It was a breezy,
cool-ish June afternoon in 2012, with a bonfire crackling in the side yard and smoke blowing
every which way. I arrived at June and Dean’s for the memorial gathering and
spotted Janice and her brother Wesley and lovely Linda, and the older woman Aila who
used to volunteer to work on the archives donated from Alf the town historian,
when we all worked together at the Guild.
June’s small
fluffy dog Snickers, acquired not too long ago from the spca, romped around
the woodsy yard, with obvious grand pride in his newly acquired digs. Dean went inside and came
back out with a tribute
tray of Dana's favorite beverages: a pitcher of Margaritas, and a bottle of Prosecco...we
chose our favorites. We toasted solemnly
and clinked glasses. Lovely Linda told
of the last time she and I and Dana had gone to the Mexican restaurant for
dinner and imbibed Margaritas, and upon leaving, I’d had to help both of them
to the small red car, because of their respective dizziness and balance issues. She made it sound festive and funny and there were a few chuckles around the fire.
June mentioned
she'd put some sacrificial type offerings in the fire earlier (I hadn’t thought
of that). Then Janice reached for her purse
and came out with a tiny Swiss flag on a toothpick, along with a picture of she
and Dana, at the Matterhorn. She tossed both into the fire, not saying anything
else about it. She had traveled with
Dana to Switzerland two years before, when Dana was still hiking and making her
annual trek to Zermatt, a pilgrimage she’d continued for at least twenty years
after her husband Malcolm died many years before.
Other friends
arrived: Rowena and Tom, Lawrence, Darlene, and an unknown gent with dark
glasses, though it seemed way too late in the day for dark glasses and we were
in the woods, so to speak. And Ardith.
Although it was cool enough for us all to don gloves and stand with arms folded
over our collective chests, Ardith somehow was comfortable with no jacket at
all, and her black curly wet hair – ah, youth.
We stood (or
alternately kept moving in circles) around the bonfire with our drinks, trying
to avoid ingesting the smoke, and seeming to pair off a bit to tell “Dana”
stories. I think the talk around the
fire was a bit fractured. I talked with Rowena, Tom talked with Dean, Ardith
and Aila sat and talked, a paradim pairing of the youngest and the oldest
present; June gave Wesley a tour of her garden,
Lawrence talked with….? Was it my imagination or were there some women
studiously not talking with each other?
(This is only in retrospect).
Rowena shared
with me what had gone on with Dana on the last day. She had gone to see her and the doctor was there
and gave her the report (she’d been put on a list of approved people to talk
with) Dana had a perforated bowel; Rowena says casually, in that frank, intense
way she has, well, she did have
diverticulitis, but it also could have been the chemo, and the doctor told Dana
he could perform the necessary surgery, or he could “make her comfortable.” It was her choice. Dana said “no surgery”, knowing what the
surgery involved and that it would change nothing about her cancer, but give
her additional complications. Rowena
said Dana was very clear about her choice.
After that, things went pretty quickly.
Rowena had other things to say, trite stuff, old stuff, about the Guild
and Dana’s choices, and her not agreeing, but I didn’t really listen, and sort
of drifted away, looking for another conversation.
We all went
inside to eat and folks clustered in twos and threes in the warm, cluttered rooms, sharing their individual
stories about Dana. Then, Darlene called
everyone’s attention, and she read much of the obituary that had appeared in the Woodstock Times about Dana. Lawrence said nothing, but I
knew she had written the piece. Dana’s close friends Suzannah, Shirley, and
Barbara were not there, and I wondered why not. I felt that it was particularly
hard for Linda and of course Ardith, both of whom were very constant and present supporters for Dana
in the past year, Linda going with her to her chemo treatments, Ardith taking
care of Dana’s cherished cats, with those Greek names I never could remember.
I felt when I
came home, that so much was unsaid, but maybe that is just the nature of it
all. Everyone has much to say, but it is
hard and bittersweet to say it, or maybe we just want to keep the memories to
ourselves. We knew different parts of Dana. That's how it is with people. She had such a broad spectrum of friends, and
over a goodly period of time. It seemed a bit ironic, for she was not an
overtly expressive or emotional person, but yet one knew where her devotions
lay. She was a loyal friend, a very loyal friend, but sometimes one did not
know why. Even in her last weeks alive, there was no real connecting in a very
personal way, for me, anyway. She seemed
unable to ever get very personal except if there were too many vodkas or
Margaritas.
When June and Janice and
Arlene and I saw her last on her birthday, the Ides of March, we had gathered at
the Thompson House, a hospice. We popped
the champagne, we had bowls of M&M’s, her favorites, and we sang Happy
Birthday. Darlene told a great story from
the old days when she’d worked with Dana
at the Hudson Valley Philharmonic, which involved a famous scheduled guest
conductor, a missing limo and a pair of white gloves, and Dana added a few
points that she felt Arlene missed, but mostly she just smiled and nodded at
the remembrance, the telling of the story.
Dana loved a good story. She lay
back in her bed, propped against the wall, wearing her Cubs hat, with the word Cubs spelled out in hieroglyphics. The Cubs, Egyptian history, Switzerland, and her little red car with the license plate ALPS, those were Dana's favorite things. Happy Birthday Dana!