At My Son’s Queens Kitchen, He Told Me To Pack A Bag If I Refused Assisted Living. “Then Leave My House,” He Said. I Smiled, Closed My Old Suitcase, And Walked To The Door—Just As A Black Limousine Pulled Up Outside.
“Catherine,” he said, almost under his breath, “you are breathtaking.”
I smiled.
“Grief may age a woman,” I told him, “but clarity can dress her beautifully.”
Grant’s was one of those old Manhattan restaurants that still believed in white tablecloths, polished silver, and waiters who addressed everybody as sir or ma’am.
A pianist was playing standards continue reading …