My wife’s stepfather, Dale, died unexpectedly yesterday after
a three-year private battle with leukemia. He married my mother-in-law when my wife was just a little girl aged two.
He was 84 years old and led a long, active life. To
paraphrase Sinatra, he did it his way. Disappointed, discontented and
disillusioned with the corporate world of the late 1970s, he and my wife’s mother
cashed everything in and relocated a thousand miles from Michigan to the
untamed wilds of Hilton Head, South Carolina. There they hung up their
architectural shingles and proceeded to build the island up. After clearing out
the gators and copperheads.
Dale was the quintessential quiet man who knew exactly
and at all times what he wanted. My wife affectionately referred to him as the
“Swedish James Bond.” Long, lanky, always debonair even in jeans and black T,
always witty. A self-taught gourmet chef, he was the classic definition of an
epicure, a connoisseur of fine food and finer wines, a bon vivant, a
gastronomist. When we’d stay with them a week or two every year, I can honestly
say I never, ever, had a bad meal from his kitchen.
In his later life he became a traveler. Whether to
Arthur Avenue to hunt out the latest greatest in cheeses and meats or Wrigley
Field to hunt out a winning Cubs team, he and my mother-in-law racked up the
frequent flyer mileage. Those long thin legs of his tallied up the kilometers
of the Italian north, unknown numbers of rustic hostels, cobblestone streets,
Milanese cafes and Tuscany villages. An autodidact with a photographic memory,
he picked up conversational Italian one winter to better arm himself for
haggling with the beloved peasantry.
I first met him twenty years ago at La Guardia
Airport. They were stopping back from a week in Europe, I had just started
dating their daughter. I must confess to being more than a little unsettled; I
don’t believe he spoke more than a sentence or two with me. In fact, over the
next two decades, I think we exchanged perhaps the equivalent of a
Shakespearian monologue. He made me look positively extroverted. But that was
all right. After dinners, wine freely flowing, he’d regale the party with
hilarious stories of his past or their travels. A born entertainer, if a quiet
one.
Reminds me of a joke:
Two
Swedes meet one night at a bar. First Swede pours two drinks; second Swede says,
“Cheers,” and they both down the booze.
Ten
minutes later the first Swede pours another round. Second Swede says, “Cheers,”
and they both drink.
The
first Swede frowns and turns red.
Ten
minutes later the first Swede pours another round. Second Swede says, “Cheers,”
and they both drink.
Now
the first Swede starts trembling with barely concealed rage.
Ten
minutes later he pours another round. Second Swede says, “Cheers,” and drinks
his drink.
The
first Swede can’t take it any longer, explodes, and pounds the table: “Are we
here to drink or talk!!??!!??”
That’s not quite Dale, for I never saw him react to
anything with anything approaching anger, but I like the fact that silent
moderation seems to be a genetic trademark of the Swedes. It certainly was with
him. And even though that predisposition to taciturnity kept touchy feelyness
out of the equation, he had a profound admiration of and enjoyment in the lives
and accomplishments of his daughter and granddaughters; that was obvious to all.
He was diametrically opposed to me on many levels. An
MSNBC devotee, I had to actually tell him that channel didn’t work on my cable
box when he came to visit our house one day. He also held no opinion on
religion or belief in an afterlife. Whether he was an atheist or simply
agnostic, I have no idea. But I do think he must have had an inkling to the
existence of God. After all, he did live long enough to see his Cubs win the
World Series after a century-long drought.
What we did have in common was a love for classical music.
I threw myself fully into it in the spring of 1998, right around the time I
first met him. A few weeks later, prompted by my future wife, he emailed us a
list of ten or twelve essential Classical pieces to investigate. “Once you can
hum them all,” he wrote, “we’ll work on a second list.” I still have that email
printout somewhere in my files, and when I come across it again I’ll post it
here.
As a kid he played the sax and was a serious jazz
aficionado. He must’ve gotten a kick out of Patch, who is in her second year
playing the sax at school and brought it down with her this past Christmas to
play for her grandparents. I also delved a bit into his jazz collection that
week, too. Particularly liked a Charles Mingus CD he had. Later while browsing
online I discovered a series of CDs on “Hot Swedish Jazz.” Have you ever
contemplated such a thing? Apparently, it is. We were going to get the set for
him either for his upcoming birthday or next Christmas, but, alas, that is not
to be. Perhaps we’ll pick them up and listen to them in his honor on those
special dates, dry martinis or glasses of Italian Barolo in our hands and sparkling
cider in the girls’.
Rest in Peace, Dale. It was a pleasure to know you; I
only wish the ice was not so thick between us.
Grandpa
and Little One, 2011
Hopper, as usual, you nailed it! Did not know the man very well but we will forever admire him for giving his love and devotion to your wife and your daughters...that says a lot about a man...RIP, Dale
ReplyDeleteBeautifully done, thank you.
ReplyDelete