Prior to the fire
For the past week or so I've been less than overwhelmed but more than preoccupied with a few events that have transpired.
Said events kept my mind astir with so many thoughts that I could not think about blogging.
Things have calmed down in the last day or two -- a lull, as it were -- so I was casting about for a subject with which to regale you, my cherished readers.
I still had not settled on a topic when, lo and behold, the universe provided one.
It's a sad story. You may need a Kleenex.
On the morning of Tuesday, May 17th, TG's childhood home in Rossford, Ohio, caught fire. The blaze began in the detached garage, which his mother had rebuilt after his dad's death in 2011.
This was the house that TG's sister, Ruth (who visited us last October), received as her part of the inheritance when my mother-in-law passed away in 2016.
The house, meant to be their forever family home, was built by TG's parents sixty-five years ago when TG was five, his brother was not quite four, and his sister was age two.
My father-in-law had just signed on to work as a math teacher and track and field coach with Rossford schools. He may have also coached basketball at some point.
This is is the well-worn and comfortable house that I first walked into on a typically damp and raw Northwest Ohio October night in 1978, having been dating TG for two months.
(We both lived a four-hour drive away in Northwest Indiana at the time, where TG was a biology/chemistry teacher and basketball coach, and I was fresh out of Bible college, living with a friend who was engaged to a boy from my home church in Atlanta, and working at the mall.)
We had left earlier in the day and traveled to South Bend, Indiana, where TG coached a soccer game. After the game, the team went home on the athletic bus and TG and I proceeded eastward along the Ohio Turnpike to Rossford, a bedroom community of Toledo.
I was nervous to meet TG's parents. What would they be like?
In TG's white 1974 Toyota Celica, we pulled up into the driveway of the small blue two-story dormered house on a double corner lot that you see in the photo above (cadged from Facebook). It had long been dark out, plus cold and drizzly, but warm light poured from the windows.
As I settled on the sofa just inside the lower-level left-hand window seen in the photo, my future mother-in-law (who went by the nickname Dolly), a tall, slender, attractive lady of fifty-two, asked if I would like a glass of apple cider.
Stanley, Stan to his friends, my six-foot-six next-June-to-be father-in-law, occupied an armchair across the room. At fifty-three, he was a handsome man, a WWII veteran, an enigmatic individual cultivated from stoic Ohio farming stock.
Both Stan's and Dolly's genes live on, strong, in my children -- both in their looks and their personalities.
Stephanie is built like her grandfather's family and is practical and hardworking like her grandmother's. Erica resembles both her Grandpa, whom she favors at first glance, and her Grandma's father, whose likeness you can see if you look at a picture of him, then back at her.
Both she and Steph are taller, like the Webers and the Johnsons.
Andrew tends to favor my father more than the Weber side, just as Audrey favors my mother -- sometimes the two of them resembling their maternal grandparents in pictures to such an extent that it causes one to marvel at the mystery of DNA.
Their temperaments tend to coincide with those of the grandparents they take after, as well, some of the time.
But the features and mannerisms of all four grandparents are in there, in all of my kids.
You know what I mean.
Back in October of 1978, having been offered cider as a refreshment, I said: Could I have it heated up? As opposed to cold. I was chilled through to the bone from the day's activities.
Dolly Weber paused, peered at me for a few seconds, then gave a slight nod of assent and went into the kitchen, which was barely ten feet from where I was sitting.
I heard the rattling of pans and soon I was handed a steaming mugful of apple cider, for which I was most grateful. The beverage had been heated on the stove, the old-fashioned way.
Little did I know that my late mother-in-law was thinking (if not that night, then on subsequent nights, and days) something along the lines of, Oh no. No no no no noooooo not this one. Please not this one.
Haaahaha. Bygones.
(Her eldest, the son and heir, made me his choice and as such, her only choice was to deal with it. And I dearly loved my mother-in-law, and she loved me. We were just polar opposites, with the friction that is often the byproduct of that reality.)
It was what it was.
As I watched the house burn in this video, also posted to Facebook, so many memories flooded my mind.
I recalled the day in late spring of 1979 when my mother, having driven from Atlanta, stopped in the street in front of 604 Marilyn Drive and put her car in park, jumped out, leaving the driver's side door open, and ran up to the house.
She was too excited to park in the driveway and turn her car off, before seeing me and meeting TG and his parents.
The reason for her appearance there was that a few friends and relatives were giving TG and me a small wedding shower in the living room where, several months earlier, I'd first met my future in-laws. TG and I were married a few weeks later in Atlanta.
For a long time, as our family expanded, we drove the miles from wherever we lived, to Grandma and Grandpa's house several times a year.
In fact, our children grew up going to that Grandma's much more than to their other Grandma's.
And when they did, what they experienced there was a one-hundred-percent, one-hundred-eighty-degree difference from the experiences they had at my mother's house. Neither was better or worse; just so different.
All but a few -- a very few -- memories of that house in Rossford are precious, wonderful, good ones.
There were Christmases -- for at least twenty-five years, we spent every Christmas there -- and of course the summertime trips, with their particular memories.
Sleeping upstairs at Grandma's -- up the stairs were two bedrooms, one large and one small, under the dormers -- had its own challenges. There was a bathroom at the top of the stairs, between the two bedrooms, that was so oddly built that, when you opened the door halfway, it hit the sink with a dull thud.
I can still hear it. (I mean, where was the building code for that?)
I could go on at length about that bathroom but I'll keep it brief. In the picture at the top of this post, in the upstairs rear of the house, do you see the part that juts out? That was the bathroom in question. If you stood in the bathtub and turned around towards the wall, you looked out of that wide window (the bottom edge of which was at just below chin level for me).
Right across from the sink, within a built-in cabinet that held towels and such, there was an opening with a chute attached where you stuffed the towels and sheets when you were fixing to leave and go back home, sending them down to the basement where they landed in a cage suspended near the washer and dryer.
The bathroom contained a tub but no shower, except for the years that there was some gizmo or other hooked onto the faucet to give you a sort of spray apparatus. But it always fell off.
That was tough for the decade of the '80s, when I was pregnant four times.
The pokey cinder-block shower that guests were expected to use was in the basement (near that laundry cage), and was so utilitarian -- so basement-y -- that I could not bear to go down there. IYKYK*.
I don't know why I did not just march my bad pirate self (well, to be honest, I was not a pirate then, more's the pity) into the bathroom on the main floor -- Grandma and Grandpa's bath, in the hall outside their bedroom -- and take my shower. But I didn't. Somehow it felt off limits.
Despite certain quirks in the accommodations, spending the night at Grandma's was special. In fact, the last time I slept there was on a night in August of 2017, waking up the next morning in the small upstairs bedroom to the soft breeze coming in the window just over my head, and hearing the mourning doves cooing outside as they always did. (That sound will always be Grandma's house.)
It was the day that TG and I drove up into Michigan to meet my dear friend and blogging buddy Mari and her husband Bob (Bon to me; IYKYK*), and have a wonderful meal with them.
We returned to Grandma's house one more time, that night, but we've never been back. Well, that is, I haven't. TG was on the property for three-quarters of an hour after our niece's wedding last summer.
Since Grandma's passing, the house has been inhabited by TG's sister Ruth and her ex-husband (don't ask) and, at least in recent years, two of their adult children and their partners, plus now, a newborn (Baby Atalia Hazel was born on April 10, 2022), and five dogs.
Everyone, plus the animals, got out safely, since the fire happened after Ruth and several others had gone to work for the day on Tuesday.
The house is a total loss. There may be one or two small things that can be salvaged, but that's all.
My sister-in-law told me last night that every piece of clothing she owns, including all of her shoes, was destroyed. She has only what she was wearing at work that day.
If that happened to me I would probably just lie down in the dirt and die.
Of course friends and family members have come forth to donate both new and used clothing, and we will all pitch in because Ruthie is our beloved sister and aunt, and we ache for her.
The family will be displaced for many months. It's stressful and they need our prayers.
Here is a series of photographs taken at the scene and posted on Facebook by a local who apparently is fascinated with fire trucks. And there were plenty to gawk at.
Drawing a line from the night in October of 1978 to a night in March of 2016, I walked into the house on Marilyn Road for one of the last times, thirty-six hours after my mother-in-law's death. For the first time in nearly forty years, Mom (that's what I called her) did not come towards me with a smile, and embrace me.
It hurt to enter the house -- her house, hers and Grandpa's -- with its familiar never-changing ambience, its homey sights and smells, and for her not to be there. I walked the short distance down the hall to her bedroom, where she had lived the last days of her life in a hospital bed.
The room was empty. Just the bare carpet, and her dresser and a nightstand. It was hard to imagine that she would never walk or talk or sleep there again, in her own bed.
And now it's gone forever.
Looking at the picture at the top of this post, I have another heartbreaking memory.
Do you see the two windows on the side of the house (main floor) that's still mostly blue, instead of black from the fire? Specifically, the window on the right, where the blue is beginning to blacken?
Just inside there sat Grandma and Grandpa's kitchen table. Grandpa rose from that table for the last time on a January day in 2011, and had a massive stroke from which he never recovered.
A week or so later I was sitting at the table, drinking coffee, when I looked out of that window and saw something that caught my eye.
We had buried TG's dad the day before. His casket had been covered with a spray of gorgeous red roses.
After the graveside service (which was held in the mausoleum because it was so cold and the snow so deep), each family member was given one of the roses as a keepsake.
The morning after his dad's funeral, TG left before I did. He had to go back to work. I would be leaving the next day.
He'd been gone a short while when I looked out of the above-mentioned window and saw a red rose resting on a tree stump about thirty feet across the driveway and into the spare lot, straight ahead from the window.
It would have been not far from where the firefighter at the far left of the photo is walking away.
I was puzzled. Who had put that rose out there? I called TG and asked if he'd done it.
Yes, he said. Dad used to sit on that stump. I left it for him.
I will leave that for you.
It's the end of an era. There's a lot of sorrow; my children are grieving. Chad and Brittany never saw the house in Rossford, and now they never will, and neither will their children.
The other four grandchildren have seen it, but while the others may have dim memories, Dagny will not remember it.
TG is processing the tragic news quietly, as he tends to do everything. As for me, that house was the closest thing to an ancestral home that I have ever had.
Many right decisions that affected future generations in an enduring way, were made within the walls of that unassuming family home. No matter what changes and whatever time takes away, much of the fruit of those decisions remains.
It's a blessing today even more than it was a blessing then, and will always be as long as there are some who remember.
And that is all for now.
*If You Know You Know
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Happy Thursday