My grandfather, Louis Eugene Straight
Our family visited Louie once a year when we were young. The last time
I saw him, he and grandma took the train to New Jersey from Kansas to
visit my disintegrating family.
He was trying to stop drinking.
My older brother, Louie and I went to a
pool hall in Chatham.
My brother was a man now, with a full year of
college under his belt, so he ordered two beers, one for Louie.
I
ordered a coke since I never drank.
When the glasses arrived, I
switched drinks with Louie and told him I’d have the beer and he could
have the coke.
I never realized it, but that small gesture showed how I felt about my
grandpa.
I liked him. He was fun.
When we got back to the house, he
made a point of telling everyone what a nice thing I did for him.
That’s why I remember the story. He made me feel good in front of my
family.
My father Don never said things like that about me.
Louie didn’t like
my father and told him to his face.
I remember my mother telling the
story but the details are lost now.
She was secretly very happy that
Louie put Don right.
I think he told Don that he treated his children
bad, which was true.
My father was a jerk, no doubt about it.
The year after the New Jersey visit, my parents got divorced.
My mom
and the rest of us moved back to Indiana where we had lived previously.
I was glad for my mom that she found a place to root, but conspicuously
absent was no to return to her origin in Kansas.
There was a reason why she didn’t go back to her roots. Louie never
stopped drinking and neither did grandma.
Gene Haynes