by Lisa Twaronite Sone
I used to volunteer at a nursing home .
I would sign in at the front desk and then walk from room to room with my infant daughter, chatting with anyone who wanted to talk to a visitor.
One day, I wandered into the full care wing of the building. I usually didn’t go there, because most of its patients were suffering from advanced dementia.
A woman was lying in her bed with her eyes open, so I decided to say hello and see if she was responsive.
I remember her window faced west, and the afternoon sun was streaming into her room. Her scraggly white hair, spread out on the pillow around her, shone like a halo.
“Is it you?” she asked, in a gravelly whisper.
“Yes,” I said.
“I knew you’d come.”
“I’m here.”
“I’m sorry for all that happened,” she said, before her voice dropped to a low whisper and I couldn’t catch her words. She concluded with, “I always knew you’d come back to me.”
I wondered who she thought I was.
“Is that my grandchild?” she asked.
Ah.
“Yes,” I said, lifting up my fat, smiling baby for her to see.
“She looks like a good one!”
“She is.”
I let her stroke my daughter’s face.
“I’ll see you again soon,” the woman said, and I told her, “Of course.”
But when I went back the next week, her room was empty. An aide told me she had died.
I never knew her name.
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For an interview with Lisa about her writing with Reuters, see here.
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