Short Story: A Class Act
| February 9, 2011Occasionally her children came to visit. Very rarely her grandchildren appeared as well holding plates of who-knows-what and talking in exaggerated cheery voices. She also had friends. Her friends came every Shabbos morning to catch up on the news. It was a tradition maintained from the past when she would sit under the wide bough of her maple on the red painted bench and matching table. One by one her friends would drop by until the maple was overflowing with people and voices.
Her friends were still there for her. They called at night when sleep didn’t come after a full day of catnaps. They came laden with warm silver-foiled dinners in the early evening. They knew they would find her in bed. Heidi was always in bed. During freezing cold scorching heat gentle breezes or falling leaves. All the seasons bothered her the way the world didn’t stop changing but rushed about sleeping in the winter bursting with life in the spring sun bathing in the warm summer and then falling again to the autumn winds.
She didn’t used to be like this. When she was fifty sixty even seventy she was a young woman. People said she was forever young. Now the tables had been sharply turned the dance floor vacated for another crowd. She had crossed over the bridge to live out her life among the old.
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