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Tuesday, 14 April 2009

A Wasted Brain in Oz

By wisewebwoman of The Other Side of Sixty

Over our nightly game of Scrabble, he’d pop the cigar from his mouth and wag it at me as if I were some kind of fool, which he thought I was anyway for he never got tired of reminding me of it back in the day: that my brains were wasted on me, a mere girl. I wouldn’t know what to do with them, when it should have been my brother, who was thick as two planks, who should have got them.

As I was saying, the cigar would be waving at me, trailing a stream of blue smoke, the lips would be pursed, he’d be staring at the Scrabble board, debating his next move, whistle-talking in that way he had, about too many consonants or too many vowels in his tiles, as if I, his brainy daughter, wasn’t challenged in such a way when it came to my turn.

He’d defend absurdities, like “oz”, referring to his absent best friend, the god of spelling, Father Ned, who’d use “oz” regularly in defiance of the Scrabble dictionary which I handed to him, my temper bubbling in spite of myself: where in god’s name did “oz” appear, I’d demand of him.

In response he’d take a long, deep puff and admonish me, his eyes rolling upward, telling me that the Scrabble dictionary was an American invention and what did they know about English and its usage please tell him, the expertise of Father Ned was all he, my father needed, thank you very much, for hadn’t Father Ned lived for years in America and could tell stories about it that would make your toes curl. What did the Americans know about English or the good Irish game of Scrabble.

So there we were, the fifty-year-old divorced daughter, the widowed seventy-five-year-old father, touring around America together in my car in search of his long lost uncle, Vincent Xavier Mullalley, who might be in Philadelphia. Or maybe in Boston or New York, for he had emigrated suddenly out of Cobh in County Cork when he was 16, 70 years before, and they’d never heard another word from him and maybe one of the phone books in one of these cities would give him up like an offering to his nephew, my father, who was named for him and who spent the afternoons of our trip dialing up Mullalley strangers in these American cities asking in his thick unintelligible Cork accent if they had a Vincent Xavier in the family.

Before we left on this trip, I’d remembered that when I was still living back home, before my own emigration, that together we’d always completed the challenging crosswords in the newspapers and followed up Sunday tea with a game of Scrabble where I would invariably beat him, much to his pouting annoyance.

So I packed the Scrabble board for this road trip but after the second bout of “oz” in the first few evenings of playing, I stretched that wasted brain of mine out even further and let him win each and every time and allowed him to gloat but not for long for I made sure he caught that little smirk on my face as I packed the game away. And that would shut him up right there in his tracks.

[EDITORIAL NOTE: All elders, 50 and older, are welcome to submit stories for this blog. They can be fiction, non-fiction, poetry, memoir, etc. Instructions for submitting are here.]

Posted by Ronni Bennett at 02:30 AM | Permalink | Email this post

Comments

Great story! I smell that cigar right now *grin*.

Ah, the timely smirk - an art not many command!

Considering how much I love Scrabble - I really like this story!! No one in my family will play with me, however, because they are just not into games. I don't know how they could have escaped that gene!

wisewebwoman
This is a funny well-ritten piece!

You should invent a new version of "sentence" scrabble, with words on the tiles and not letters. When you do, I guarantee you no one will be able to outscore you!
Sandy

Thanks, www, a fine story. Just spent an hour enjoying your website as well.

Oh thank you for all the wonderful comments.

Pattie: it took a lot of practicing!

Kenju: I'd love to play a game with you!

Sandy: Sentence scrabble, oh I do like the sound of that!

Mary: Thank you!

XO
WWW

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