At sixty-eight, I had never seen the ocean. So when my son invited me on a Florida beach vacation, I cried right there in my kitchen.
I packed a new sunhat, painted my nails pale pink, and let myself believe I had finally been chosen. But the moment we reached the hotel lobby, my daughter-in-law handed me a piece of paper that revealed the real reason I had been invited.
I was crying over Jack and Rose in Titanic when my phone rang, which says almost everything about the kind of lonely afternoon I was having. I had a blanket over my knees, cold tea on the side table, and the familiar quiet widows learn to live with.
“Mom,” my son Sam said brightly. “We’re taking the family to Florida in two days, and we want you to come with us.”
“Florida?” I repeated. When you’ve spent your whole life in the mountains, Florida sounds less like a real place and more like a rumor made of sunshine and expensive sandals.
“Beach trip,” he added. “All of
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