I was not my grandmother’s favorite grandchild, but I adored both my grandparents. I was devastated when we lost my dear Grandma on April 10, Easter Sunday, 1966.
I was a Junior in high school and heavily into the music of the day. I’d grown my hair long, cut bangs, grown them out again, and mimicked Joan Baez, Janis Ian and Judy Collins with my guitar. John Lennon, Bob Dylan and Hoyt Axton were my heroes, and I wasn’t the ingenue that my cousin Marci was. My grandmother often told me I should try to be more like her. I loved my grandmother too much to resent those comments and had no intention of ever being anyone but who I was.
Myrtine Petersen Grove, born July 16, 1891 in Colman, Moody,
South Dakota, died on April 10, 1966 in Enumclaw, Washington, at home, sitting in
a chair, eating her daughter’s canned peaches, put up in August of 1965, when
it never occurred to anyone that Grandma wouldn’t be with us the next summer, pressing the lids on fruits and vegetables to test the seal, making sure there was fresh coffee
perking, and cheese sandwiches drowning her dark Danish bread, while we all labored
away in the hot kitchen, juggling jars, rings, lids and boiling water.
My grandma’s bread was the best in the world, brown, with a
hint of sweetness, rich, like her constant coffee, little slices that were
often overwhelmed by layers of cheese, thinly sliced ham or beef, beet pickles
and tart mustard. Her klejner and æbleskiver were not just holiday
delicacies; they were warm in her kitchen on a regular basis, rolled in powdered or granulated
sugar, greeting you at the back door, assuring your special place in her
kitchen, which always smelled like a cross between a bakery and laundry, where the scent of her steam iron mixed with all the smells of a loving, well-tended home.
My Danish grandmother eschewed pants and wore delicate patterned and floral dresses of cotton, silk crepe and chiffon, even for daily wear. The scent
of lilacs and lavender will always remind me of resting my cheek against her soft bosom,
even as I grew into adolescence.
Even though I was the little hippie girl, and my grandmother would often tell me to get my hair out of my eyes, she was one of my biggest fans when it came to my singing and reading out loud. I don’t know who loved it more, she or I, when I’d sit cross-legged on the floor and entertain her, while she crocheted her lacy patterns, the needle weaving in and out, her fingers moving with practiced precise movements that she’d perfected over several decades.
The next morning, when my mother was in church playing the organ for the early Easter service, her mother went to be with her angels who’d gone on ahead of her. I'm sure they greeted her blowing trumpets, strumming harps and singing Broadway tunes like You Gotta Have Heart, from Them Damn Yankees, a musical my grandpa had taken Myrtine to see on one of their trips to New York. I suppose if that's where they are, I'll get to see her again one day. If that's where I'll go.
Thanks for reading...
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