A wooden door leads down into the basement. Dirt floor. Wood beams run across the ceiling. Shelves with canned tomatoes and Hungarian peppers are lined up and dated. A light bulb dangles above.
He tries opening a jar of the peppers while she sits in a corner, knitting a sweater for their grandson. Colors of red and yellow are woven together. The old man taps on the jar with his fist and tries to turn the lid.
Why did you have to put these on so tight? He asks. I mean. I know they got to be tight, but these are impossible to open.
She shakes her head and places the fabric in her lap. Give me that, she tells him. Come on. Give me that jar.
He hands her the jar of yellow peppers. You’re going to break your wrist, he says. Break the bone right in two.
She gives a little effort and opens the jar. Here, she smiles. Have at em. She then continues her needlepoint. She begins to sing a song. Humming at first, then singing out loudly. Cause when she gets behind closed doors, she belts out. And no one knows what goes on behind closed doors. She laughs. I love that, Charlie Rich, she tells him. He sure can sing that sonofabitch.
Right. He munches on a pepper. These ain’t that hot, the old man says. Not hot at all. Kind of sweet, he tells her.
They’re Hungarian peppers, she says, still knitting. They’re not supposed to be hot. She holds up the small sweater. You think he’ll like it?
Honey. He’s gone.
Gone where? She asks.
To heaven, he says.
Ohhhh. I forgot. Ain’t that something. Me, forgetting that. You could have reminded me before I stitched this, she throws the sweater down in the dirt.
Hey, he picks up the sweater. Don’t do that. You worked too hard on that. We’ll give it to the kid down the street.
Nevermind. I’ll just put it in the cedar chest with the others, she says. Besides. I don’t like that kid down the street. Looks like Chairman Mao.
All Chinese babies do, he laughs.
Yes. And white ones look like Winston Churchill, she looks away. Why didn’t they adopt an American kid? She asks her husband. Nobody buys American anymore.
Right.
I miss him.
So do I.