Amy's dad died yesterday
when she was on her way home
from another funeral.
Just last week
her husband had a phone call
and heard the news
his father had died.
A hurried trip across country
by plane and up into
Canada to hear kaddish.
Shovels of dirt onto a casket
in cold ground,
the end of a life once held behind
barbed wire.
She and two of her sons,
the oldest away at college
in the midst of final exams,
flew towards home while her husband
stayed behind to
sit shiva with his mother.
In between flights in Chicago
Amy called her sister across the lake
just saying hello,
and heard the news
their father was in the hospital,
heart attack.
Later that afternoon
it was already too late;
there was nothing they could do
but keep him comfortable.
She called her husband
to interrupt his grieving
with her own.
He will fly home in a snowstorm today.
A little later
the other call came
that he had died
and then Amy began
making her own calls.
I am sad inside
and winter does not help,
the nausea has returned.
Sometimes a giving up of the ghost
sounds like a relief
if you are the one doing it.
Now Amy is planning another trip
for another funeral.
Blizzards complicate December travel.
This time the two boys will stay home
with their father,
the oldest still busy with college exams,
and Amy will come alone
to the cold
winter of home and death.
Before he died,
her brother said
and her sister agreed,
their father said, "Oh!"
as though he had seen
something grand
or someone dear
and a smile broke across his face,
sedated though he was.
The look
like he was running
toward happiness
lingered
until death.
I was loading groceries
into my car
when Amy told me
all this
and snow was swirling
all around
and it was dark
and very cold
and I was suddenly very sad
and alone
and wished for arms to run to
myself
arms backlit by firelight and warmth
and most of all
love
and knew I did not have them.
Many years ago
I answered another phone call.
My son was perhaps three
and now he is more than twenty years
past that.
It was Amy, crying.
I remember the exact words she said
Mom died.
Last night, after she told me
about what happened just before
her father died,
Amy said, crying,
"I think Mom came to get him."