As the United States of America celebrates two and a half centuries since its founding, one family grapples with its own issues…
I was wondering how to lift a suddenly sombre mood when Bubba ambled over. He had a carrier bag in each hand.
“We got these for the kids. All the kids. And the teenagers. But then we wasn’t sure it was appropriate.”
“If they can’t injure themselves, or anyone else, with whatever’s in the bags then my vote is that it’s appropriate.” Felix said.
“Mine too,” Ophelia managed a grin.
Bubba whistled and his daughters herded a handful of excited kids over to us. He opened one bag and squinted at each child before handing out smallish parcels. When each child had a parcel he held up a large red fist.
“Three, two, one, go!”
I watched my sons deal with wrapping paper with their usual relish. In less time than it took to write this every child was in possession of a bright red t-shirt. A bright red t-shirt with a cartoon dog on the front and the words ‘redneck and proud’. Felix chuckled, then laughed out loud.
“You got one for me Bubba?”
Bubba spared him a severe glance. “Heck no. They don’t make t-shirts for guys your size.”
Ophelia punched her brother lightly in the ribs. “Not even Walmart does t-shirts for Gargantua.”
“Then I guess I’m gonna have to get one specially made to wear when I visit the grandparents.”
Bubba nodded sagely. “Tell you what. You get measured proper and I’ll get one for you, even if I have to weave it myself.”
By the time the young were t-shirted up, the parents returned to the garden.
Mom’s eyes sparkled with merriment, but she kept her voice businesslike.
“Eli, c’n you ferry the good doctor back to his clinic?”
“Yes’m. And do it matter if he falls off a time or two on the way?”
“So long as he ain’t hurt bad it don’t matter a bit.”
Eli kicked the dirt bike into foul-smelling ear-splitting action and headed off.
Luke looked up at me. “That bike’s really cool,” he breathed.
I sighed foreseeing all sorts of shenanigans in my future. Bubba grinned at me.
“They’ll be okay. They got good families.”
Felix’s Pa looked at the t-shirts and he smiled widely. “Look at the children,” had said in a voice of sheer wonderment. “All proudly wearing their shirts and nobody caring which side of the family they sprung from.”
“And the teenagers,” that was my daddy. “They all came here with attitude and now look at them. Just a bunch of kids together. Planning to sneak across and steal a few beers from the cooler while we’re all busy being philosophical.”
Bubba pointed a thick finger and the marauding teens moved away from temptation. His wife came over and leaned against the impressive bulk of his beer belly.
“You were right, hon,” she said then explained. “Bubba reckons we need to teach the kids that we’re all the same under the skin. He said if we gave ‘em an identity they could all relate to, they might stop seeing themselves as two gangs and become one gang instead.”
“Like the Montagues and Capulets,” Felicity sounded awed.
“No ma’am,” that was Bubba again, probably using up a whole year’s allocation of words. “We ain’t bringing these kids up in a Shakespearean tragedy. What we’re doing is reminding them what our forefathers wanted independence to be about.”
I knew what he was saying, but I couldn’t remember the exact words. To my intense surprise it was Anthony who could. He had joined the group quietly and spoke now with dignity but with none of the bombast that had characterised him before the events of the day on which he became a father.
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. And that’s why we have decided to call our daughter Liberty. So I have a reminder of the kindness of people I was brought up to look down on.”
And that’s how the birth of a child taught all of us a lesson we had maybe forgotten.
Happy Independence Day everyone!