Ed lost whatever inhibitions he was genetically predisposed to during the 1920's. His dad, a captain of the Sioux Falls' Fire Engine company, died in the 1918 flu epidemic leaving two sons and a daughter. His mother moved back to her hometown and it soon became apparent that the boys were too much to handle. So on a dry, dusty summer day, the battered black Ford drew up to the Odd Fellow's Home in Dell Rapids and two little boys were given into the care of the retirees and staff of the rest home. The adventure of Ed's life began there and it ended 80 years later around the same time he stopped buying green bananas.
This one's for Ed.
"Where are you from and what do you do?" said the man crossing my front yard. An old curmudgeon smoking unfiltered cigarettes lived in the pink house next door to mine. Who lives in pink houses anyway? This coarse, surly, old man did. "It's my wife's favorite color and her only request after following me around the world was for a house she could call our own and to paint it pink." "My name's Ed."
Ed's stories played out like a technicolor movie. Where scrappy boys of 8 and 10 would hustle the staff, terrorize the nursing aides and listen intently to the stories of the WWI veterans who were living out their last days entertaining the kids with tales of the Great War. Where the protagonist starts chain smoking at 14 and is reunited with his mother only to find out that it was because a young man's strength is an asset, not a liability, to making money on the surrounding farms. Where that move sets the stage for the hero to meet the love of his life - Mo.
Before enlisting in the Navy in the late 1930's, Ed and his brother did a stint in the CCC building Iron Mountain Road out in the Hills. He rode the rails across South Dakota in empty train cars on the weekends or when he was needed back on the farm. "Gettyburg's sheriff was the best. He'd figure when we'd be on the cars, take us off and give us something to eat. You'd get a hell of a lecture but the food was worth it."
He went to the South Pacific looking for Amelia Earhart, was in Pearl Harbor years before its destruction and had a chance to join the crew who would support one of Admiral Byrd's expeditions to Antarctica. He came home ready to settle down, married his high school sweetheart and then the "Japs bombed Pearl Harbor" - that's how he talked. He and his brother were sent back to the Pacific.
It took forever to get home after the peace treaty had been signed. There were only so many ships, and it took days, sometimes weeks to get from point A to point B and he'd pass from one ship to the next in his haphazard logistical voyage heading east. "Whenever you could catch a ship headed to the east you did. No one knew when you'd return home." It turned out to be a great surprise for Mo when he appeared at the bottom of the apartment building steps. Cue the background music.
Coming home, he missed the service and found it difficult to make ends meet. So he enlisted again, only this time in the army. Now based in Japan, he was providing support for the police action in Korea. Calling Korea a police action pissed Ed off, I only did it once. War is war and he saw action at Inchon, Iwon, Ulsan, Hungnam and the second landing at Inchon.
After Korea, they were off to France. He didn't have much nice to say about the French. Rebuilding efforts were in earnest and Berlin was the epicenter for the Cold War. He passed through what would be known as Checkpoint Charlie a few months before the wall was completed. He also provided coordination services for the crew filming "The Longest Day". I loved those stories best. "That Zanuck fella would prance into the officer's club all gussied up, you'd never see him without some fancy scarf tied up around his neck." Or another favorite, "Eddie Albert was a really nice fella when he wasn't drinking but he was pretty much drinking all the time."
A forty year old he said had no place trying to keep up with the 18 year old enlisted men so he passed on an opportunity to go back to Asia as an advisor. "My time was over and it was probably a good thing." He was one of the very few service men to ever reach the highest enlisted rank in two branches of service. I don't believe that is possible now.
So they came home. Bought a house. Painted it pink. Mo died the year I moved in next door. She had severe dementia and he placed her up to the Odd Fellows Home in Dell Rapids for her final days. He'd come home and report back to me on all the comings and goings and when she was gone he was deeply saddened by her passing.
During the week he would drive his Chrysler down to the VFW for breakfast and lunch, smoking, talking politics and swapping stories. During the day he would put on his uniform and conduct flag ceremonies on behalf of the VFW. He never, ever passed up a chance to talk to the kids at the Children's Home Society. His story, he felt, was one they could connect with.
Toward evening he'd watch for me to come home and if I wasn't outside within thirty minutes he'd be at my door, saying "Coming out?". Unless it was Wednesday. On Wednesday he'd go over to the Center for Active Generations, he called it degenerates, to dance. He'd come home exhausted having danced into the night with a whole bevy of ladies - some he said danced better than others. There he met a North Dakotan with a deep German brogue. The two of them became inseparable. She'd take the bus to the pink house and he'd take her home in the Chrysler.
He'd interrogate all of the bums he proclaimed I dated and he'd come to every family gathering I hosted. He didn't need an invitation, he would just walk over when he saw the guests gathering. Someone would always give him his classic opening line by asking him his age. "Well, you know I don't buy green bananas anymore" and he would close at the end of a night's stories with "I was so poor the only thing a thief would get from robbing me is experience". Pocketbook poor but rich in life.
He was demanding and intrusive. He wouldn't take no for an answer. And underneath it all, was that six year old boy on an adventure. He golfed, attended Mardi Gras, and as a retired prison guard, signed up to watch hospitalized prisoners after 9/11 way into his eighties.
He hadn't been feeling well through December of '03 and in January I got a call. "I got some bad news today - small cell lung carcinoma. The doctor says I got maybe six weeks. Said the smoking didn't cause it. I'd sure like to make it to Valentine's Day though. Mo died on February 14. I'd sure like to see her again then."
He planned his own funeral. Asked his own pallbearers to carry him. Picked out his uniform, had it laundered and mended. Then his son, son-in-law and grandson moved in to the pink house. They played cards, chain smoked Camels, and told the funniest stories. I would sit by Ed's side each night and take in what I later called a sacred journey - life to death.
When he left the pink house by wheelchair for inpatient hospice care, it was spring - Easter to be exact. He had called the week before and let me know that he wouldn't be around to ride with me in the convertible one last time. I told him not to worry, as his presence would always be felt. And on a Saturday I went to say good bye. I was off to meet a bum. He had me bend down - "no more jewelry" he said. I laughed. My closest family and friends will know what that means. A last little piece of advice, not nearly as colorful as "got a middle finger, then use it." but his message was conveyed.
The formal send off was sad, but the impromptu party that night with his family was ridiculously fun. There was drinking, karaoke, gambling, and chain smoking. And then there were stories of Ed, the perfect party favor.