The last words
out of Grandmom's mouth as I left her at the end of the path on my way to
the store was, "Now son, you go straight to the store and hurry back just
as quick as you can. I can't start dinner until you get back."
She placed a special emphasis on "hurry" and "quick." Grandmom did not buy
perishable groceries for more than one meal at a time. I suppose it was because
she did not have a refrigerator for the first half of her life. After
refrigeration was available in her kitchen, the old habit was hard to break.
Breakfast at her
house usually consisted of buttered toast and coffee for everyone except
Pop Pop. His morning meal also included bacon, eggs, and cheese.
He arose every morning at 2:30 AM except on Sundays to go fish his nets.
Grandmom prepared the same breakfast menu for him for sixty-five of their
seventy years of marriage.
Pop Pop began fishing
as a profession when he was twelve years old. It was the only life
he knew ---a life of hard work and little pay. Driving stakes by hand,
setting nets, and hauling fish into his boat required a lot of strength and
energy. After fishing the nets, culling the fish, and selling them, he would
return home for dinner, which Grandmom always served at 11:00 AM sharp unless
she was faced with circumstances beyond her control.
When it was time
for Grandmom to prepare dinner, which she served promptly at 11:00 AM, I
knew that I might as well stop whatever I was doing. She always called me
to come in the house where I was directed to take a seat beside her at the
kitchen table. It was there that she prepared a grocery list of items
she needed for dinner.
Her handwriting
was a work of art and I watched with envy, her steady hand and preciseness
of script as she complied the list. When finished, she carefully tore away
from the tablet only the amount of paper on which she had written. The
rest of the sheet was stored along with its tablet in an upper drawer of
her sideboard. It was used again later in the afternoon before suppertime.
My job was to
carry the list expeditiously to the store and to bring back the items.
For a seven-year-old kid who was spending the summer with his grandparents
on Hatteras Island in the 1940's and who was easily distracted from what expeditious
meant, this presented an opportunity for adventure.
The store was
less than a fifth of a mile from our house. To walk there, to give
the list to a clerk who gathered the items and charged them to Pop Pop's
account, and to return home should have taken no longer than fifteen minutes.
Sometimes it took me an hour. Today was one of those days.
When I left on
my journey to the store, it was high tide and the path that led from the
front yard to the sandy road was covered with mud fiddlers that had migrated
from the surrounding saltmarsh. The large claw of the male fiddlers
looked to me to be as large as hedge clippers. The only way anyone
could get me to walk down the path when it was alive with what I imagined
as aggressive bloodthirsty crabs was to hold my hand and walk with me.
Grandmom saw me safely to the road. I had confidence that by the time I returned,
the tide would have fallen enough for the fiddlers to return to the marsh
where they would be out of sight. And for me, out of sight was out
of mind.
Walking in the
tire ruts of the unpaved road was fun. It was when I was forced from
these furrows by an occasional slow moving car that the trek became tiresome.
The sand on the road was loose, course, and deep, which caused me with each
step to sink almost to my knees slowing me to a snail's pace. There
were places where the sun's intense rays heated the sand to an unbearable
temperature forcing me to hop from one patch of vegetation to another to
cool my bare tender feet. There was a low spot in the road just before
I got to Miss Ursa's house where last night's rain left an inviting puddle
of water. I could not resist and it did not occur to me that wading
might add minutes to a trip that was supposed to be accomplished quickly.
Mr. Nelson and
Miss Ursa were neighbors of my grandparents. Their home place was a picturesque
scene of tranquillity: a whitewashed story-and-a-half home built at the turn
of the twentieth century, with a large manicured front lawn, nestled in a
thicket of live oaks, whose branches were draped with Spanish moss.
As I approached their home, I was distracted from my hike to the store.
Mr. Nelson and some of his friends were playing croquet on the front lawn.
I loitered on the edge of the road in a gentle summer breeze beside a storm-gnarled
red cedar. For ten minutes or more I witnessed an exciting and competitive
sporting event. Even with no activity, the scenic beauty of the spot
slowed me down every time I passed as my eyes drank just one of the many
flavors from the goblet of the island's simplistic charm. This still
holds true today.
On towards the
store was the village barbershop. As I approached, I noticed that Mr. Damon
was not cutting hair but was sitting on the front porch of his shop whittling
a piece of wood into the image of a shorebird. The clean crisp aroma
from the cypress shavings filled my nostrils. I stood mesmerized by his talent.
While the piece of wood slowly took the shape of a goose, the minutes ticked
away. Finally he asked me where I was going. He encouraged me
on towards the store when he learned that I was not just whiling away the
time but was on one of Grandmom's grocery missions. He knew she would
be upset if I didn't return in a reasonable amount of time.
Just past the
barbershop was the famous Hatteras weather bureau. I always stopped
and observed if one of the weather flags, which alerted the islanders of impending
weather, was being hoisted up the flagpole. Today my preoccupation was watching
the weatherman collect data from the instruments located in a white louvered
box on the front lawn. Then he launched a weather balloon. What
a spectacle! It took at least ten minutes before the balloon was out
of sight and I was able to resume my journey.
Mr. Dolph's general
store had a large front porch that covered the entire front of the building.
Rarely was there a time when someone was not sitting on one of several benches
on the front porch, visiting with the customers as they entered and left
the store. Often folks just sat there to escape from the heat of the
summer's sun.
I spotted Mr.
Victor sitting on the porch. This meant trouble. It seemed to me that
every time I came alone to the store, he was there. Mr. Victor loved
to chew tobacco, as did so many of the men who lived at Hatteras. Pop
Pop started chewing when he was nine years old and I 'm sure Mr. Victor was
no different. Watching the enjoyment and pleasure he derived from moving
the plug of tobacco from one cheek to another and spitting the juice made
me want to try it.
Occasionally I
would sneak a small leaf from Pop Pop's tobacco plug that he kept on the
table behind his rocking chair in the sitting room of his house. I
usually hid in an upper branch of an oak tree in the front yard and when I
was sure no one was looking, I slipped it in my mouth and began to chew.
I tried to like it but all I ever experienced was a gagging reflex.
I figured I must be doing something wrong but I never did discover what it
was.
At any rate, Mr.
Victor's favorite pastime was spitting on the bare toes of the children when
they passed near the corner of the porch where he was sitting. His
was a perfect shot wherever he aimed. I avoided him like the plague.
As I approached him I jumped and danced around trying to avoid his deadly
aim, but no matter how hard I tried he hit his target. The feel of slimy
tobacco spittle between my toes made my skin crawl. His pleasure of accomplishment
was directly proportional to my displeasure. The bigger the fuss I
made, the harder he laughed. I knew from experience that if I tried
to run past him to avoid his spittle attack, he would calmly removed the
moist plug from his cheek and throw it at me. It was better by far
to pass close by him and take the chance of his artillery missing my feet
than have a plug with its unerring aim come barreling at my head.
I always liked
Mr. Victor. He was a rather cute, toothless old man whose long nose
almost touched his protruding chin when his mouth was closed. His tan
face, whose skin was almost leather-like from years of exposure to the sun,
and his belly laugh which rolled up from deep within him when he made me
dance, reminded me of a character from one of my childhood stories.
Even today when I visit the site of Mr. Dolph's general store, I miss Mr.
Victor's strange way of showing affection.
Once in the store,
I gave the grocery list to my aunt who worked there as a clerk. I always
called her Sister. She was the kindest, gentlest, sweetest person I
have ever known, and she was also the slowest. Sister did not rush
for anyone. She worked at a steady pace, always got the job done and
did it right, but she did not hurry through it. Before she gathered
the few items on Grandmom's list, I talked her into buying me an ice cream
bar, which she made me consume before returning home. We both knew
that Grandmom did not want me to eat anything that might spoil my dinner.
This created a further delay in my quest to bring home the groceries.
Returning home,
I had all the same distractions again but in reverse order. I knew
I was in trouble when I heard my name being shouted across the nearby saltmarsh.
Turning into the path that led to the house, I saw Grandmom, dressed in her
faded ankle-length frock protected by a bibbed apron, with a concerned look
on her face. She was pacing back and forth on the piazza wringing her
hands and hollering my name to the top of her lungs.
My well being was
not Grandmom's concern, for she knew a child anywhere in Hatteras Village
during the '40's was as safe as he would be in his mother's arms. Adults throughout
the village watched everyone's children and made them behave. Her concern
was that she needed to have dinner on the table at 11:00 o'clock.
No one demanded that of her including Pop Pop who had not eaten since the
early hours of the morning. It was a self-imposed curse that drove her
to be punctual and created her distress if dinner was not ready at that time.
I wanted to make
a desperate dash towards the house trying to make up for wasted time, but
I could not. The mud fiddlers were still on the path and no one could
make me walk through them alone. I could not complete the last leg
of this odessy with them there. I knew by the tone of Grandmom's shouting
that she was aggravated with me for holding up dinner, and I was so frustrated
and scared by the sight of all the mud fiddlers on the path that I started
crying.
Grandmom stepped
down from the piazza, waded through the fiddlers, and met me at the road.
She must have felt sorry for me because she leaned over, gave me a kiss on
the forehead, put her arms around me, and escorted me safely back to the
house.
At three o'clock
that afternoon Grandmom's shouts for me could be heard all over the neighborhood.
I climbed down from the oak tree where I imagined that I was an airplane pilot
flying over the island. I met her in the kitchen at the table.
She prepared her grocery list and passed it to me. "Son, it's almost
time for supper," she said, "and I need some things from the store. I want
you to take this list and go straight to the store and hurry back just as
quick as you can. I can't start supper until you get back. " There
was the familiar emphasis on "hurry" and "quick."
It was low tide.
The fiddler crabs were back in the marsh. She served supper at 4:00
PM sharp unless she was faced with circumstances beyond her control.
Copyright 2000 by Buddy Swain,
all rights reserved