Weekend Warriors
Excerpt from Bro. Dick … a remembrance
I went to a play
recently. It was the Sacramento Theater Company’s production of Steinbeck’s Of
Mice and Men. There was no curtain to raise for the opening scene. Instead, the houselights dimmed to black, the
stage lights came up, and George and Lenny entered stage left.
That’s sort of what it was like for
Mom and me when we knew my brother Dick was coming home for the weekend. On Thursday after
school, I would go into what wife Barbara calls my Suzy Homemaker routine:
vacuuming, dusting, scrubbing the bathroom and mopping floors. Mom would make a
long list and head off to the commissary on the shipyard to shop for the weekend.
She’d stock the house with fruits and veggies, snacks and drinks, and all the
fixings for a special Sunday dinner. By the time Friday evening rolled around,
the house was in tip-top shape and the cupboards and fridge filled to
overflowing.
My brother would arrive from
Sacramento around 7:00 p.m. Mom and I would be sitting in the living room,
trying to act nonchalant, but glancing out the window every minute or so to see
if he was safely home. Dick would come up the walk and into the house, and then
it was like the stage lights coming up: our weekend could begin.
Through the daylight-saving months,
he’d drop his bag in his room, grab a cold Hamm’s from the fridge, and we’d go
outside to inspect the yard. Landscaping became our ongoing project after our father
died. Dad had kept about three quarters of the backyard for his vegetable
garden and there was no way Dick and I were going to maintain that tradition. So,
we planted grass, which came up thick and green, a tribute to the thousands of
yards of steer manure Dad had worked into the soil over the years. We built
brick planters around the foundation at the back of the house and filled them
with exotic plants from the Vallejo Nursery over on Springs Road. We kept some
flowerbeds for annuals and rotated them according to the season. As I said, it
was our project.
The purpose of the Friday night
inspection was to see how things were going and to map out the work that needed
to be done. Saturday was generally devoted to yard work: mowing, trimming,
pruning and planting. One favorite thing to do was to cruise over to the
nursery and browse through the rows of trees and shrubs and flowers. We tried
lots of things that didn’t work out, but it never dimmed our enthusiasm. I have
to say we kept the place looking pretty spiffy. And we had pet names for our
favorite plants. A fruitless mulberry tree became a mulless fruitberry.
We couldn’t remember the name of one of the plants, but the tag on it said,
“prune heavily,” so we just called it the prune heavily. You get the
picture.
I would go out with my friends on
Saturday night, to a movie or bowling or a dance at the High School. Dick
occasionally had a date with a girl in town named Laurie. She was very pretty
and the family got its hopes up that this would be the girl, but I don’t think
it ever went beyond casual dating.
We’d wind up back at the house
around midnight and then the fun would begin.
We’d hustle over to a place called Red’s on Solano Avenue to pick up a
pizza and then gather around the table in our dining room. My friends Dillon
Mini, Bruce Bigelow, and Jim Decious would join us. Mom always had something
fresh-baked for us to chase down the pizza. Then we’d clear the table, break
out the Tripoli board and launch into a spirited game. Tripoli is a board game
that I guess can be described as part poker and part gin rummy. Anyway, the
game would rage on until 2:00 or 3:00 a.m.
I’d take a break from the game at
times and go into my bedroom, which was right off the dining room. I’d turn on
the radio real low and pick up an all-night jazz station out of the Bay Area.
But I always left the door open. It gave me a good feeling to see and hear my mom,
my brother, and my friends talking and laughing and having a good time, with
Dizzy Gillespie or Gerry Mulligan & Chet Baker providing the soundtrack.
A typical Sunday involved going
over to the high school courts to play hours and hours of tennis. Usually this
was just Dick and Bruce and me, but sometime the other guys would join us. My
brother was a good tennis player, gliding around the court with that long
stride of his. In fact, we were all pretty evenly matched which made for good
competition.
After tennis, we would head home to
shower and clean up in time for Sunday dinner. Mom’s specialty was a sirloin
tip roast with mashed potatoes, pan gravy, lots of fresh veggies, and chocolate
devil’s food cake for dessert. After that we’d collapse in the front room and
wait for the Ed Sullivan Show to start.
That was a typical weekend with the
Spooners.
When Ed Sullivan said goodnight, it was time for Dick to
pack his car and head back to Sacramento, and time for me head for my desk and
make a half-hearted attempt to do the homework I’d been putting off all
weekend. As he left the house and went down the walk to his car, it was like
the stage lights dimming in the theater. For Mom and me, it wouldn’t be as
bright again until the next time he came home.
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