by Jim Bates
English breakfast tea
Ron finally lost it when the first shovel full of dirt
hit Larry's casket. It suddenly all came crashing down, the bout with cancer,
the horrendous radiation treatments, the final agony and pain. Then merciful
death. Larry dead and Ron, his long time lover, unable to do anything but stand
in the crowd and mourn and try to hold it together. Well, he'd done all right. He
was a funeral director after all. He'd arranged everything and things had all
gone according to plan. Right up until the end.
As he turned to leave, Amy,
Larry's sister hugged him. "Oh, Ron," she said. "I'm so sorry."
Through his tears, Ron suddenly
went on high alert. Sorry? She said she was sorry. Sorry about what? She
couldn't have known about the two of them, he and her brother, could she? Larry
had made it perfectly clear from the onset that their affair was to be kept
secret.
"We're Catholic," Larry said
early on. "My family is very strict about these things."
Ron would always remember the day he fell in love. He'd
not been having a particularly good time of it. Business was slow, which for the
general population was good, but for him, not so much so. Plus, he was concerned
about his future. He was forty years old. Single. His parents dead there was no
one but him to run the third generation funeral home business. He'd never found
someone to spend his life with and he was alone. No kids. Nothing. When he
couldn't run the business any longer, he'd sell out, maybe do some traveling
(although he wasn't really much of a traveler), move on with his life and
do...do what?
It was in the midst of these
rather morbid thoughts, that he'd glanced outside as a pickup truck pulled up in
front of the funeral home. The sign of the side read, "Anderson Landscaping."
A short stocky man with a
trimmed beard got out of the truck, walked up the sidewalk and in through the
front door. "Hi, "he said, taking off his Minnesota Twins baseball cap and
wiping his brow. "Hot out there." The guy appeared to be around forty years old
and was dressed in clean jeans and a white tee-shirt.
"Hi," Ron said, standing up to
shake hands. "Yeah, it is hot. What can I do for you?"
"I'd like to look at your
caskets."
Ah, good. A customer. "Sure.
I'll be happy to show you our fine selection of container resting places. I'm
Ron Bessemer."
"Larry. Larry Woldsfelt." They
shook. "And, by the way, you can cut the crap with the burial container BS. I
just want to see what you've got."
Ron felt the red flush of
embarrassment rising. "Okay. Sure," he stammered, moving around the desk. "Let
me show you our selection of...of caskets." He ushered Larry through a set of
doors to the display room. "Anything in particular you're looking for, Mr.
Woldsfelt?"
"It's Larry, and no, not
really. Just...just something that feels right, I guess." He chuckled and seemed
to lighten up somewhat. "Sorry. This is new to me. A weird thing to be shopping
for."
Ron's heart went out to the
guy. Larry was honest with his emotions, something not many people were. "I'm
sure we can find something to suit your needs," he said, and ran his hand
lovingly over The Parliament, a mahogany casket with a sand colored velvet
interior. "First I'd like to show you..." And he began his spiel.
It soon became apparent Larry
was not your typical, run of the mill customer. Specifically, he wanted to try
out every casket. Every single one of them. Which took some time, because Ron
had twenty-five of them. And, by trying them out, it meant that Larry climbed
into each casket, lay down on his back, folded his hands on his chest and
stretched out to really get the feel of things. He even closed his eyes. Once or
twice Ron thought for sure he might have even dozed off, but no. Larry stayed
wide awake and engaged the entire time. It was apparent he was very serious
about, as he put it, "Checking these bad boys out."
Finally, after over two hours,
Larry took Ron aside and said, "Nice caskets, but do you have anything a little
more, shall we say, natural?"
Ron actually laughed. By this
time he had gotten to like this serious casket hunter. He was different. No one
had ever spent the better part of an afternoon climbing into even one casket,
let alone all twenty-five of them.
"Sure," he said. "I think I
know what you mean. I've got some natural ones." He stepped through another set
of doors and took Larry out to the garage where there were four pine caskets
stacked on a pallet. "Here you go. All pine. All natural. All the time," he
said, making a little joke.
Larry ran his hand over the
smooth grain and grinned. "Perfect."
Ron heaved a sigh of relief.
"Good."
"Now, just help me here, will
you Ron? Let's set one on the floor so I can get in. I need to check it out." He
grinned, making his own joke.
So Ron helped Larry into the
casket and the minute their hands touched something happened. An electric
current of attraction perhaps? Maybe, but whatever it was, that was the moment
Ron and Larry knew they were meant for each other.
Years later, on the day he
passed away after his long illness, Ron consoled Larry's sister, "Don't worry,
Amy. I'll take care of everything."
And he did. He arranged for the
service and the obituary, plus all the other details Larry had specified, from
cards, to flowers, to music. Ron had it all covered. It was his job of course,
but it was the hardest thing he'd ever had to do in his entire life because for
all those years they'd kept their pledge to keep their affair secret; over
twenty years. No one knew about them being a couple.
So at the end of the service,
when Larry's pine casket had been careful lowered in the ground, and the last
words from the priest had been finally spoken, when that first shovelful of soil
had hit the casket it was like a knife into Ron's heart. His lover was really
and truly dead and gone for good.
Amy took Ron's arm and led him
away. Even though he still had many tasks to take care of it felt conforting to
be with her. The three of them had gotten along well.
"Why couldn't you at least tell
your sister?" Ron had asked not only in the beginning of their relationship but
throughout their long love affair. "She's a good person. She'd
understand."
Larry always grimaced, "I just
don't want to put her though keeping a secret from the rest of my family. I
don't think it would be fair."
Ron had to accept that his
lover's mind was made up and as the years went by he asked less and less, until
finally he gave up altogether.
Now this. Now the funeral, and
Larry's coffin being buried forever. The end.
Amy squeezed Ron's arm and
asked, "Ron, I know that you and Larry were friends."
He glanced over and she made
eye contact and smiled, "I really appreciate how much you both meant to each
other."
"He was a wonderful man, Amy. I
cared about him a lot," was all he could think to say, wondering where was this
heading.
"I was wondering," Amy
continued, "Would you like to help us maintain his final resting place, the
gravesite? We were thinking of planting flowers."
Ron felt a surge of emotion and
quickly interjected, "Larry would like that. He loved flowers, especially
dahlias. Yes, that would be great." He smiled a genuine smile for the first time
in what seemed like days. "I could help you."
Amy squeezed his arm and made
him stop and look at her. "Larry never had a better friend than you, you know.
Your friendship meant the world to him. And it did to me, too. I want you to
consider yourself part of our family now. At least me and my husband and
children. Would you like that?"
Ron couldn't find the words to
tell her how he felt. A real family. A family he thought he'd never have. He
belonged. The decision was easy. "Yes, Amy, I'd be privileged. Thank you."
Then they embraced, holding
each other tightly until long after the grave had been covered and the workmen
had left, leaving only Amy and Ron, two people who each in their own ways loved
Larry and would carry that love forward as long as they lived.
They both thought it would have
made him very happy.
About the author
Jim
lives in a small town twenty miles west of Minneapolis, Minnesota. His stories
have appeared online in CafeLit, The Writers' Cafe Magazine,
Cabinet of Heed, Paragraph Planet, Nailpolish Stories, Ariel Chart,
Potato Soup Journal, Literary Yard, Spillwords and The Drabble, and
in print publications: A Million Ways, Mused Literary Journal and Gleam Flash
Fiction Anthology #2. You can also check out his blog to see more: www.theviewfromlonglake.wordpress.com.
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