It took us almost two months to comb through dad’s house, sorting the pieces of his unpursued passions into piles.
Keep.
Sell.
Donate.
Trash.
He didn’t have much in the way of food, but cookbooks in mint condition spilled out of his kitchen cupboards. Mystery novels were stacked neatly on his bedside table, suffocating under layers of dust. Princess Di’s biography and Stephen King’s The Shining lay face down on the coffee table, spines cracked towards the ceiling. Poets hid, forgotten, behind the basement bar. Daunting masterpieces of Joyce, Hugo, and Dumas stood proper and pristine in the bookcases of his spare bedroom. Harry Potter, curiously, was lined up neatly on the workbench in his garage next to an impressive collection of equipment manuals. Donate.
While I examined every paternal artefact with the zeal of an amateur archaeologist, my sister, Kate, executed our job grudgingly, methodically, the corners of her mouth tugged down in mild distaste. She held no curiosity for the life that gave us life, and I assumed her interest in him extended only as far as his had in her.
We waded through a world of short-lived hobbies. The shed in the yard boarded gleaming gardening tools, unspoiled art supplies, and a pair of cross country skis still marked with a discount sticker. Sell.
We purged every nook and cranny in the house of unused useful treasures. Three hundred glass mason jars collected dust and spiders in the alcove under the stairs; forty-five rolls of scotch tape curled up on their sides, stacked haphazardly in the cupboard above the washing machine; three five-gallon pails of assorted nails, screws, and bolts rusted behind the furnace. Keep. Donate. Trash.
A Yamaha keyboard piano emerged from under piles of forgotten laundry. Sell. Beginner sheet music for the guitar we’d never heard him play was buried in a wicker basket under a cascading mountain of magazines. The guitar in question was wildly out of tune. I strummed a dissonant chord absentmindedly, prompting Kate to grab and drop it with a reverberating hum next to a harmonica, a violin bow, and an assortment of small percussion instruments. Donate.
“We could sell that!” I exclaimed.
“He bought it at Walmart,” she replied flatly, and I briefly wondered how she knew.
Dad hadn’t been a bad guy, as far as I remember. I recalled him doing all the right dad things—teaching me to throw and catch a ball, taking us to the county fair to eat too much candy, bringing home a wriggling bundle of floppy ears and sad eyes that we crossed our hearts to feed, train, and walk (naturally, and much to her disgruntled dismay, it became mom’s exclusive responsibility).
It was just that, between the checked boxes of fatherhood, absence was his only constant.
Early on, it was missed birthdays, disappointing Christmas mornings, and an empty seat in the stands at my B Division hockey games. By the time I was ten, he banged through our door only once or twice a year. Kate would quietly disappear to a friend’s; mom would gravitate as if on auto-pilot into the kitchen to prepare a meal; I would hover, eager to brief him on my latest activities and accomplishments, hopeful he would finally divulge something about the band with which he was surely travelling, or the secret mission on which he must have been deployed. “This and that” was all he ever offered.
When Kate left home, he came around even less often.
I waded into the unmoored moodiness of my teenage years and developed (feigned) indifference in his disinterest. By the time I crashed clumsily from adolescence to adulthood, dad was a sort of non-entity that flitted and fluttered at the edges. He attended my university convocation, but didn’t stick around for the celebratory dinner. He stood by us at mom’s funeral, appropriately sad, but left us to make the arrangements and deal with her estate. He was invited to Kate’s wedding, but she asked me to walk her down the aisle.
At Kate’s orders, I tackled the bedroom, while she disappeared for days under unreasonable hoards of wooden spoons, tacky coffee mugs, and canned goods. The stench of sickness still clung to his mattress and its clothes. Trash. The neglected novels on his bedside table were jacketed in dust and blanketed in crusty tissues. Trash. Drawers were mostly empty save for a rolling lip chap and a handful of loose change. The rest of the furniture appeared in fine health. Sell.
Rifling through his closet, I found only a few crumpled receipts in the pockets of his clothes. Donate. My climbing bewilderment and disappointment reached their peak. A lifetime of pretending not to care aside, we finally had unfettered access to the private life of our flighty father. I wanted to find a trunk of sentimental memories in his basement, or a shoebox of photographs labelled with hard-to-read names stuffed in the closet, or a stack of secret-littered journals on the bookshelves. But the modest 900 square-foot house rejected my foolish fantasies.
Last year, Kate had learned dad was unwell. “Oh, by the way,” she hesitantly tacked on to our annual phone call, “Dad’s been in the hospital.”
I paused, caught off guard by her mention of his existence and, further, her awareness of his illness. I’d wanted to know more—what was wrong, should we go visit, who was taking care of him, who called her—but my tyrant nephews were wailing in the background, and she took advantage of my silent beat to skewer the conversation. “He’s fine now, at home, I guess. Listen, don’t worry about it…” She trailed off as the cacophony of family anarchy rose with a mighty crescendo, and the line died.
I didn’t call back, and neither did she. The next time we spoke, she delivered a dispassionate dispatch. “He’s dead.”
Now we stand among life’s leftovers.
Keep. Empty.
Sell. Posted.
Donate. Boxed.
Trash. Bagged.
There is no heirloom-worthy jewelry. There are no old family photos. There aren’t any accolades or love letters, not even a final will and testament. Nothing in seventy years’ worth of accumulation sheds a shred of light on who dad was or why.
I watch my sister lug bags and boxes out the door, and wish there was someone left who knew him.
When the trucks are packed and the house echoes in vacant relief, we stand on the front porch and watch the realtor pound a For Sale sign into the frosty lawn. I mutter, “I should have gone to see him, you know, before…”
Kate turns and looks up at me with the most peculiar expression of incredulity. She puts her gloved hand on my arm. For a long quiet moment it feels like she’s trying to convey something important, but all she leaves me with is: “See you at Christmas.”
And then she’s gone without looking back, bounding down the cracked concrete towards her car with a lightness in her step I’ve never seen before.
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227 comments
Good job with this story! You deserved the win. Side note—I physically cringed when Kate DROPPED the guitar. Very effective to portray the amount of care she had for all the stuff
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Thanks so much for reading!!
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Good Job. Emotional fare handled well is definitely the secret to win. You handled it perfectly. My favourite thing was the ending, that feeling of losing her sister as well was really powerful.
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Thank you!!!
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I love this story!
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Thank you!! Me too haha
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I love the concept of this story, out of the box and extremely creative. Your use of words brings the magic!
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Thanks for reading and the kind words!!
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This is a great read! You have captured so well the agony of cleaning out a parent's house. Yours is poignant because of what the children don't find. Nicely done.
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Thanks so much!!
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Congratulations!!! I really loved your story🤩❤️
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Thank you!!
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This will be what it's like when my dad dies, and when my father in law dies.... I've foreshadowed every moment of it- looks like I'm not the only one. Congrats on your win!
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Thanks so much!!
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That was great! A well deserved win.
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Thank you!
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Loved this! Congrats on the win, well deserved.
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Thank you!!
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really great prose and nice imagery
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Thanks!
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I found this story compelling and poignant. I fall into your father's generation, and if my children were to come pack up my house, they might have the same response. Communication these times is so hard. I reach out, but maybe clumsy. They do not respond. The two sides of this are both so sad! The result of losing "hometowns".
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Thank you!!
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Wow, congrats! Not for one moment did my eyes allow themselves to be lifted from the words.
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Thank you!!!
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Woah! I really loved this story, your descriptions were articulate and really heartfelt, reflecting the narrator's mental state in a very relatable way. It was an accurate way to depict life itself, and I enjoyed it thoroughly. Congrats on the win!
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Thank you!!!
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Big stuff: Wow, Christina, this is so well-written. It reminded of "The Things They Carried" by Tim O'Brien. If you haven't read it, I recommend it highly. Your story addresses the prompt in a very creative way: The daughter who feels like one of her father's unpursued hobbies. You show this parallel so clearly, without telling it explicitly. I love it! I hope your story does well in this week's contest. Small stuff: I loved the italicized decisions for each item. The only one that didn't quite work for me was the three all together at the...
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Thank you so much! I have not read The Things They Carried, but I will definitely check it out. I really really appreciate the feedback. You're right, I missed that the novels were mentioned twice! Oops. I do also like to play around with tenses in dialogue - I think realistically it's not something people pay too much attention too when they actually speak, and I like to try and capture natural conversation - here she's definitely distracted :) Thanks again for the read and critique!
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Wow, your story did *really* well haha! I'm glad I got to read it before it won. Congratulations!
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Thank you!!! Haha amazing
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I enjoyed your work on this prompt. Definitely triggered the 'what are you here for?' question. I found the relationship between the siblings interesting too. At first, I thought they were close. But you slowly revealed to us towards the end that this wasn't the case. Kate is quite the mysterious one. Great work!
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Thanks so much for reading and the kind feedback :)
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I enjoyed this take on the prompt. I particularly liked "the life that gave us life" reference. I am curious as to why the sister seems particularly aloof, yet she had more contact with the father near the end of his life. Great job!
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Thank you for reading!! I wanted to leave her situation open to interpretation and somewhat mysterious, maybe even emphasizing the lack of relationship between the siblings. Again, thanks so much for reading and commenting :)
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I really liked the detailed descriptions. The alliteration in the first is a nice touch. I was hoping that there would be some revelation of who the father was in his pursuit of hobbies, but maybe the point was in there not being one. I wonder how this story would look if the first section, the lists of items, were more interspersed with the second section (the description of the father from the perspective of the son/daughter. Maybe the various hobbies could even be linked to the memories, or maybe that's too big a stretch. Anyway, really n...
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Thanks David! I appreciate the thoughts and the kind words. I did play around with the arrangement of the sections like you've suggested while writing, but felt this version flowed best. I'll take another look when I have fresh eyes and see if it can be tweaked a little more :) thanks again!
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Christina, it's a beautiful story. A father who was indifferent to the lives of his children flitted through an assortment of hobbies that are all exhibited for despatch at his life's end. So many layers of meaning may be attached to the whole story. Very creatively done. Well deserved win!
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How easy or difficult it is to remember someone's birthday? Especially when that someone is your best friend! Read this story to know more - https://vineelwrites.blogspot.com/2021/06/happy-birthday.html
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Christina - excellent story. The first one that I read on this site. Thank you bj
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