Marion Market's was busy Saturday mornings; a sunny, spring April day.
She checked out. The supermarket had two women on cash registerers, busy sorting the produce, 15 minutes from her house. Two shopping bags to distributed the load, arm to arm, she walked to the Post Office. She'd run out of $.04 stamps. That done; home.
Everson, Pennsylvania is extremely hilly and uphill. It's a village of Polish Catholics, everybody knows everybody and Fayette County population is about 1000, more or less.
Grandma walked briskly. Well, not briskly. Grandma is hefty. She walked uphill to St. Joseph's church, up yet still on Maple Street, huffing and puffing and markedly short of breath. She opened the door, exhausted. The bun on the nape of her neck was soaked with sweat. She heaved to catch her breath. The mouth was drooping, just a little, she had a headache. Anna died in the living room. The family doctor, Dr. Pisula, and came running. But Grandma was still.
"Anna had a stroke mercifully fast," he said, "there's nothing I can to. I'm sorry. She's dead."
The doctor packed his stethoscope and little black bag and left.
She hated doctors and pills, hence, the physicians told her about hypertensive drugs. All the time.
Coincidentally, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt died of massive cerebral hemorrhage, April 12, 1945. I'm a useless factoid.
Grandma did the same, April 12, 1958. Grandma is 63. I was 10.
Anna, recently deceased, and Walter Szczekocki, owns the house on Maple Street. Kitty Mae and Jess Johnson were married and lived in the house. Mary Ann and Billy were siblings. The older children have married, Louie, Chester and Jo. Kitty Mae and Jess produced a son, William Walter Johnson, aged 5. Mary Ann was engaged and Billy is in high school. It's a compact house for the family and there's an out-house with kinfolk.
Mary Ann Sczcekocki Knipple
Pap is distraught, to be sure, and crying. "Go call Jo," he ordered. Kitty Mae dialed the number, for the elder sister.
I answered the phone. Clearly, something was wrong. Aunt Kitty Mae was wailing.
"Where's your Mother?" she said, sobbing.
"Here. Wait a minute. It's Aunt Kitty Mae." I passed the phone to Mother, "She's crying."
"What's wrong?" said she to Mae.
Marions Market. Shopping bags. Soaked with sweat. The doctor came and went. Mum was gone. Mum had a stroke. End of story.
Marion Market's was busy Saturday mornings; a sunny, spring April day.
She checked out. The supermarket had two women on cash registerers, busy sorting the produce, 15 minutes from her house. Two shopping bags to distributed the load, arm to arm, she walked to the Post Office. She'd run out of $.04 stamps. That done; home.
Everson, Pennsylvania is extremely hilly and uphill. It's a village of Polish Catholics, everybody knows everybody and Fayette County population is about 1000, more or less.
Grandma walked briskly. Well, not briskly. Grandma is hefty. She walked uphill to St. Joseph's church, up yet still on Maple Street, huffing and puffing and markedly short of breath. She opened the door, exhausted. The bun on the nape of her neck was soaked with sweat. She heaved to catch her breath. The mouth was drooping, just a little, she had a headache. Anna died in the living room. The family doctor, Dr. Pisula, and came running. But Grandma was still.
"Anna had a stroke mercifully fast," he said, "there's nothing I can to. I'm sorry. She's dead."
The doctor packed his stethoscope and little black bag and left.
She hated doctors and pills, hence, the physicians told her about hypertensive drugs. All the time.
Coincidentally, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt died of massive cerebral hemorrhage, April 12, 1945. I'm a useless factoid.
Grandma did the same, April 12, 1958. Grandma is 63. I was 10.
Anna, recently deceased, and Walter Szczekocki, owns the house on Maple Street. Kitty Mae and Jess Johnson were married and lived in the house. Mary Ann and Billy were siblings. The older children have married, Louie, Chester and Jo. Kitty Mae and Jess produced a son, William Walter Johnson, aged 5. Mary Ann was engaged and Billy is in high school. It's a compact house for the family and there's an out-house with kinfolk.
Mary Ann Sczcekocki Knipple |
Pap is distraught, to be sure, and crying. "Go call Jo," he ordered. Kitty Mae dialed the number, for the elder sister.
I answered the phone. Clearly, something was wrong. Aunt Kitty Mae was wailing.
"Where's your Mother?" she said, sobbing.
"Here. Wait a minute. It's Aunt Kitty Mae." I passed the phone to Mother, "She's crying."
"What's wrong?" said she to Mae.
Marions Market. Shopping bags. Soaked with sweat. The doctor came and went. Mum was gone. Mum had a stroke. End of story.
Mom called Dad. My Mom and I squeezed into the truck, flanges and all. My mom never owned a car. Well, she had a permit, sort of. She had a crash in Bridgeport Dam, another booming metropolis, in her 20's. Two cars and a fender-bender; she tore up the permit.
"I'll walk," she noted. Dad was with at the time and the car was fine, damaged, but fine. She never drove.
Grandma never liked Mother, sad but true, and Mom couldn't care less. My aunts were sobbing and mounds of Kleenex tissues were wet and soggy. Mom, however, nary a tear.
"I'm sorry, Pap," she embraced Grandpap.
The undertaker came and went and the body was embalmed.
Grandma died at home and the coffin laid in the living room. All sorts of company came, from the inebriated men to the women making kieska, kielbasa, duck soup dziczyzna, my personal favorite, pierogi, laden with lard. The camaraderie came non-stop for three days; the women prayed the rosary and the men were imbibing.
The day of Grandma's funeral, Mom was late. Exceeding late. One hour late. The sisters glared and Grandpap scowled. Mom was undaunted, with Arpege perfume, red-red lipstick and seamed stockings just so.
Two years passed, Grandpap had a stroke. Dziczyzna, keiska and all matters of cholesterol took their toll.
I remember Grandpap. My hair was short and Buster Brownish and he called me Mimsy. He spread his arms around me and grinned.
Me and Charlie |
"Hi Grandpap," with a hug.
I remember a white shirt and tie, never smoked and he brushed his teeth with salt. He had sparkly teeth. I was four and he was gigantic. I found out later Grandpap was miniscule person, perhaps 5'7". Even Dad the plumber was a munchikin . Even my first ex-ex-ex-husband was 5'7", the misanthrope womanizer. Yes, a contradiction in terms.
Kitty Mae was kind, long-suffering and loves the church and the crisp, clean almost-virginal linen. She's was always ironing for the church. Men-folk abound with Grandpap, Jess, Little Billy and sibling Bill. Mary Ann Szczekocki and Knip Knipple were married by now. Knip was deranged in a good way. Jess was a loving husband and ten years senior. Kitty Mae was wildly hypertensive.
Every day before breakfast, Mae took the coffee and buttered toast with home-made preserves, out on the rear porch to feeding the birds. Chickadees, bluejays and cardinals scarfed down crumbs and bits of toasts. The birds ate from the plate.
Sister Teonesta |
Pap was 68 and had a mild stroke, then suffered two strokes. He's quasi-bedridden and he's falling down over the bed, to the floor. Apparently, the paralyzed side, the arm and leg, were dead.
"Mae," said Jess, "it's Pap," Grandpap fell to the floor with thud.
"You can't walk, Pap," she explained. Jess and Kitty Mae pulled him up.
Grandpap was mute and discouraged.
Kitty Mae bathed him, fed him, encouraged him and he died in his sleep.
Grandma and Grandpap was buried from the house from the living room, respectively, 1958 and 1962. It was a full-blown, three-day, bells and whistles wake.
Grandpap looked good for 70 years, white shirt and all. Legions of men came to the Polish Club to give respect and the women baked delicious dishes.
"Na zdrowie," the men toasted.
The undertakers, however, halted the viewers.
"It's leaking fluids," said the afresh dead body.
"Where?"
"Here. The eyes and the ears," squinting at the ooze. "It's overflowing."
"Well, that's not good," said the embalmer. "Pump it out?"
"Pump it out."
The decay fluids were leaking badly. I peeked through the keyhole on the door of the living room. Out of the coffin he went, to the floor. The undertakers manipulated the pump. I don't want to think about it.
Mom's affliction with agoraphobia, coincidentally, buried Grandpap. She never left the house. I was a teen-ager.
The cemetery was peaceful, calm and serene and Anna and Walter left us.
The cemetery was peaceful, calm and serene and Anna and Walter left us.
Mary had a son, Bobby. "I don't know why I'm baking a cake so soon," said Mary telephoning Mom. "The birthday is next week," she noted. "Well, you never know."
Billy Johnson was grand champion of divorce and three-times loser of wives. He's moved out, of course. He had a pre-op for his knee surgery and had a sky-high-off-the-charts blood pressure. He's taking antihypertensives.
Bill "Murphy" Johnson
Aunt Mary Ann, Knip, Jess and Kitty Mae were vacationing at Ocean City Maryland. Well-rested and tan, Knip and Jess checked out. Kitty Mae was going to the bathroom.
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"What's taking so long?" said Mary Ann.
Chalmer "Knip" Knipple and Billy Szczekocki |
GG Mary Hribal Beran, Me, Charlie |
Charley had a brief stint in higher learning as well. Westinghouse picked up the tab bachelor's degree, unheard of a company-based tuition-assistanced in the 1940's. Dad was brainy. He discussed with Jo, the rigors of night school three times a week for six years, albeit a sheepskin; he chose no, and left Westinghouse.
Mom and Grandma didn't like each other, heinous comes to mind; stormy, infuriated and, well, insane.
Anna and Jo were fighting vehemently about nothing. Mom left the farmhouse with a huff, kid in tow and sheepishly Dad fired the pick-up truck, full of parts and plumbing supplies. Grandma was smirking and Dad was in the middle once more. Fierce Mom and fiercer Grandma. Not good, not good at all. I'm probably seven. My Mom left the farm, never to return.
I don't know the family or Pap or kids or the autocratic Grandma.
My Mom's brood was plethora for cerebral vascular accidents and my Dad and his uncles died of old age.
You pick.
I don't know the family or Pap or kids or the autocratic Grandma.