She and her daughter visited the beach. She's up in age—walking through sand can be an ordeal. She carried a Foldger’s coffee can. The old metal kind people keep roofing nails in.
They walked toward the Gulf of Mexico and removed the lid. They scattered brownish powder into the water.
There wasn’t much breeze. They tell me most of the dust fell like sand. But it was a beautiful ceremony, nonetheless.
“My husband and I kinda grew up coming here,” said the old woman. “Before all the big condos and high-rises. His family had a place down that’a way.”
She was nineteen when she met him. After a few dates with the skinny boy, he invited her along on an annual family beach vacation.
The family stayed in a big camp-house cabin. They went fishing. They sat on swings, stayed up late, talked, watched the moon above the bay.
He was almost three years younger than her. He called her an old lady, it infuriated her.
They
made a nice family. Two girls, they adopted a son. They took walks after supper. They played cards. They traveled.
He inherited his family’s service station. He could fix anything with wheels. It was a lifelong obsession, tinkering beneath hoods. They weren’t rich, but in many ways they were.
A drunk driver killed him.
It was a twenty-year-old girl with friends in her car. Nobody knows what happened exactly. The theory is: he was doing sixty-five and the girl was doing ninety. She tried to pass him. He switched lanes to let her over. She was going too fast. Four people died.
It happened almost sixteen years ago, her wounds have turned into scars.
Ever since his funeral, he’s been sitting on her closet shelf, in a…