He and my sister shared a love that surprised me with its tenacity. It was as though he thought he couldn't be loved, and as though she thought she couldn't love anyone else. It was hard to watch sometimes, sometimes it was a joy to observe.
They only got a year. A few years of wooing, a year of marriage, two years of heartbreak.
While I loved Jim because he loved my sister, he really shoe-horned himself into my heart in the time-honored fashion: by loving my child - more accurately, my grandchild. My daughter came to visit from Augusta, and we organized a picnic/fishing trip at Lacamas Lake.
Jim met Fiona, and it was instant mutual love.
They played peek-a-boo. They shared food. They took a walk, Jim acting as a tour guide through the wonderland of Western botany.
It was as though by opening his heart to embrace Cheryle, he had allowed a fissure to remain, allowing the love for this small person to enter and freshen and nourish the ground. Jim later told me he hadn't responded to a child like that since his daughter was born.
I could be wrong, but I like to think his acceptance of Fiona's fondness prepared the way for the flood of love he felt for his granddaughter, Ada.
It seemed natural that his affection for Ada created of tide of warmth and love for her brother Felix, our family, and those around him. While Jim was not a religious man, when I saw him around his grandchildren he seemed filled with grace and light.
Maybe it was just a reflection on the river of family times.
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