She Worked Three Years For Their Cruise—Then Her Mom Took The Tickets-Cherry - Chainityai

She Worked Three Years For Their Cruise—Then Her Mom Took The Tickets-Cherry

The number was $19,400.

It did not feel like a number after a while.

It felt like a second heartbeat, one that started before sunrise and kept going long after the diner lights went out.

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It was there when I tied my apron around my waist and smelled coffee burning in the pot before the breakfast rush.

It was there when I wiped down sticky bar mats at midnight, lemon cleaner stinging my hands while the last table laughed over drinks that cost more than my groceries for the week.

It was there when my friends asked about weekend trips and I answered with the same little lie every time.

Maybe next time.

There was never a next time.

There was only the cruise.

My grandparents never asked for it.

That was part of why I wanted to give it to them so badly.

Mr. and Mrs. Thompson had been married thirty-eight years, and the whole marriage looked to me like a long, quiet lesson in doing without.

Grandpa drove the same old pickup until the seat foam showed through the fabric.

Grandma could stretch a rotisserie chicken into three meals and still send me home with soup in a jar.

They lived in a modest house with a front porch, a stubborn mailbox, and a little American flag magnet on the refrigerator that held up grocery coupons and doctor appointment cards.

Nothing in that house was decorative unless it had first survived being useful.

The cruise brochures lived in the junk drawer.

They were tucked under rubber bands, takeout menus, flashlight batteries, expired coupons, and recipe clippings Grandma swore she was going to organize one day.

Every few months, when she was looking for tape or scissors, she would pull one out by accident.

Then the whole kitchen would change.

She would smooth the glossy page with the side of her hand and stare at the picture of a balcony cabin floating above blue water.

“Can you imagine?” she would ask, soft enough that it sounded like she was talking to herself.

Grandpa would reach for his glasses and pretend not to care.

“I can imagine you getting seasick before lunch,” he would say.

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