My head’s in a whirl. I don’t know where to put anything in my head. How do I analyze this so I can figure out how I feel about it, how to deal with it?
We know Daddy’s dead because a Darien policeman came to the door and told Mom so.
She’s furious because Daddy’s brother called and asked her to pay for his burial. She’s crazed out-of-her-mind with anger and tells him to go to hell.
After that, we don’t know when, where, how, Daddy’s buried.
A manila envelope comes in the mail, addressed to my sisters and me. It’s Daddy’s burial flag. The beautiful red, white, and blue of the great U.S.A. It’s five by nine-and-a-half feet in size. The size impresses me.
No one’s interested in the flag, but me. I tenderly keep it with my things. I peel the return address label off the envelope and save it. There’s no name on it, just a Hartford address. Daddy had cousins there; none that I ever met, or if I did, don’t remember.
I’m too young to understand that he’s buried in a Connecticut state veteran’s cemetery. I do know that this is the flag that covered his coffin.
July 4, 2013 at 12:02 pm
Wow!
“Tells him to go to hell.” Tells who specifically. The policeman? The brother? And when.
Lee
July 4, 2013 at 12:21 pm
The brother is asking her, and she is telling him. All in the same paragraph, so I think the two connect already.
And when. “When” is part of the much larger story. What I presented today is just a snapshot of the larger piece.
July 4, 2013 at 12:03 pm
The blog is powerful on this day. Flags on the 4th must bring this up every year, several times a day. Lee
Nice scene. Someone respects your dad. He did good somewhere, sometime.
Lee
July 12, 2013 at 4:42 am
Very compelling story. Paragraph after paragraph with such heart felt expression. Mark