The day was like any other day at the old folks home. Hanging out in the rec room was comfortable with plenty of recliners and couches to sprawl out on. It seemed like Ben's lucky blessing worked and my boss wasn't going to come in.
Still, I tried keeping one eye open for Mr. Suez. He was an imposing figure with a snowy white beard like Santa Claus but an evil, hot gaze like the Heatmiser. When he did come into the home I would catch him staring me down as if he could turn me into a pillar of salt. He wanted to make sure that I was pleasant to the residents. If he caught me smiling though, he got mad assuming that I was goofing off because there was nothing to smile about while at work, a catch twenty-two.
As for the residents, Theo was the most reserved, and therefore my favorite resident. Theodore was as old and frail as the next senior at the home. His thin, silver hair was slicked sideways to hide the naked truth. Usually wearing a striped polo, he blended into his tacky, striped chair in the corner by the bookshelf. There, he consumed several books a week. In all the time that I had been there, I had never seen the chair empty and it was always occupied by Theo.
I tried to find my own niche in the furniture, but once I got comfortable I only started feeling anxious. The silence got louder as I started to notice, and then couldn't ignore, the grandfather clock's incessant ticking. Then the heat kicked on and the low rumble turned into a choir of old people snoring and other nuanced nuisances. I needed to do something. Despite my best interests, I got up and engaged the community of old folks. I did my job.
First, I made my rounds and came across a gripping game of checkers. The crankiest lady who everyone calls Crone was tapping a cigarette on the table. I had to confiscate that before I forgot. She tried to smoke in the home every once in a while. That was not allowed.
I tried to encourage more social games, to stir conversation and imagination. After suggesting chess, backgammon, and even dominoes my rejection was made clear. There must have been something more interesting these people liked to do. I probed a few residents for old stories, war stories or anything to get them going.
“So, you guys must have lived through a lot of interesting history.” I started, trying to get the ball rolling.
“Well, not really. I couldn’t pay too much attention to what was going on in the world. I had to take care of her children and cook for my family.” The first woman responded.
“Me too.” The second woman agreed.
“Nothing stood out as particularly memorable?” I asked.
“Just kept to myself, cleaned the house.” The first said.
“Mhmm.” The second murmured.
After that, a man I interviewed tried to talk about the war and other major changes he was a part of, but couldn't stay focused and instead went on a tirade about how things are different now. I had to stop my mission and deliver meals to the shut-ins before the cafeteria opened up.
I made my way down the halls with a rickety food cart delivering the meals to everyone. It was worse than hospital food and came with little cups of pills every color of the rainbow. I visited Horatio, Ingrid, Cyrus, Phoebe, but not the other imaginary Phoebe I wrote on the list. Coincidentally this second Phoebe always ordered what I liked to eat and always sent it back. If she didn't want to eat, I couldn't waste the food.
Wiping my mouth, I knocked on Ingrid's door and went inside. She complained about the food immediately and chewed my ear.
“Did you hear!?” she shouted, waving a magazine through the air.
I dropped her tray on the table.
“Clark Gable is on the brink of death!” she rasped before I left.
When it was the original Phoebe's turn, her door was open and I politely introduced my presence with a knock. I placed the tray down and she started to complain about her food too so I turned around.
“I ate better scraps than this on my lunch breaks from riveting.” she snickered.
I turned around and walked back in.
“The town hired lady workers for the submarine dry docks.” She clarified nervously. “I don't mind working for my meals, but I just can't make it to the cafeteria these days. It's so difficult to be willing to do things when your body just isn't able to do them anymore. Sorry to prattle on sweetie.” she finished.
This caught me off guard, and I couldn’t respond so I just said nothing. The truth is that I wasn't bored with her story, I was riveted. I backed out of the room with a “Good evening.”
On the way back to the kitchen I walked past the exercise room where a sound like tap dancing caught my attention. I left the cart and investigated.
It was Theo. He was all alone in there with one of the ping pong tables sitting upright so he could bat the ball back and forth against himself.
“Ever see Forrest Gump?” He asked without looking up at me then handed me a paddle.
“Thanks.”
"Let's play PING-pong!” He said in his southern Gump impersonation, serving me up a fast one.
It was an ace. I had to roll my sleeves up and get serious. He was full of energy, the opposite of the man I was used to seeing in that chair. He was schooling me in that game, and it was all I could do to keep up.
I did keep up though, and he was "Sweat’n” as he put it. After he beat me on the game point with some skillful English, he dropped the paddle on the table and shook my hand.
“You lean against me and I’ll lean against you. That way we don’t have to sleep with our heads in the mud.” he said, and then he was off like a seat-seeking missile back to the rec room.
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