfather to
father and I was expected to take my part.
We continue driving south, passing the
Palm Beach County line. West Palm Beach,
Boynton Beach, and it’s time to call my father
and ask where to meet. Get off on Atlantic,
left, Military trail, left. Look for the post
office, left. Into High Point. Second stop sign, left, right. I call my daughter as she asked. She wants to go, for her grandfather. For her
grandmother and for me but not for anyone
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else. She will not go until she knows I am
there. I call her and she drives over from not
far away. Boca Raton to Delray. From the
mouth of the rat to the place of the kings.
What does not sound better in Spanish?
I have parked but I do not know which
condo it is. There are eight. Four in one sec-
tion and four in another at right angles. All
identical at this reasonable distance. I call my father to have him come out. I see him emerge
from a corner unit and immediately begin to
mouth words I cannot see.
He seems OK. I hug him and we enter the
condo.
Once in I start to say hello. So does Alek.
One by one. There is my uncle and his wife,
Miral, a woman I have always liked. There is
my aunt, Suki. There are some people I do
not know. There is my mother. There is Erika,
the caretaker, asking people if they want cof-
fee, looking more after my mother than seems
anyone else; Erika is the most animated per-
son in the room and, other than my mother
and myself, her French accent is the only
speech that does not sound like New York.
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There is my grandfather in the corner. My
father is in the hallway mouthing words. I
think he is telling me to say hello to everyone.
Who can tell?
There is talk of the rabbi. Talk of the can-
tor. Who will do the service? My uncle is in
from New Jersey. My aunt from Israel. My
parents from down the road. Arrangements?
No, it seems little has been done. A cantor
has been called. Or a rabbi. I hear both terms
over and over and she is due to arrive soon,
was met with last night and is coming to help
make arrangements.
They should be simple. A Jewish body is
watched until it is in the ground. Prayers are
said over it. My aunt and uncle are discuss-
ing the rules and traditions. I know as much
about these as my uncle, and more than my
aunt who claims to know all and makes up
what she does not, usually with a fanciful
mixture of myth and absurdity.