by G. Jack Urso
The other night,
about 10:30 PM, I'm in my den when there is a BANGING on my front door. Because
my hearing in one ear isn't as good as it used to be, I have trouble hearing
knocks on my door and the doorbells don't work and I don't fix them because, generally, I'm fine with ignoring people.
Finally, the
cats' movement alerts me something is up, and then I hear the knocking. I go
check it out and through the enclosed front porch I can see an elderly woman
walking off my stoop back onto the street. I call after her, “Can I help you?”
“I've been
knocking on the door! Won't anyone help me?”
"What's the
problem?”
“I'm lost! I
have no idea where I am and nobody will help me!”
I look around to
see if there are any cars or people nearby, in case this is some kind of scam,
but there's no one about.
Thinking she has
dementia, I ask, “Can I call the police for you?”
“No! I just want
to go home! I've been knocking on doors. I'm an old woman, but no one will help me. I forgot where
Salem Street is.”
The street
sounds familiar. It's nearby, but as I can get lost going to the bathroom, I
told her to wait and let me check where it is. It takes a couple
minutes, but it turns out to be just one block down. I throw on a pair of
shorts and go back to the porch. She is walking away, thinking I just said
what I said to get rid of her, like the others whose doors she knocked on.
“I know where
you live,” I said, “Come on.” I turned on my flashlight and she follows the
beam as I point it on the street. I live in a slightly run down area with lots
of side streets and few working streetlights.
She explains she
is 75 and here visiting her friend Michael. She went out to buy some toilet
paper but, not being from around here, forgot where he lives. She knocked
on a couple doors, but no one helped.
Salem Street is
just about a block away. It is a small, short access street with only the side
entrances of a couple houses and an old mobile home dating back to the 1960s
when the area was last zoned for them.
I flash the
light on the side entrance of the apartment where her friend Michael lives. She
is so relieved, she is nearly to tears. She thanks me profusely. I ask her for
her name.
“Penelope.”
“Hello, Penelope.
My name is Jack.”
I wait for her
to get inside and then went home.
Regarding the
name of the street she was looking for, Salem Street — “salem” is a word found in
both Hebrew and Arabic. In Hebrew (salem), it is often translated to mean “peace.” In Arabic (salim), it means “safe” or “undamaged.”
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