I arrived in Canton, my brother backed my Honda Accord off the trailer and my son backed the big truck down the mountain and into the driveway of my new home. My brother, two of his sons and his ex-wife helped us unload everything into a charming apartment built under my son's home in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina.
The yard was filled with blooming bushes and trees. The woman who had rented it before me planted butterfly bushes that attracted dozens of beautiful butterflies and the Rose of Sharon bushes that lined the fence were covered in brilliant pink blooms! They were also covered in big fat bumble bees absolutely covered in pollen. As I walked in the fence they were buzzing all around me. My brother said to just say, "Go away bees!" and the sound of my voice would drive them away. He seemed to be right. I never got stung and neither did anyone else. My part of the yard was small and fenced in part way by a wire fence with apple trees and all sorts of blooming plants. Everywhere I looked I could see mountain peaks. It felt very isolated and lovely, but in truth there were houses scattered here and there down the mountain behind my yard. They were just hidden.
The apartment was spacious, but not really finished or decorated in any way. Just livable. That was okay with me. I had plans to decorate it my way. There was a large living room with a window looking out on butterfly bushes and flowers. A kitchen with a nice view of the mountains, but no refrigerator or oven. I bought a toaster oven and refrigerator and installed a pretty rustic chandelier with candle like lights. My washer and dryer fit in here, but there were no hook ups. My son said I could use their washer and dryer upstairs. The bathroom was functional and due to a fluke when it was hooked up had a hot water toilet! It took a while to notice the heat when you used it, so no one had ever switched the hook ups. There was a large bedroom in the back with a window looking towards the side yard and our neighbor's house. Clyde was an interesting neighbor. He liked to sit on his rocking chair on his porch and he shaved his beard off once a year, on Easter. Clyde used to leave me wild flowers on my gate. There was a smaller bedroom in the front with two windows. One facing the mountains in back and one with kudzu creeping in between the screen and the window that looked very exotic.
My first night alone I met my roommates. Spiders! The first one appeared beside my chair, but on the floor. With her leg span she was probably as big as my hand! I originally didn't want to step on anything that big, but I didn't want her running around, or jumping around, my house. Eventually I stepped on her and hundreds of baby spiders crawled off of her and began to scatter! She was the largest one I ever saw, but all of the spiders in this house were bigger than silver dollars and there was an unending parade of them from the corners and crevices in all the rooms. I finally bought some spider spray and sprayed all the edges of the rooms. Unfortunately I didn't really think this through, so when I sprayed the ceilings a lot of it drifted back down on me! I nearly axphyxiated myself.
Mountain towns are difficult to navigate because they don't just build around blocks. They build tunnels and bridges and winding roads to deal with the steep incline of the mountains. Riding my bike turned out to be impossible for me. Too many very steep hills no matter which way I went. Just going from my backyard up the road to my son's porch above me was so steep that in winter the ice could make it almost impossible to walk up, let alone drive up. But I ended up letting my son use my car for work much of the time, so his wife could have theirs for errands. I didn't mind. I was watching my grandson and playing with him most of that time.
My son's wife was known for her sharp tongue and sarcasm. That is what made her good at the poetry she wrote and performed locally, but it didn't make her a pleasant person to be around if she wasn't enthralled with you and it turned out she hadn't really wanted me to come out there at all. No matter how hard I tried to include her and love her and respect all her insane rules, she was never happy. Not even the freedom my babysitting gave her made her happy. She was so jealous that it made her furious if my son and I even ate lunch together in my apartment while she was gone. On holidays I was invited upstairs, but she seldom even sat down in the same room or at the table with us. She just ran in and out announcing who had responded to her Twitter account.
I wasn't allowed to drive anywhere with my grandson alone in the car with me, so no going to the library, or park, or whatever unless my son went too. And even then it often caused repercussions, I was not allowed to walk him outside of our yard either. She was a very possessive and jealous woman. At first she wasn't going to let me watch him in my own apartment, but I put my foot down there. I would watch him upstairs at night if they went out so I could put him to bed. Otherwise, I would watch him in my own home. Her comfort and convenience could overrule her neuroticism.
It was so much fun having my grandson there! I bought a little round red cherry child's table and chairs set so we could have tea parties like I had with my children. Only we would get a little shaggy dog cake from Ingles for dessert. We built all kinds of things with wooden architectural blocks. I put together a basket of marbles and metal objects that we could make marble runs with on the refrigerator. We colored and painted, read books, cooked together and played with his power rangers and Transformers. He like to play on my piano and sing and once gave me good advice saying, "Grandma when you sing you don't use your regular voice." He had the sweetest baby voice and he could remember anything!
Sometimes I let him play with the water in the bathroom sink and sometimes we played with his plastic bat and ball in the back yard. He was a pretty good little batter! One day his mother showed up and had to show off. She hit a home run over the fence and down the road next to it. That road wound around and around, down the mountain and it took her twenty minutes to walk all the way down before she could stop it and walk back up.
I would have been glad to help her out with some household chores, but she was furious the one time I took her clothes out of the dryer and folded them before putting mine in. I took an old wooden toy castle someone had given them and refurbished it. I painted a stone facade and plants on it and bought miniature horses, knights, and even an elf princess who looked like her for my grandson to play with. She claimed I was trying to steal him away from her by doing this! In the last few months she got in the habit of rolling her eyes and looking at her friend and shrugging as if I couldn't see her when she picked her son up after work. She complained about my piano playing even though you could only hear it vaguely in the kitchen and I never played if I thought they were in there. She was the truest most complete narcissist I have ever met. And the meanest. My son always supported her which seemed right, but she was not kind to him either. The only friends he was allowed to have had to be her friends or she made everyone miserable. Just one of the problems with this was her habit of practically living with people who were friends for a while, then suddenly finding them so horrible no one could even mention their name.
And then one day she banned my son from the house and told him if he loved me so much he could live with me and if I didn't leave she wanted a divorce. I was stunned. She and I really only saw each other when she picked up my grandson up after work by that time. The rest of the time I never went up to their house for anything except to do laundry when she wasn't home. I left the next day.
I moved down there in a moving van with a trailer and came back in my Honda sedan. I put my bicycle on the back, my dog in his carrier,and the clothes that would fit in the backseat and drove back to Illinois. There had been a landslide on the main highway and it had been closed for cleanup for months, so I took back road all through the mountains to get out.
She sold or gave away everything I owned that she didn't want, clothes, china, washer, dryer, books, almost everything except my furniture, which was very nice. The only other exceptions were my fifty some photo albums that my son kept in his rooms on the second floor. I never could understand how she could give away $1500 worth of china without blinking an eye. Money was tight for them.
Living in this house was both a blessing because of being able to see my grandson and son and a true trial trying to make her understand I wanted to treat her like a loved member of our family. I failed at that part.