Obituary Writer (9780547691732) Read online




  The Obituary Writer

  Porter Shreve

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Table of Contents

  ...

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  1

  2

  3

  4

  5

  6

  7

  8

  9

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  A MARINER ORIGINAL

  HOUGHTON MIFFLIN COMPANY

  Boston • New York

  Copyright © 2000 by Porter Shreve

  All rights reserved

  For information about permission to reproduce

  selections from this book, write to Permissions,

  Houghton Mifflin Company, 215 Park Avenue South,

  New York, New York 10003.

  Visit our Web site: www.hmco.com/trade.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Shreve, Porter.

  The obituary writer / Porter Shreve.

  p. cm.

  "A Mariner Original."

  ISBN 0-395-98132-8

  I. Title.

  PS3569.H7395 025 2000

  813'.54—dc21 99-046759

  Printed in the United States of America

  Book design by Robert Overholtzer

  ISBN 978-0-395-98132-0

  DOH 10 9 8 7 6 5 4

  for my mother

  I WOULD LIKE TO THANK

  my editor, Wendy Holt; my agent, Joe Regal; the Meijer

  Foundation, the Colby Fellowship, the Avery Hopwood and

  Jule Hopwood Fund; Louie Estrada, Lisa Estrada,

  Jeff Avery, Jessica Avery, Khoi Nguyen, Jeff Richards,

  and my MFA teachers and workshop at

  the University of Michigan.

  I am especially grateful to my family—Dad, Carol,

  Sooz, Tim, Liz, Rusty, Caleb, Kate—and to Bich.

  1

  MY FATHER, who died when I was five, had a reputation as a great newspaperman. I never doubted that I could be one too. "It's a matter of destiny," my mother would say to me with her usual drama. I believed her, and that's where my trouble began.

  I was eight when I took my first paper route—three hundred houses with the Columbia Pioneer at ninety-five dollars a week. That first winter, my mother delivered the papers with me. She woke me at five in the morning dressed in a scarf, sweatshirt and jogging pants, white moon boots, and her old camel-hair coat, and we went out into darkness to the corner of Stadium and La Grange to pick up the bundles. On certain days the distributors would leave inserts—the home section on Tuesdays, real estate on Fridays, comics, coupons, classifieds, and Parade for the Sunday paper—and my mother and I would sit on the cold floor of the garage putting inserts and headsheets together, folding the papers in thirds, slipping them into plastic sleeves.

  When we had folded and bagged all three hundred papers, my mother popped the hatchback of what was then her brand-new 1975 AMC Gremlin, brown with a white racing stripe. We stacked the papers in the back of the car, then sat in the front, waiting in silence as the Gremlin warmed up. This was the best time of the day. The silence, the murkiness of first light, the warm air from the heater closing around us.

  By the time I was twelve, I was collecting newspapers. I'd save one a day from my morning route, and my mother, Lorraine, who was a secretary at the University of Missouri Journalism School, would bring home thumbed-through discards from the school library. I kept a handwritten log of what stories I deemed important, by date and subject, from the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, and Dallas Morning News. The papers piled up in labeled stacks in the garage, until eventually I had so many that my mother had to park her car in the driveway. This must have been an inconvenience, since we had limited space, but she wasn't about to let an AMC Gremlin, which smelled of engine oil when you turned on the heat, roll over my dreams.

  I grew up with a heightened sense of my own importance, which my mother encouraged. She figured an only child with a single parent ought to be treated as exceptional. "Great men like your father come along only rarely," she liked to say, beginning an exhortation I'd hear many times throughout my youth, often following the arrival of more bad news from school.

  I'd come home from basketball, a skinny sixteen, and she'd be standing by the microwave lining Triscuits onto a plate, slicing cheese to melt on top. I'd go to the refrigerator for a soda and see my final grades taped to the door.

  "Some who are born great fall through the cracks," she'd say, waving the knife in a backhand motion, narrowing her wide-set eyes on me. "Maybe they end up homeless. Maybe dead. Maybe they go crazy. Who knows? If you're born great, the rule is: you soar to the sun or you sink to the silt."

  Pale and narrow, the bones in her downturned face just beneath her skin, my mother would often strike me as youth standing at the boundary of old age. I'd watch her turn in the crinkly black dress that sharpened her features and darkened her eyes and wonder if men in town found her pretty. She'd walk to the stove, rigid and deliberate, and roll a cigarette in the flame.

  "Einstein flunked math when he was your age, but he got his act together and they gave him the Nobel Prize." She'd take a couple of nervous puffs, lighting her cigarette unevenly. "These grades are unacceptable, Gordie, but let me say this: you have the substance of greatness."

  Even on my mother's salary, we could have afforded a better place, something I never tired of bringing up. We had lived in the same Sears, Roebuck house at 102 La Grange since I was five, always with boarding students stomping above us. Our half of the house had low ceilings and little light, and though it was kept clean, nothing had changed in years. The living room was small, with a lumpy yellow sofa, shag carpet, a near-empty curio cabinet, and a fall-apart rocking chair that I was forever salvaging with Super Glue. We ate in the kitchen at a Formica dinette under cheerful aphorisms that my mother would copy out of magazines and hang on the walls.

  My room had always looked the same, even later when I came home to visit, as it did when I was a boy: the comforter on the bed printed with old headlines: TITANIC SINKS, SACCO AND VANZETTI GUILTY, LINDBERGH BABY KIDNAPPED; the basketball trophy for best playmaker in summer camp atop my writing desk; the same photographs on the walls: my father, a cigarette hanging from his lip, his eyes squinting from the smoke, in the newsroom; my mother on their wedding day in Norfolk, Virginia, leaning stiffly against a newel post in elbow-length gloves; Harry Truman, the pride of Missouri, with a big gray smile famously lofting the Chicago Tribune; and a picture of me and my father taken on Easter Sunday, 1972, eight weeks before he died.

  I cherished this picture because I had an actual memory of the scene. The cloudless sky, the pale grass on an uncommonly warm spring day. My father, Charlie Hatch, thirty-six years old, sitting on the back stairs of my uncle's house in Wichita in a blue and white seersucker suit with a Panama hat brim-down over his head. I remember my mother chasing me with a camera while I ran around the yard making airplane noises, my arms outstretched. Out of the blue my uncle had snatched me up and whispered conspiratorially in my ear, "I'm going to zoom you at your daddy and you're going to take his hat."

  The photograph, a grainy black and white, captures the scene a minute later. My father, hatless, his back to the camera, bends above me, looking over his shoulder. I'm sitting upright on the lawn in a white shirt. The Panama hat rests hugely over my
head.

  My mother and I were for the most part alone. She did sometimes have company over, small potlucks with friends from the office, but usually we had the evenings to ourselves. I'd organize my newspapers in the garage or write long editorials at my desk for no one's eyes but mine, while my mother played her light operas too loud on the RCA Victor my father had given her. She had a singular passion for Gilbert and Sullivan and knew every word to The Gondoliers, Princess Ida, and The Pirates of Penzance. She'd twirl around the room or hum along as she read Cosmopolitan in the fall-apart rocking chair.

  My mother kept no photographs of my father in the living room. What mementos she did have were locked away in her bedroom, down the dark hallway from mine. The few times I went in there as a child, I felt an immediate urge to turn back. Her small room had no carpeting, and the creak in the wood, the shock of the cold floor on my bare feet, gave me a feeling of emptiness.

  The double bed was always made, with a brown chenille spread pulled taut over the single pillow and tucked in all around like a private's bunk. Hanging above it, in a thick wooden frame, was a needlepoint sampler of flowers and vines surrounding the words GROW WHERE YOU ARE PLANTED.

  Against one wall was a heavy walnut dresser; atop it, neatly arranged in saucers, lay pennies and nickels and Viceroy cigarettes. In the far corner sat an old rolltop desk, always locked, where I assumed my father's things were saved: his wallet, his press pass, his obituary from the major papers, all the photographs, many with important people, letters and keepsakes from his life with my mother, clips from his short but dazzling career.

  My father's first job out of the Navy was on the city desk at the Wichita Kansan. Back in the early sixties a midrange paper sent out maybe a dozen reporters, and the cub, my father at the time, usually got the police beat. He checked in with the hospitals, kept contact with the precincts, and reported to accidents, robberies, and the occasional homicide, where he'd call his stories back to the office for rewrite. He liked the work but, according to my mother, he was restless. He wanted to make an impact on the world, and toward the end of 1963, eight months into the job, his opportunity arrived.

  In those days, the Associated Press put out a calendar of upcoming national events every other Thursday, and late one November afternoon my father picked off the wires the news that President Kennedy would be in Dallas the next day. He was off Friday and Saturday, so he called my mother and cut out of work early and bought a ticket on the five-fifteen Silversides Thruliner, the overnight bus to Dallas.

  The next morning at Love Field, awaiting Kennedy's arrival, my father weaved through the crowd to a cordoned-off press area right up front just as the President and the First Lady were appearing at the door of Air Force One. President Kennedy descended the metal staircase, walked up to the press area and the cheerful throng that had gathered to greet him. Of all the hands extended, he chose my father's.

  For a moment that must have replayed in his mind every day for the rest of his life, my father held the President's hand and looked straight into his blue eyes, squinting in the bright noon sun.

  As the presidential limousine pulled away, with its plastic bubbletop removed and bulletproof windows rolled down on account of the glorious weather, my father, not giving it a second thought, squeezed in with the press pool, which followed six cars behind the President in a telephone company van.

  The van was turning a corner when three shots cracked the sky over downtown Dallas, and my father witnessed it all: the President's limousine, a hundred yards ahead, slowing down and weaving in the road; the flurry of activity in the Secret Service follow-up car; the spot of pink that he'd later recognize as the First Lady crawling across the long black trunk.

  Suddenly the President's car sped off and the van driver followed it, passing the Vice President's car, racing out onto the highway to Parkland Hospital.

  My father saw President Kennedy's body wheeled toward the emergency room. He saw the horror-stricken expression on the face of the man pushing the gurney. He saw two priests hurry down the hospital corridor with purple stoles wrapped tightly in their hands and a policeman rush by with a heavy carton of blood for transfusions. He was there, at the hospital, at 1:33 P.M., when a press aide announced that the President of the United States was dead.

  "That's the fate of the exceptional journalists," my mother would say, recounting the story. "They're lodestones of history."

  In the days following the Kennedy assassination, my father's by-line reached not only the Kansan but the Kansas City Star and newspapers all over the Midwest. He stayed on the story for two years, covering the Warren Commission investigation and the Jack Ruby trial, leaving the Kansan for the Chicago Tribune, where he headed a special Dallas bureau until the dust began to settle. By the time he moved to Chicago in 1965, the year before I was born, he was already a star.

  I stayed home, in Columbia, for college, and my mother made a great show of loading up the Gremlin and driving me the quarter mile to my dormitory room on the University of Missouri campus. At the journalism school, I thrived, tackling regular assignments for the Columbia Missourian, the school's daily paper. I won an annual reporting award for my series about the effect of deinstitutionalization on the local homeless. For this, my mother gave me my father's briefcase, a weathered oxblood London Courier, still edged with newspaper ink.

  In the summer of my junior year, I landed an internship with the St. Louis Independent, where I returned after graduation to work as an editorial assistant. A slot opened up on the obituary desk when another young reporter left for the night police beat. And on the fourteenth of August, 1988, exactly three months before my twenty-second birthday, the Independent promoted me to full-time obituary writer.

  From my corner of the newsroom I believed that I could be a lodestone too. I merely had to hunker down, work hard, and await the inevitable.

  2

  THE St. Louis Independent was a morning paper with a circulation of 305,000, the twenty-ninth-largest daily in America. Many around the journalism school and in the national press considered it the last of a dying breed, a true old-fashioned newspaper, neither sentimental nor cynical, but reflecting the famous "show me" skepticism of the state of Missouri. The Independent had grown out of the ashes of the Missouri Gazette, the first North American newspaper published west of the Mississippi River. The pioneering spirit of the Gazette's founder, Joseph Charless, who in 1808 had pulled the first edition of his paper from an old Ramage press and delivered it himself, lived on at the Independent. Our logo, overarched by the Missouri state motto—"The Welfare of the People Shall Be the Supreme Law"—was a lithograph of Charless working his hand-operated press.

  I admired the paper's history, was proud to work in a place that seemed to back the underdog. Growing up, I had followed the Independents many battles with Monsanto, the multibiliion-dollar chemical company across the river in East St. Louis, which had introduced PCBs, dioxin, and Agent Orange to the world, to go along with its more "beneficial" products, like saccharine, Nutrasweet, and dairy hormones. Unswayed by Monsanto's advertising dollars and its power in the region, the Independent ran series after series in the early eighties exposing the deadly contamination that Monsanto's manufacturing had brought upon East St. Louis. Thanks in part to the Independent, the national press began for the first time to think of the environment as front-page news.

  The Independent's offices took up seven floors of an industrial-era steel and concrete building that loomed directly above the International Bowling Museum and Hall of Fame, home to Earl Anthony, Dick Weber, Floretta McCutcheon, and other legends of the lanes, in downtown St. Louis. Most days I arrived before anyone else in the newsroom. The elevator up to the sixth floor would be full of the eight-to-four crowd, on their way to Classified, Accounting, Circulation, or Personnel. I would stand in a back corner, listening to bits of other departments' gossip—who was dating whom, who got canned, who was too ambitious for his own good—as the creaky elevator stopped at each fl
oor. One month a new elevator was installed, with an intercom that spoke in a woman's voice. "Please stand back," she said gently. "Going up." Such instances of modernity were rare in our offices.

  It was the sixth floor, though, that harbored all of the tension and adrenaline of news reporting that I craved, and where, as absurd as it seemed, I thought I could detect my father's presence. He would descend as a kind of heat, a shiver across my scalp and down my spine. Sometimes I'd swear I could sense him looking out through my eyes, a young reporter waiting for the flare in the sky that points to the great discovery. I'd stop at the rackety wire machines under the mural of Remington's Pony Express to scroll through the overnight news, then pick up a late edition from the stacks before taking the long, slow route to my desk.

  Along the east wall the managing and assistant managing editors had offices with sweeping views of downtown. Jim St. John headed up the metro section, and had the largest office. A small man with a wiry mustache who wore brown suits and galaxy ties, St. John had a booming voice and a morbid sense of humor. Without fail, at five o'clock each day when I stepped into his office with a list of the next day's obits, he would swivel in his chair and reach out his hand, saying, "Give us this day our daily dead."

  The editors and writers for the metro section covered the middle of the newsroom. Metro had the largest staff, the biggest budget, its own investigative unit, and a dozen special beats; it was the training ground for the national post in Washington and the foreign desk in London—and where I very much hoped to be.

  My desk, nestled between a thick column and a huge clattering overhead fan, was at the end of the last row of metro clusters. The fan marked the terminus of a vast network of tubing which looked like a Bauhaus air-conditioning duct but served the purpose of transferring lead particles to a work site on the floor below. The lead removal program had been ongoing since my arrival fourteen months earlier, slated then to last another six months. One day a yellow sign was posted above my desk: LEAD REMOVAL NEARING COMPLETION, BUT DON'T HOLD YOUR BREATH.