Next up was the theme song from Friends, “I’ll Be There For You” by The Rembrandts. That one was tolerable enough to sit through.
I got all excited when I heard the beginning of “Smells Like Teen Spirit.” Fuck yeah! But my hope was squelched when I realized it wasn’t Nirvana at all. It was Weird Al Yankovic: “Smells Like Nirvana.”
“Oh, hell no.” I laughed.
Heather started laughing.
“I’m crying uncle.” I handed her back the phone and tickled her. “You’re lucky I love you.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE
* * *
HEATHER
FIVE MONTHS LATER
Heather and Noah Do the World had been the time of my life. I doubted anything could ever top these past months. The experiences Noah had gifted me I would take to the grave.
In Australia, we’d visited the Great Barrier Reef and the Sydney Opera House. From there, we’d traveled to Hong Kong, where we walked along the Tsim Sha Tsui Promenade and visited their version of Disneyland.
After Asia, we traveled to Africa and saw the Sahara dunes of Morocco and the pyramids of Egypt.
Europe was our second-to-last stop but where we spent the majority of our time. We spent several weeks living in a rented apartment in Paris. We visited the Eiffel Tower and the Louvre and ate our way through the city.
After leaving France, we took a train to Italy and toured Rome and Venice before heading to London.
No amount of college education could have possibly made up for what I’d learned about the different cultures I experienced firsthand.
And now we’d come to the final stop on our trip, a place near and dear to Noah’s heart: Havana, Cuba.
I’d fallen in love with his photos from here when I’d stalked his website. So when he’d asked me where I wanted to end our journey, this is what I chose.
Turns out Noah had been made an honorary family member the last time he’d visited this country. He called Ana “Abuelita,” which affectionately means grandma in Spanish. She’d insisted we stay in her home instead of getting a hotel. Every night she cooked us authentic Cuban food like pork, rice and beans, and fried plantains. Then she’d whip up a delicious mango milkshake for dessert.
Noah agreed that we would stay with her, provided she let him do some work around her house. That physical labor turned out to be more extensive than we’d bargained for, so our Cuba trip stretched longer than we’d planned as we worked together out in the sun, much like we had during our summer on the lake. We knew this was the last leg of our trip, so we weren’t really in any rush to get back.
We were having the time of our lives, yet anytime Noah got even a little tired or—God forbid—complained of a headache, it put me on edge. But I knew I couldn’t live in fear of him having another rupture, so I tried to put those scary thoughts out of my mind.
When Noah and I weren’t working together on Abuelita’s house, we took in Havana’s historic sites. We visited the Gran Teatro with its amazing architecture and toured Old Havana, which was a mix of baroque and neoclassical monuments and narrow streets lined with homes. Havana was the perfect place for people watching and taking lots of photos of urban life. My travel blog had accumulated a ton of followers, and they seemed to love the images we captured here.
On the afternoon of our second-to-last day in Cuba, Noah took me to the area where he’d done the feature on the orphanage six years ago. We were just turning toward Abuelita’s car to drive back when he froze, his eyes fixed on a kid in a wheelchair across the street.
“Come on.” He took my hand and led us toward the boy, who was with a woman.
He stopped a few feet away and said, “It’s him.”
I knew instantly what he meant. “The boy from the orphanage…”
“Daniel. I would recognize his face anywhere. My God, Heather, it’s him. He looks so grown up now.”
We approached them, and Noah began speaking in Spanish. I hadn’t realized until we got to Cuba that he was pretty fluent. He knelt down to be eye-level with Daniel.
The boy reached out and touched Noah’s face. At least on some level, he seemed to remember him. Though he didn’t speak, Daniel typed something on a device that looked like an iPad. He flipped the screen around and showed us what he’d written.
Naranja.
A huge smile engulfed Noah’s face. “That’s right! Naranja. Orange. You remember! I used to bring you little oranges, clementinas.”
My heart turned to mush as Noah embraced him.
Noah continued talking to the woman and then entered some of her information into his phone.
“Bueno. Adios. Hasta ma?ana,” he said.
“Tell me what you were saying,” I said as they departed.
“She said they had to leave to get him to a doctor’s appointment. Her name is Rosita Jimenez. She adopted Daniel about three years ago, so that would be a couple of years after I visited. All this time, they’ve lived right down the street from where the orphanage used to be. He was placed in foster care and ended up with her. He’s been doing great and making a lot of progress. Since he can’t speak very well, he uses that device to communicate. Even though he was in a wheelchair today, he’s able to walk some now. I got her information so we can go visit them before we leave tomorrow. I want to bring him a whole bunch of clementines.”
“Oh my God, yes. That’s a great idea. It’s so wonderful he remembered that.”
Noah looped my fingers in with his as we continued walking. “Back when I told you the story of my Cuba trip, I didn’t mention that it came very soon after the letter from Opal, during the height of my depression. Meeting Daniel really helped me to stop feeling sorry for myself—seeing how strong he was and how he persevered despite the odds against him. Everything feels more connected than it ever has right now—the way you and I met, being here with you, and running into him on the last full day of our trip. It feels like everything has come full circle.”
He stopped walking and faced me. “When we were in Paris, you were napping at the apartment and I took a walk. I passed a jewelry store. I had no intention of buying anything that day, but then I happened to see a ring in the window. I couldn’t believe how perfect it was for you. I knew I had to at least inquire about it. To be honest, I didn’t really care how much it cost—I knew I wasn’t walking out of there without it.”
My heart raced as he continued.
“I told myself I wasn’t going to give it to you for a very long time, that I was going to wait until you were done with school. But every single day since I bought it, I’ve had to stop myself from getting down on one knee. This morning I asked the universe to give me a sign that my gut was right—that I should keep the ring in my pocket and do it before this trip was over. I’m pretty sure running into Daniel was the sign I was waiting for.”
“Oh my God.”
“Traveling the world with you showed me even more clearly what I already knew, that you and I make the best team, that you’re my partner. There’s no one else I would rather continue the journey of life with. It doesn’t matter where we are as long as I have you by my side. I believe everything that has happened to me thus far—the good and the bad— happened to get me to this moment. Heather and Noah Do the World might be ending when we get back to Pennsylvania, but I’m wondering if you’d start another kind of adventure with me—one that’s forever. I know this isn’t my first rodeo. I may not be perfect, and I may fuck up at times, but I have to put aside those fears and take the risk. I love you too much not to, and I just can’t wait any longer to ask.”
My big man got down on one knee and looked up at me with his beautiful brown eyes, the color of Cuban coffee. He reached into his pocket and pulled out a velvet pouch. When he opened it, I knew instantly why he’d had to buy this ring.