My brother Walt built
a deck on the back of the house, and with a swing and a picnic table, it became
the hang out. One hot summer afternoon
mom and dad were on the deck. So were
Walt’s three boys and Beth and Shelly, playing with Rubik cubes grandma and
grandpa brought them. Timmy, probably
five or six at the time, came through the house onto the deck and joined the
crew. After some time he volunteered to
show how to get all the block faces back to the same color. Mom watched in horror as Timmy popped out one
cube from a grandchild’s Rubik. She
stopped him at once. Timmy disappeared,
reappeared with his own Rubik cube, and demonstrated the disassembly and
reassembly of a Rubik cube. In short
order he made the other children expert, too.
Timmy was a geek before there were geeks.
For their birthday I took Beth and Shelly to dinner, with a
friend. By the second or third time
around, Shelly just brought Timmy. Or,
he came anyway. He wasn’t just
omnipresent, he was a delight. He leaned
back in his chair after one birthday dinner, rubbed his stuffed belly and announced he
had gouged himself. The description is
part of the family lexicon now.
Timmy and Shelly spent long hot summers under the deck
awning, playing every board game and card game in our house or his. In the winter they moved to the kitchen
table. At Christmas he crawled up in the
attic and handed out the decorations. I
have another fond memory of him marching up and down the living room, in an
Abraham Lincoln stovepipe hat, memorizing the Gettysburg Address. One summer he
showed up just as I was about to take the rented roto-tiller back. I was so tired I was happy to have his help
to wrestle the machine back in the car.
At the store he took it out, then asked if we could stop at a store on
the way home. I protested; I was hot, tired,
filthy. He wanted to buy a mother’s day
card. We stopped. The next week I got a mother’s day card, too.
When Beth went off to school in 1982 the house seemed a
little less empty because Timmy came in every afternoon, just like another
kid. But when Shelly went off in 1985,
Timmy and I both were at a loss. It wasn’t
the same. He looked around right after
that first Thanksgiving, went upstairs and came back from the attic with
boxes. “We’re putting up the Christmas
decorations right now.” And he did.
Timmy was still in high school when I sold the house and left. Shelly kept in touch with him for some time
and gave me news. He became a computer
geek, of course. Never learned to
drive. Lived and worked in Pittsburgh as
a graphic designer.
Not too long ago I asked Shelly for news of Timmy, and she
admitted she’d lost touch. “You can’t
even find him on the internet?” Well,
she had no idea how to do that. Timmy
would be proud of me; I Googled him up for Shelly in five minutes or less. He’s still in Pittsburgh. He still doesn’t drive. He’s still a geek. They’re back in touch.
Oh good...a friend like that you don't want to lose.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful story!
ReplyDeleteA Bonza trip down memory lane :-).
ReplyDeleteHow lovely. I am so glad that they are back in touch. You deserved that Mother's Day card.
ReplyDeleteOh, the Timmy's in our lives! What a wonderful story. So glad you were able to find him again. Friends like that need to be kept!
ReplyDelete