Read Yom Kippur as Manifest in an Approaching Dorsal Fin Online
Authors: Adam Byrn Tritt
Arial, a gloriously charming and delightful
woman. She is an acupuncturist in Hoboken
and I know Lee will wish to meet her. Duvid
is introduced to Sef and Alek. Erika asks if
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we want anything. Yesterday the coffee had
no caffeine. Today, she whispers, she made
caffeinated. Indeed, yes, please.
Sef, Alek, Duvid, and I talk about music.
Duvid is a guitarist and has an artist’s soul.
We discuss playing alone versus playing with
and how sharing musical space is so hard for
some who emphasizes personal ability over
art. He and Alek discuss rock and Arial and
I gab about New York, medicine, organic
foods, health. She is a pleasure to talk with.
They both are. I haven’t seen Duvid in nearly
a decade. Before that, once. It was an after-
noon when I diligently worked at convincing
him he did not need his pacifier.
Duvid and Rom are not the cousins I hear
of all the time. They are not the ones I was
regaled about, compared to, measured against.
There is no resistance here. We trade emails,
phone numbers. Look at the butcher shop
walls.
“It looks like we could sell add space. Or we
should all autograph it.”
There is agreement. I pull out my pen and
write, tiny, at the very top corner in a space
of less than half an inch, “Adam was here.”
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From a foot away, it is hard to see it as any-
thing but a mark on the stark white. My uncle
walks over, looks up and says, “Discreet.” It is.
My name. Unobtrusive. Hardly there. Appar-
ently, easy to forget.
The day wears on and groups have formed.
The siblings are off in corners discussing wills and arrangements. It seems continuous but
more so regarding the disbursal of money, the
purchase of the building than the burial of
the body. Through this I hear snippets but try
to not listen. Each person having received
forty-two thousand, grandkids getting this or
that, grandpa’s new Lexus immediately
switched with one of the kids for his old one.
Through it all one person has not stayed
long in any group. Everyone seems to know
him but me and my kids. Irwin.
He appears to be in his seventies. Tall,
broad, white-haired. He seems nice. He seems
gentle. Who is he? I ask. Grandma’s brother
married a girl, she died. This was their son.
Soon after, he married his sister-in-law and
then, sometime later, the brother died. Does
that make Irwin my cousin? I think so. He
talks with my parents before coming over to
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me. We speak. He seems oblique in his ques-
tions though fully friendly and comforting in
a way no one else has been. He alone either
does not know there is nothing to comfort or
he alone needs comforting and has general-
ized that to me. To all.
The day moves on and we cousins talk
more. No other cousins will be coming in. I
shall not meet any of those I am held in com-
parison to. They will not come.
The funeral is at eleven tomorrow. We are
asked to meet here at nine as that is when the
limo arriving. I am not the only one asking
why we’re all meeting here if the limo will
only hold the siblings and husband. Most of
us state we’ll be at the cemetery by eleven.
Evening is coming. It is nearly five and my
daughter is hungry. My son is hungry. I prob-
ably am as well. My father mouths something
and I tell him he’ll have to break tradition
and at least whisper instead. He tells me they
will leave first and then we can leave but don’t make it look suspicious. That we’ll have dinner with “your brother” and Amy. They leave.
What is long enough to not look suspicious?
What else am I supposed to do, and what is
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wrong with going out to eat with my brother?
There is no food in the house so everyone here
is going out, as far as I can see. Frankly, no one seems to care.
A few minutes later my cell phone rings. It
is my father giving me instructions. I ask,
“Which way do I drive?” and immediately he
tells me, “Don’t use the word ‘drive.’ ”
I have walked toward the front window.
Out of earshot? Probably not.
He tells me, “If you use the word ‘drive,’
they’ll know you’re going somewhere. Walk
over to the window.”
“How did I get here? Of course I’m driving.
Do you think someone will decipher a dia-
bolical dinner plan from me asking what
direction to drive, considering I don’t live here and drove two hours from Palm Bay?”
“I’m going to call Dana and find out where
they want to go. I’ll call you back. Stay put
till then.”
We say our goodbyes and leave. In the car
I call Dana. My father wants us to drive to
his house and go from there because he wants
to cruise around and look for a place we’d all
like. That sounds like a warmed up version
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of Hell; Ft. Lauderdale traffic, back seat car
sickness, and squabbling over what place is
healthy and what place not. I suggest just
picking a place and meeting. We agree this is
a far better option and he suggests the Cheese-
cake Factory. Just tell me where it is. Where?
That far? What time?
Sawgrass Mills: third largest mall in the US.
From the air it is shaped like an alligator.
From the inside it is shaped like a mall. We
are a bit early. We find the Cheesecake Fac-
tory and I walk inside to use the restroom
leaving Alek and Sef outside in the courtyard
of the Oasis section next to the Blue Dolphin
entrance or the Pink Flamingo lot or some-
thing like that. When I come out everyone is
there, gabbing about who was there today. I
ask, “So what was up with Duvid getting mar-
ried and no one getting an invitation?” Sev-
eral people gasp, “Oh Geez,” and my brother
says that’s why he doesn’t give them any more
than a hello and a goodbye.
“We just finished talking about that,” he
says.
“I’m sorry. How the hell was I supposed to
know? It was an innocent question. The way
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people run their lives in
that
family” (I am careful to say “that”), “I figured their wedding was the last thing under their control. I’m
careful not to judge intent. I was just
curious.”
“Well, I don’t want to talk about it” is his
immediate reply.
Lee and I eloped. Actually, we reverse-
eloped. My parents said they’d throw us a
wedding if her parents weren’t invited. Her
parents said they’d throw a wedding if I
wasn’t invited. We waited for a weekend both
sets were out of town and got married.
There wasn’t even an announcement for
my brothers. Not that I recall. I never thought
about that. Not until now.
We hear our last name and file in.
•
It is eight-thirty in the morning. I am putting
on the best I have and so is Alek. I had dress
black pants, but Alek needed a pair for some-
thing and by the end of the evening he had
ripped them beyond repair. Sef’s best is much
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better. South Florida has far better thrift
stores.
We are into her car, feeling late at ten
o’clock. Driving up 95, we exit at Hypoluxo
Road, go too far by three miles into Lantana,
turn around, find the correct road and the
cemetery with its length directly boarding
the highway. It is ten-thirty. We have not
eaten and drive a mile the opposite direction
looking for something I want but should not
have. A bagel.
We finally come across a Dunkin Donuts
and, in a place you would think would be rife
with delis, it is the best we have found. Inside.
It is crowded to its seeming capacity on this
Friday morning and we each get coffee. I get
a bran muffin, not giving in to my wants, and
each of the kids gets their bagel. Dana calls.
How far away is it? What road is it on? Join
us, I say. We are five minutes away but there
seems to be too little time and we finish our
breakfast and drive back to the cemetery.
Pulling in at ten till eleven I see no cars we
recognize. I park by the tent, as directed. The
first tent. There are three. When my father
said, “We’ll be at the tent,” I knew that would
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be problematic. I asked which tent and he
told me there would be only one. One? “Do
they only bury one person a day?” I asked.
This was a fair question, asked in an unfair
way, I grant. But this was the man who once
hit me for insisting he was wrong when I
asked what flavor ice cream was with no fla-
voring added. “Vanilla,” I was told. I said
vanilla was a flavor. Wouldn’t it taste just like milk? For some reason that deserved my
being slapped. I learned to ask questions in
unfair ways.
We walked and found workers, asked them
where Tritt was and they pointed to the large
building close to the wall that divided those
who had already found death from the eight
lanes of those speeding toward it.
We walked. We entered. Lee called. She had
called several times that morning, while we
were waking, showering, dressing, to tell us
she would be late, each time keeping me on
the phone as I tried to rise, shower, or dress,
telling me in great detail why she would not
be there on time. Finally, I said it was OK.
She had no need to call to tell me she would
be late as a device to take up time so she would 67
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be late. It was a trip, for her, of just over one-and-a-half hours.
So she called Sef. Sef was not as charitable
and told her squarely if she got off the phone
and stopped complaining about being late,
she’d have been on her way. But what does
she wear? It doesn’t matter. Bring clothes for
later, yes.
Now we are waiting at five minutes to
eleven and Lee tells me where she is, that she
may be late. I let her know she is fewer than
five minutes away and I will wait for her. Two
men in black suits tell me the “family” is in
the office and will enter together. More peo-
ple arrive. Lee arrives, hugs me, and walking
the long hall between the twenty-foot walls
of vaults, we go in.
In the front of the hall is an ornate, gold-
toned casket. To the right of it, in the corner, is the lectern. There are seven rows of seats
and ten seats to a row. The first row is empty,
the second mostly full, the third, full from the far end halfway in. Behind, they are empty.
In the last of the half-full row is my brother
and we take our seats—I next to my brother
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and Lee next to me. Alek and Sef sit in front
of us with their second cousins.
I look for my mother and do not see her.
Then, I do, at the end of the second row, thin,
in a cap, small and frail, she looks to be a little boy. Next to her is Erika.
There is talking, quiet laughter, joking. Is
she missed? It is hard to say. Not by her grand-
children, it would seem. At least not by all.
Not by her great-grandchildren.
The two men in the black suits enter and
ask all to stand for the family. We do and they
enter, single file, my grandfather at the lead,
on a cane, then my aunt, my uncle, and my
father, last. They sit. We sit. The rabbi enters.
He is dressed in black, black and black
topped with a wide-brimmed black fedora.
Behind the lectern he stands and starts by
opening his mouth and pausing, says he did
not know the deceased, pauses, looks at his
notecard, and says, slowly, “Mrs. Tritts.”
He is corrected by a voice from the assem-
bled. “Tritt.” But there are four Mrs. Tritts in the room: three living. One Mrs. Tritt not
present. One Mrs. Tritt to be and one Miss
Tritt. I look around and see I am not the only
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person to notice this. I look at Lee and, turn-
ing, find her eyes instantly.
He continues to call her Mrs. Tritt, eulogiz-
ing five women in one. He talks to us about
her being a daughter of the Jews and his sister
and, therefore, knows her just the same. His
sister, Mrs. Tritt. He starts with the prayers.
He reads them in English quickly. So quickly
I can barely follow. He then says them in
Hebrew because, he tells us, the soul under-
stands its native language best. He says them
at a speed that is ferocious and fluid so there
are no divisions between the words, no mel-
ody, no rhythm. These are prayers and he says
them as though they are a pharmaceutical
insert, skimming out loud in search of some
hidden important information. They are