Trip Report: Lost Beach Day 7
by Dr. John McIntyre
It seems like everyone in town has turned out for our departure. The only other
guests returned from Negril late the night before, after we were
asleep. Now they're having breakfast at the bar, looking bewildered
by all the attention we're receiving. Courtney and Boy George are
both here, and they've brought letters for us to post to girls they
know back in the states. Boy George gives my daughter a beaded necklace.
Young Jamaican men can seem so innocent, but I know this particular
one is going to be trouble for the ladies some day. Al gives us
a small cactus, with Lost Beach 2001 and all of our names carved
in it. It's still growing strong as I'm writing this. Harold and
Mark bring our bags to the lobby, where Dennis and the van await.
It's Romy's day off, but our waitress from his
alternate days, Audrey, is waiting in the lobby. So are Myrna, Marcy,
and Karel. The owners are waiting there also. The girls hug my little
daughter, Steve shakes my son's hand, and Beth kisses my wife on
the cheek. Mark nudges me, motions toward my wife and says "The
tears begin to flow". Sure enough, he's absolutely right. My wife
is crying.
As we started down that long dirt road, Dennis
asked us if it was OK for him to bring his girlfriend and her daughter
along to MoBay. That was fine with us, so he stopped in front of
his house, and they came running out...seems like this whole thing
was planned out in advance. By the time we arrived in Little London,
Dennis noticed that one tire was a little flat, so we stopped at
a gas station to add air. He debated calling Lost Beach for another
van, but eventually decided that the leak was slow enough that we
would just stop periodically for air.
The trip took us through Sav-La-Mar and then
into the mountains. No teenagers along on this trip, so Dennis didn't
have to play the rap-reggae (reggae hip-hop? gangsta reggae?) that
we listened to on the way to the falls. His tastes were a little
more subdued; we spent the whole trip listening to UB40 (reggae
lite?). There was one song called Kingston Town that seemed to fit
our mood, we were missing Jamaica already.
Dennis kept looking down at the tire and decided
we needed to stop for more air. Unfortunately the only service station
we came to didn't have any. Dennis kept shaking his head in frustration.
"Must be the only gas station in Jamaica without air," he said.
About a mile further and the tire was completely flat. And, of course,
the rain was pouring down. Dennis's girlfriend held the umbrella
while Dennis and I changed the tire. It wasn't easy, and we had
to move the jack a few times before we got it right. Dennis was
very worried that we might miss our flight. But we were still on
vacation, and told him that we'd be perfectly happy to stay one
more night. "You know how we say 'no problem, man'?" he asked, "Well
this IS problem, man!" Somehow, he managed to get us back on the
road again, and we did make it to the airport on time for our flight.
Usually, when we're about to leave a place we've
enjoyed, I tell the kids to take a look around and say goodbye.
But we were in a rush because of the delay, and we never really
said goodbye to Jamaica. And that's perfectly all right with me.
I don't really want to say goodbye anyway. Since we've been back,
we've bored all of our friends with stories, and sometimes out of
nowhere one of us (usually my young daughter) will ask "Remember
when...?", followed by a story about Mark, or Al, or Squeak. Then
we all smile, each of us knowing that we've got something inside
of us that no one else will ever have. And each of us knowing that
somewhere, miles and a world away, we've got another place that
we can call home.
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