This morning the clouds
hung low in the sky, gray and listless, humidity thick as molasses. Clear skies
and sunshine would have helped. I had been dreading this day for months now,
but there I was helping Patrick pack all of his worldly possessions in three
cars for his latest trip back to Nashville, his new city. Pam and Paula were
heading down with him along with Ryan, who would be driving the cavernous Buick.
Meanwhile, Kaitlin and
Jon were busy packing up all of their wedding gifts, all of Kaitlin’s clothes
and the remainder of her stuff from the attic in preparation for the trip to
Columbia. They will begin their married life together in South Carolina, while
Patrick will be trying to make his mark in Tennessee, both of them many miles
from home.
Pam and I have been
through this before, but in the past it was always temporary. This is the real
thing. They are both grown and on their own, and my house feels empty, their
old rooms like vacant lots, full of furniture but oddly still and lifeless. Pam
won’t be back until Wednesday, so I’ll have a couple of days in this place by
myself to get acclimated to the new reality.
I spent much of my day
at the office working through my Dad’s financial affairs, paying the stray
bills that keep trickling in through the mail. I spent nearly an hour talking with
someone at Bank of America, trying to officially cancel a credit card that had
a zero balance. It would require a copy of his death certificate to get it
done, a certificate that I had to pay $12 for. Even after death Dad can’t escape
the tyranny of our paper-pusher society. Dying isn’t cheap.
So now, I will pretend
to watch a baseball game on TV while I think about how it could possibly be true
that I have two grown people for children.
But first, I think I’ll
close the doors to their rooms. There’s no point in standing in the doorways
looking in anyway. Who wants to look at vacant lots? Besides, I hear that a redecorating
project is in the works.
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