when he died, his jackets all went to the grandkids (world-war-two-chic was en vogue), his medals to his sons, and his meticulous preparations for any far-off hurricane, blizzard, fabled connecticut sandstorm, power outage, overheating engine, skinned knee to the big and elegant dumpster.
his wife in her heels-for-every-occasion, in her quiet knowing languages and recipes and birdseed loved him even after she forgot his name and hers.
they built this house bare-handed and in the shade of the trees and spiders and cell-phone towers it will stand as ever it always has.