7th April 2020
My Grandad has just passed away
during the night. He was the most incredible man. He collects and keeps all the
keepsakes of his life that he made with my Nanny in a little room. It was his
office and we used to sit and talk to him. His black leather chair was getting
all crinkled and dry. He loved being in there, surrounded by his life. Every
pen, every notebook, every photo, every newspaper cutting, burst out of drawers
and folders. I'm not even sure what colours the walls were.
His name was Ronald Smith.
I loved him very much, even if he
did tell my sister and I to turn off Fresh Prince of Bel Air on the channel
called Trouble. We loved it because he had Sky. But he'd only watch the news
and sport. When we were younger, we thought the telly he watched was so boring.
No wonder Nanny had to knit, do the crossword, cuddle us, and escape to the
jacuzzi. Now, I would do anything to sit and watch a rugby or cricket match
with him. Most evenings, when we were younger, we'd have jacuzzi nights when
we'd go and visit and I remember running through from the furthest conservatory
getting colder and colder in a little towel until Nanny would cuddle me warm
again. Grandad would be sitting on his beige leather sofa, making the headrest
turn brown with the amount of years his head had rested upon it. He'd be
watching cricket. Once I was changed, I always sneak up to him and say good
night. He'd give me the biggest kiss and wish me sweet dreams. He'd be all
snuggly and squishy. He had soft white hair, that never really left his head.
Such a strong head of hair. He turned up to my Mum's wedding looking like
Einstein in a bow tie.
He started a seating company and
built it up with Nanny by his side. He started it by touring table tennis
tables, then realising that none of the places had seating. He saw a gap in the
market and went for it. I remember him saying how he will always regret not
putting a patent in for his umpires chair invention as someone copied him. He
supplied seating to every sporting event you could think of. He's got signed
photos of lots of sport stars. I remember a signed cricket bat that he loved
and the one of John McEnroe. We went to Wimbledon most years with my Mum or my
sister. Auntie Jackie would get us tickets. She's the oldest out of five. And
probably the most sensible. Two girls, my Mum, then two boys. They all look
after each other now. The eldest and the youngest of the brother and sisters
still work for the company (and my cousin, too). I'm so proud to have come from
such a hard working businessman. I have so many memories about him and Nanny.
When we were little, they used to
send us these figurines from every holiday. I remember a hula shaking woman
from St. Kitts. My Nanny used to say Petit St Vincent was her favourite. She
remembers a man coming along on a bike to deliver their dinner in their cabin
by the beach. They travelled everywhere. My favourite toy was a koala bear from
Australia that played waltzing matilda when you pressed the paw. My Dad helped
build their swimming pool and all the cousins would flock there and swim. The
savings account they set up for me paid for the insurance of my car and my
first Caribbean holiday. He'd be happy I spent it wisely - on memories.
When I was little, I played cricket
in the grounds of Highclere Castle. It was a friendly against another school
but I was chosen with another girl because we were tall. Anyway, Nan and
Grandad came along to that and I felt so proud that day of them being able to
watch me. It was the perfect summers day. The cricket pitch is surrounded by
woodland - like a secret hidden area. Grandad later told me that he used to
play cricket there with Richie Benaud and they would take girls into their
caravan when touring around. He loved telling us a story. It's how he's keeping
his stories alive. He relives them again by telling us (even if we did hear
them every half an hour when he got a bit older and had forgotten he'd already
told you). I'd say I haven't heard the story so he'd tell me all over again. I
wish he could tell me another story.
When they moved to Cornwall, I was
4 or 5, and Grandad started making boats. Really intricate, beautiful objects.
Pieces of art. His hands are really memorable. Even his thumbnail I remember.
It had lines down it and was rounded off into an oval. They became more and
more freckly as time went on. They were quite small and really delicate. I
remember he bruised a lot when he got older and Nanny used to tell him off.
Nanny used to tell him off a lot but I think he liked it. He would sit and
fiddle with tiny pliers to make his boats all day long and then call 'Grace'
out loud so she could bring him lunch. We need to preserve his boats.
He had a
salad every lunchtime (I remember seeing my first fennel) and loved fish. I
remember the way he ate the gravy left over with his desert spoon and Nanny
would have to go and get him another one. I remember how he was the only one
who loved broad beans. He taught me to leave my knife and fork facing down when
eating as it was rude to have the spikes pointing up. He taught me to break
bread with my thumbs on my side plate, not with a knife. He taught me that he
always wins at monopoly (his tactic, you ask? Buy everything you land on). They
had a fish man that came every week. The last meal I made him was trout with
capers. We ate exactly where I am sitting. But now, this room is the lounge and
it used to be the dining room. The picture of that meal is upstairs on our
landing. There's a glass of red wine in the corner. He was happy. He had the
most amazing life. Their house was on the edge of a cliff and looked out to the
sea. It was the most beautiful view to retire to. I miss it but I'm so happy to
have the memories. It inspires me to make memories like that for our new little
family.
Yes, he was old fashioned - had
never set foot in the kitchen, didn't know how to use the washing machine when
Nanny passed and he was a lost soul without her. He got by for nearly 20 years
without her. Now, they can spend their 90th birthdays together this year. I can
hear him shouting out her name already. They were married for 52 years or so
and we all used to say how Nanny put up with him. I think he grounded her. He
kept her safe. He was Mr Smith and she was Mrs. I'll be a Mrs Smith next year.
I remember him telling me about how
he built his first house. Nanny's Dad ran a pub (The Kite Inn at Osney, Botley,
Oxford) and he knew everything about betting. He wasn't a gambling man but he
told Grandad how to bet his money and what on. He won enough to build his
house. He then took out a few more loans from the bank (£500 at a time he said)
and then gradually built it. Nanny was up a roof at 8 months pregnant with her
second (Auntie Chris) doing the roof tiles.
One thing Grandad loved to to was
to drink a lot of red wine. Three quarters of a bottle at lunchtime, the rest
for dinner and usually another one at dinner time...a lot! He loved eating out.
He would take us all out for dinner at posh restaurants (maybe that's where my
fascination with restaurants and good food originates) and he loved frogs legs.
I can still see him sucking all the frog bones and dropping them into a bowl,
then washing his hands in some lemony water. Nanny has brie in breadcrumbs
(anything cheesy or fatty she loved). A funny memory was when he went into
McDonald's for the first time. He went and sat down then raised his hand for a
waiter. He thought it was table service.
Even though he was a grumpy Grandad
sometimes, you knew, deep down, he was full of love underneath. He upheld the
traditional man of the household: limited his emotions, always kept himself
busy with making things and fixing things.
Every morning when we'd visit them
in Cornwall, I'd wake up to Nanny opening the sliding door to the spare room
with her dressing gown on from Japan. I'd sneak off from the bottom bunk (my
sister slept on top) and we'd go into the kitchen and feed the 5 dogs (or
however many they had at the time: they used to run a kennels in Newbury that
they turned into the Leisure Centre). We'd put the kettle on. We'd all have
earl grey (mine extra milky) and go back into their bedroom where Grandad would
be sat up and the duvet pulled just up enough to see his belly sticking out. He
was freckly like Mummys. We'd stare at the rolling hills out of their bedroom
(over to the other side of the cliff) and talk about what we'd do that day.
Usually, we'd go down to Calne Beach or we'd go to the bowling club. When we
were having our earl grey, I used to stare at the objects on their windowsill.
I can still see it now. A glass book with violins on, a teddy, a crab, a
porcelain dog. Once we'd finish our tea, the dogs would lick the last bits. It
felt naughty but Nanny let us do it. Oh, and we'd always have a moo cow
biscuit. Weirdly, I had two this morning in bed. And I've also seen lots of
robins recently. I always think they're my Nanny in disguise, telling us she's
going to look after Grandad now. Just like she's always done.
Goodbye Grandad, you were the
pillar of our family. Our foundations. Our roots. We now have new roots to tend
to and thanks to you, we've got direction and confidence to grow. Thank you.
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