My grandfather was the quietest person in every room he ever entered. Not shy, not withdrawn, not socially inept the way people sometimes describe quiet men to soften the observation. He was simply a person who had decided, at some point in his life, that most things did not require comment, and who had lived that decision so thoroughly that by the time I knew him the silence had become structural, as much a part of him as his hands or his eyes. He lived in a small, fading house on the edge of a sleepy Ohio town, drove a truck that was old when I was born, kept a bird feeder in the backyard, and could repair almost anything mechanical with tools he had owned for thirty years. He never displayed a medal or a photograph from his service years. When I asked him about the past, he would smile with the patient indulgence of someone who has been asked the wrong question so many times that they no longer expect to be asked the right one. “That was a long time ago, sweetheart,” he would say, and change the subject, and you would find yourself somehow several minutes into a conversation about something else entirely without being able to name the moment when the turn had happened.
My parents found this exasperating. My father’s word for my grandfather was difficult, which he used with the specific confidence of a man who has decided that a person’s failure to perform their own significance constitutes a character flaw. My mother managed her feelings about him with the controlled politeness of someone enduring a recurring inconvenience they consider beneath them. He was not invited to holidays unless I pushed for it. He was not consulted about family decisions. When my brother made a joke at Thanksgiving about Grandpa’s greatest achievement being that he had never been arrested, everyone at the table laughed except me, and I watched my grandfather’s face from across the room and saw him absorb the joke with the same quiet patience he brought to everything, and feel something tighten in my chest that I could not fully name until much later.
I used to leave the table during those gatherings and sit with him on the porch. He would drink black coffee and watch the trees in the distance, and sometimes we would talk about small things, the birds, the neighbors, what I was studying, and sometimes we would simply sit, which he was better at than anyone I have ever known. He always said I didn’t have to stay with him. I always told him I wanted to. His eyes would soften and he would nod, and there would be something behind the softness that I registered without understanding, a weight that was not sadness exactly but was in the same family.
He wore a ring every day of his life. Simple metal, slightly worn, a small symbol etched inside that was not a name or a date but something I could not identify. When I asked about it at sixteen he said, “It reminds me who I am,” and moved on, and I filed the answer under the general category of things about my grandfather that were not going to be explained and that I had learned not to pursue.
