The ride to the cemetery grounds
where the services were going to be held was the longest car ride of my
life. I remember I was in this car with
Ed and his parents and my mother and aunt and there was such a sad cloud that
seemed to hang over us. This cloud was
both emotional as well as literal. The
skies were crying for my baby and so was everyone in that car. The silence and the soft sobs were both
unbearable. I sat in this slow moving
car staring out the window at life. The
world seemed to operate as normal around me.
How could things be so normal for everyone? Didn’t they know my daughter was dead? Why didn’t the world stop to mourn the lost
of this beautiful child? Those were my
thoughts as the cars and trees passed on by.
I knew that my eyes were swollen already and I had no idea how they
could possible release anymore tears, but it was just the beginning and my
tears were just warming up for the main event.
I looked away from the window for
a while because it angered me to see people walking on the street smiling and
laughing like all was great with the world.
I watched her father’s face for a while.
His expression was hard and controlled.
He was trying to hold it together.
He had to prove that he was a strong man and that he could handle what
we were about to face. I watched as his
expression started changing from hard to a little softer. It kept getting softer until the tears
started forming in his eyes. He kept his
composure and he wouldn’t let those tears fall.
I was proud of him for trying to be strong for me, but I knew he would
have to let go soon. My eyes shifted to
my mother who was sitting there dressed so lovely. I studied her face and I saw such sadness. The sadness was mixed with anger, anger that
she was trying to suppress. I knew she
was angry with God that day. I could
almost hear the questions she was asking him in her mind. Why? Why would you take my sweet
grandchild? Why would you allow her to
leave her mother? How was I going to get
through it and more importantly, How was I going to help my child get through
the lost of her child? Her sobs were
getting a little louder now, but she too tried to control them for me. I moved up to the front of the car and I
watched my in-laws. I couldn’t see the
actual faces because their backs were to me, but the body language was
apparent. They too were wondering how
such a lovely child could be taken from them.
She was their first grandchild as well as another female Kizzie. Girls were
scarce in their family and I recall the joy her birth brought to them. My mother-in-law was also sobbing softly and
she rested her head in the arms of her husband.
She is a small lady who had a strong will and a huge heart. I knew she was trying to be strong for her
son and her struggle within was great. My father-in-law was always the strong one in
the family. He carried himself that way
on the outside. Inside he was like a
cuddly teddy bear. He could be gentle
and he loved his Girls. I spent a lot of
time with him and I knew that underneath the tough exterior was a kind-hearted
soul. He always made Ky’monie
and I laugh and he always treated us like princesses. Monie would say to
him, “Come here granddad I got something to tell you”, he would say, “What is
it baby girl.” She would say, “Come here it’s a secrete I have to tell you in
your ear.” Well you know how the story goes.
He would say ok and walk all the way over to her, (because she would
never come to you) and when he got there and put his ear to her mouth she would
say “CIKE” and burst out laughing. He
would laugh and tell her it was funny that she could get him with that same
trick over and over. As I watched him
put his arms around his wife and wipe her tears, I smiled because no matter how
many times she did that she would get all of us with it each and every
time. I don’t remember him allowing his
tears to fall, but I am sure they did because no one could control their
emotions that day. I watched my aunt who
also tried to be strong as she comforted my mother. I could feel her sorrow flowing through the
car and I knew I had to turn back towards the window before I let it all out
again. It seemed as if a lifetime had
gone by, then a realized one had. Ky’monie’s life was flashing before my eyes as the car
rolled on toward its destination. I saw
her smiling at me in the tub that day. I
saw her running around on the playground.
I saw her teaching her sister how to put her foot on the petal of her
pink power wheels car in order to make it go.
I saw her waving to me as she went off to school that first day. I saw her when she took her first breath out
of me, and I saw her take her last in the hospital bed.