to forget time
to forgive life
to be at peace.
[oscar wilde]
My grandmother died in the early hours of my birthday, just after the middle of the night. Given another month and a half, she would have turned a hundred and two years old. It was not a good death, said the nursing assistant when she called my uncle in the morning. He'd been a surgeon for over forty years, and apparently didn't need to ask what that meant.
Mom and Anne and I were having lunch together when Mom got the call. Afterwards, we kept eating, quietly. It was tricky. Mom didn't cry, and neither did we. It just felt the way it feels when you close a hollow core door with a little too much force. You think it should weigh more, but it just doesn't.
On my grandmother's hundred and first birthday, my daughter was born. They never knew each other but shared almost one full year together, a wondrous thing for three generations of women who had daughters well into their thirties. Four generations of late bloomers, briefly under the same sky.
The funeral was on on my mother's birthday. We flew to my sister's and my hometown in the heart of West Texas, then drove further west to my mother's hometown, then drove even further west to my grandmother's hometown, little more than an abandoned fort next to the rolling San Saba River.
I knew her so little. I knew her mother was the postmaster at Fort McKavett. I knew she had a stillbirth, a child who would have been younger than my uncle and my mother. I knew she liked to brew whole pots of coffee or tea, or both, and drink them down over the course of a day, reveling in her stack of library books, windows and doors closed against the blazing Texas heat outside. I knew she liked a clean house but never had one during my lifetime, mostly due to my wild dogpile of cousins and their affection for animals of all sorts, including reptiles and roosters, which they happily sneaked inside behind her back.
I think she was often lonely, but she never seemed sad when we all tumbled out her door and she waved us off from the porch. She loved her peace and quiet. Grandpa died twenty-five years before she did, and even though they were married for fifty years, she lived so long that she was technically single longer than she was bound to him, or anyone. She was a creature of solitude at her core.
She appeared frail, but time would eventually reveal the truth- that she was stronger than almost everyone, the last one standing out of all the others who shared her world.
She lost her eye in an accident as a child and she wore a glass one almost her whole life, which I never got used to. It was hard to remember which one to look at. The only way you could tell was the false one never looked at you, but that didn't help because her real one was usually never looking at you either. Her eyes, both the real and the not-real, were brown.
She was tall, and had great style once, and had a whip-quick sense of humor, but all her long years didn't seem to give her compassion or much wisdom, or not as far as I could tell. She was genial to strangers but brutal in combat with family. I remember some of the things she said to my mother's face, right in front of me, and they still make me angry. She needed Mom desperately as she grew old and infirm and couldn't seem to stop punishing her for it.
My other grandmother had lobbed similar insults at my father while I was growing up. His weight and his receding hairline were favorite targets, so-called friendly fire that he sat through quietly. I knew those were the two things he was most devastated about, the Rogaine in the bathroom cabinet, the days he went without eating anything but a single Clif bar in the middle of the day. I imagined telling her that it wasn't funny, but I knew I would be the only one in trouble afterwards.
Once, after my grandmother had picked yet another fight with Mom about Trump and politics and the idiotic stew fed to her by Fox News, after another night listening to Mom cry, I'd had it with grandmothers torturing my parents. I called her and told her I would not permit her to speak to my mother like that again. I never forgot how her voice changed. You're the one who makes her sad, she hissed. You moved home, and now she has to take care of you, too. You should be ashamed.
Jesus. When I hung up the phone, I thought back to the time I looked up what her name, Edith, meant. Prosperous in war.
Maybe it's too much to expect someone to be exceptionally strong and also kind. Maybe it took everything she had to just survive, her suffering and forbearance paving the way for gentler generations.
The day my daughter was born was my grandmother's last birthday. On an odd impulse, I saved their horoscope from that Sunday, for two women born exactly one hundred and one years apart. It said those born on that day would meet an interesting stranger in the coming year.
I wonder what Grandma thought of in that last span of months, weeks, minutes. The porch of her mother's house at Fort McKavett, the lazy San Saba winding, those days when she was a willowy girl riding horses. Her first night away at college in Alpine, when she leaned over to blow out the electric lamp at her bedside table and her roommates never let her forget it. Her beloved youngest brother, who died of AIDS in the eighties. The way my grandfather called her Baby. She blamed herself for his dying, even though that made no sense, even though she never seemed to blame herself for much else.
Did she ever think of the little one she'd lost? Did she ever wonder if she would see them, on the other side?
My last memory of her was from her hundredth birthday party in Fort Worth. I had a whole conversation with her and was still reflecting on how nice it had been when I heard her turn to my mother and loudly whisper Who is that?
It's your granddaughter, Mom said, which must have been the strangest thing in the world to hear, the absolute last thing she would expect the answer to be. In that moment I thought of my father, his polite bewilderment when I reached for his hand to help guide it through his shirt sleeve.
I hope she met an interesting stranger in the end. I didn't see her that last year, so it wouldn't have been me. I kept gnawing on this while we flew through the sky and the forests gave way to desert, a koan I couldn't solve or slake. Was it God? Her baby who didn't make it? Maybe as she flew past dying stars exploding, she only met herself.
I'll never know that or much else, other than how the towels in her house smelled kind of musty in a nice way, the way the plum tree out back withered from neglect in the years after Grandpa died. All I have of her was what I gleaned from the ground, the pieces she forgot to pick up and tuck away. She never told me a thing.
The last time I saw her she was a hundred years old and a day, the oldest person I'd ever known. Out of habit, I glanced from one eye to the other, then back again, trying to see which one tracked me and which one stayed still, but it was no use. By that time she was blind in both, tracking nothing at all, and it shouldn't have mattered, but it haunted me anyway. How I never knew what parts she could see, and which parts she couldn't. How there had never been a day in my whole life when I could tell the real from the not-real.
I asked Mom late one night if the eye would have been cremated with her, or if it was somewhere else, and if so, where, and Mom said good Lord, who knows, and I thought wildly that maybe I should try to find it. I felt such a sudden and sharp longing for it, the part of her I could finally have a handle on, the part I could know best, the part I could know for certain wasn't real, which made it the realest piece of her I would ever have.