Granddaughter’s Airport Note Warned Her Not To Board France Flight-heuh

My son told everyone he was taking me to France so I could finally enjoy my retirement.

He said it warmly, with his hand resting on the back of my chair, the way kind sons do in front of other people.

He said I deserved peace.

Image

He said I had spent too many years looking after everybody else.

He said the move would be good for me, good for my health, good for the family, good for Lily.

By the time we reached the airport, I had heard the words “good for you” so many times they no longer sounded like care.

They sounded like a lock turning.

The terminal was bright and restless, full of people dragging suitcases, balancing paper cups, checking screens, and snapping at children in the soft public way people do when they know strangers are watching.

Coffee hung in the air.

A little boy cried near the entrance while his father tried to fold a pushchair with one knee.

Somewhere overhead, a woman’s voice announced a flight delay, but her words dissolved into the general hum.

Matthew walked ahead of me with our passports in his hand.

He had insisted on holding mine.

“It’s easier, Mum,” he had said.

Everything was easier, according to Matthew, when he took it from me first.

My papers.

My phone.

My appointment cards.

My house documents.

My decisions.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *