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I have eight little sisters and
one little brother. I used
to tease my brother, "Blessed
are you among women."
He became a Marine.
My eight middle-aged little
sisters and one middle-aged
little brother and I had arrived
this morning in
Connecticut
from the
Midwest
for the wake. Funny, how
when you're the oldest in a
family you still want to call
your younger siblings "little".
My little brother is taller than
I am and some of my little
sisters actually look older than
me. St. Macarius the
Elder, isn't that funny?
Driving from the
Danbury
airport to Peggy's home I could
see that their trees' fall
colors were a week or so ahead
of the
Midwest. Rows of reds and
brilliant golds divided the
dark, somber tree-trunks from
the bleak October sky.
Standing by my nephew's casket I
was the bleak, divided by the
dark wood from a brilliant, gold
soul.
He was laid out in his altar
boy's black cassock and white
surplice with an artillery of
beads between his fingers. The
Sacramental Soldier was at ease.
It wasn't so much that he had
waged war on Leukemia for the
last three years that made him
the Soldier. It was that
he had accepted his orders from
a chain of command, Dad, Mom,
doctors, nurses and carried them
out, patiently, cheerfully while
being trained by Captain priest
with the sacraments for his
daily battles. When the
final orders came... he obeyed.
He had accepted the Last
Sacraments and died a
Sacramental Soldier.
My sister Noreen, from
Ohio, standing next to me at the
casket, suddenly grabbed my left
arm and pressed her face into my
shoulder shaking violently with
a disconcerting snort issuing
forth from her sinuses.
"Martyrs of Sinai!"
I whispered as Noreen let out
another sinus-snort. "Blessed
Seraphina Sforza, stop snorting
and get a hold of yourself, will
ya?" I put my
right hand upon her head to
soothe and quiet her grieving. "This isn't
Ohio, ya know." I
tried to shame her being that we
were back east and all. Connecticut, no less.
"Look, look!"
Noreen cocked her head towards a
stand of flowers to our right
and at the foot of our nephew's
casket. Noreen's hand was
partially covering her mouth as
though she were trying to
prevent a mournful moan
from escaping. The poor
dear. She nudged me
towards the end of the casket.
"It's all right, Noreen,
it's all right."
I reassured. "Are
those your flowers?
They're beautiful."
I tried to pry Noreen's fingers
from my arm. "Come
on let's go sit down
somewhere." I
wanted to bring some comfort to
my distressed sister, here in
the east. Preferably "Southern".
St. Winebald, if ever there was
a place that needed a Bar it's a
funeral home.
Noreen dug her nails into my
arm. "Get that
card! Do you hear me?
Get that card!"
Now she shoved me into the stand
at the end of the casket holding
an orange-glazed ceramic pumpkin
pot containing an array of
colorful chrysanthemums. "Grab
that card. Those are my
flowers and I don't want Peggy
to see that card!"
A sound erupted from Noreen's
lips like she was giving the
whole funeral parlor the
raspberries. She had
completely lost her mind with
grief.
"St. Exsuperantius!"
I was exasperated. "You
get that card yourself.
It's yours and why do you want
it anyway?"
"I can't. I'm
wetting my pants."
She was bending over laughing.
Laughing?
I was shocked. Simply
shocked. Noreen, still
holding onto my arm straightened
up. Her face was screwed
up in hysterical looking knots,
mouth wide open and absolutely
no sounds coming out.
Suddenly she threw her face back
into my shoulder and... bit me!
"YOUWSER!!!"
I screamed out in anguish and
instinctively slapped her in the
face. Everyone in the
funeral parlor stopped talking
and looked at us. Noreen
stared up at me startled.
"Yahweh! Oh,
Yahweh! Pray for us St.
Aengus MacNisse and St. Eystein!"
I wailed like a professional
Irish-Jew.
"Get that card in that
pumpkin pot. Get that
card." She just
wouldn't let up about that card
in the pumpkin pot.
I put her head in a half-Nelson
and dragged her over to the
stand of flowers in the
orange-ceramic pumpkin pot.
"St. Nicholas the
Pilgrim, we're by your pumpkin
pot." We were now
in front of the floral stand.
There was a white square card
resting on a black plastic
pronged stick protruding about 6
inches out of the dirt in the
orange-ceramic pumpkin pot.
I plucked the card out of the
prongs and turned my head from
side to side to see if anyone
saw me swipe it.
"Okay, Noreen, I've got
the card." I
muttered from the side of my
mouth pretending to be looking
straight ahead and nonchalantly
admiring all the flowers with
Noreen's head still squeezed
under my arm.
"Read it!"
St. Macrina the Younger, my
little sister was spitting
raspberries again.
"Get yourself under
control, will ya?"
I squeezed my sister's head
tighter and another sound issued
forth. Where that sound
came from I wasn't sure.
Not having my reading glasses
with me I held the card out in
front of me about 12 inches,
squinted and read the big,
black, bold letters emblazoned
on the white card...
"WE
LOVE PUMPKINS"
"WE LOVE PUMPKINS?!"
I screeched. The whole
funeral parlor went silent again.
Noreen was in conniptions so I
squeezed her head harder trying to
suffocate her. I immediately
went into another wail trying to
disguise the words "We
love pumpkins" with your
everyday Latin...
"Deum juventutem meum!"
Oh, yeah, that sounds like "We
love pumpkins". I
should have been slapped naked and
had my clothes hid.
"What? What did you
say?" Noreen was
mumbling as I beat my breast with
one hand and pulled her by her
head out into the foyer of the
funeral parlor.
Ensconced in the foyer, I let go
of Noreen's head and she stood
facing me. "What did
you say?" She asked
pulling out a kleenex from a box
sitting on a white marbled-top
table in front of a gold-gilded
framed mirror hanging above on the
wall.
"Deum juventutem meum!"
I blurted out. "It
means, 'God my joy!' If you
had stayed a Catholic you would
know that." Noreen
had left the Catholic Church years
ago to become a pumpkin... errrr...
a Protestant.
We both turned towards the mirror,
yanked out some more kleenexes and
wiped off our sweaty faces damp
from tears of grievous-laughter.
And then I saw it. My
hair... or rather my scalp through
my hair.
"St. Patern!"
I was starting to exhibit
male-patterned baldness right here
in the funeral parlor mirror.
What next?
"St. Patern?"
Noreen asked.
"Yes,
St.
Patern. As in
male-patterned? Don't you
remember anything from your
Catechism?" I
started frantically pulling clumps
of hair over patches of white
scalp. "Remember,
'Who is God?' 'God is the
Supreme Being.' What is
menopause? Menopause is the
supreme joke God plays on women
making them grow mustaches and
suffer male-patterned baldness!
'Tis a hard religion, Maggie, but
the only one!'"
"Catholicism?"
She asked.
"What? No!
Menopausism! And St.
Eutropius of
Orange
, what the heck kind of Protestant
prayer is 'WE LOVE PUMPKINS'
anyway?!"
Maybelline mascara tears started
rolling down Noreen's cheeks.
"I told the florist in
Ohio
to write, 'We LOVE YA pumpkin';
not... 'We LOVE pumpkins'."
She lowered her eyes. "When
I saw what that card said sticking
right up out of that pumpkin pot I
knew I had to get it before Peggy
or anyone else read it"
The front door of the funeral
parlor foyer opened. An
acorn incensed wind blew in
wrapped in a shroud of smoke.
A perfume of consolation. It
was the priest.
A season of dried-up, brown leaves
crunched under Father's shoes
announcing his arrival.
"Deum juventutem meum."
My sister repeated as Father
walked by.
"Yes. 'God my
joy.'" I put my arm
around Noreen and led her back
into the parlor right behind
Father.
The priest knelt on the
prie-dieu.
We all knelt and made the sign of
the cross.
"In Nomine Patris, et
Filii, et Spiritus Sancti..."
Father began the Sorrowful
Mysteries of the rosary.
I pressed the rosary's wooden
crucifix between my fingers.
I lifted my eyes to the bowed down
head of the priest. His
rosary beads clicked against the
wooden prie-dieu and my eyes
snapped up to the casket cradling
my nephew, shrived in a veil of
wood...
The
boy whose tongue in penanced-prayer,
Took Bread, locked lips, to
guard God there.
Oh Sacramental Soldier Soul,
Five senses all saluted whole,
With Holy Oils by Captain priest
You marched off to the Banquet
Feast.
You left the war, at ease, in
place
And died in sanctifying grace.
Oh, highly decorated Soldier
Soul...
...we
LOVE ya pumpkin!
THE
END
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