Ohana
"Aunt Bailey!" Katie yelled, hurting my old ears.
"Quietly please Katie," I whispered. She nodded in my direction before she started to run to Bailey.
"Hi, Bean," Bailey greeted Katie.
Katie turned towards me, "Ice cream now?" She whined. I nodded with a sigh. Katie jumped up and down then ran out of the room.
"Slow-" I started to yell after her, but was interrupted with a fit of coughing. Bailey looked at me with worry etched in every line of her face. I shook my head, indicating I was fine.
"How are you May?" She asked tentatively.
"I am perfectly fine thank you very much, enough people worrying, don't need you too," I stated quickly. She smirked as she moved to the one chair in my little room.
"What did the doctor say today?"
"That I need to be here for the rest of my life," I sighed as I exaggerated to her. She shook her head at me.
"Stop it, you will get better," She told me.
"Sure," We sat in silence, her not knowing what to say to a dying woman. Katie ran into the room after a couple minutes with three cups of chocolate ice cream.
"I got the last three!" She exclaimed. I smiled at her when she handed me one. "Ok ok, tell me again,"
I grinned at Bailey, every time we got together Katie asked this. "Are you sure you wanna hear it?" Bailey asked, teasing.
Katie bobbed her head up and down. Bailey asked, "I don't know Katie, I'm tired," as she glanced at me. My grin grew as I played along.
"Yea Bailey is right, I need rest,"
Katie shook her head. "No no, it's our," her face scrunched up, "What's the word again?"
"Tradition," me and Bailey said in unison.
"Yes, that, pleaseeeeeeeee," Katie asked.
Bailey and I looked at each other, she nodded towards me. I took a deep breath and began our story.
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"Maybella Rumes, mother, friend, and wife. 1995-2019." I read the tombstone out loud to Katie. Her face was streaked with tears, while my eyes stayed bone dry. Katie ran off to be with her father. I thought of how shtoo younge was to have lost her mother.
I knew that May wouldn't live very much longer, but it killed me inside. She was my best friend and now she was gone. Closing my eyes, I thought back to when we met.
How she quite literally ran into me and we were both late for our first jobs. How May and I had lain under the stars on my birthday and she drunkenly said we were Ohana, family.
All those memories and more of how we had become best friends, even through her Progeria. I know that's what killed her in the end, how she was lucky to make it to 25, but I liked to believe that she chose to leave and it wasn't the sickness that did it.
Leaning down to her grave I lay a letter by the wilted roses. I thought of how I needed to bring fresh ones tomorrow.
"We are Ohana, family," I whispered.
Tracks of Solitude
In a forgotten corner of America, tucked away in a quiet, timeless town, lived a man named John. He was a man of solitude, content in his own company, and always yearning for a simple life. When an opportunity arose for him to work as a night guard at the local railroad, he thought it was the perfect job to fulfill his desire for solitude.
The railroad was a place of mystery at night, with its long, winding tracks disappearing into the darkness, and the occasional distant howl of a coyote adding to the eerie atmosphere. John's job was to ensure the safety of the trains and the tracks during those silent hours.
One moonlit night, as John patrolled the rail yard, his flashlight illuminated a lone figure huddled on one of the parked freight cars. At first, he thought it was a trespasser and approached with caution.
"Hey, you there! This is private property," John shouted, hoping to scare the intruder away.
The figure on the freight car trembled, and out stepped a weathered and ragged man, his face lined with the hardships of life on the road. This was no ordinary trespasser; he was a hobo, a traveler of the rails.
The hobo looked at John with a mixture of weariness and curiosity.
"You ain't gonna chase me off, mister. I ain't looking for trouble. Just a warm spot to rest my bones for a while," he said in a voice that carried the weight of countless miles traveled.
Reluctantly, John allowed the hobo to stay for the night, making sure he kept his distance. But as the nights turned into weeks, and weeks into months, an unlikely friendship began to form between the night guard and the hobo, who introduced himself as Old Ben.
Sitting around a small fire one chilly night, they shared stories of their lives. John spoke of the repetitiveness of his job and his longing for solitude, while Old Ben recounted tales of his adventures on the rails, the people he met, and the lessons he learned from a life without a fixed destination.
"You see, John," Old Ben said as he poked the fire with a stick, "life's like a never-ending train ride. You can either fight it, trying to control every twist and turn, or you can embrace the journey, savoring the unexpected stops and detours along the way."
John listened, and for the first time, he began to question his own approach to life. He realized that he had been so focused on his need for solitude that he had missed out on the richness of human connection and the beauty of embracing life's uncertainties.
As the months passed, John's heart softened, and he found himself looking forward to Old Ben's visits. They continued to share stories, dreams, and philosophies under the starry night sky. John learned to appreciate the beauty of spontaneity, and Old Ben found comfort in the steadiness of John's company.
One fateful night, as the wind whispered through the trees and the distant rumble of a freight train echoed through the rail yard, John and Old Ben shared a silent moment of understanding. At that moment, they both realized that life's journey was made more meaningful by the connections they had built, despite their vastly different approaches to it.
And so, in the quietude of that small, forgotten town, a night guard and a hobo became unlikely friends, each enriched by the other's perspective on life, and both finding solace in the friendship they had discovered along the rails.
As time passed, John's friendship with Old Ben continued to grow, and the railroad became a place of warmth and camaraderie rather than solitude. They shared stories, dreams, and philosophies under the starry night sky, and John learned to appreciate the beauty of spontaneity.
One cool autumn evening, as they sat by the flickering fire, Old Ben turned to John with a knowing smile.
"You've learned much, my friend," he said. "But have you ever considered the life of a hobo?"
John gazed into the dancing flames, his thoughts drifting into the possibilities of a life unburdened by schedules and responsibilities. He pondered Old Ben's question deeply, realizing that there was more to life than the routine he had grown so accustomed to.
"I suppose I never really thought about it," John admitted, "but the way you describe it, there's a certain freedom to it, isn't there?"
Old Ben nodded.
"Freedom, my friend, is what makes life worth living. It's not about possessions or routines; it's about the journey, the connections we make, and the experiences we collect along the way."
As the night wore on, John couldn't shake the thought of embracing the hobo's way of life. The allure of the open road and the endless possibilities it held began to heave at his heartstrings.
In the days that followed, John found himself torn between the comfort of his job and the call of adventure. Finally, one crisp morning, he made a decision. He approached Old Ben, who had become his wise mentor and dear friend, and said, "I've decided to join you, to experience life on the rails, and to embrace the journey."
Old Ben's eyes twinkled with understanding and pride.
"You won't regret it, my friend. The world is a vast and beautiful place, and every mile of track holds a new story waiting to be discovered."
And so, John bid farewell to his post as the night guard at the railroad, leaving behind the solitude he had once cherished. He embarked on a new chapter of his life, following Old Ben's footsteps into the unknown.
As the two friends hopped on a passing freight train, the wind in their hair and the rhythmic clatter of wheels beneath them, John couldn't help but smile. He was no longer bound by routine, and he was ready to embrace the ever-changing journey that lay ahead, just like the hobo he had come to admire and love.
For Your Trust
Rosaline's loyalty was hers.
It was a precious thing, reserved for the closest of her companions. That particular fire sparked with a passion that would never be extinguished. Emilia knew that, and would return her devotion in kind.
The line that separated them from the meaningless smiles and fleeting pleasantries of the others were written in their blood, sworn to honor for their forever.
Emilia hummed, reaffirming their vow in her head. Everything was for the unconditional faith that joined the duo. For the loyalty that linked them like glue. For the devotion that fanned their flames.
Sacrifice and loyalty went hand-in-hand, Emilia mused as she traced the wound on Rosaline's stomach.
She had sacrificed much to prove her loyalty.
Emilia's eyes darkened as the closest of her friends hissed in pain, disturbed by the agony even in her dreams.
Their friendship was one built on trust and sacrifice, and it was time that Emilia repaid her debts.
The grin that stretched across her face was a tad too sharp to be innocent, white teeth flashing with a vicious sort of threat that clashed with her gleeful expression.
Rosaline's foes would fall without grace, of that much Emilia would ensure.
Pillars
The world tears you down, a storm of words and thoughts and whirlwinds and whirlpools, all coalescing around your feet.
The wind screams, the ground shakes, the fire in your heart is flickering, your resolve tested by that betrayal that shouldn't have stung but it does, by that test in the distance, that train moving far too quickly, too fast to stop, to dodge out of the way
The things, they surround you, they entrap you, but then
You see something else
A person
A friendly face
A hand outstretched into the storm
And you know things will be ok after all.