A Queen's Story
By hudsonmoon
- 4648 reads
What’s troubles me while writing these memory pieces is why my family moved around so much.
In 1966 we left Manhattan for good, moving to an apartment in Flushing. In 1967 we moved to a house Maspeth, and in 1968 we moved to a home in Elmhurst. All located in the borough of Queens. That was a lot of moving for a family of six.
In 1966 my younger brothers were six and eleven, my older sister fourteen, and I was twelve. I don’t recall having any family meetings to discuss these moves; like the ones you might see in Peaky Blinders.
Son, get the Bushmills an’ six glasses, I got somethin’ to discuss wit the whole lot of ya.
Yeah, Da?
Pack up yer knickers an’ say goodbye to yer ol’ life. Discussion over. Now, hurry up an’ drink yer bloody whiskey. Landlord’s bringin’ da coppers in at six.
I’m not knocking Queens. It’s a fine borough, and it houses the home of my favorite losing baseball team, the New York Mets. One borough north is the Bronx, home to one of the winningest teams in baseball history, the New York Yankees. My dad had to know this going in. Did he make this move to a losing borough to strengthen my character? To make me more appreciative of the down and out? Or was it plain spite because of my recent love affair with Frankie Valli. Was Frankie’s falsetto really such a burden on Dad’s blood pressure? Or was it my insistence on singing along in a similar falsetto for which I was not properly trained? For whatever reason, I was stuck with a losing team who continue to break my heart. But I’m loyal. And as tempting as it is to abandon ship and hoist a Yankee banner on a ship that doesn’t sink at the end of every season, I’ll continue to go down with my crew in Flushing. An, oh so, appropriate location name for a team such as mine. Maybe my folks did know what they were doing. Keep the boy humble. At least they didn’t name me Sue.
It bothers me that I still have no recollection of the circumstances causing us to move like a den of thieves needing to stay one step ahead of the heat. My family had been a part of the Yorkville fabric since the thirties. Twelve children were raised in that railroad flat. Ten boys. Two girls. A lot of laughs and drama were had there. My grandmother lived two flights down. It was a good, long run.
I wonder if all that moving had anything to do with me running away after that first move to Flushing when I was twelve. Let’s annoy the boy and keep moving. That'll keep him on his toes. Teach him to run away on us like that. It was the worst runaway plan ever. I didn’t take a thing with me. Not so much as a peanut butter sandwich. I simply decided one day not to come home from school, and, instead, took the subway to my old neighborhood in Yorkville. Who would think of looking for me there?
Just about everyone, as it turned out.
There was an entire network of women who spent a good deal of their day hanging out tenement windows – smoking cigarettes and fanning them selves in the summer heat – and keeping an eye on the neighborhood. You couldn’t so much as pull a girl’s ponytail without it being relayed from one window to the next until it reached the headquarters of the hair-puller‘s mother eight buildings away.
I was a sitting duck. But I did mange to elude them for one night by ducking into a building with a kid I knew from the neighborhood. He had run away, too. We had this idea we’d spend the night on the roof, looking up at the stars and trash-talking parents.
It was October. By nightfall the temperature had dropped into the forties. No hat, no gloves, no blanket, no brains. Just two disgruntled boys looking for some clarity.
My dad whips me with a strap, was his story. I hate him. He comes home drunk and gets out the belt if he’s told I’ve been bad. And my mom lets him do it.
My feet are getting cold, was all I could think of. I couldn’t come up with a single horror story that didn’t sound made up. So I didn’t. We decided then to get out of the cold and talk Bond movies and girl crushes. We sat up, and half-slept, on the stairs. Two twelve-year-olds huddled at the foot of the roof’s door wishing they were back in their beds.
After our night on the stairs I can’t remember what we did the following morning. What I do remember was my eldest brother Michael coming down the street. I was standing outside the building where I spent the night, pretending not to notice. I let him nab me and drag my sorry ass home.
The truth was I missed what I left behind in Yorkville. Catholic school, for all it’s faults, was the only home I knew. My friends were the same friends I’d had since kindergarten. That I’d suddenly find myself in an Up the Downstair Case public school was just a jolt to the system socially. I went from the strict regiment of thick-rulered nuns, to utter chaos. It was like stepping into Times Square on New Year’s Eve after spending your life in a monastary. I then made a habit of playing hookie every chance I got; finally quit school at the age of fifteen.
It took a long while to get the sound of those swishing nuns, parading up and down the classroom, out of my head.
This was fifty-three years ago and it's only recently that I realize the anguish my mother must have suffered thinking about a twelve-year-old son who didn’t come home, who didn’t bother to call. I’d have hung me out to dry if I were them. But I don’t recall Mom dealing with me after I returned home. That sort of thing was left to Dad.
You ever do it again, son, they’ll be no guarantee we’ll be here when you come crawling back for forgiveness. Now drink yer whiskey and get to bed. We’ve all had a trying night. And by all that I hold holy, son, I love ya, but if ya ever do it again I’ll hunt ya down and feed ya ta the pigs what are starving out in yonder pen.
Okay. What my dad really said was: You ever do that again I’ll beat the living’ bejeezus out of ya.
He got right to the point. It was highly effective.
My dad was a handsome hulk of a man. A truck driver. I’ve witnessed him carry appliances such as washers and refrigerators on his back up flights of stairs. He was boiler-maker tough, but a softy at heart. I don’t ever recall him striking me. That was mom’s job. When we were younger there were three of us to a bed, raising hell long after bed-time. When yelling didn’t work Mom would grab anything she could get her hands on — newspaper, broom, fly swatter — and give us a couple of good whacks. Her favorite, and most handy weapon, was one of her bedroom slippers. It wasn’t so much what she used, it was the power behind it. There was no Mommy Dearest stuff here. Just mom trying to keep her sanity. She had her first child at seventeen and the last child at forty. A long haul
Mom and Dad were the heart and soul of our lives, and I miss them dearly. Both are long gone, but wander about in my head at the random moments I’ve given up on things.
No matter how common I thought my childhood had been, I believe we’ve all got a good story in there somewhere. It’s all in the telling and what we’re willing put into it. These rambling remembrances have opened a floodgate of material. For good or bad, better or worse, I expect I'll have more to say on the subject.
Photo courtesy of Wiki Commons: https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?sort=relevance&search=the+five+boroughs&title=Special:Search&profile=advanced&fulltext=1&advancedSearch-current=%7B%7D&ns0=1&ns6=1&ns12=1&ns14=1&ns100=1&ns106=1#/media/File:Usgs_photo_five_boroughs_staten_island.jpg
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Comments
Hi Rich.
Hi Rich.
I read your absorbing memoirs and find them fascinating.
I find this episode a bit confusing as to the numbers you mention. You say
"That was a lot of moving for a family of six."
Then go on to state: "In 1966 my younger brothers were six and eleven, my older sister fourteen, and I was twelve. (The other seven siblings were off on their own.)"
So, what was the total number of members in your family?
Kind regards, Luigi.
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Are you enjoying writing
Are you enjoying writing these pieces as much as we're enjoying reading them husdon? You have a real talent for this kind of life-writing
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I hope there are going to be
I hope there are going to be lots more! Life bursts out of each sentence :0)
New York in films always seems huge and hostile to me, but I love how you describe it
also winningest. that's a great word :0)
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Sorry Hudson but I am a
Sorry Hudson but I am a Yankee Fan however, it happens that our youngest son is a Met Fan - we still don't know how it happened... everyone around him : Grandparents, cousins, other siblings are all yankee fans...so our youngest must have looked around and though, not for me...I'm going to be different, and he is...he likes the Mets, the Jets, the Islanders ..while everyone else in the family likes the Yankees, the Giants and the Rangers...go figure?. And I've never understood why one has to go with the others - but somehow it seems they ususally do. Anyway, this was another great entry - and so many of your experiences ring a bell with me - even that Catholic school bell too...Oh those nuns...but I'd better not get started on that road...
Well deserved Cherries!
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This is our Story of the Week
This is our Story of the Week - Congratulations!
It's also our Facebook and Twitter Pick of the Day
Please share/retweet if you enjoyed it as much as I did
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yeh, my mum and the slipper,
yeh, my mum and the slipper, brings a tear to my eye, not that I'd cry, being a tough guy.
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Its all here Rich, Field Of
Its all here Rich, Field Of Dreams, Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn and A Bronx Tale all rolled into one. Please, please keep them coming. These are stories I could read all day and I'm sure others feel the same. Your voice is in every line...
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Rich, these just get better
Rich, these just get better and better. Reading them is a real highlight of the day. Keep them coming and please think about collecting them up and publishing them, one way or another. I can think of at least half a dozen people who would love a book of these in their Christmas stocking.
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Just love this taste of
Just love this taste of Americana!
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