1927
Time Machine
We
all know we can’t go home again. Turning
the clock back is a dream.
However,
if we can find the right time frame, maybe the past will show its face once
more. Here’s our story.
Fifteen
years had passed since the five of us had been together at Mom’s funeral. I don’t need to tell you about funerals – tears
rolling down the checks while laughing at hilarious happenings. We promised,
“We’ll get together.”
Not
until August 2014 did the “fabulous five” meet once more in Indiana. Luck had been with us. We are all still here. Mariam (87), Butch (85), Johnny (82), Al (75),
the baby Susie (74).
The
girls had wandered afar, the boys had kept their roots in Indiana. Butch and Johnny would meet Mariam (from
Arizona) and Susie (from Texas) at the airport.
I
(Mariam) came in first. Watching the
multitude of runways as we touched down, I could not get a glimpse of 1948. Someplace out there on the grass I had made
my first solo flight in an Aeronca Champ.
At the same time, on the runway next to me, Allisons made one of their first tests of a
jet plane, scaring the bejeepers out of me, causing a huge bounce, a throttle
forward, go around and come back shaking, “What was that?”
Today
inside of a jet plane I pulled my bag from the overhead and did the usual slow
shuffle to freedom. No longer did the
family stand at the end of the tunnel hollering “Here I am.” It took a wondering walk to find a familiar
face. But there he was. Brother Butch, oh so much thinner, but with
the same light up smile and waiting with open arms. We hugged, we talked at the same time, we
hugged, Johnny, coming from the Cell phone lot, met us and more hugging, tears
at our happiness in being together.
While
waiting for Susie’s arrival we drove a tour of the airport. Where is Roscoe Turner hanger and his race
plane stored high? What happened to the
metal hanger that I had helped build and worked under the sign of Hurst Flying
Service? All gone? All forgotten? The 40s had disappeared.
This
summer would be our big reunion including a trip to the past. Susie rented the time machine – a seven
passenger Mercedes – and we met at Johnny’s sixty year old house. Even as we backed out of the driveway, the
boys were hollering driving instructions. “Take 61 to 55” or maybe it sounded
like “The best way must be 40 to 36”. The family noises sounded the same as our
growing up years and belonged to this day.
A
variety of routes criss-crossed the map, all leading to Pine Village. Susie
ignored the help, and following her I-pad Sammy, we were soon off of highways and
traveling two-laners. Huge dark green
oaks and maples and pines lined our way.
Recent rains had added inches to ponds and created new ponds in hollows
around tree roots.
Oh,
for Mariam from Arizona, this became a scene to be painted in memory, to keep
the smell of freshness, the deep greenness of Indiana. I hugged it close to me, couldn’t let it fade
from three dimensions to flat.
The
150 miles included past escapades some only coming to light now that we could
no longer be paddled for our misdeeds.
As we passed over Little Pine Creek we got a glimpse of young boys
skinny-dipping from the banks. Butch and
Johnny yelled, they still felt the sting of the belly splash.
Susie
drove slowly, we had come in the back way.
On the side of the old deserted wooden building the words of “Ogborn’s
Store” were fresh and bright to us. On
the other side of the road – “Look, there’s the Pool Parlor.” It had been forbidden to girls – can you believe
a time when someplace was forbidden to girls?
Our
driver, who had been a babe in arms on those trips to Pine village, followed
our shouts and turned right for the street to grandma’s house. Three of us, we were teeners and middle
graders and pre-schoolers once again. “Here
it is! Turn in to the driveway at the
end of the road.” Butch hollered. “Booth’s chicken coops are gone.” A mowed yard
and new-to-us house were now where hay barns and well used tractors had been
parked.
Slowly
the time clock wound back. “Our tree is
gone.” The tree that Mom had climbed to
read books, the tree where Butch had to be rescued from when he climbed it too
young, the tree where I had hid behind the leaves and dreamed. No longer there. “The lilac bushes, the snow balls were over there.” We were still in the Now but we could see how
the yard had been in the Past.
A
“For Sale” sign had been hammered into the yard at the front of the house. Mariam timidly knocked the front door, Butch
knocked harder, no answer, we turned away.
Well, anyway Liz (Butch’s wife and our photographer) would take a
picture of our Memory Five. We stood in
place and she clicked. OK, good. Then a young man came to the door. He invited, “Come on in.”
The
clocked rolled back to the Thirties and the Forties. We came through our enclosed front porch, we
could see Grandma’s Boston fern in front of the window, long, almost touching
the floor. Not daring to breath, we pushed each other, through the door into
the living room. Grandma sat knitting in
her comfortable cushioned chair. I gestured toward the tall window with the
lace curtains. “That’s where the radio
sat – that’s where I heard that Wiley
Post had crashed and I cried for an hour.”
Straight
ahead! The door to the Mom’s bedroom
right in front of us. The time clock
stopped. 2014 had disappeared. “Right here, right in the bed in front of
this window, 87 years and 10 days ago, I was born.” I had heard the tale so many times and now it
was real. The struggling young lawyer had
brought his wife home to her mother from Washington for their first child. He had told of how Dr. MacGilvery and grandma
had banned him from the birthing. I
could see him pacing the yard in front of this bedroom window, I heard the
doctor say “Push harder” and I could hear my mother hollering. Suddenly . . . quiet
and then a baby’s cry. I saw the young
man run back into the house. His first
question: Was his Lily all right? Only after his Angel smiled at him, did he
look to see his baby daughter.
Oh,
that moment in time came so clear. The clock had stopped, the circle came
around in time. If I could only give
some words of wisdom to that newborn maybe I could make her journey a little
easier. For a blink I lived in that room with my
father and his Angel and the crying babe.
Then the room spun and I returned to 2014. No message had been left for the baby. It didn’t matter, I knew I would not have
altered her journey.
Brothers
were shouting, going from room to room. The
wall to grandma’s bedroom has been torn out to make the living room
larger. The parlor just exactly the
same, a wooden hatrack still in the corner.
Same hatrack, same corner. The back
bedroom, the low window, through the years we three had all climbed out of it
early in the morning to escape chores.
Only
we three could see the big iron cook stove taking up a good part of the
kitchen. Grandma had heated washtubs of
water for our Saturday night baths, big skillets of frying chickens on Sunday,
big pots of chicken real-noodles and dumpling soup for sick kids.
We
ran down the very same cellar steps and ignored the “modern” heating system.
There on wooden shelves sat the Mason jars of peaches and green beans and
chicken. “There’s the coal chute,” hollered Johnny. The brothers had moved many chunks of coal
into the coal bin.
Out
the back door and the cistern remained.
“Look, the pump is gone!” announced Butch. “Where’s the tin cup for
drinking?” The wisteria vine no longer
bloomed over the trestle at the back door.
However we could lead our host around to the side of the house and tell
him “That’s the fish pond.” He laughed,
“I always wondered why that area was so sunken.”
We
had looked forward to our summer times with grandma and grandpa and, when we
couldn’t sneak away early enough, had spent many an hour hoeing the weeds,
shelling the peas, pulling and saving the feathers from the scalded headless
chickens.
Scenes
go through my mind too fast to record.
The rooms appeared to me as they once were. When someone later mentioned the fireplace in
the For Sale Flyer, I could not remember seeing it.
2014
came back into view. Susie parked on the
circular driveway that we had once weeded.
We began the walk along the same sidewalk, still cracked by tree roots. We passed Booths, passed Gepharts, we could
get a pale glimpse of the sandbox behind Donna’s house where we had built so
many castles.
In
our Time Chariot we drove to the Methodist Church. We didn’t expect it be open but Butch went up
the steps, grasped the handle, big surprise, it turned. Pastor Jeff Allen, catching up in his office,
welcomed us and we explained our mission.
The wood pews awaited our return.
Then down the familiar steps to the basement and once more, the Time
Clock would stop in the 1930s and 1940s. Same scene, the long tables covered
with white tablecloths and variety of collapsible chairs in place. The Ladies Aid ladies had the ranges burning and the smells of
breakfast frying overcame the dampness of the basement.
Pastor
Jeff recommended the good cooking of Windy Mill for lunch. He promised to email us a copy of his
completed History of the Church (which we now have) and then we walked up to
the Main Street.
We
raved over the tenderloin and chicken salad.
Mariam’s desert came with a surprise!
The friendly young waitress asked, “Did you ever know a Brutus?” I jumped up, and the name came
immediately. “Rosie Brutus!” I rushed into the other room to meet the
grandson of grandma’s best friend. We
threw names into the air to see who would catch. Martindale, Metzker, Ogborn, my (step)
grandpa Bill Kelley? “Did you know the
Jones’ girls – Jo Anne was the best baseball player on the team?” Again, once more, time retreated and we could
catch the smell of the old school.
Next
destination, Mound Cemetery, to say Hello to grandma. Our GPS Sammy took us on a graveled road
right to the marker we had last seen twenty some years before. We strolled around searching, but grandma
called me her way. While I was by myself with her stone I whispered, “Grandma,
thank you for being such a useful caring loving part of my life.” Then I
gave our own family yodel to bring the others.
Well
fed, well memoried, with lots of pictures, we returned to Reality. The brotherss gave suggestions for the best
way to Hendricks County. From the back
seat a voice announced, “Mariam’s asleep.”
No, not asleep, my eyes were closed keeping memories. The time reel moved slowly, I didn’t want to
come back to 2014 quite yet. I knew I wouldn’t be returning this way
again.
Susie
traded the Chariot for a smaller Nissan and the two out-of-town sisters began
visiting. We would spend the night with brother Al and
his charming Kerri. Next we drove
through country roads to the small acreage of brother Butch and Liz, his wife
of fifty some years and also our photographer.
Sunday would be Family Day, Reunion Day, Get
Together Day. Johnny’s house began to
fill. Tables and chairs were set up in
the backyard where Marty’s green hand had taught coleus, moss rose and
geraniums to bring forth their bright colors.
Children and grandchildren of our brothers arrived and set their dishes
on the long kitchen counter - Sinful potatoes, Fresh Corn Casserole, Shredded
Pork, salads and plates of luscious Indiana sliced tomatoes. Fresh peach pies, fruit salad, Brownies. They were all without calories.
New arrivals were greeted with shouts. Once again we could put faces to names. Oh, what a wonderful warm fuzzy feeling to be
surrounded by the clan I was born into.
There
was so much talking and laughing that somehow we forgot a family
tradition. In the growing up years, we
had traded songs for dish washing. Mom
would play the piano and with only a little arguing, we cleared the table and
filled the dishpan while singing “Shine on Harvest Moon.” Throughout
the years, it didn’t matter where we would be, someone would begin a familiar
favorite, Mariam adding out-of-tune noise, and suggestions coming for the next
song.
Too
much excitement, we had missed our vocalizing.
So, consequently here it comes from Big Sister: We, the Fabulous Five, all of us, are duty
bound once more to board the Time Machine and be together again next year. Butch, start the harmonizing! "The Bell are Ringing . . . "
#MariamCheshire #PineVillage #WeirCookAirport #HurstFlyingService #RoscoeTurner #AeroncaChamp
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