Those summers were the best months of my childhood.
My grandmother, Hazel, was petite but strong, tough in the way only women who’ve worked nights in hospitals and raised children alone ever really are. She’d been a nurse at the local hospital—working double shifts, grabbing naps in on-call rooms, living on vending machine coffee and whatever she could pack in a brown paper bag. She divorced when my father was still young and raised him and his sister, my Aunt Paula, almost entirely on her own.
She never complained, but the years were etched into her. They showed in the tiny lines fan-spreading from the corners of her eyes and in the way her hands, still steady, carried a faint tremor when she thought no one was watching. When she smiled, though, she lit up the room.
Her house sat on the outskirts of Tuloma, a little wooden place with peeling white paint, a sagging front porch, and a shallow set of steps where I used to sit listening to cicadas. She kept pots of flowers along the porch rail—petunias, geraniums, and her favorite yellow marigolds—and in the backyard she had a vegetable garden that somehow always produced more tomatoes, beans, and squash than one person could eat.
Inside, the first thing you noticed was the smell.
Freshly baked cookies cooling on old wire racks, the faint scent of antiseptic that clung to her clothes from all those years working in the hospital, and the warm, comforting smell of old wood that had soaked up decades of laughter and late-night conversations.
Every time I crossed that threshold, she pulled me into a tight hug, even after I’d shot up taller than her.
“Calvin, you’re growing so fast I can barely keep up,” she’d say, laughing as she reached up to ruffle my hair.
But her eyes—those warm, hazel eyes that I was named after—always sparkled like I was the best thing that had ever walked through her door.
Those summer days felt like heaven.
She taught me how to bake cookies from scratch, letting me crack the eggs and sneak chocolate chips from the bowl. She told me stories about her hospital nights—tiny preemies who pulled through when no one thought they would, cranky surgeons who secretly cried when a patient died, the way she used to hide a peppermint in her pocket for scared kids in the pediatric ward.
We’d sit on the porch at dusk, watching fireflies blink in the yard while the local radio station played country songs and old rock ballads on a crackly speaker inside. Sometimes she laughed so hard telling a story she had to wipe tears from her eyes.
And yet, when she thought I wasn’t looking, I’d catch her sitting by the front window with her hands wrapped around a mug of coffee gone cold, staring at the framed photograph she kept on the little table next to her chair.
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In that photo were my father, my Aunt Paula, and me.
She dusted the frame carefully, as if it were made of crystal. But the way her fingers lingered on my father’s face, on Paula’s, told a different story. Sometimes, a shadow crossed her expression, a sadness so deep it made my chest ache, even when I was too young to understand why.
My father left Tuloma as soon as he could. After college he took an engineering job in Greenville, married my mother, and built a life that looked good on paper—solid salary, a respectable house, a retirement plan.
Aunt Paula married a man named Leon Mallister, a wealthy real estate developer. They moved to Peachtree City, Georgia, where manicured lawns, golf carts on tree-lined paths, and perfectly planned neighborhoods replaced the cracked sidewalks and sagging porches of my grandmother’s town. Paula and Leon had two kids, Isabelle and James—my cousins, who I saw once or twice at Christmas and sometimes in staged photos my grandmother would proudly show me.
Both my father and Aunt Paula left Tuloma behind. They left my grandmother behind in that little wooden house with her marigolds and her memories.
They rarely visited. Maybe a quick stop on their way somewhere else, a rushed holiday call with forced laughter. The conversations were polite, framed in that brittle tone people use when they feel guilty but don’t want to admit it.
In my grandmother’s house, the walls were a history book. Framed school photos, wedding pictures, a shot of my father in a cheap suit at his first engineering job, Paula in a cap and gown, me as a toddler in a Fourth of July T-shirt with a tiny flag printed across the front. She dusted those frames as gently as if she were touching their faces.
But behind the tenderness was something else. Waiting. Hoping.
I thought she just missed her family. I didn’t yet understand that neglect can carve empty spaces in a person that never quite fill back in.
She lived alone, but she never let the loneliness turn bitter. She tended her garden like it was a living thing that loved her back. She rode an old bicycle with a wire basket to the grocery store and local market, sometimes bringing back fresh peaches or a loaf of bread from the bakery by the town square, where an American flag hung over the courthouse steps.
She cooked simple meals in her small kitchen: chicken and rice, vegetable soup, cornbread in a cast-iron skillet. On hot days the box fan in the window rattled while we ate, and the evening news played softly in the background.
In the humid afternoons, we’d kneel side by side in the dirt, pulling weeds and watering the plants. She would talk while we worked, her voice steady and calm.
“Back then, I’d run around that hospital all night,” she’d say, pushing her hair away from her face with the back of her wrist. “Sometimes I didn’t sleep for two days straight. But when we saved somebody… it made every ache worth it.”
I admired her more than anyone.
Not just for her strength, but for the way she loved—with this quiet, unyielding, unconditional love that never demanded anything in return. She had given everything to my father and Aunt Paula. Her youth, her health, her best years.
She never once asked them to pay her back. She never asked them to help with her bills, to fix the leaky roof, to send money for a new stove. She didn’t guilt-trip them or complain to me.
Even as a teenager, though, I could feel something wasn’t fair.
I tried to make up for it the only way I knew how—by being there. By listening. By helping with the garden, washing dishes, or just sitting beside her on that creaky porch while the sky turned orange and purple and the town’s single high school football field lit up across the hill.
Still, I knew I could never fill the empty spaces left behind by my father and Aunt Paula.
Everything began to shift the spring I turned eighteen, right after I graduated from high school.
I was back in Greenville, enjoying the last sliver of freedom before college. One evening, my parents called me into the living room. The TV was off, their laptops closed, and their expressions carried a kind of rehearsed excitement.
“Calvin,” my father began, voice almost booming with enthusiasm, “we’re planning a big trip.”
He had an airline brochure next to him on the coffee table, next to a ballpoint pen and a yellow legal pad covered in lists.
“The whole family is going to Europe,” he said. “Paris, Rome, London. A once-in-a-lifetime trip.”
My mother nodded, eyes shining in a way I wasn’t used to. “We’ll all go,” she added. “Your Aunt Paula, Uncle Leon, your cousins, and of course your grandmother.”
My heart sped up.
“Europe.” The word felt unreal in my mouth. I’d never even left the country. I could picture the postcards I’d seen in gift shops—the Eiffel Tower against a sunset sky, gondolas gliding through little canals in Venice, double-decker buses in London rolling past palaces and old stone buildings.
More than any of that, I imagined my grandmother.
I pictured her standing under that steel lattice of the Eiffel Tower, her white hair blowing in the Paris breeze. I imagined her on a boat in Venice, laughing as she watched the city lights twinkling across the water, telling me stories the way she did on the porch in Tuloma.
A trip like that sounded like the perfect thank-you. A way for her children to finally give her something big, something that said, We see you. We remember everything you did.
Then one night I walked past my parents’ bedroom and heard their voices, low and conspiratorial.
“It’s expensive,” my mother murmured. “The hotels, the tickets, everything. We can have Mom contribute. She’s got savings from all those years as a nurse.”
“She’ll want to help since it’s a family trip,” she added, the words soft but calculated.
I froze.
I knew my grandmother had a little nest egg—money saved from all the night shifts and the meals she skipped so her kids could eat. But I’d always assumed that money was for her security. For emergencies. For her old age.
Something in my chest twisted, but I forced myself to breathe.
I told myself that if Grandma agreed, it must mean she wanted this trip as much as we did. I told myself that maybe this was how families worked—everyone pitching in for a big, once-in-a-lifetime experience. I wanted to believe this was about love, not taking advantage of her.
In the weeks that followed, my father suddenly seemed to remember he had a mother.
He called her more often, his deep voice artificially light.
“How are you, Mom? Eating okay? Taking your vitamins? I’ve been thinking about you,” he’d say, pacing the kitchen with the cordless phone in hand while I pretended to do homework at the table.
For the first time in years, Aunt Paula’s name started popping up more too. She called my grandmother from her spacious home in Peachtree City, Georgia, sending photos of the stylish scarf she’d bought in some upscale mall and a pair of designer sunglasses she thought Grandma might “like to see.”
My grandmother smiled when she talked about these calls, but every time, there was that flicker in her eyes. A tiny shadow, as if she couldn’t quite believe this sudden rush of attention.
One weekend the whole family descended on Tuloma like a traveling show: my parents, Aunt Paula, Uncle Leon, and my cousins Isabelle and James.
They rolled their suitcases across the gravel and into my grandmother’s small wooden house, filling it with perfume, cologne, and the faint chemical smell of dry-cleaned fabric. Their car—Leon’s pride and joy—sat in front of the house, gleaming under the Southern sun, a shiny black SUV with leather seats and a chrome grille.
Inside, the atmosphere felt off from the beginning.
Everyone was too cheerful, too loud. My father settled on the couch beside my grandmother, taking her hand like he was auditioning for a role. He talked about strolling through Parisian streets, about tossing coins into the Trevi Fountain in Rome, about seeing Big Ben up close instead of in pictures.
“Mom, this is our chance to be together,” he said. “The whole family—all of us. You have to come.”
Aunt Paula chimed in, perched on the arm of the couch in a bright blouse and designer jeans.
“Mom, we just want you to be happy,” she said, her voice sugary sweet. “You’ve worked your whole life. It’s time you saw the world.”
Isabelle and James, both glued to their phones, sat at the dining table, earbuds dangling, texting their friends about shopping in London and taking selfies in Paris.
My grandmother sat in her favorite armchair, fingers twisting the hem of her sweater. She shook her head gently.
“I’m old,” she said, voice soft. “My health isn’t what it used to be. I don’t know if a trip that far is a good idea.”
My father didn’t back off.
“We’ll be with you,” he said quickly. “We’ll take care of everything. It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity, Mom. You deserve it.”
Aunt Paula nodded, eyes locked on my grandmother’s face like she was trying to will her into agreement.
“Please, Mom,” she said. “Come with us.”
I watched from the dining room doorway, wanting her to say yes, to let herself be loved and celebrated the way she deserved. I wanted her to leave this old house behind for a little while, to rest in white hotel sheets with room service breakfast and a view of some foreign city.
Finally, she looked at me.
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