At age 29, I broke off an engagement. I had too. My fiancée believed in a God that did not resemble any God I
could praise or worship, or even curse.
A God who wore his belt cinched tight around his waist, sported bland
ties, a side-part in his straight hair, and required clean, white walls in his
temples, wood-paneled ceilings like the underbelly of a capsized boat. For weeks after our dissolved
engagement, I couldn’t eat. I
couldn’t sleep. Hives sprouted up
from my chest, angry pebble-shaped spots scattered between my breasts. I passed though the world as a giant,
exposed nerve. The
air-conditioning hurt me; everything hurt me, even the trees, even the sun.
One afternoon in the deepest dark of my despair, I sat in
the passenger seat of my father’s car.
The car moved south toward downtown along I-45, the same highway that once connected me to my
grandmother.
“You know that mirror and brush you have, Sis?” he asked.
“From Grandma?”
“Yes.”
When my grandmother died, I inherited from her an antique
silver brush and oval-shaped mirror, along with the oak vanity table on which
these objects lay. In every
apartment I’ve lived in, I’ve placed that table and that mirror and brush into
my bedroom first, a consecration.
“You won’t believe what I found out,” he said. His incredulity raised his pitch a
notch higher. He almost squeaked.
“That mirror and brush belonged to a man my mother loved
before my father. In her
twenties.”
“What?” I asked in a puny voice.
“I almost didn’t happen,” he said. “I never imagined or thought of her
having an adult life before me or my father.”
He slowly unraveled the story for me: my grandmother was
engaged to a man before my grandfather.
Her own mother, my great-grandmother, disapproved of the match. She approached the local parish priest
and persuaded him to refuse a marriage service. My grandmother left home. By the time she met my grandfather on a blind date in Tuscon
and decided to marry him, she had learned her lesson. The second time she did not ask permission.
How my grandmother would choose to bestow the objects
from her first love to her first grandchild. How I always thought she loved only one man. How even after my grandfather died
suddenly when her children were still adolescents, my grandmother never
remarried or even dated much. How
I always assumed a second love would have come after my grandfather, not before
him. How the objects were a secret
whispered only to me: I was once a woman
like you. It’s not too late.
How a God might conspire to have this information revealed to me in the wake of
my own broken engagement.
Imagine my grandmother standing on a street corner—Lower
East Side, because I’ve walked through that part of New York and can picture
it, maybe Ludlow and Houston. 1939 or 1940, give or take a year or two. It
won’t matter. She is 24 or 25, maybe, having finished college at St. Mary’s
early, and she feels relieved to have escaped the Midwest, escaped Southbend
with its wind and monotony, its gold helmets. A white dress, a thin metallic
belt I saw once in an old black and white photograph, her shoulders bony
against the skyline, her auburn hair crisply bobbed—she was a woman of her time.
She stands on a street corner, my grandmother, full of
hope and longing. She stares down the concrete hallway of buildings, the
car-infested street. She sees a future: a husband, children, grandchildren,
some loss and regret but all these remain shadowy. For instance, she does not
see me. Because she is young, she does not know she will indeed get this future
she imagines, but that she will miscalculate the particulars. She does not see
yet a giant war, can’t imagine one for her husband’s time, for her son’s too,
and her grandson’s, and maybe more.
She thinks she will marry this Kelly. Kelly is his first
name or his last name. No matter. He is Irish, he is hot-blooded and easy on
the eyes, a liberal pourer. I say he has blue-green eyes. I loved a man once
with sea-green eyes and I know they can get a sensible woman to promise the
world.
It is a dangerous neighborhood, tenement houses glued together like model planes. Elegant and tall, my grandmother, so people glance at her. She does not belong here, and will never. Kelly is a poor young man, or a little poor. He pays the bills as a boxer, say, and he often wins bouts, and when he does he buys my grandmother steak and top-shelf Whiskey she never drinks. He drinks it. Orders another. He loves her in stupid excess.
Before dates my grandmother sits at the dark wood vanity
table. She sits with her back
straight at the top edge of the bench whose seat is upholstered in a
fashionable coral-colored fabric.
She cannot decide which necklace to wear. A string of dime store pearls? A stern, silver choker? A bare neck? Or is that too brazen? She cocks her long neck
and runs a finger over her cheekbone, studying her reflection in the narrow
mirror. Who is she?
I rewrite and rewrite the story ever since that day in the car with my father. The facts change; the truth remains. The Reverend J. Pittman-MeGehee once wrote that “myths kill time”, and so this story collapses the distance between women of the same lineage, and also comforts me in my most restless, distracted moments, like a good New York Times crossword puzzle or Reality TV. I have canonized the story inside the sacred text of my life. The story nourishes me down to my soul, whichever way I tell it. I have these fragments, these words: mirror, brush, fiancée, Irish, vanity. One phrase: before your grandfather. One place: New York. I have all these fragments of history and now I can adhere them to something, to my own first, sad engagement story, to my heartache, to a hope for a happy future, and this will be a grace my grandmother gives me.
I rewrite and rewrite the story ever since that day in the car with my father. The facts change; the truth remains. The Reverend J. Pittman-MeGehee once wrote that “myths kill time”, and so this story collapses the distance between women of the same lineage, and also comforts me in my most restless, distracted moments, like a good New York Times crossword puzzle or Reality TV. I have canonized the story inside the sacred text of my life. The story nourishes me down to my soul, whichever way I tell it. I have these fragments, these words: mirror, brush, fiancée, Irish, vanity. One phrase: before your grandfather. One place: New York. I have all these fragments of history and now I can adhere them to something, to my own first, sad engagement story, to my heartache, to a hope for a happy future, and this will be a grace my grandmother gives me.
Last month, I entered into another engagement. My partner knelt down in the street
between the University of St. Thomas and the Rothko Chapel—a place I’ve walked
before, a place that could leak a few stories about me—before he pulled out my
grandmother’s engagement ring to place on my finger. The same diamond, reset in a simple white gold band to
resemble the original. The old cradled
inside the new. And shining.
And last week, my Aunt Mary gave me my grandmother’s more simple wedding band, a gold and silver ring my Aunt Lore wore for many years after my
grandmother’s death. I don’t know
what love I feel most wedded to: my fiancée’s love or the love handed down from
woman to woman to woman.
I think of a poem by Mark Doty, “Broadway”, from his book, My Alexandria. It ends with these lines:
I will write a poem for you tomorrow,
he said. The poem I will write will go like this:
Our ancestors are replenishing
the jewel of love for us.
I think of a poem by Mark Doty, “Broadway”, from his book, My Alexandria. It ends with these lines:
I will write a poem for you tomorrow,
he said. The poem I will write will go like this:
Our ancestors are replenishing
the jewel of love for us.
Amen.
beautiful. both my grandmothers were engaged to other men before they married and started families. t did well in getting your grandmother's ring.
ReplyDeleteit's strange to be bequeathed of such things ain't it? the worst thing i ever heard from a therapist was an answer that stated, in essence, that my problems were not unique, that many, even most people felt the way i felt...it was meant as succor, a salve, but it did not work...and yet, if he/she would have known such a personal history, a personal narrative to relate to me, something akin to the above, what a difference it could have made...cheers...
ReplyDeleteYou are a jewel of love for us. I hope there are two sets of chromosomes in there somewhere. :) Mama
ReplyDeleteI am always struck by the commitment of the World War II generation to a a protection of privacy in personal lives.
ReplyDeleteIt seems so foreign in this current world of Reality TV, Facebook, memoir, and celebrity gossip.
I think it was based on a notion of civility and decency and reticence - protection maybe.
Having said that, I'm glad we have the information now. In retrospect, it explains a lot about Ellen Fleming and her stoicism and calmness in regards to loss - particularly of her husband - her second love - when he was 44.
Of course she would say that this information we have about Kelly was not important to her story at all. But of coursed it was. She kept the hand mirror - his gift to her - for almost 50 years.
It's the stuff of novels really.
wonder who gets the hand mirror next?
This is so lovely, Casey. I'm so loving these sermons!
ReplyDeleteWhat a lovely and interesting story of you and your grandmother (and me.)
ReplyDelete