Mike Fitzgibbons and His Morning Paper
"Words are words," Mike said at the time.
"Being paid more money to arrange words for someone else seems like the
right thing to do."
Writing and editing were the two things
in life Mike could do well enough to draw a salary. It broke his heart
to retire many years later at the age of 68 but it seemed like the best
thing to do. His doctor had told him he might have early Alzheimer's
disease and that he should prepare for the future since the disease
would only grow worse. Mike never told his wife or any of the children
about the problem. His wife was the excitable type, and all of the
children had grown up and moved away, many of them back to Chicago where
all of them had been born. Each of them had acquired a college degree
or two and had found a good job. Most of them were married. Mike and his
wife now had 12 grandchildren and were looking forward to more.
"You can never have too many heirs," he
told his wife one time. "Whatever we leave, it will give them something
to argue about after we're gone. They won't forget us."
After the doctor had mentioned the strong
possibility that he had Alzheimer's disease, Mike decided to have the
daily paper delivered to the house instead of driving to the store every
morning to buy one. And on most days that seemed like a good decision.
But not on the infrequent days when the deliveryman soared by Mike's
house without tossing a paper on the lawn.
The first time it happened Mike called
the circulation department and received a credit on his bill. He did the
same thing the second time, managing to keep his temper under control.
But the third time occurred on the morning after the Super Bowl. For
Mike this was the last straw. Three times he told the kind old lady in
the circulation department to tell the driver Mike was from Chicago
originally and in that fine city errors of this magnitude did not go
unanswered. A credit on Mike's bill, while necessary, would not
suffice.
When his wife Dolly got up, he asked her,
"How the hell can I check the stats on the game without my newspaper?"
She was only half awake. Mike was a very early riser and Dolly,
according to Mike, was a "sack hound."
A kind woman, Dolly had always tried to
be helpful throughout the many years of their marriage, so Mike
understood why she eventually suggested he drive to the QuikTrip and buy
a paper. Then he could read about the game and check the stats, she
said.
"That's not the point, Dolly," Mike said.
"I have a verbal contract with that paper for delivery and they are not
keeping their side of the bargain. A credit on my bill is not adequate
recompense." Mike loved the sound of that last sentence as it rolled off
his tongue. He always loved the sound of words whether they were
floating in the air alone or jailed in a sentence or paragraph.
What made matters worse, Mike told Dolly,
is that without his newspaper he would have no way to check on the
obituaries of the day. The obituaries were Mike's favorite part of the
paper. Back in his old ethnic neighborhood in Chicago, the obituaries
were known as the Irishman's Racing Form.
Back then, many retired Irish immigrants
would spend the day reviewing the obituaries in the city's four
different newspapers. Finding a good obituary primed them for
conversation at the local tap after supper. The tap was run by the
legendary Rosie McCarthy, a humongous widow who did not suffer any
nonsense in her establishment. But she did offer free hard-boiled eggs
to customers who ordered at least three foaming steins of Guinness. Eggs
were cheap in those days. It was rumored that Rosie had to buy 10 dozen
eggs a week just to keep her customers happy.
"Rosie knows how to hard boil an egg,
Dolly," Mike had told his wife many times over the years. And his wife
always wondered what secret Rosie could possibly have when it came to
boiling eggs.
One reason the obituaries were of such
great interest in Mike's old neighborhood involved the retirees wanting
to see if any of their old bosses had finally died. Some of those bosses
had been nasty men, so petulant and abrasive they'd have given even a
good worker a rash. There was also the possibility that over in Ireland,
the Irish Republican Army might finally blow up a bridge with the Queen
of England on it. The IRA had been trying to do that for years. Many
bridges had been blown to smithereens but not one of them had "Herself"
on it.
"The IRA keeps blowing up bridges,
Dolly," Mike would remind his wife. "You would think one of these times
they'd get it right. They know what she looks like."
In addition to reading four newspapers a
day as a young man, Mike had had other hobbies during his long and
tumultuous life. He had bred rare Australian finches for decades and had
won prizes with them at bird shows. However, after his last son had
graduated from college and moved away, Mike sold more than 200 finches
and 40 cages because he no longer had a son available to clean the
cages. Five sons had earned allowances over the years cleaning the cages
at least once a week. All of them ended up hating anything with wings.
One son had even bought a BB gun and would sit out in the yard all day
while Mike was at work. That boy was a pretty good shot. No one knows
how many woodpeckers and chickadees he managed to pick off.
After Mike sold his birds, he took the
considerable proceeds and plowed all of the money into rare coins. For
the next ten years he collected many rare coins but when he retired he
figured he may as well sell them because none of his children had any
numismatic interest. Not only that, none of them would have known the
value of the coins if Mike died. Some of them were very valuable--the
1943 Irish Florin, for example, in Extra Fine condition would have
brought more than $15,000 at the right auction. Mike loved that coin and
kept it, along with all the others, in a large safe in the basement.
Guarding the safe was a large if somewhat addled and ancient bloodhound.
Mike had bought the dog from a fellow bird breeder when it was a pup.
The bloodhound wasn't toothless but he may as well have been. He
wouldn't bite anyone no matter how menacing a robber might be.
"I love that dog, Dolly," Mike would tell his wife every time she suggested that euthanasia might be the best thing. "That dog, Dolly, is as Catholic as we are and Catholics don't abort or euthanize anything," Mike said.
When Mike finally sold all of his coins,
he had a great deal of money that he viewed as disposable income. Dolly,
however, viewed it as an insurance policy in case Mike died first. Mike
had a couple of pensions but he had never made Dolly a co-beneficiary.
In fact he convinced her to sign waivers so the payout to him would be
larger. Dolly didn't want to do it but signing was easier than reasoning
with Mike. His temper seldom surfaced but when it did, things weren't
good for weeks around the house.
"I get mad once in awhile, Dolly, but I always apologize," Mike would remind her.
Mike finally decided to put the coin
money into guns--big guns--although he had never shot a gun in his life.
He refused to go hunting because he saw no sense in killing animals
when meat was available at the butcher store. The kids used to joke that
maybe deer and pheasant were Catholic, too.
Some of the guns Mike bought were the
kind you would see in action movies. Mike always liked action movies.
The more the gore, the happier Mike was. But he had to go to action
movies alone because his wife hated gore but she liked musicals. No
musicals for Mike, although he would always dig into his pocket to give
her the money for admission, complaining occasionally that the cost of
seeing musicals kept going up.
"I don't want to spend good money to see a
bunch of people in costumes and wigs singing songs together when Frank
Sinatra, all by himself, sings better than any of them." Sinatra had a
good voice, the kids thought, and it probably didn't hurt that he was
Catholic. One of them once suggested to Mike that it might be nice if
they played a recording of Sinatra's "Moonlight in Vermont" at church.
Mike didn't agree or disagree because he thought some sacrilege might be
involved.
Mike remembered his gun collection on the
day the deliveryman had failed to throw his newspaper on the lawn. He
decided that the next morning he would sit out on his front porch at 3
a.m. with a big mug of coffee and the biggest rifle he owned. When the
delivery van drove down his street, he planned to walk out to the curb,
rifle in hand, to make sure he got his paper and to advise the driver of
the inconvenience his mistake of the previous day had caused.
"There's no way this guy's a Catholic," Mike said to himself. "Three times now he has skipped my house with my paper."
The next morning things went exactly as
planned--at the start. Mike was out on his porch with his rifle and
coffee at 3 a.m. when the van came rolling down the street. Mike got up
and strolled down the walk toward the van, his rifle resting like a
child in his arms. Mike couldn't have known, however, that the van
driver had been robbed several times over the years and that he carried a
pistol in case someone decide to rob him again. When he saw Mike coming
toward him down the middle of the street carrying a rifle, the driver
decided to take no chances. He rolled down the window and put a bullet
in Mike's forehead.
One shot, dead center, was all it took, and Mike, still a big strapping man, fell like a tree.
The next day the story about the death of
Mike Fitzgibbons made the front page of his beloved paper and Mike
himself was listed in the obituary section. The obit advised that
friends of the family could come to the wake at Eagan's Funeral Home on
Friday. It also pointed out that a Solemn High Funeral Mass would be
said for Mike on Saturday at St. Aloysius Church, where Mike had been a
faithful member and stalwart usher for decades.
Two days after the funeral, a neighbor
was shoveling snow for Mike's widow. He happened to look up and saw the
missing newspaper stuck in the branch of one of Mike's Weeping Willow
trees. Mike had an interest in Weeping Willows and had planted a number
of them over the years, too many some of the neighbors thought for the
size of his property. This was the first time a newspaper had gotten
stuck in one of the trees, his wife said. And it would be the last time
because she had canceled the subscription to the paper the day Mike
died. Like her husband, Dolly was a woman of principle and she thought
canceling the paper was the least she could do in his memory. She had
never read the damn thing anyway.
Donal Mahoney
No comments:
Post a Comment