I lived with my grandparents as a boy before kindergarten. My grandfather, a union boilermaker, always left for the job early in the morning before I woke. In the evenings, pap would stumble through the back door, covered in soot, exhausted. Sometimes I'd run up to him and hug his leg, a sign of appreciation, true love. Pap always laughed in delight at the affection and then he’d pat my back in approval.
As I clung to pap’s ***** work pants, the sharp smell of burnt metal filled my world. It was the scent of the Rust Belt that often hung in the air around the steel mills and so many manufacturing centers. That familiar smell reflected the gritty region, its culture of hard day labor and heavy Sunday dinners, the only way of life we understood.
Fifteen years later, sitting together on pap’s back porch next to his stack of books, his retirement library, the metallic scent was gone, along with the steel mills and the rail yards. ‘I miss that smell,’ I said. Pap kind of frowned and rolled his eyes in that way when we hear the young and naive speak without wisdom or experience. ‘I don’t,’ he said.