When Jenna goes to school, I
have taken the bus with her. I normally
have my backpack which contains my water bottle and a book. Or at least I try to have a book – so I
can read during the ride when Jenna isn’t with me.
Jenna and I have ridden the
bus all summer. We’ve gone in a variety
of directions. But we have always
started out on the same bus that we have taken when she’s been in school. Instead of continuing to our normal bus stop
near her school, we have been getting off at the college and making a transfer
connection to a different bus.
Just north of the college is
a foot bridge that leads to the junior high across the street. Jenna has always wanted to cross it. I figured she’ll have the opportunity to
cross it in two years – almost daily for the three years that she attends the
junior high. My initial plan was to cross it with her, as I’d need to take a
return bus home. But this morning I
learned that is no longer in my future.
She will either have to get off one stop before me, or cross at the
light. I think she will choose the
bridge – which is what I would prefer for both of us.
Jenna was so excited about
being on this steep uphill bridge; it did make the crossing worthwhile. But the side with the junior high is fenced
in, and there is no slit in the fence and so we had to walk around and it took
us more time than if we had just gotten off at the college and crossed the
street. Jenna apologized for my error. But it was my error. And it really was nice to learn about it now
as opposed to when it’s full of junior high traffic. And Jenna really did think it was cool to be
on the bridge. So it was fine. I wasn’t upset about it.
We took a bus to the train
station and transferred to another bus that took us to St. Mark’s hospital. Before my mom passed away, I had driven to
the hospital many times to see her – the same hospital I went to today, but for
a different reason. It was actually my
first time riding the bus to St. Mark’s.
It was so different arriving at the hospital with a different form of
transportation.
Instead of going to see my
dying mother, I entered another part of the building that brings new life. Up in the maternity ward is my sister, Kayla
and her husband, Bill and their new arrival, BJ (not his real name – but I
highly suspect that he is a “Bill Junior” as he seems to have had Bill’s sense
of humor even while in the womb; and as their other two look like Kayla, I
suspect BJ will not only act more like Bill but look more like him as well –
kind of hard to tell right now who he takes after in the “looks” department)
who’s been named after mom.
Roland’s office is located
about four and a half blocks east and south of St. Mark’s. I noticed that he hadn’t taken his phone, and
grabbed it since he was so close. Though
I considered just keeping it as my phone has been flipping out the last two
days and every call is broken and gets cut off.
I wondered if he had left it for me intentionally.
I don’t like calling him at
work through his work phone as I’m often redirected to the location in Phoenix
– even with an extension. Sometimes I am
tempted to call the President of the United States just to see how much harder
it would be than trying to get Roland at his work. But that’s beside the point.
While we were at St. Mark’s,
Bill’s sister brought his kids to see their new little brother. Anna lovingly held her new brother and
smiled at him. Gary, on the other hand,
seemed freaked out and afraid. I’m
thinking it was time for a nap (perhaps
he hadn’t had his Super Why fix) He
clung to Bill who wanted to take pictures and handed the camera to one of his
nephews as Gary wouldn’t let go of his dad. I
noticed the time on the clock and asked Jenna if she wanted to go see her dad
and come back later. And so we left.
The hospital and Roland’s
office building are both on the same side of the street. I told Jenna our two choices. We could either cross the street, ride the
bus down four blocks, cross the street(s) again or we could stay on that side
and walk to Roland’s work. We ended up
walking.
I didn’t remember Roland
taking a lunch and wondered if he was at the nearby drive-in. Jenna and I checked before making our way to
his office. I had her stay downstairs so
we wouldn’t miss him if he got off the elevator. I went from cubicle to cubicle not even
knowing for sure in what section he was even stationed (he’s been relocated
several times due to change of management and HUGE turn-overs)
I placed the phone on his
desk and wanted to know if he’d be going to lunch. He finished up what he was doing and met Jenna
and I in the downstairs lobby and we went to lunch. I should have gotten something for Bill, but
just dumped the leftover fries in a bag along with half a shake and half a
drink. But he seemed grateful.
He asked me if he could take
Jenna with him to the DMV as he and Kayla just purchased a van that still needs
to be registered. Their kids call it a
bus. Jenna’s actually excited about it
because they will have room for her in addition to their three children. She normally has fun with Bill and usually
delights in his overly-done sense of humor.
I actually ended up leaving
shortly after they did. They may have
still been in the parking lot actually.
But Kayla looked really tired and I could sense that she wanted to rest
more than she wanted to visit. I’ve
actually had an obnoxious dry cough that seems to worsen when I talking,
and so it worked out for both of us.
I hadn’t planned on returning home alone as I naturally figured that Jenna would be with me; therefore had nothing to read.
I hadn’t planned on returning home alone as I naturally figured that Jenna would be with me; therefore had nothing to read.
From the train station I have
three options on returning home. Instead
of transferring back to the 41 (which is the route Jenna and I had used for
getting to the train station) I decided to take the train to the next stop and
wait for the 35 which gets me closer to wear I live.
Now i am home writing this post, frustrated by a stuck shift key that keeps giving commands on my word that i have to go back and correct. (That cap is one example. It was also underlining and bolding – but the caps don’t seem as correctable – even on a different computer. I was able to change the font size. But I had to copy and paste this part)
Now i am home writing this post, frustrated by a stuck shift key that keeps giving commands on my word that i have to go back and correct. (That cap is one example. It was also underlining and bolding – but the caps don’t seem as correctable – even on a different computer. I was able to change the font size. But I had to copy and paste this part)
Now that this is posted, I
will go to the other room to wait for Jenna and the kids (who will be staying
with us for a couple of days) I don’t know when Bill will be dropping them
off. He may try calling, but I can’t guarantee
there will be a connection. It's been almost five hours now and I haven't heard from them. Roland is home now. Perhaps I should use his phone to find out where my daughter might be.
According to customer
service, I’ll be receiving my new phone in just a few days. That sounds unbelievable to my ears. I’ll be surprised if it comes on Saturday or
even Monday.