I am a child. My father is young, shirtless. My grandfather still has color to his hair, although there isn’t much hair left.
We are outside. It’s Labor Day weekend. So it’s the last days of summer. School is about to start again, and we children know we will once again belong to communist dictators known as schoolteachers.
My father is getting ready for the shindig at hand.
Daddy is the kind of guy who works hard for a living. I have no memories of him that do not involve denim, Budweiser, or profanity.
My grandfather is always followed by children and dogs. He fought in two wars. Was wounded once. He was leading a charge, and he extended his right arm and was yelling, “Charge!” A bullet bit him in the armpit.
He was in R-and-R in “Itlee.” Where an Italian woman thanked him for delivering her people from Mussolini, and gifted him a mandolin. He impressed her when he played “Turkey in the Straw” and “Soldier’s Joy.”
Together, Daddy and Granddaddy are digging
a shallow pit in the backyard, with shovels. They are scrawny, bare chested. They are three sheets to the wind. Maybe four.
The pit is the size of a grave. Except nobody has died. At least not yet. Although my mother has insinuated, several times, that if I don’t go outside to play, and get out of her way, the pit will be my eternal resting place.
The men line the newly dug pit with concrete blocks. Then, they start a fire inside it with p’cawn and hickree.
Party goers arrive. First, my aunt: a woman who is such a staunch Methodist; she has to take Metamucil just to stay alive.
Next, my uncle, who wears overhauls, and smells like Old Spice.
More people come. Most have kids with them. We children are turned loose, without supervision. These are our final days of summer, which…