外婆的奶油覆盆子

人生百味

作者:by Nancy J.Kopp

I was nine years old when my parents put me on a train in Chicago. Dad slipped the porter a few dollars to keep an eye on me until I reached Rock Island, IL. When the train pulled into the Rock Island station, wheels grinding, puffs of steam coming up from the engine, I slid to the edge of my seat and peered out the window at the people waiting outside. Excitement, then fear moved in because I didn’t see a familiar face.

The porter bent down and said, “C’mon miss, this is where you get off. Your grandma be waitin’for you.”

I slid off the soft 1)upholstered seat and followed the man down the aisle. The porter smiled broadly as he helped me down the two steps to the ground, and before I could look around, my grandmother appeared.

Grandma was tall, slim and serious. No hugs and kisses. She wore her long gray hair in a braid that wound around the top of her head, and her 2)rimless glasses gleamed in the sunlight. She walked fast, her black lacedup 3)oxfords keeping a steady beat. My little girl legs had to work overtime to keep up with her.

We m a r c h e d for several blocks at this smart pace, when Grandma stopped so suddenly, I nearly fell on my face. She pulled me into a small neighborhood grocery shop and let go of my hand as she picked up a small wooden box of red raspberries. A smile lit up her usually sober face.

“We’ll have these,” she told the clerk as she handed him the box of raspberries and some money.

Back on the sidewalk, we kept going past houses that were old and not very well kept. Some of the lawns were neat and tidy while others were overrun with weeds and too-tall grass. Finally, we reached a big, yellow house with a fence around it. Grandma opened the gate and climbed the front steps pulling me with her. “This is the rooming house where we’re staying,” she said as she opened the screen door.

I wasn’t sure why my mother and father had sent me here. I knew Grandma lived in Arizona now, not here in Rock Island where my grandpa lived.

We climbed the steps and went down a hallway to a small bedroom. “This is where I sleep—you’ll stay here with me,” Grandma said.

She laid her pocketbook and my suitcase on the bed, then led the way to a tiny kitchen that held all the necessary equipment.

I watched as Grandma washed the raspberries, divided them into two green glass bowls and poured heavy cream over them.

Placing them on the table with two spoons, she said, “Now, sit down and have your raspberries. They’re only good if you use real cream on them.”

And they were good, sweet and 4)tangy, covered in the smooth, cold cream. They were so good that I think of the day Grandma introduced me to this wonderful fruit every time I see them. And I know they need “real cream” to taste the very best.