Grandma's Lemonade

Grandma's Lemonade

Grandma used to make lemonade. She would squeeze the fruit by hand, letting the sour juice drip down into the pitcher below, pouring in sugar, allowing it to settle to the bottom before handing me the large wooden ladle so that I could vigorously stir, swirling the liquid into a frenzy of pulp and citrus bubbles. She would make it whenever I came to stay with her. Once, mom woke me early in the morning on the first day of summer vacation, pulling my small arms into a thin jacket, then yanking my zipper up to my chin in stubborn defiance of the mid June heat. We made the five hour drive across the border into upstate New York, arriving around 1 pm. She unloaded my bags and kissed me on the cheek in a rush, leaving a smear of pinkish-orange lipstick on my cheek.

"Be good... I-... just, be good." Then almost as quickly, she was gone, her silver Toyota a glinting speck speeding down the long winding farm road.

I stood there on the porch of Grandma's house, feeling hot tears pushing to get out. I rubbed them aggressively, pressing my palms into the sockets hoping to relieve some of the stinging pressure. I didn't know it yet but this wouldn't be the last time mom would leave me at Grandma's impromptu, speeding off to spend a whirlwind month or week or however long her new relationship would last with her string of new boyfriends.

I heard the screen door creak open. Grandma stood in the doorway, an unreadable look on her face, curlers adorning her graying hair. Her neutral expression broke into a pained smile, her eyebrows pitching down casting her eyes in pale blue shadow.

"Oh darling, come here, sweetheart. It's all gonna be okay." Before I even realized it, she had enveloped me in a tight hug, and as I relaxed into her strong embrace the tears came. They rushed down my face hot and fast as I gripped Grandma's quilted nightgown. Her old tabby, Rooster, tip-toed through the cracked door, slithering through my legs, purring deeply.

I reached down to run my hand along his soft back. His tail was clipped at the end from a run-in with one of the feral cats in the dilapidated barn down the road. Yet Rooster lacked nothing. He maintained an air of mischievous confidence, even if he sometimes toppled to the left due to the injuries he sustained. Grandma clicked her tongue at him, lightly shoving the abashed cat to the side with her foot.

"Get back in the house, you damn cat... Last time he got out, he snuck into the chicken coop. Almost snatched an egg or two before I chased him out." Although her words were harsh, she imbued them with a warm fondness for the old animal. 

Breathing deeply I suddenly felt as though all the pain I felt would be forgiven ... somehow. Something about how the warm gusts of wind rustled the trees, or the way Grandma stood with open arms, an unwavering beacon of comfort. I knew she would be there, just like I knew the sun would rise every morning.

Just like I knew mom would never change. Broken things don't always want to be fixed.

Coco

NC

14 years old

clarkclark

VT

17 years old

The Voice

June 2025

  • Essay

    By Leah

    The Road that Remembers

    I live for these moments. Moments that make you forget anything but remember everything all at once. The dirt road crunches beneath the car tires. With windows down I am serenaded by the gentle sounds...

  • Dew-drop

    In a dew-drop, a little world exists A place turned blue and silver by the light That lingers well beyond the morning mist. In a dew-drop, a little world exists But melts into the grass long before ni...

  • As I Soon Leave

    we can run fast run forever until we lose ourselves our spirit but it doesn't matter as we sit in the grass and breathe in as the air grows sweet and the sod is covered in green and as we walk throug...

  • Ode to The Elephant

    Under the green jungle crown you silently go, Shimmers of light pattering down onto your soft, worn skin. With kind eyes, you observe, all the beauty surrounding you. I hope you know the beauty tha...

  • Lenses

    We need more joy in this world, we need less of this depressing sense of life, when everything around us is so beautiful. But we only look through a gray lens to see it. Sometimes we see our reflecti...

  • Dear Canada

    Dear Canada, You do not belong to us. You never have. And I really, really hope you never will. You are your own country, but I know I don’t have to tell you that. You already know it. On behalf of ma...

  • One Saturday Night

    On the windowsill He sat, Staring at the sky, Writing words Known only in his head, Leaning against a reflection, Watching the moon, Listening to the wind Drifting through the trees, Hearing the faint...

  • A Sestina

    Somewhere in the summer sun, Where dandelions dance and sing Along with the bluebird’s lonesome cry, Alone, you’ll find me, lying there Between the grass seed and maple leaves, Among the lilacs and ri...

  • Poetry

    By wph

    Sleeping In The New House

    Old shadows break in the brand new walls The dirt projected by the naked winter giants of trees Stains bare wooden flesh with familiar rusty bandages All the old calloused front porches Welcome the n...

  • Out of Tune

    What used to be my everything has now turned into what feels almost like a burden. But I don't quit because of that small ounce of enjoyment I still get out of it. Whether or not it's actually enjoyme...

  • Dinner With You

    I only ever came here for the fortune cookies I don't know if you can tell when I stare at the menu under shiny plastic with a red rim when I glance up I can tell you're reading the Mandarin in the me...

  • Grandma's Lemonade

    Grandma used to make lemonade. She would squeeze the fruit by hand, letting the sour juice drip down into the pitcher below, pouring in sugar, allowing it to settle to the bottom before handing me the...

  • Can You Hear It?

    Can you hear the roar of the crowd? The thousands of people, Kids, teens, adults and seniors. All screaming at the corrupt administration that we call a government. We will not be silenced. No matter ...

  • A Tree

    I talked to a tree just the other day, I was walking past and it did say, Well, what are you? Just a traveler. But what are you? Why, a human, of course, you didn’t know? I’ve never seen one before. ...

  • Static

    These days I sip on the light from the window. Sometimes the walls are dark, and they swallow it up, and there's none left to reach me in my seat by the door. And when the light’s too dim I swallow sm...