RD201902

(avery) #1
on each side. From ridge to ridge,
west to east, I could see every shade
of green.
“Two hours more,” Doods said.
His not knowing anything about the
purpose of my journey was a relief. I
had enough interior dialogue going
on. I was no better than my parents.
I could have done more to free Lola.
Why didn’t I? 
I tapped the cheap plastic box and
regretted not buying a real urn, made
of porcelain or rosewood. What would
Lola’s people think? Not many were
left. Only one sibling remained in the
area, Gregoria, 98 years old, and I was
told her memory was failing. One of
Lola’s nieces had planned a simple
memorial, followed by the lowering of
the ashes into a plot at the Mayantoc
Eternal Bliss Memorial Park.
Doods veered northwest. Two lanes
became one, and then gravel turned to

dirt. The path ran along the Camiling
River, clusters of bamboo houses off to
the side, green hills ahead. The home
stretch.

In the late 1970s, I was attending col-
lege an hour away. On my frequent
trips home, I heard Lola say that her
mouth hurt. Then her teeth started
falling out.
“That’s what happens when you
don’t brush properly,” Mom told her.
I said that Lola needed to see a den-
tist. She was in her 50s and had never
been to one. A year went by, then two.
Lola’s teeth looked like a crumbling
Stonehenge. One night, I lost it.
Lola could barely eat because her
teeth were rotting out of her head, I
screamed at my mother. Couldn’t she
think of her as a real person instead
of as a slave?

To outsiders, Lola (far right) looked like one of the family. That was their cover story.

96 february 2019


courtesy melissa tizon

Reader’s Digest

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