I gathered my stuff with tears in my eyes as a man insisted I leave my seat because my granddaughter wouldn’t stop wailing. Suddenly, an adolescent offered me his business class seat. That horrible man’s face turned white after what transpired.
I’m 65, and the past year has been a haze of pain, restless nights, and concern. My daughter died shortly after giving birth to her daughter. She struggled during delivery, but her body gave out.
I went from mother of a healthy adult daughter to sole guardian of her newborn in hours. The immediate aftermath was worse. My daughter’s husband, the baby’s father, couldn’t handle it.
I saw him hold his daughter in the hospital. After staring at her small face, he mumbled something I couldn’t understand and carefully placed her back in the bassinet. His hands shook.
Next morning, he was gone. He didn’t take her home or attend the funeral. He left a handwritten note on my daughter’s hospital chair claiming he wasn’t meant out for this life and that I would know what to do.
I never saw him again. When my granddaughter was placed in my arms, she became mine. As her sole parent, I took care of her.
I named her Lily. I cried the first time I mentioned her name after my daughter’s funeral. My daughter told me the name was simple, sweet, and strong, like she wanted her baby to be, during her seventh month of pregnancy.
I feel like I’m reintroducing my daughter’s voice every time I whisper “Lily” when I rock her to sleep at three in the morning. Lily has been difficult to raise. I forgot how pricey babies are when my daughter was small.
Every dime disappears before I can count. I work odd jobs like babysitting for neighbors or volunteering at the church food pantry for groceries to stretch my pension. However, most days I feel barely afloat.
After Lily is asleep in her crib, I sit alone at my kitchen table staring at bills, wondering how I’ll get through another month. However, Lily stirs in her crib, making baby sounds, and opens her huge, inquiring eyes. My heart reminds me why I keep going.
Her mother died before she was born. Father abandoned her before she was a week born. She deserves one person who won’t leave her.
I hesitated when my oldest friend Carol called from across the country and urged me to visit for a week. “Margaret, you need a break,” she remarked firmly over the phone. “You sound exhausted.
Bring Lily with you. I’ll help you with everything, okay? We can take turns with the night feedings.
You can actually rest for once.”
Rest seemed like an unaffordable luxury. Carol was right. I was exhausted, and every bone in my body felt it.
I saved enough for an inexpensive flight. It was little and the seats uncomfortable, but it got me to her. I boarded a crowded plane with a heavy diaper bag over one shoulder and Lily snuggled against my chest, praying for a few quiet hours.
Lily fussed when we settled into our narrow economy-class seats in the back. It started with a whimper. The murmur became into weeping within minutes.
I tried everything possible. I held her and whispered, “Shh, Lily, it’s alright, sweetheart. Grandma’s here.”
I offered her a bottle of formula I’d prepared before boarding, but she pushed it away with her small fists.
The story doesn’t end here — it continues on the next page.
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