I was called “homeless,” mocked in front of a full cabin, and treated like trash in business class. By the time the wheels hit the runway, the same people who laughed at me were on their feet, giving me a standing ovation.
I’m 73 years old, and my hands shake as I type this. Three years ago, my daughter Claire died.
She was my only child. If you’ve ever buried your kid, you know there’s no “moving on.” People say time heals, but every morning still feels like getting hit by a truck. I stopped living that day.
I didn’t leave the house much.
I let calls go unanswered. My son-in-law, Mark, tried his best. He’d show up at my door, knock until I opened, and push me to rejoin the world.
One night, he sat across from me at the kitchen table.
“Robert,” he said gently, “come down to Charlotte. It’ll do you good.”
“I don’t belong down there,” I muttered. “I don’t belong anywhere anymore.”
He leaned forward.
“You do. You belong with family. Please.”
I wanted to tell him no.
I wanted to stay in my dark little cave where memories were all I had left. But the look in his eyes, tired, hopeful, desperate, wore me down. Against everything in me, I said yes.
Which is how, two weeks later, I found myself staring at a plane ticket for the first time in decades.
Just holding it made my stomach twist. Airports, crowds, strangers — it was like agreeing to walk into a storm without an umbrella.
The morning of the flight, I tried to make an effort. I pulled on the nicest thing I owned — a dark jacket Claire had given me for Father’s Day years ago.
I even stood in front of the mirror long enough to shave. “For you, kiddo,” I whispered. “For you and for Mark.”
But fate had other plans.
On the way to the airport, I cut through a side street downtown.
That’s where they cornered me — a group of young guys, loud and cocky.
“Hey, Pops,” one of them sneered, stepping in front of me. “Where are you headed, looking so fancy?”
Before I could answer, another shoved me hard against the wall. My shoulder cracked painfully.
They yanked at my jacket, ripping the sleeve, and pulled the few bills I had out of my wallet.
I croaked, “Please… that’s all I have.”
The tallest one laughed in my face. “Old man looks like a bum already. No one’s gonna miss this.”
Their laughter echoed long after they scattered, leaving me bruised and shaken on the sidewalk.