In January their first-born daughter died after a recurrence of breast cancer. She left two children and family and friends, stretching from Ballard to around the world, following years working overseas. On a Saturday there was an open house in her honor. Jim spent his last night there. Next morning the Happy Hauler arrived to begin emptying the house of its last 49 years.
The tools, the knick-knacks, the cleaning supplies, the china cabinet in the hall and the leftover food, “Take it!” Jim said, “Take it!” He loaded a few things, including the photo albums and a trundle sewing machine he’d decided to fix. The following Sunday, on March 4, 2018, Marion Hafterson died, just eleven days short of her 89th birthday.
Over those clean-out days I’d pored over the photo albums looking at first Christmases and grandparent visits, birthdays and the first day of school. There was Marion as I never knew her, glamorously blonde, with her tow-headed girls.
Over the years I observed their summer pizza nights in the backyard of another friend on the alley. Sometimes Marion Hafterson would stroll down to visit, in our matching garden clogs, calling at the back door. She never suffered fools and had toothy grin. I liked her version of how she and Jim had met on a ski slope. She had chosen to leave her hometown of Hanover, New Hampshire and was working in the Bay Area in California. She’d packed her lunch and Jim had not. She sized him up to decide whether to share her sandwich with him, perhaps already realizing her decision might be for keeps.
Last week Jim Hafterson told me his account. He’d been invited to ski with the Palo Alto Ski Club when he was working in California after the service. “Marion was the only person I could keep up with, and besides she was carrying a lunch.” They were married on July 11, 1964. After he was transferred, “I drug her up here,” Jim said. She claimed that when he first drove her to the Ballard house he took every bumpy back road and made her water break. Until college their daughters never lived anywhere else.
Last week the house sold in a bidding war heartbeat. “If the new owners don’t take out the plum tree,” Jim said to me the day that it went on the market, “and don’t pick them…make sure to rescue them.” He left by the back door, after a beer with us in the kitchen. He gave a backwards wave.
I mourn the losses within this family, along this alley, and to the fabric of Ballard and neighborhoods like these. There was a time when a young family could move from a trailer into a house, and stay there for 49 years. I will miss my neighbors dearly, and the past they represent. One doesn’t meet neighbors any more like Marion and Jim. They were the Haftersons.
a heartwarming story!