He used to play the spoons in our kitchen to my utter delight. And every Saturday he would wash and wax that kitchen’s floor. The smell of floor wax makes me think of cartoons. Many nights, after cleaning up the dishes, he’d dance with me standing on his shoes to the radio. When he came home from work at four o’clock on the dot, he would always have a surprise – a flower, a small toy, a cookie. Every single day. One summer he made me a doll house out of Popsicle sticks. Almost every night we’d play gin rummy, followed by butterfly kisses and “Don’t let the bedbugs bite” good night. If I was sick in the night, he would stay up with me until I fell back asleep. He was the only father I ever knew, Daddy Jim.
My Dad was my hero. He would never spank me, but he would chase me around the house for a good “paddy wackin,” which meant catching me until I dissolved in giggles. He never raised his voice, unless he was house-training a puppy. We would sing I Wonder who’s Kissing Her Now in the car or maybe Casey’s at the Bat. If we drove under a bridge, we’d duck our heads. My foster Mom, Nell, couldn’t drive, so Daddy took me out into the world – to the butcher, and the bakery on weekends. And to Mass on Sunday, followed by a Rocky Road sundae and the papers at Zanelli’s.
I’m pretty sure he never finished grammar school, because he had to get a job to help support his big Irish family of eighteen children. But he was the sweetest, kindest man in the universe. In the few pictures I have, he is sitting reading a newspaper, with me underneath it; or this one, holding me and a puppy.
He didn’t pose, and only knew how to tell the truth. Too old to fight in WWII, he found a job at Picatinny Arsenal, helping trains navigate their labyrinth of tracks. He would answer the phone, “Transportation Man!” He and my biological father, a pharmacist, were buddies back in PA. Robert Norman Lynn died of a brain tumor when I was a baby, and Daddy Jim drove his wife Nell over the Delaware Water Gap to save me from going into an orphanage. My husband Bob always said, “Your Dad’s a hard act to follow!” Our son’s middle name is James.
He gave me a home, after mine fell apart, and most importantly, the capacity to love.
Such a wonderful way to pay hommage to your Step-Dad on the Eve of Father’s Day. I am sorry that I never met him. I thought you were talking about your Brother, Jim, when I first started to read your blog. He must have been a role model for you as well, as you were growing up. We all remember our Fathers today, some with great admiration and some with the wish to do it all over again. Happy Father’s Day to Bob!
Thanks Jack! Jimmy Mahon was my Foster Father. He and Nell would drive me back and forth to PA to see my Mother in the hospital after the July 4th car accident in 1949 – the year my brother Jim calls “The Year of Living Dangerously” since our Father died that April. Somehow, my 14 year old sister kept her two young brothers together in the house until Mother came home, still unable to walk. Kay reluctantly gave me up because she knew she had to return to school….but Mother would not allow the Mahons to adopt me.
So I had 3 fathers – Robert Norman Lynn, James Joseph Mahon, and then my step-father Judge Bert Berla….but only one Daddy.