She swept an arm to the chairs in front of her messy desk, and cautiously, I moved to one, feeling funny.
I’d been working there a while. I knew the lay of the land. I knew my duties. I knew when to pitch in, where and how. I knew the chain of command. I took tough stuff and easy stuff. Unless they thought I was a Nazi, all the residents liked me. I thought I did a good job.
I could not imagine I’d done something wrong.
Studying Dela’s face as I sat and tucked my purse and jacket into my lap, I couldn’t get a read on if it was saying I was in trouble or something else.
I just knew whatever it was saying wasn’t good.
“What’s going on?” I asked once I’d settled.
“Amelia, honey, worst part of this job but I have bad news for you, girl.”
I tensed.
She gave it to me.
“Mrs. McMurphy passed away last night.”
My lips parted and my throat started burning.
“I’m sorry, Amelia,” she went on, sounding like she absolutely was. “You were real good with her and I know she liked you, even if she thought you were a Nazi. This is tough news to hear and I hate havin’ to give it to you.”
“But, she was okay yesterday,” my mouth said for me, my voice sounding far away in my head.
Dela shrugged, keeping kind eyes on me. “Happens. Sometimes outta the blue like that. One minute their accusin’ you of bein’ in cahoots with Hitler. The next minute, peace.” She got up, walked around her desk, sat in the chair next to me and leaned in to grab my hand. She held it between us and said softly, “First one’s always the hardest, girl. Gotta say, plain truth, second one isn’t a whole lot better. We know ’em. We care for ’em. We give ’em what we can to make their time with us as best as it can be. It isn’t easy for them to be in here. And one thing we give ’em that they don’t know they’re gettin’ is how hard it is to find it in us to be able to say good-bye.”
I heard her. She was saying the right things.
But I looked to the window, wondering how on earth I could spend my days at Dove House without Mrs. McMurphy.
It was raining outside, gray, cold and windy, but I didn’t see that.
I saw Mrs. McMurphy walking down the front walk in her coat with her umbrella on a sunny day.
It was no longer funny.
Right then, it pierced my heart and made it bleed.
I felt a tug at my hand and my eyes drifted to Dela.
“You with me?” she asked.
“They’ll all go.” My mouth was still speaking for me in that distant way.
“Eventually, we all go, honey.”
She was right.
Mrs. Osborn.
Mrs. Porter.
God. Mr. Dennison.
“Not many folk have gifts like you and me.”
I focused again on Dela at her words.
“We get it,” she said, still gentle, but also now firm. “We got the strength others don’t have not ever to show to them we know they’ll go but we’ll suffer the good-bye. We just keep on givin’ ’em the good. That’s our job. That’s our gift. You with me?”
Somewhere in my dazed brain I understood she was challenging me.
And somewhere in my dazed brain I wondered if she actually saw that strength in me or if she wanted me to reach for it, believe in me, grab hold and give that to the folks I helped look after.
Perhaps the Amelia Hathaway my parents raised wouldn’t actually have that gift Dela was talking about.
But the Amelia Hathaway I’d become in spite of that definitely had it.
So it wasn’t just my mouth that replied, “I’m with you, Dela.”
I saw relief flash in her eyes, knew then she thought this sad event, like it had probably with others, would have me leaving.
But truly, if I did, who would Mr. Dennison flirt with?
I tipped my head toward the wall. “Are they upset?” I asked.
Her hand clenched in mine before she let it go and sat back. “The ones who been around awhile, they’re dealing. The new ones, not so much.”
“I better get out there,” I told her.
“Yeah,” she replied.
“Thanks for being so kind in telling me.”
“Practice,” she murmured like she wished she didn’t have it.
I figured she didn’t want that practice (because who would?) as I gave her a smile that I hoped reassured her, got up and went to the door.
I turned in it to see she was up and rounding her desk.
“Do you have any idea why she thought I was a Nazi?”
Dela lifted her eyes to me as I spoke and shook her head after I was done. “No clue. The woman thought I was Rosa Parks. Every time she saw me she congratulated me on the courage I showed on that bus. Now I’ve seen a fair few pictures of Ms. Parks and not in one of them did the woman have braids. But didn’t matter. Mrs. McMurphy lived in her own world and until the end it was a safe world. Somethin’ else we can give. Somethin’ she got.”
Yes. That was something we gave. Even as a Nazi, she never feared me.
So that was something she got.
“Thanks, Dela,” I said.
“Not a problem, honey,” she replied.
“Are you okay?” I asked.
“Long time ago, I learned what was important to give and through that, how to deal.”