Hollis

Hollis grips the smooth wooden armrests and lowers herself onto the worn-out seat cushion of her favorite chair. Hollis has sat here thousands, maybe tens of thousands of times in the 60 years since she’d bought the blue house on 13th street. People have come and gone, rooms rearranged, but the dining table has remained firmly fixed beneath the kitchen window. Solid oak and detailed with the decorative swirls expected of grandmother’s furniture, it has survived a house-fire and two burglaries. She sits in her chair, in her spot, and looks past the yellowing lawn to the street beyond.

Her hearing isn’t what it use to be, and in the past six months has gotten worse. She nods and smiles at neighbors wishing them good morning with relative ease, furrows her brow in concentration as she watches the lips of the checker at the grocery store, and avoids meaningful conversation when it can be avoided. Like sinking to the bottom of a pool, the sound of the world above had become muffled, isolating her in the deep of her own thoughts. This gray afternoon, as she peers through the kitchen window, she’s thinking of a weekend in 1972, when she and Eddie had camped at Paradise Valley.

It was late June and the snowy sides of Mt. Rainier had erupted with colorful wildflowers. This, this is how she’d pictured paradise she’d told Eddie. He’d nodded, smiled, bent down and touched the earth. Fifty years later she imagined Paradise hadn’t changed much, the wildflowers stuck in a groundhog’s day of Springs, blooming and dying, blooming and dying, ad nauseam. Mt. Rainier, Eddie had told her, was not a mountain at all, but a sleeping volcano– no a resting volcano. Looking at those beautiful wildflowers, on that perfect day in Paradise he’d told her the mountain they were standing on would someday explode with the power of hundreds or even thousands of atomic bombs. The very place they were standing would turn to ash, and all that lovely, vibrant color would be wiped to a dirty gray. A thing like that, she’d thought. Eddie would say a thing like that in Paradise, wouldn’t he? Standing in the garden of Eden, and Eddie only thought of the lava flowing beneath the wildflowers.

Eddie, her ‘Beloved Eddie’ is what they called him now that he was ‘Dead Eddie’. Dead Eddie. The first time she’d thought those words she’d actually mumbled them out loud. “Dead Eddie” she’d said, standing in her grandmotherly living room in her grandmotherly robe and slippers. And then again, “Dead Eddie!”, she’d chuckled. “Dead Eddie!”, she’d giggled, and the more she said it the harder it was to contain. “Dead Eddie” she’d crowed, tears streaming down that weathered, elephant-skin of a face as she laughed and gasped, gasped until she’d choked and vomited all down that grandmotherly robe. Dead Eddie.

But now, anointed by the muffled friends and family that eat her pies and drink her coffee, he is ‘Beloved Eddie’. “How she must miss her Beloved Eddie”, they say over Sunday brunch, looking at her with wrinkled foreheads of pity. “Her Beloved Eddie” they say as they pick up her wedding album, turning each page with a sigh. She smiles, nods, wrinkles her forehead and joins in their condolences. And why not? After 54 years of marriage, the least she can do is wrinkle her forehead in feigned grief when expected to do so. After 54 years of marriage that spread from black & white to color and back to sepia tones, the least she can do is to play along, to let them remember her and Dead Eddie and their marriage any fucking way they please. After 54 years of marriage that went from bliss to black & blue to red to gray, the least she can do is to wipe the vomit from her grandmotherly robe and keep their wedding album firmly fixed on the living room coffee table, firmly fixed where it goddam belongs, an everlasting testimony to her everlasting devotion to goddam Beloved Dead Eddie.

Raindrops pat the roof and ping the aluminum eves of the blue house on 13th street and Hollis has returned to the present. She grips the oak armrests on either side of her, blue-veined hands tighten as she bears down, slowly rising to a stand. She glimpses herself in the kitchen window, the faint reflection of an old woman shrouded in falling rain. Steadying herself on grandmother’s furniture she makes her way to the living room, past the blue recliner and the grandmotherly vomit stain, to the grandmotherly coffee table. She bends, lifting the thick ivory photo album from its place, holds it to her chest and carries it out to the garage.