I went to the airport—alone—only to find out my son’s whole family had already gone to Torch Lake without me. When I called from the airport, my daughter-in-law laughed: ‘Oh, sweetie, we’re already at Torch Lake. Why didn’t you come yesterday?’ I went home and said nothing.
I didn’t argue, I didn’t beg. I locked one bank account, rewrote my will… And when they landed back home. The hum of travelers and rolling suitcases filled the terminal at Gerald R.
Ford International Airport. I stood still, ticket in hand, peering up at the departure board. Grand Rapids to Cherry Capital: on time.
Gate C6. I should have felt that familiar flutter—the kind that comes before a week of laughter, grandchildren’s hugs, lakeside mornings. Instead, my stomach churned with something heavier.
I dialed Nolan first. No answer. Then I called Ivette.
She picked up on the third ring, her voice bubbling with cheer. “Oh, sweetie,” she said, a soft laugh under the words. “We’re already here at the cabin.
Why didn’t you come yesterday?”
“Yesterday?” I asked, keeping my voice steady. “You told me the flight was today. Three p.m.”
There was a pause, a rustle of wind, or perhaps just her breath.
“Did I? I thought we said the twelfth. Clara even double‑checked the tickets.”
Clara—the youngest of the grandkids, nine years old and apparently more informed than I was.
I turned toward the glass and blinked at the tarmac, as if that might explain it. I sat down on a bench near a vending machine and pulled up our text thread with trembling fingers. There it was, clear as sunlight: Flights at 3:00 p.m.
on the 13th. Don’t be late, Delora. We’re counting on you.
Sent by Ivette herself. Around me, the airport kept moving—families hugging, flight announcements blaring, children buzzing and dragging oversized backpacks. I had packed mine the night before, carefully rolling each shirt.
I had even baked sugar cookies for the kids, the ones with cinnamon edges Nolan used to love. And they had left me. Not forgotten, not miscommunicated.
Left. I didn’t cry. I didn’t call back.
I walked slowly out of the terminal, past the arrivals lane where I should have been picked up next week, and drove home in silence. The suitcase stayed in the trunk. The cookies sat wrapped in foil on the passenger seat, untouched.
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