Nephew
I awoke in a strange bed walked out to the room out from the
guest room to find everyone preparing for breakfast. In the corner of the room
stood a tired old desk holding an ancient desktop computer, sitting at the desk
was a five year old boy.
Eyes as bright and blue as the summer sky, and voice
scratching and new. The scratchy voice spoke to me after prompting from his
mother. Explaining the game he was working on, I could only nod and give a kind
smile. Not being a mother myself yet, I studied this boy with amazement.
Curious, calm and cute as a button, that scratchy voice and the boy that it accompanied
and I began to become acquainted. He sat next to me at meals that weekend and I
tried to figure out how to talk to this little human.
The following summer I was even more a part of the family,
but not officially. The scratchy voice was still with him, but he was growing.
At least two inches taller and mildly more coordinated, my soon- to-be husband and
I secretly giggled while we watched his oversized head steer his body around
the makeshift kickball field in the backyard at Grandma’s house. So determined
for his team to win, he’d run as fast as his little legs would take him. It seemed
to me that the rest of the family members were taking it easy on him when it
was his turn, all except his sisters. There was plenty of squabbling between
all of them while they huddled in the corner of grandma’s living room where she
kept the hand me down toys. Legos were his thing, always building,
concentrating.
Every summer we saw him and every other Christmas or
Thanksgiving. I looked forward to seeing him and his sisters; they brought
energy and life to the otherwise quiet family gatherings.
At six years old he started to call me Aunt Sue. He was the
obvious choice for the ring bearer in our wedding and took his job very
seriously. He walked down the aisle as slowly as we had asked him to do the
previous night at the rehearsal and enjoyed wearing the tiny tuxedo. His gentle
nature came through even then.
A few summers after I became a mother for the first time we
ventured out west again. The shack where we had stayed previously had been
replaced by a grand beach house where we brought our two boys, they were one
and three. My oldest and he shared the same birthday, separated by eight years.
My three year old had been enamored by him from the start. He played with my
oldest non- stop and was curious about my youngest. I was reeling from the news
that my one year old would be disabled and have special needs as he matured and
I was very protective. I remember waking one morning after everyone else to
find my nephew holding my one year old. I was alarmed until I saw the gleam in
my nephew’s eyes. Proud to hold his new cousin, he was able to feed him a
bottle as he held him.
That week also showed me his patience and kindness; at
eleven years old he came to town to be our tour guide. He showed us the sites
and the amusement park. My three year old begged to go on this toy train ride
but was too frightened to go alone. My nephew volunteered to ride it with him.
He gathered his already long legs in the small train car and faced my son while
they did three laps around the flat sunny parking lot. I remember being
impressed that he didn’t once complain and we rewarded him with a half hours’ worth
of videos games at the arcade. He was grateful.
As he grew older his scratchy voice disappeared, but his
interest in my boys never feigned. Always enthusiastic, patient and entertaining,
he picked up where they had left off from the last time they saw each other. Of
course, when my third son came to be, he was right there ready to play and be
his instant favorite.
My third son looked forward to Thanksgiving almost as much
as Christmas because it he could finally play with his favorite cousin again
whom he hadn’t seen in months!
As an observer I admired the young man he was becoming. While
we were visiting their home two summers ago, we had returned from a family
outing to the aquarium, he came from another car and carried my wheelchair
bound son with ease into the house. I didn’t ask him to, he just did it. I was
moved by his thoughtfulness. He took a few more breaks from playtime than he
had in years prior, but I understood. It’s hard to be in demand and popular
with the little guys. He started relating more to his older cousins, seemed as
though he wanted to be grown up. He was on his way.
Each time we’d see him I’d love to marvel at how tall he was
getting. First as tall as his mom, then almost as tall as his dad, finally surpassing
both parents and then some! His voice was deep and matured; thankfully, his
eyes were still that of the boy I remember holding my one year old years ago.
The last time I saw him was Thanksgiving 2012. He was a
handsome young man. He ran the Turkey Trot on Thanksgiving morning and ran
faster than his mother, which is a big deal. I couldn’t get over how fast he’d
grown up. I suppose when you only see someone every six months they seem to
grow faster.
I have a video of him and the rest of the cousins playing
Pit after the Thanksgiving feast. I’ve watched that video over and over in the
last few days. Read countless articles about the legacy his amazing father left
behind. Wished I hadn’t read all the details of their tragic deaths. Because it
isn’t real yet, he’s not dead yet. I’m still expecting to see him at
Thanksgiving.
He lives on in my memories and the family photos I searched thru
before I started writing this.
The horrific ending to his life overshadows the beauty of
who he was. Kind, gentle, smart as a whip, funny, strong and innocent. I will always
keep his memory alive with my boys. I will remind them of who he was, talk with
them about all the cool things he was able to do in his abbreviated life. I
hope that my boys inherit his strength of character and his sense of self.
We will miss you sweet nephew. I pray you are watching from
above with your beautiful blue eyes.
Comments
For the joy of human love,
Brother, sister, parent, child,
Friends on earth and friends above,
For all gentle thoughts and mild.
Lord of all, to Thee we raise,
This our hymn of grateful praise.