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Beneath the police log, there was an announcement. A retired fireman was being buried that day. The cemetery was on my commute to work. The fireman had been born in a nearby township over fifty years ago. He had left as a teenager. He was being returned as requested by his will.His name leaped off the page at me. An Italian name, I had not thought of in a while, Anthony Benito Barone. It was my stepfather! A name I had not seen in decades. I thought it must be just someone with the same name. It could NOT be my stepfather. Last I heard he was a fireman in Norwalk, not in Northern California. I read the obituary and the details were clearly those of my stepfather since they named his children. Nothing was mentioned of a wife or of his stepchildren, but I knew his children in youth, so I could verify it was the same man.I was sad to hear he was dead, and that was a bit unexpected as our relationship had been rocky. I got up to get a beer and dropped the paper. The beer felt cold, but good in my hand. I felt dreamy after a time as I sipped at the bottle while looking out over my shaggy, but very green lawn. The bees were flitting from clover head to clover head. I watched the girls work in the fading sunlight. I shut my eyes and dreamed a dream…I knelt by a grave. The tombstone must have read Anthony Barone, but it was illegible to me in this state, but somehow I knew what the name was. I stared at a pile of grass on the grave. I knew I had just pulled it up. The cup where the flowers were to be placed was completely overgrown with invading tendrils of grass. Obviously, no one had placed anything on this grave in quite a long time. I continued to pull at the grass until the edges were clear and exposed.Where were his kids? Why didn’t they come here? I knew they had not been very close to their father. His first divorce was after only five years of marriage. Not much time to build a lasting relationship. His marriage to my mother had lasted almost ten years, which was the longest, but I knew they never talked. I wondered about the subsequent marriages I had heard about. Now that he was dead, was there really no one that would visit his grave? Apparently, the answer was no.I was only a stepchild. What was I even doing here? Yet I was here, though I lacked the blood relation. I’m just overly sentimental, I thought to myself. It seemed so very sad that the little receptacle should be filled with weeds. I finished pulling the offending grass away.“Ralph, is that you?”Astonished to hear my name, I looked up. There he was. Tony Barone was standing right there in front of me.“Whaa…Uhhh?!” I stammered. As I stood up and backed away, I tripped and fell on my backside.I started sliding on the grass away from the apparition.“No, Ralph, wait!” implored the image.I stopped sliding on my butt and asked, “Are you a ghost?”“Yes…I guess I am. It is so good to see you after all this time. How long have I been dead?” my stepfather asked.“You don’t know?” I replied.“No, I have spent my afterlife floating in a kind of limbo. I have no perception of the passage of time. ““What do you mean?”“I do not know. I feel unusually whole tonight, though. That I know with certainty. I rarely feel anything or have any sense of a physical presence, except when someone needs to populate their dreams with strangers.”“I don’t understand,” I said.Just then the cemetery began to flicker and fade away. When my eyes refocused, Tony Barone and I were standing on a golf course in bright daylight underneath a beautiful blue sky.“You boys ready to play?” A tall middle-aged man yelled as he walked toward us. A shorter, younger man walked beside him and waved as they approached.“Of course, we’re ready!” my stepfather shouted back.I felt my arm rise up and wave back at them as if I knew the two men. I had no idea who they were. I turned to speak to my stepfather, but I had no control of my body. Instead, I walked over and shook the strangers’ hands.“Don’t worry Ralph. We are in someone else’s dream. We can communicate to each other through our thoughts, but the dreamer controls our actions and speech.”I tried to think my question, “What do you mean, dreamer?”At the same time, as I did this, my physical body slapped a tremendous drive down the fairway. There was a collective, “Ooooooh!” from the other three men in the foursome.
“I am not sure. Other souls have communicated with me as I am communicating with you. They explained to me what was happening. You see, there is someone dreaming. They needed a couple of spirits to fill out this foursome. The dreamer knows the other actors in this dream.”“Wow...” was the only response I could manage to this revelation.“Those other two feel their physical bodies as if they are alive again. You see, when someone who knew and loved you in life dreams of you after you are dead, it is like you have been brought back to life. When you are just an ancillary character, it is only like being half alive” explained Tony Barone.“How am I in this dream? Am I dead?” Suddenly, I became very fearful that I had died. My mind turned to Bobbi and how alone she would be. I could not be, I would not be, dead.“No, I do not think so, because your thoughts do not feel quite the same as those of other spirits I have met. I do not know why I understand this.”“Are you sure I am not dead?!”“Thank you for coming to visit my grave. I have not felt this alive since I died.” Not actually answering my question is the most disturbing of responses.While this internal conversation between my stepfather and I went on, we all finished our initial drives onto the fairway. The four of us began walking down the course.“Doesn’t anyone dream of you, Tony?” I had always called my stepfather by his first name. Behind his back, I had often called him Pop Barone. It had been a nickname one of my teenage friends had given him. I had used it as a sign of disrespect, I guess.“No, Ralph. No one ever dreams of me. I had no close friends and my family life left much to be desired. All my ex-wives hate me, but surprisingly not enough to ever have a dream about me. I have had much time floating in limbo to think of how I lived my life.”“That is very sad.”“Yes, it is.”Just then the golf course began to waver and disappear.“Well Ralph, I guess our dreamer has awaked. Our visit is ending. I feel myself slipping back.” said my stepfather as he began to fade.“Tony, I’m sorry.” I stuttered lamely.“No reason to be apologetic. Why don’t you call me, Pop Barone, I do not mind. You never called me Dad, always just my first name. Pop Barone, it sounds like there might be a little affection in that name. Remember, the more peoples’ lives you touch positively, the more pleasant the afterlife.” I was sure I heard a muffled voice.“Yes” I replied softly.“Dream about me.” There seemed to be a whisper in the wind.“Yes, Pop Barone, I will do that,” I answered to the empty air of my garage as I sat straight up in the chair I had fallen asleep in. The bottle of beer went tumbling to the floor and broke.I ignored the broken glass and I bolted into the house to tell Bobbi. “I knew he had been born up here somewhere, but I did not know it was so close!” I said while catching my breath.“What are you talking about, Ralph?”“Tony Barone, the fireman, my stepfather from when I was a kid, is dead. They buried him over in Hicksville cemetery. Can you believe that?! I read it in this newspaper from the stacks.” I loudly explained.“Now that is pretty amazing. What a small world.” she said rather coldly.“Damn, this is weird. It’s like I was destined to read that paper. I should go see his grave.”“Why? I thought you hated the guy. To hear you tell it, the only reason for you to visit his grave would be to spit on it.”“That’s a little harsh, don’t you think. He was very strict. I know he only thought of me as the geeky, four-eyed kid he had to support because he had married my mother. Still, I spent ten of my most formative years, ages 7 to 17, in his presence. He is a part of me, whether I like it or not.”“OK, baby, don’t get upset. Let’s eat dinner.” Bobbi suggested quietly.“No, I can’t. I need to go down there right now!”“What the hell are you talking about?” She was incredulous. “You are not going to a cemetery in the dark.”“Oh yes, I am!”“Be careful, Ralph.” Bobbi sighed. She had heard the resolve in my voice. Most of the time, I was fairly pliable, but occasionally I would dig in my heels on an issue. She knew better than to try to dissuade me.I grabbed my overcoat and kissed her on the cheek as I went out the front door. Before I left, though, I stopped in my front garden and plucked a few purple croci to put on his grave.For a moment, I sat in my car and considered what I was doing. Maybe I should just go in and eat dinner. The grave would be there tomorrow and the next day for that matter.
I did not understand why I had to go right then, but I did. There was some reason I had read that paper at this moment in time. As I had grown older, I had begun to suspect, no, sense a deeper reality than science addressed.
Exactly one year after he dies, I read about it in an old newspaper. I could not believe he was dead. Moreover, I could not believe he was buried so close to where I had ended up settling. It was too coincidental not to be acted upon immediately. Obviously, now was the time to pay my respects.I checked the sky and was happy to find a full moon, another coincidence, which would allow me to search the small cemetery without a flashlight. The obituary gave the relative position of the service, so mourners could find it.I backed out of the driveway, slowly. Making my way out, I did not get out of second gear, at first. Something made me hesitant, but I overcame it. I accelerated through the remaining gears and was cruising at plus sixty-five in no time.As I crested a hill, I could see the tombstones. The full moon was especially luminescent. I pulled into the drive and got out of my car. A cold wind chilled me to the bone. I zipped my jacket up to my chin and shivered. The leafless trees cast eerie shifting shadows in the bright moonlight.The gate was locked, so I hopped onto the hood of my car and pulled myself over the fence. I tried to land lightly, but the years had begun to catch up with me. I landed with a thud, jammed my knee, and fell backward onto my butt. I lay there for a moment and let the pain in my knee subsided. I looked at the flowers I had brought. They were a little worse for the wear, but they would suffice.“What am I doing here?” I asked aloud. After a little silent reflection, I answered myself. “Well I’m here, so I better start looking.” I often talked to myself when I was nervous. I was certainly nervous now.I made my way across the grass in the direction the obituary had indicated. I walked slowly with my head down, reading the names on the headstones. Beneath the full moon, I was able to read them with surprising ease.I reached the end of the first row. I moved over one row and started back. After several of these switchbacks, I finally found the name that had brought me here.Anthony Benito Barone. There it was, carved in stone at my feet. I got down on one knee and ran my hand over the letters. He really was dead. A flood of memories from my childhood came rushing into my head.I looked down at the flowers in my hand. I was glad I had brought them. The cup had a little water from the recent rain. I placed the flowers into the cup. Suddenly, I began to cry. Trying to get a hold of myself, I choked back a sob. I only cried harder. Intellectually, I believed we had not been very close. In my heart, though, I guess there lurked some powerful feelings that I had suppressed all these years.I stood and stared at the grave for another few minutes, incredulous.
There was the pile of grass I had pulled out of the receptacle in my dream earlier???
I could not understand how that could be, but strangely I did feel that it was okay for it to be there. I felt no need to know how it could be.I knelt down, straightened the little flowers, and put my hand on the headstone. I said a little prayer for my stepfather’s soul and then hurried back to my car. Time was short. I had many old friends to call and new ones to meet. Of course, I also had some dreams to dream.Previously published .