The Wallace De Pue Stories
In Our House, Piano is spelled Mulhausen By Wallace Earl De Pue, Sr. Chapter One My father was a barber. He was a perfectionist when he was cutting hair and he didn't care how long it took him to get it right for every customer. He worked in a shop for Bill Thompson, another barber who was Dad's best friend. Bill saw to it that Dad had the freedom to pursue his real interest, training prize fighters. Dad was safe from losing his job at the shop. Dad was only 5'2" tall. As a boy, he had nearly killed himself eating peanuts. His allergy to goobers stunted his growth. Even though he was short, he was very strong. He was also intelligent. When men showed up at the barbershop, they either wanted a haircut or they wanted to bet money that Dad could not escape a wrestling hold known as "a full Nelson." One man after another failed to hold the "Shorty." Sometimes Dad's veins would pop out in his head as he exerted his strength, but he would always escape his adversaries and claim his money. Even though I was only six, I remember when Dad was bringing fighters into the house where we lived, and training them in the large, empty bedroom right above our dining room. Mom would call Dad to supper when the food was nice and hot. Usually, the family had to begin without him. On one occasion, Dad's fighter was punching the heavy bag and dancing around above the dining room ceiling when plaster pieces fell into the food on our table. When that happened there was a fight between Mom and Dad. They loved one another dearly, but it was hard to believe when I saw them go at it. Mom was all Dad could handle, even as strong as he was. Her Italian temper made her formidable in battle. Mom and Dad ended their marriage when I was only six years old. After Dad and Mom were divorced, Mom moved into our first stable home. The old Victorian house had a basement, two stories and a full attic apartment where Bud Pemberton, our new boarder, stayed. Up to that time, we had moved from one house to another. The previous tenant of our new house had decided that the huge, heavy, Mulhausen upright piano was too much trouble to move when they left. The instrument attracted me immediately. I would sit and make sounds that were always floating through my head. Before very long, Mom believed that I needed piano lessons, but there was no money for them. Mom was a natural musician who had once taken free piano lessons from a nun; however, she didn't want to risk teaching me. Mom used to sit at the keyboard and sing with her pretty voice while accompanying herself. She could read music. I entered Fair Avenue Elementary School. The very first day of school, I heard a young girl, Jane Ann Howe, sing a song to celebrate the beginning of school. She sounded like an angel! "Oh, if I could only sing like that," I thought. After the first day, school became torture for me. In those days, it was very unusual for a child to wear eyeglasses, so no one could guess why I was failing in the first grade. The school held me back for two terms! Mrs. Dean, my teacher supposed that I was retarded. Finally, one of Mom's private customers, the wife of an optometrist, suggested that I should have my eyes tested. Her husband did Mom a favor. Mom was shaken when the doctor told her that I would have to have glasses. She had to borrow a lot of money to buy them. AAUS Library Room
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