Traveling was one thing. If people have the time and money, why shouldn’t they travel to every place they’ve ever wanted to go? But what Uncle Charlie and Aunt Maddie did after they got to their destinations was quite another.
Ziplining in Costa Rica.White water rafting on the Colorado River. Hiking in Montana and Italy. No doubt these were fantastic, action-packed experiences. But Uncle Charlie and Aunt Maddie were 87 and 85 years old. They had no business risking their well-being by galavanting all over the world and going on these wild adventures, family members thought.
“What if you’re doing the Tour du Mont Blanc and one of you is injured? Katie, their niece, asked. “How would we take care of your medical needs? How would we get you home?”
“We have very good travel insurance.We don’t want or expect anything from you kids,” Uncle Charlie said, still referring to his 30- 40- and 50-year-old nieces and nephews as “kids.”
“Just let us have a good time while we can,” Aunt Maddie said.
“And enjoy the pictures,” Uncle Charlie said. “We’re both getting to be pretty darn good photographers.”
“We are,” Aunt Maddie said, then chuckled. “But it’s not hard to take good pictures when you’re taking some of the most beautiful scenery in the world.”
“True,” Uncle Charlie said. “Maybe we should enter some of the pictures in some contests before we head off to Tokyo.”
“Tokyo?” Katie and the other nieces and nephews asked in union after gasping, also in unison.
“What’s wrong with Tokyo?” Aunt Maddie asked.
“Nothing’s wrong with Tokyo,” Nephew Joe said. “It’s just that …”
“Tokyo is just so …” Niece Cathy started, but couldn’t think of anything either.
“It’s crowded and hectic and loud and …” Nephew Alan started.
“We don’t care what reasons you come up with,” Uncle Charlie said. “We’ve also wanted to go to Japan and that’s what we’re going to do. Tokyo will basically be only our home base anyhow. We plan on exploring as much of the country as we can in 10 days.”
“Ten days?” Katie asked.
“Yes,10 days,” Aunt Maddie said, “and we’re going to pack as much as we can into those days.”
“We don’t understand any of this,” Cathy said. “Why can’t you stay home and spend time with us and our children and grandchildren?”
“We’re spending time with you now,” Aunt Maddie said. “Renting these houses on the Outer Banks was a wonderful idea for a whole family vacation. We should do this every year.”
“That’s the plan,” Joe said. “We’re simply concerned that with all these high-risk adventures you’re going on you won’t always be here to share these vacations with us.”
“There will come a time,” Uncle Charlie said, “that we won’t be here. You do understand that, don’t you?”
“Of course we do,” Joe said.
“Then just let it go and live with whatever happens,” Uncle Charlie said.
Not wanting to waste anymore time debating the issue, the nieces and nephews accepted defeat and made their way to the beach where the rest of the family had been for hours.
When the others had left Uncle Charlie and Aunt Maddie gave each other knowing looks. They knew the family was less concerned about their well-being than they were about the whittling down of inheritance money. They did have to give the nieces and nephews credit, however, for not mentioning money in any way.
Not mentioning money was the only thing that kept the nieces and nephews in Charlie’s Maddie’s good graces. They would mention that in the letter to be read at the reading of the will for whichever one of them passes last.
What no one except their lawyer, their accountant and state lottery officials knows is that three years ago Charlie and Maddie won a multi-million dollar lottery jackpot. It was that, and not their life savings, which was quite significant before the lottery win, they were using to travel to every place they’d ever wanted to go.
If the nieces and nephews kept their mouths shut about money, once Charlie and Maddie were gone, they’d be able to follow their dreams, too.