Rose and the Love Letter

Old Letters in a Parchment Notebook

 

 

In a box at the flea market,
Dusty and forgotten,
Memories slept closely to one another while 
silently dreaming of another place and time.

 

 

Old Letters in a Parchment Notebook

 

Once cherished.

Placed carefully.

Peeked at when the heart ached, or feelings surged.

Those secrets, those cherished bits of papers, the letters from someone she held close.

Memories pinned on love.

 

 

 

Old Letters in a Parchment Notebook

 

 

Years ago, when I was around nineteen years old, I had the opportunity to care for an elderly woman who was housebound.

A beautiful woman who had a house stuffed with beautiful old things. Nevertheless, her curtains were closed and her stacks of fine dishes stored in the basement.

The summer I took care of her, her housekeeper went away for a three-month holiday, I entered a wonder world of someone's life that would have a grand effect on my sensitivities. As soon as I walked in Rose told me, while barely looking up from her soap opera, "I have my meals served on a tray right here in front of the TV. Here is my checkbook and car keys, buy whatever you want to make for my meals, charge it to my account."

I looked around at her lovely old home, "Why?"

She said, "Why, What?"

"Why take your meals in front of the TV?" I asked, "Your home is beautiful!"

She shrugged, "It is easier."

I frowned, "For you or for me?"

She sadly replied, "For you since I do not move very well."

As I was nineteen full of vinegar and honey I marched on with my desire to bring her home alive, "We will have lunch on the terrace. So you can use that walker… come on, I'll help you get up, let's give it a try."

Rose grump-ed, "Oh no! It is okay right here in front of the TV. I don't want to bother you."

"If you want lunch you will have to meet me on the terrace." With that, I turned and walked towards the kitchen to prepare the meal.

 

The kitchen! Had floor-to-ceiling cupboards, a breakfast nook, and a basement FULL OF LOVELY THINGS! I ran out to the living room, nearly hyperventilating with excitement, "Rose, Oh my God, your home is a treasure box! We will have breakfast tomorrow in the breakfast nook, lunch every day outside in the garden by your roses, or on the terrace, and dinner in the dining room. Can I use any of the dishes you have? And the linens can I use them? And the teacups too? Can we have tea too? And, why do you have the curtains closed?"

I am afraid Rose didn't know what to do with a girl like me.

She moaned though I saw her hidden smile, "Use whatever you like. The curtains are closed because the windows are dirty,

and I don't want to move to eat my lunch."

"I'll wash the windows," I threw the curtains opened, "And we are NOT eating in front of the TV even if I have to drag you

to the dining room to prevent it, or throw the TV out."

Rose's eyes opened wide. Then she laughed out loud.

 

 

 

Old Letters in a Parchment Notebook

 

 

I drove her car.

Went to the grocery store every day.

Bought delicious treats, and made meals for Queen Rose.

We became fast friends.

She wrote poetry.

Her cupboards were delighted my brocante heart.

Tea was served in sweet teacups.

Meals on different china plates each day.

I stuffed the sugar bowls with sugar cubes, and the cookie jars with my mother's cookies, and her silver trays with cakes, flowers in vases, and lace clothes on all the tables and trays.

Rose sparkled, so did the windows… and her garden provided flowers galore for every inch of her home.

I loved every day with Rose. Her home was a wonderland.

 

Old Letters in a Parchment Notebook

 

Rose was a storyteller. She had lived a beautiful life yet was left crippled by an infected mosquito that left her tongue hanging out which made it difficult for her to talk… though once she got to know you she never let your ears grow cold.

One day she told me she had a secret love letter from a boyfriend who had died.

"I never could throw them away." She said, then continued, "If you go to bedroom, in the closet, there is a trunk, in the trunk there is a box…

can you bring it to me?"

I sprang to my feet with excitement and raced myself to the hidden love letter.

In the trunk, there was the letter.

Love poured out as she held it in her hands, "I haven't held it in years." she cried.

There are some things that tell a story better than words. Rose did not have to tell me why, who, how, or when

her tears spoke the volume that only a heart can hear.

           And so it was that I put the letter back in the box, back in the truck in the closet of her bedroom.

 

Fast forward ten years later, on my wedding day, I went to visit Rose with my newly wed husband Yann.

A few months later I was in France when I received the news that Rose died.

The first thing I remembered was her love letter tucked away in her bedroom closet. I do not know if anyone knew about it…

In a box at a flea market,
Dusty and forgotten.
Memories sleep closely to one another while 
silently dreaming of another place and time.

 



Comments

36 responses to “Rose and the Love Letter”

  1. Oh Corey, what a precious story…..thanks for sharing.

  2. Diogenes

    Lovely Corey. So glad you got to see her before she passed away.

  3. Absolutely beautiful, Corey! You brought so much happiness to this Lady as she ebbed towards the end of her life. God Bless You!!!

  4. music to my ears…..so beautiful-I mean the people placed in our path-why for what reason-never a one way street always something given and something taken a 2 way street whether we realize it or not……

  5. Wow Corey. That is a beautiful story. Sounds as though you made a big difference in her life. Very lovely.

  6. You made Rose a very happy woman in her last few years. How beautiful! I hope someone found that letter and cherished it for what it was.

  7. Sue Young

    Oh quelle belle histoire!

  8. Beautiful post Corey. Probably most can relate to those boxes holding memories.
    Merci.

  9. I hung on every WORD! Who but you, at 19 years old, would have the maturity and “know how” to do what you did. When I was 19 I probably didn’t even know how to make a good cup of tea. (and probably would have served it in a syrofoam cup!!!) You were even lovely way back then! I admire you.

  10. I adore this post

  11. Debbie Z.

    What a lovely post. You brought so much joy into Rose’s life. Some people are just born attuned to beauty. That was evident in your life at a young age. Most nineteen year olds would be blind to china and flowers and breakfast nooks and would only be worried about how soon they could get away to be with their friends. You were such a gift to Rose.

  12. Ditto Dee! Loved every word!

  13. Thank you for such a beautiful post.

  14. I’m all teary. A beautiful story, beautifully written. Also, as someone who just lost my parents, ages 85 and 90, I want to acknowledge all the angels who care for the elderly. It isn’t easy or pleasant, but many older people still have their wits and deserve to be treated with respect (those who don’t have their wits deserve respect, too, but those whose minds still work feel the sting much worse). Anyway, as a society we underpay and underappreciate our caregivers.

  15. What a beautiful post and how lucky Rose was that you, a young vivacious 19 year old, came into her life. A few simple acts of kindness go a long long way to helping others.

  16. christine

    Beautiful Corey.

  17. simply beautiful

  18. Thank God he sent you to Rose. When I think of the love and light you flooded into her home I am so moved. Corey you are a force of good.

  19. chicagops@hotmail.com

    Corey, I knew you were an angel. What a beautiful gift you gave to Rose. At 19 to understand all that and to appreciate it. But to use it to make someone feel loved and no matter who they are you treat them and make them feel like royalt. I know you didn’t tell us the story for that reason. Thank you sharing Roses story it touched my heart. I never know how I’m going to start my day when I read your blog but I know it is always with a sense of love and beauty. Thank you!
    Linda Lee

  20. What a beautiful story Corey.
    Your kindness, energy, love and wisdom is so inspirational.
    I so love to read your stories..
    And Congratulation on the Victoria magazine article!
    I bought my copy yesterday, the apartment looks beautiful!

  21. pc brown

    So many lessons in this post! Thank you for inspiring thoughts and for sharing this sacred experience.

  22. Bonnie Schulte

    What a heart touching story. I am so happy that Rose lived to meet Yann, with you after you married. What a wonderful gift you gave her, of a wonderful summer, filled with happy memories, and the wonderful memories she left you with. Beautiful..

  23. what an enchanting story Corey! I felt I was right there with you two, having tea and sharing stories. What a gift you were to each other. And you to us!

  24. Corey, oh Corey…thank you for beautiful, heart-centered words and such a poetic story. My poetry assignment for this week is to write about a meal….and I awoke thinking of ideas and getting to the notebook when the computer time is over….your story stirred so much within me, spread the energy of meal out and wrapping around a home filled with inspiration. Thank you for sharing once again beautiful, warm, caring story thoughts that always succeed in finding a home within me and connecting with the poet who dwells here in my little retirement bungalow. You are truly a treasure that I found one day wrapped in a story on the internet….and how delighted I am to continue to find your sweetness and stories in my morning computer time.
    You are, for me, that box tied with ribbons sitting and waiting to be opened and enjoyed over and over. Much love and appreciation for you in my life.

  25. Cheryl in Wisconsin

    You just made the lovely things I buy second hand (wondering about their story) a little more meaningful. Excellent tale.

  26. That was so beautiful.

  27. Wow Corey! You came out of the egg feisty! What a wonderful interlude you provided in Rose’s life. Wonderful for both of you.

  28. Corey, you transport us to another place and time, of beauty and memories, with your tales, your homes, your brocante jaunts – I’m loving it!

  29. Rebecca from the pacific northwest

    Thank you for this wonderful story!
    As I’m aging, not ancient yet but still I’m 40 years past 25 now, I look at all my lovely things and how they remind me of people-places-experiences from earlier in my life. (I’m such a sentimental sort.) A piece of me regrets that when I’m gone, they won’t have the power of recollection for anyone else that they have for me. But then I tell myself that “souvenirs” are called that for a reason, so that *I* will remember. They’re only souvenirs for me.
    —————
    When I was between 3rd and 4th years of college, I lived in a nearby city and was entranced by a nearby front yard that was totally different from its neighbors, totally unique. Eventually I met the 70 year old owner, who told me her name was Tia; a 21 year old and a 70 year old became friends for that summer. Oh the stories she told: I was never sure if they were all true or not, but decided to err on the side of offering her my full belief in them. Then, with that casual callousness of the young, I went back to college and never looked Tia up again.
    ———–
    Finally, I have a box of my mother’s that always held her treasures in her bedroom. Now I have some of the things that remind me of her in there too, but still I keep a faded corsage that she always had in it. I surely wonder what its story and meaning were to her. Her souvenir. But not mine.

  30. a beautiful post, Corey.

  31. Beautifully written. I am wondering, are you an angel sent to earth to teach how to love thy neighbor and thyself? xxoo jody/ florida/ ky

  32. Little Kristi

    That’s my Corey 💛

  33. I don’t know why I didn’t see this post – made me smile through tears. Beautiful, beautiful …. touching, I sympathise – would have done the same thing too. And you are a wonderful story-teller too, dear C.

  34. Paula Tyner

    Bless your heart. And bless hers. May she rest in peace.

  35. Like your other readers, I too was moved by Rose’s story and the joy that you brought to her that summer. It must have been heaven for her to have you bring life, love and flowers back into her life. I am wiping away a tear….
    Camy

  36. What a beautiful experience. Rose was lucky to have you in her life.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *