Rose imagined that the colorful brochure must have been
tossed away with the rest of the junk mail Adobe Nursing
Home had received. Whereas the rest of the mail dutifully
went into the wastebasket, a brief gust of wind from an open
door must have caught the brochure and sent it scuttling
down the faded linoleum hall. As if by prior arrangement,
a cross breeze would have sucked it under her door before
anyone noticed it. She saw it drawn by the cool air coming
from her open window, skating across the dusty linoleum and
stopping only when it had collided with her favorite orange
slippers.
Rose looked down at her feet and stared blankly at the brochure
that was wedged under a toe, fluttering in the breeze.
She gently set down the small glass ship she had been holding,
giving it a gentle pat before leaning over and picking up the
ad. She straightened up with a deep sigh and shifted to a less
uncomfortable spot on the unyielding bed. She moved the paper
away from her face, then close up, then away again before
groping the top of her head for her glasses and settling them
on her nose. “All The Fun You Can Handle” the brochure
practically screamed. The picture was of a man and a woman
playing chess. His arm was around her, and they were both
laughing. Rose studied the brochure at first disdainfully, then
more closely. She looked at the glass ship, then at the brochure
again, and she smiled. “Oh yes. This is just what the doctor
ordered.”
Later that evening her eldest son, Arnold, came to the
nursing home to visit her. He sat heavily on the vinyl couch
and ran a thick hand through his thinning hair before droning
on about his work. Rose listened patiently to his stories,
nodding and asking the right questions but waiting to get a
word in edgewise. Once Arnold took a breath, looking as if he
would go on about shuffling papers from one office to another,
she said, “I’d like to take a trip.”
Arnold blinked his hound-dog eyes, his lower lip poked
out a bit, and he blinked again. “What?”
“I want to take a trip,” Rose said again, slowly. She pulled
the folded brochure out of her robe pocket, smoothed it carefully
with her gnarled hands, and handed it to him.
Arnold took the brochure, fumbled for his glasses in his
breast pocket, set them on his nose, and held the brochure at
the end of his arms, frowning mightily at the gaudy display
before him. He opened the tri-fold, his eyebrows twitching up
at words like “fun,” “adventure,” and “exotic.” He sighed and
tucked the brochure carelessly in one of his coat pockets. “I
think I better talk this over with Gail and Sharon,” he said as
he pecked her on her cheek to signify the visit was over.
Rose knew they would all be back that weekend. They
always visited her between lunch and dinner on Saturday. So
she carefully made sure she knew what to say, what their arguments
might be and was ready and waiting for them when
they appeared Saturday afternoon. After the normal greetings,
a bit of small talk, and what seemed to Rose too long of
a time, she brought up the trip.
“You mean to the mall?” Gail asked as she tucked a stray
strand of hair back into her bun and smoothed down her
plain brown dress. Rose sometimes went with her to the mall
for a few hours to do a little shopping and have a bite to eat.
“No,” said Rose, but before she could go on, Sharon broke
in with a sniff.
“You mean to the beach?” Sometimes the children rented a
couple of hotel rooms on the beach in the summer and invited
Rose to join them for a long weekend. Sharon’s hand came
up, as if to ward off an invisible breeze from her perfectly
done hair, her pinched expression declaring that going to the
beach wasn’t what she wanted to do.
“No,” said Rose. “I want to go on a cruise.”
They looked at each other and then back at her. “A cruise?”
Gail and Sharon asked together.
Rose nodded and told of the brochure that she had given
Arnold. He pulled the very crumpled brochure out of his
pocket and presented it to his sisters. They looked over it and
looked at each other, then back at Rose. “No,” all three said in
unison.
“What do you mean, no?” Rose asked in surprise.
“It would be too dangerous,” Arnold said.
“You would be happier here,” Sharon added.
“Don’t you like us visiting you?” Gail asked.
“Of...of course I like you visiting me,” Rose began. “But
dangerous? It’s just as dangerous walking down the hall here.
I could fall and break my hip.”
“All the more reason,” Arnold interjected, “to stay here. We
could not get to you as fast if you were on a cruise.”
Rose gaped at her son, but plodded on, “And happier here?
Would you be happy stuck with a bunch of old people, drooling
and peeing on themselves all day? I mean, unless we are
talking about the Price is Right, they don’t have anything to
say.”
Sharon smiled condescendingly, “But mother, you are just
as old as they are,” she pointed out.
“Damn how old I am girl!” Rose raised her voice. “You are
missing the point. The point is I may be as old as these folk,
but I’m not old here,” she thumped herself on her chest. “Or
here,” she pointed to the side of her head. “I don’t like the
food they serve here. I haven’t had a steak in two years, and I
have my own teeth, so don’t give me no flack about not being
able to chew it. And a body gets tired of mush and applesauce
every day.”
“Mother, please,” Gail pleaded, “you are getting all worked
up.”
“Worked up? It’s about time. All I do is sit here and wait
for these visits so I have a live body to talk to and not one of
them corpses they call a patient. And I want to take one little
cruise, one week out of my life with my own money, and you
three have the gall to tell me no? Me? Your mother! Is this the
way I raised you?”
“Mother, you are making a scene,” Sharon scolded as she
gave a faint smile to the nurse who appeared in the doorway,
concern written on her face.
“I’ll give you a scene, young lady. Ever since you married
that man, you’ve put on airs. That’s not the way I raised you.
I taught you the down to earth old fashioned way, and you
aren’t too big to take a switch to!”
Arnold sighed, gathered up his coat and the brochure. “We
are sorry, mother, but we are upsetting you and the others
here. We should leave.”
“Yes, go on and leave me here. A body wants a small
vacation, one week, who knows how long I’ll be here.” Rose
continued to holler as her children walked down the avocado-colored
hallway and out of the nursing home.
Rose was so worked up she couldn’t sleep that night. It
seemed every commercial on television for the next week was
about getting away or traveling, and this just added to her unhappiness.
The following Saturday the children came to visit,
but they kept it brief and no one mentioned the cruise. That
didn’t mean Rose wasn’t thinking about it, however. After
they left, she found a phonebook and looked up the number
to a travel agency that specialized in cruises. She then went to
her room that she shared with one other patient, and dialed
the number.
“Adventure Cruises, this is Sally, how can I help you?”
Rose explained she wanted to go on a weeklong cruise,
but didn’t know how to go about setting it up. Sally was very
helpful and suggested she come to the office. Rose explained
she was unable to currently and would like the information
over the phone. Sally was happy to oblige and after an hour,
Rose had found a cruise she thought sounded perfect and was
within her budget. She told Sally she would get a money order
to her as soon as possible. As she hung up the phone Rose
thought how easy this would be to do.
“No children are going to tell me I can’t do as I please.”
She nodded firmly to herself.
Monday morning, after breakfast, Rose carefully dressed
in one of the few sets of clothing she had. She carefully did
her hair, put on her orange lipstick--the one Sharon hated-
-and topped it off with her favorite lavender hat. Making
sure the nurses were busy doing their rounds, she managed
to get out the front door without anyone the wiser and she
congratulated herself on that fact. The bank was about three
miles away from her nursing home, but Rose had all day. She
usually didn’t eat lunch, so they wouldn’t miss her then, and
it was such a pretty spring day, she set off down the sidewalk,
head held up, a smile on her lips.
Rose had to stop a few times to rest her weary legs, but
by lunchtime she had made it to the bank. The line wasn’t
long and she soon found herself before a cool young man, his
eyebrows arched politely but impersonally over his green eyes.
“Yes, how may I help you?” he spoke slowly and loudly.
Rose thought about scolding him. She wasn’t deaf or
stupid, but then she smiled. After all, she was here to get her
money out of the bank and take a cruise! “I’d like to get a
money order,” she said brightly. She pushed her identification,
her paper bankcard, and a small piece of paper she had written
the amount on and whom to make it out to, through the
small slot at the bottom of the window.
The young man nodded briefly and punched things into
his computer. He paused and looked from the computer to
Rose and back again. “Mrs....”
“Call me Rose,” she said brightly.
He smiled wanly, “Rose, do you happen to have either Gail
or Arnold here with you today?”
Rose blinked and her smile slipped. “Why would I have
one of my children with me?”
The young man cleared his throat, “Well, it appears that
your account is under their approval. For me to give you this
money order, they have to sign for it.”
Rose’s smile fell all the way, and her brows knitted. “Oh
dear... I forgot about that. But it’s my money. Can’t I take
it out if I want?”
The young man held up his hands and tried to put on a
reassuring smile that only made Rose’s hopes completely die.
“I’m sorry, but the account must have one of their signatures.”
Rose nodded and took back the papers. She thanked the
young man who had already turned away to help the next
customer. She walked slowly home. It seemed her dreams of
going on a cruise had faded beyond her grasp. How could she
have forgotten the children had power of attorney over her
estate? Ever since she had fallen sick, her children had treated
her like a child. She couldn’t fault them; the doctors weren’t
sure Rose would ever recover, but she did. The children
refused to let her return to her apartment and had left her in
the nursing home, thinking it was better for her there than
by herself again. She felt old, and heavy, and kept looking up
at the stores she passed, wondering when she would make it
back.
Rose was subdued for some time afterwards. Her husband
had been a sailor and had talked about the beauty of the sea.
There was a part of her that wanted to experience this, to feel
close to him again, and do this one thing before she became
too old to enjoy it. She sat one night, holding the ship tenderly
in her hands, when a streetlight from outside caught the
glimmer of a ring on her finger. She turned her hand over and
looked at it, then smiled. Perhaps all was not lost.
Rose remembered passing a pawnshop on the way to the
bank. Although she had managed to sneak out the front door
the first time, she was aggravated to find it locked. Checking
the time, she made her way to the cafeteria. Although there
was much noise from the kitchen, no one was in sight and she
was able to get out the delivery door. Spring was giving way
slowly. The trees that had earlier been full of flowers had shed
most of them in favor of bright green leaves. It made for a
pleasant, shady walk as Rose found the shop.
The man inside was about the age of her children, wearing
a button shirt and nice slacks. The shop itself was clean
and not at all what Rose expected. The young man smiled
when he saw her, and when she said she was here to sell a few
things, offered her a chair to rest on. She carefully pulled out
a small plastic bag and emptied out all her jewelry. The man
looked carefully at some, weighed others, and looked up a few
things in a book.
“Well, Rose,” he smiled, “these are all very nice pieces. You
have kept them in good condition. I could offer you a thousand
dollars for the lot.”
A thousand wasn’t quite enough to get Rose the trip she
wanted but put her a lot closer than she had been earlier. “I’ll
take it.”
The man shifted on his chair a moment, peering at the
jewelry before him. “May I ask why it is you wish to sell your
things, Rose? Pieces like this often get passed down to other
family members.”
Rose thought to take offence then realized he was genuinely
concerned. She peered around herself, then confided
that she wanted to take a cruise and that she wanted to save
her money for her children’s inheritance. She said these pieces
meant little to her sentimentally, and her children were not
interested in them. The young man smiled and relaxed. “As
long as you feel that way, I will take them.” As he handed her
the agreement stating that she was willing to sell her jewelry,
he spotted the ring on her hand. “May I see that?”
Rose reluctantly drew it off and handed it to him. That
ring was her wedding ring, one of the most precious pieces to
her.
“This ring is one of the most beautiful things I’ve seen in
my years working here. I would be willing to give you another
thousand for it.”
Rose paled. Two thousand dollars was enough to get her
that cruise with some left over for gifts and tips. But it was
her wedding ring. Her husband had given that to her. She had
never lost it in the fifty years they had been married.
“Rose,” the young man said gently. “I’m sorry. I can see
this means a lot to you.” He started to hand the ring back,
when Rose held up a hand to stop him.
“I’ll take it,” she whispered.
The sun was still shining and the birds singing as she left
the shop. The young man had kindly said he would give Rose
thirty days to change her mind about the ring, but she knew
she would not change her mind. Once back inside the nursing
home, she sat on her bed, held the picture of her husband to
her chest, and wept softly.
Rose managed to get the money to Sally at the travel
agency, and Sally worked out for Rose to be picked up by a
taxi, taken to the train station and take the train to the coast,
then picked up at the coast depot and taken to the ship. The
only problem now was when she wanted to go. Rose said she
would call back.
The family visits had gotten more eased since Rose stopped
talking about her cruise, at least for her family if not for Rose.
Spring moved into summer, and the air conditioning, which
only seemed to work in the nursing home in the winter, broke
and the heater took over.
“We are going to have to wish you a happy Fourth of July
now, mother,” Gail was saying brightly.
“You won’t be back?” Rose asked, her excitement trying
not to show.
“We are all going to Uncle Joe’s house for a family get
together. We’ll bring you lots of pictures, though.”
Rose didn’t hear the rest of the visit. As soon as her daughter
was out of sight, she phoned Sally and Sally was happy to
discover there was an opening on a ship leaving that day. Rose
could get there in plenty of time for the ship didn’t set sail until
sunset. Rose packed quickly, laid a letter on her pillow she
had written addressed to her children and managed to leave
the nursing home without anyone the wiser.
Unbeknownst to Rose, Gail had dropped her sunglasses.
After a fruitless search through her purse, car, and house, she
returned to the nursing home, sure the glasses were there.
They were but Rose wasn’t. Gail read the note and her exclamations
were loud enough to alert the nurses. Gail called
Arnold and soon the family was racing their way toward the
docks to “save” Rose.
Rose made a pleasant, if uneventful, trip to the docks. She
was a little worried the taxi drivers or the train conductor
would ask her for fare, but they kindly let her know it had all
been taken care of. As the taxi approached the docks, she set
her lavender hat at a jaunty angle and smiled to herself in her
compact. All the waiting, all the planning, all saving, and she
was finally going to sea!
In the meantime her family, breaking all speed laws, soon
exited the freeway and impatiently followed the signs to the
port. Yellow lights were ignored, lanes made out of bikeways,
and the horn laid on liberally. Everyone was talking at once,
pointing different directions, yelling to “watch out!” Miraculously,
they made it to the docks and parked in the passenger
loading and unloading zone, spilling out onto the sidewalk.
Inside, Rose had already gone through the line, checked in
her bag, and picked up her tickets. She happily tottered the
way the woman motioned, stopping only to use the restroom.
“This is almost too good to be true,” she said to herself.
Her family had spent those precious minutes arguing about
who should stay with the car so they wouldn’t get a ticket.
They finally decided the ticket didn’t matter and they converged
on the ship, fanning out all over, ignoring the strange
looks people were giving them as they tried to locate Rose.
After a fruitless thirty-minute search they finally met on the
main deck.
“I can’t find her anywhere!” Gail cried.
“Where can she be?” Sharon asked impatiently.
“Did you check the bathrooms, the restaurant, and the gift
shop?” Arnold asked.
Realizing they had neglected the dock area they flooded
back to shore to search.
During that time Rose had given herself a start, thinking
that a form ahead of her was vaguely similar to Arnold’s
or that hair was the color of Sharon’s. Berating herself for
groundless worries, she stopped in the gift store for a few
things, popped into the restaurant for a quick bite to eat,
and then happily sailed to the ship and her tiny cabin, which
appeared palatial to her. Before she knew it the ship’s horn
sounded and the public address system announced that all
non-passengers should go to shore. Rose decided to go on
deck and watch the ship set off.
Her family, now panicking, heard the horns and converged
back to the dock. They frantically begged for the ship to be
held, but the employees didn’t share their concern. The family
looked on helplessly as the ship began pulling away.
Rose, atop deck, looked out over the sea of faces. She had
done it! She was going on her cruise. And...yes it was. That
was Arnold frantically gesturing at one of the employees on
the dock. And right next to him was Gail and Sharon. Rose
took off her lavender hat, raising it above her head, grinning
wide enough to be seen even at that distance.
“And now for my steak,” she said to no one in particular.
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