Moraine Avenue was a dead end street. It had a sort of alley at the end that went
back to a rental house and then continued on through to Gardendale. Very convenient for circling the
neighborhood.
Mr. and Mrs. Davis lived almost at the end of the street. The house Jan went to to dry out and miss an
afternoon of school after she fell in the puddle. My parents and the Daviess were friends in
the way parents had back then of bringing a chair and their coffee and sitting
in some backyard while the kids played and caught fireflies until the street
lights came on.
The Davis’ were warmly mysterious. They were from “the South” and each spoke
with warm, soft accents we didn’t hear at home.
They came with names we had never heard.
Rankin and EllDean. There was a
contest on an afternoon radio show; if you had the first name of the day and
called the station first, you won something from the local grocery. EllDean called the station to comment on the
unfairness; she would never hear Rankin or EllDean among all the Johns, Larrys,
Sues and Marys they called out. The very
next afternoon the name was EllDean!
Everyone on the street listened for her to call, and as the minutes
ticked away and someone ran down to find everyone gone at the Davis house, the
women of the street began calling in and explaining she wasn’t home but surely
would call if she were. I believe
EllDean won their daily prize.
Rankin and EllDean had a Scotty dog. He came as a pup about the time I was four or
five, and joined the neighborhood kids daily as soon as he was big enough to go
out and play. His name: D Bye.
D Bye ran with the bikes, watched ball games, went off with one bunch of
adventurers or another. Like the rest of
us, his basic rule was to be home for bed when the streetlights came on.
D Bye never gave up on kids; when the interests of one set
turned to dating or cars, he took up with the younger siblings. His sturdy terrier legs carried him miles
around the neighborhood. But as he got
up in age, his eyesight began failing.
Sadly, Rankin and EllDean confined him to home and got a raggedly little
mutt to keep him company. Ever the
terrier escape artist, D Bye left home every day, his mutt in tow. D Bye eventually became totally blind, but
not before he taught his mutt everything.
For years you could still see a totally blind Scotty trotting down the
road, his mutt against his shoulder, manning the wheel.
I asked Rankin, years later, what was D Bye’s real
name. He said they’d always just called
him D Bye.
“But what does that mean,” I asked.
He enunciated carefully.
“The Boy.”
Oh, that reminds me of the Newfoundland accent here!!
ReplyDeleteJane x
As the comment above, I was thinking Newfoundland myself.
ReplyDeleteOh, what a great post.....loved every bit of it and even teared up.
ReplyDeleteD Bye sounds so exotic though. That was another lovely post. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteGreat post as ever. "The boy" for "D Bye"..OK, I can hear it.
ReplyDeleteWell done D Bye and the raggedy mutt. Beautiful post.
ReplyDeleteAww ... love this story. Sweet.
ReplyDeleteLove this story! Being a child of a navy man, I was never able to call any one state "home", but my roots would be in the deep south of Georgia where everyone called my dad "the yankee".
ReplyDeleteI have to tell my kids about D Bye! My youngest, a son, is affectionately know throughout the family as "The Boy", even though he is now 31 years old.
ReplyDeleteJoanne, your stories just keep getting better and better. I love them. I can see the little, blind D Bye and his escort. What a sweet, sweet tale (or tail)!
ReplyDelete