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One Last Dance: It's Never Too Late to Fall in Love
by Mardo A. Williams, Kay Williams, Jerri W. Lawrence

Published: 2017-10-09
Paperback : 402 pages
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A story about finding love at any age, One Last Dance is the delightful tale of Morgan, aged 89, and Dixie, 79, two “mature” individuals on seemingly divergent paths. Despite their disastrous first meeting, complete with a ruined birthday cake, broken eyeglasses and insulting remarks, ...

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Introduction

A story about finding love at any age, One Last Dance is the delightful tale of Morgan, aged 89, and Dixie, 79, two “mature” individuals on seemingly divergent paths. Despite their disastrous first meeting, complete with a ruined birthday cake, broken eyeglasses and insulting remarks, it was obvious to bystanders, even then, that the two were fated for each other. 

          The book follows the relationship of Dixie and Morgan, as they begin to date and ultimately decide to move in together – for economic reasons, they agree.  But the business-only relationship changes and strengthens as the couple unites to combat illness, scandal and a near-fatal accident.  It’s also a tale about how insecurities, humiliations and fears, thought long past, can haunt a person throughout his days.  Dixie fears intimacy.  Morgan has concealed important details about his divorce, his estranged children, and his lost job. 

          When a mysterious stranger, a grandson Morgan has never met, bent on vengeance for past wrongs, invades their lives, he becomes a catalyst, reconciling Morgan with his estranged Chicago family and eventually bringing Dixie and Morgan the love and pride they’d lost decades before with the loss of their children.

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Excerpt

BOOK I - Getting Together

CHAPTER ONE

A Violent Encounter

At first Morgan saw only movement; colorless shapes milling about. They turned into people.

A woman using a walker labored his way. Her eyes were anxious, her ankles so swollen that her legs looked like thick poles. A pinch-faced gentleman leaned on a counter behind which a receptionist sat. “Where’s my wife?” he asked petulantly. Two women, slumped side by side on the couch like two rag dolls, stared forlornly into space.

Morgan took his handkerchief from his pocket and patted his forehead. What am I doing here? I’m too young for this. He whirled around in a panic and dashed back through the double doors, heading for the sunshine.

At the same time a woman in a yellow dress hurried up the walkway. The two strangers collided.

Morgan’s spectacles were knocked askew. The large white box the woman held so carefully in front of her flipped and was crushed against her chest. She stumbled and almost fell. When he grabbed her by the arm to steady her, she pulled away, clutching at the box as it slowly slid down the front of her, opening as it went, leaving blobs of white and red icing on her bright yellow dress. “Oh, no,” she wailed. “Look what you’ve done.” Chunks of white cake with red and yellow roses smeared the sidewalk leading up to the entrance.

Her face turned pink. She called out to a passerby, “He’s ruined the cake for Effie’s party.”

Morgan, still stunned by the collision, took off his glasses and tried to bend the earpiece back in shape. It snapped. He stuffed it in his pocket and held his glasses on with one hand as he looked down at his pants leg, streaked with icing.

She gave him a scorching glance. “If you hadn’t jerked my arm. . . ” Tears welled in her eyes. “Now we have no cake for Effie’s party.”

“Let me pay you for the cake.” Flustered, he drew out his wallet, cracked it open, and held out a twenty dollar bill.

She ignored the bill in his outstretched hand. Her gray-blonde curls bounced as she rummaged furiously in the purse hanging from her shoulder.

She’s pretty high strung, he thought. Feeling like a fool, he put away the money. His glasses felt lopsided on his face. He took them off and jammed them in his pocket with the broken earpiece.

“You’ve also ruined my dress,” she snapped, whipping a handkerchief from her bag and scrubbing at grease stains on her shoulder.

“You nearly broke my glasses,” Morgan spluttered. “And this is my new suit.” She had a spot of icing on her cheek. He resisted the urge to reach over and brush it away.

Half the cake was still in the box and the message was almost intact: appy 100th Birth. “Some of this may be salvageable,” Morgan grunted, feeling more and more embarrassed as he became aware that people on their way in and out of the center were stopping to gawk.

He heard a passerby say, “Looks like just another domestic argument.” A man plunked himself down on a nearby bench to watch. “Poor devil,” he said to a lady beside him. “She’s trying to get rid of him. She’ll visit him here once a week and someone else will do the dirty work.”

“That’s unfair,” the lady broke in. “You think women are to blame for everything wrong in this world.”

Did they think he was here for their entertainment? “Why don’t you folks go on home?” he flared. “This is just between me and”—he groped for a word—“the broad.” He stooped, jiggling the cake box to shift the broken pieces toward the middle. With some smoothing-over of the icing to connect the chunks, there’d be a perfectly healthy-looking half a cake.

Just then she bent to rub the icing off her skirt. Her shoulder bag slid down her arm, knocking him on the side of the head.

He looked up in surprise as a cascade of cosmetics, credit cards, a checkbook, hairpins, papers, and assorted trinkets rained down on him and scattered across the walk.

The woman muttered, “If you’d been looking where you were going, none of this would have happened.”

“Drama queen,” he mumbled to himself.

He helped her gather up the items, thinking the quicker they were collected, the faster he could be on his way.

His hand accidentally brushed hers and their heads nearly touched. They were eye-to-eye.

Her cheeks were flushed, he noticed, her blue eyes blazing. She was a damn good-looking woman.

She stood, snapped her purse shut, and hurried toward the parking lot.

Face flaming, Morgan gathered up the residue of cake and icing from the walk and dumped the box in the trash, a clear indication to himself at least that he remained a gentleman under stress. His eyeglasses were broken, his hands were sticky, and his pants and shoes had frosting on them.

Now what? What the hell, he told himself, you’re here. You don’t want to be a burden to your friends. He had to admit that sometimes in the night he woke up in terror, knowing that old age would eventually get him. It was the beast in the corner, waiting to dig its claws in him and sink its teeth into his neck.

On that beautiful July day in Columbus, Ohio, the birds were singing, the flowers were in bloom. As if he were facing the firing squad, Morgan squared his shoulders and walked into Whispering Pines Retirement Center and Nursing Home for the second time that afternoon. “I have an appointment. I’m a little late.” The receptionist’s eyes were merry behind her glasses. Had she heard the commotion and peeked out the door?

His face felt hot. He hoped he wasn’t blushing. Had she seen him come in and hightail it out of the place once he saw the lethargic crowd? If he’d stuck to his guns, he’d be on a tour of the center now and would have missed that awful fight.

The receptionist lifted the phone and dialed. “Mr. Morgan is here for his appointment.” She looked up at him, nodding. “She’ll see you in five minutes.”

He asked her where the restroom was. He’d clean up first.

###

Dixie fled to her car, gunned the motor, and drove from the parking lot onto the street, tires squealing. She slowed after seeing a patrol car parked a short distance away and forced herself to proceed more calmly.

That splendid cake, with the magnificent red and yellow roses—Effie’s favorite colors. She’d never be able to find another cake that lovely on such short notice.

Her heart was pounding. That man was obnoxious, overbearing, and insulting. He’d almost knocked her down. He’d ruined her dress, destroyed the beautiful cake, and threw money at her as if she were a beggar! Then he had the gall to call her names.

She increased speed on the open road and found herself watching in the rearview mirror for flashing lights that would warn her of a patrolman in pursuit.

She reached for the cell phone and speed-dialed a number. She needed to talk this over with Vera, her closest friend. Sympathetic Vera.

The phone was ringing when she glanced at the car in front of her and saw the bumper sticker, You could drive better with that phone up your ass. That teed her off again and she pulled out into the left lane, almost hit a car, and darted around the vehicle with the offending slogan, waving the phone at the woman driver. Dixie gave her the finger and watched for signs of road rage. When the woman just grinned, Dixie sped on.

“Hello, hello, is anyone there?” Dixie heard Vera’s gravelly voice ask through the receiver.

“Hi, it’s me,” Dixie said breathlessly, jamming the phone against her ear.

“You sound awful. What happened?” Vera asked.

“I bumped into a man, literally.”

“In the car? Is he hurt? Are you okay?”

“No, yes. I mean, not in the car. On foot. And now I’m late for Effie’s party. And I’m in charge. I’ll tell you about it later. What are you doing at four? If you’re not busy, I’ll bring by a six-pack and some chips.”

“It’s a date,” Vera said.

At the bakery, Dixie picked up three small cakes to replace the destroyed sheet cake meant for fifty people. The clerk squirted a couple of flowers on each and wrote a quick Happy 100. Dixie felt like crying. The cake for Effie had been specially designed for her: ornate, dignified, and old-fashioned. Effie didn’t have much to look forward to, confined to a wheelchair the way she was. No family left. But she did look forward to her birthday parties. And 100 was a very special birthday!

Dixie rushed back to the retirement center. With the three cakes stacked under her chin, she carefully entered the front door. She glanced furtively around to make sure that dreadful man wasn’t lurking in the hallways.

Flushed and apologetic, she swept into Effie’s birthday celebration only thirty minutes late. Multicolored balloons floated gaily throughout the party room, crowded with Effie’s friends, most of them residents of the center.

Coffee was perking in the urn. Dixie was thankful she’d decorated and started preparations before heading out to pick up the cake, the first cake, that is.

She lined up the three small cake boxes beside the paper plates, opening each lid, feeling fresh disappointment at the sight of these second-rate substitutes.

Effie wheeled herself over to look and clapped her hands. “Scrumptious!”

“You should have seen the one that got away,” Dixie began, but didn’t want to get all worked up again. “Effie, you look gorgeous! Who did your hair?” She gave her a hug and kissed her on the cheek.

“You look pretty gorgeous yourself, Dixie. Full of pep and ginger. Wish you could pass along some of it to me.”

Dixie laughed. She liked being with Effie. She always made her feel like a spring chicken. Well, she was a spring chicken compared to Effie. Only 79. And a young 79, at that!

###

“I’m Bryce Morgan, but everyone calls me Morgan.” He shook hands with Mrs. Fontana, activities director of Whispering Pines, a matronly lady with a pale, square face and very black hair. Now that he’d calmed down, he took a second look around him. The place seemed bright and airy, with comfortable overstuffed furniture grouped around a fireplace, a kind of simulated cozy living room.

“We light a fire in winter,” Mrs. Fontana said, smiling. “People sit around and visit after a meal.”

Morgan nodded. A woman and a man sat at opposite ends of the makeshift living room. The woman fidgeted endlessly with the ruffles on her blouse. The man dozed, his mouth slightly open. With each breath, his upper set of teeth moved in and out between his lips.

Mrs. Fontana pointed to her left. “There’s the dining room. People have moved in here from other retirement villages just because of our wonderful meals.” She beamed. “We’re also known for our friendliness.”

Mrs. Fontana turned to her right, with a gesture toward Morgan to follow. They passed four women playing bridge with oversize playing cards. One woman was hooked up to oxygen. Another had her neck in a brace. In a nearby chair, a woman with bright red lipstick and painted nails called out, “Hello, Mrs. Fontana,” her curious eyes fastening on Morgan.

The activities director waved, speaking softly to Morgan, “The women far outnumber the men. You’ll be very popular here.”

A shrunken couple, gray-faced, each with a cane, stood by the elevator, holding hands, smiling a greeting.

Morgan and Mrs. Fontana rode up silently with them in the elevator. At the second floor, Morgan held the door while the couple laboriously inched their way out into the hall. What am I doing here? he asked himself again. He had no real ailments, just a touch of arthritis and asthma, kept in check by his inhalers. Okay, so he was 89, but everyone told him he seemed at least ten years younger.

“This is independent living,” Mrs. Fontana said as they exited at the third floor. “Are you interested in something unfurnished or furnished?”

Feeling glummer and glummer, he followed her down a hallway. “I have furniture.”

She unlocked a door. “Our one bedroom.” He stepped into the apartment. It smelled shut up and dusty, and it was smaller than where he lived now. The drapes and carpeting were drab. The kitchen was just a sink, cupboards, and a small refrigerator. Not that he did much cooking. Mrs. Fontana seemed to be waiting for his comment. “Umm hmm,” he grunted. Dismal, he wanted to say. Well, furniture would make a difference.

“If you like, you can bring in a microwave,” Mrs. Fontana offered. “We allow them only in independent living.” She shrugged apologetically. “We don’t want a fire.”

They left the model apartment and walked down another hallway. This place is a maze, he thought. He wondered how many residents got lost trying to find their apartments?

“Now we’re in the assisted living wing.” Mrs. Fontana waved to a woman who sat on a gaily flowered couch, wheelchair beside her. She was missing her leg from the knee down. She massaged her stump, the prosthesis resting on the floor.

Mrs. Fontana whispered to Morgan, “Game soul.” Then she turned into yet another hallway.

Morgan trudged bleakly behind. He scarcely believed his ears when the sounds of music and laughter drifted his way.

“Our party room,” Mrs. Fontana said. “They’re having a birthday celebration for our oldest resident, Effie Cartwright. She’s 100 today.”

This was more like it, Morgan thought, as he peered through the open door. Balloons rose and dipped festively in the room. He recognized the music, “In the Mood.” Beyond a group of people laughing and talking, he saw a familiar bright yellow dress. Seated beside an old lady in a wheelchair, helping her open gifts, was the gray-blonde woman who’d hit him with her purse. She glanced up in the middle of a smile. Their eyes met. Morgan touched his forehead, as if tipping his hat.

Her smile faded. She pointedly ignored his greeting.

“Oh, you know Dixie?” Mrs. Fontana asked.

So her name is Dixie. “Does she live here?” he asked.

The activities director shook her head. “She works for us part-time. Helps with the newsletter, bingo, the parties, reads to a few residents who are blind. They love her!”

“I see.” So she could be lovable if she tried.

“Would you like to fill out an application?” Mrs. Fontana asked when they were back in her office.

“I’m not sure,” he sighed. “I have an apartment with a lease.”

“Do you live alone?”

He nodded.

“Independent living would be the same as having your own apartment.”

He tried to smile but his face felt frozen.

She added, “Then when the next stage of your life arrives, you’ll move down the hall into assisted living. We even have a convalescent center. If you break a hip or whatever,” her red lips parted, showing very white teeth, “you’ll return to us, your home, for rehab and skilled nursing care. The beauty of it is you’ll already be acquainted with everyone.”

Except for those who’ve died, he thought, and the new batch who’ve filed into this elephant burial ground.

She moved some papers around on her desk. “Why don’t you come back for a meal? Our food is delicious.”

“Maybe I will.” He shook her hand and left her office. He had a lot to think about. Luckily, there was time. He sank down on the couch in front of the fireplace, his head spinning.

A heavy woman lumbered his way. She collapsed beside him. “You’re new,” she said, slightly out of breath.

“I was just visiting a friend,” he lied.

She leaned toward him. “I’m pretty good today. Except from my waist down. Hips and knees are bad. Nothing wrong with my head. A month ago I gave the supervisor a list of things missing. She said I was getting confused, that her girls didn’t steal. She thinks it’s me, putting things away and forgetting where.” Frowning, she gave her head a quick shake.

Morgan nodded warily, sorry he’d lingered

“I’ve had girls working for me for twenty years and no one can make me believe if they see something they want, they won’t take it—thinking she’s old and don’t know what she has.” Her voice drifted off.

Morgan stood.

She held him with her eyes. “One who works here now used to work for me when I lived at home. Since I’ve been making such a fuss over all my stuff that’s missing, I’ve found three things hidden around my apartment that I missed from home after she quit working for me. She’d put them back.”

Morgan waved good-bye.

“Nice talking to you,” she called as he walked away.

He was sweating profusely. He wiped his face with his handkerchief and loosened his tie. His chest felt tight. As soon as he was out the front door, he drew his Albuterol inhaler out of his suit pocket and took a deep puff. He’d follow up at home with a puff of Azmacort. The air was humid today, full of allergens.

###

Dixie and Morgan each savored the drama of their violent encounter and each told friends a slightly different version of how they met.

“She broke my glasses and ruined my new suit,” Morgan laughed over the phone to his good friend Nate. “I managed to keep both of us from falling to the concrete. We could have saved the cake—half of it anyway. When I suggested that, she slugged me with her purse.” He added, “She might be attractive under other circumstances.”

Dixie wasn’t so kind. “He was rude and boorish,” she told her friend Vera when she met with her at four.

“What did he do that was so bad?” Vera asked, opening a can of German beer for each.

Dixie enumerated. “He ran into me so hard I almost fell. He destroyed Effie’s cake. Look at my dress! It has to be dry-cleaned. He had the nerve to throw money at me. My purse was torn from my shoulder. Everything fell out. It was a mess. And then he had the gall to stop by Effie’s party!”

“You’re kidding. He crashed the party?”

“Not exactly. But he stood outside the room and waved at me!”

“He actually had the nerve?” Vera giggled.

“I hope I never see that oaf again.” Dixie shook her head. “Why should anyone, unless he’s demented, live in a retirement center anyway? He looked perfectly healthy.”

“Maybe he didn’t live there, but was just visiting.”

Dixie took a long sip of beer.

“Was he good looking?” Vera asked with a sly smile.

Dixie frowned. “I didn’t notice, I was so upset.”

Vera’s eyes twinkled behind her tortoise-shell glasses. “I have a feeling it was probably as much your fault as it was his. Maybe you could sort of straighten things out with him. You know, if he’s cute.”

“Are you serious?” Dixie exploded. “He left no doubt he considered me a royal pain. Of course, he could do no wrong. It was all my fault.” After a few moments, she sighed. “Anyway, I’ve almost given up hope after that last fiasco with that—playboy.”

Vera chortled. “You mean the guy who said he’d like to move in with you but he’d be gone maybe three or four nights a week?” Vera lit a cigarette and inhaled deeply.

“You think he’s married?” Dixie asked.

“Find out.”

“I don’t know even know his name. I don’t even want to know his name. Stop smiling,” Dixie told her friend. She finished her beer just as Vera’s husband Paul breezed in from the golf course.

That night, Dixie performed her bedtime ritual. First, she took her pill, that important, not-to-be forgotten pill, and said silent thanks for the gift of another precious day. She cold-creamed her face, wiped it off with a tissue, and then used cleansing lotion. It left her face feeling tight and shiny. She peered into the bathroom mirror. She looked darn good, considering all that life had doled out to her. She slipped on her nightgown. In bed, she brooded, deciding she’d make no effort to seek this man out. She’d let things develop as they would. view abbreviated excerpt only...

Discussion Questions

1. Here in an aging America –unlike so many other cultures -we have a love affair with youth. Our television commercials, magazine ads, and even most television shows are geared to the younger, beautiful people. Instead of being overlooked, how could the contributions of our older generations be acknowledged and used to benefit society?
2. In the novel, Dixie is 79 and Morgan is 89. How realistic is it to expect to fall in love at that age? Discuss the complications of romance and marriage at this stage in life. Also talk about the advantages.
3. Dixie would possibly like a relationship but does not want to turn into a care giver. Do you think she is selfish? Would you take the kind of risk she takes by inviting Morgan into her life? Discuss your thoughts about whether women manage being alone better than men do.
4. Although the novel explores problems related to aging, it also explores relationships, motivations and needs of human beings at every age. How does your view of Tony change as the novel progresses?
5. Dixie has concerns regarding Morgan's past. Is she right to be worried? Grandson Tony has been led to believe that Morgan is wealthy. Had Morgan been treated fairly by his family? Did he create some of his own problems?
6. Dixie is afraid Morgan will be repulsed by her body and Morgan is afraid he might not be able to perform. Discuss the nature - and truth - in these fears. Do we all have young minds in aging bodies? Discuss your thoughts on sexuality as life progresses into the later years.
7. There are many new challenges that surface as we age. In the story, Dixie struggles to keep her house up and is considering taking in a boarder. For retirees, finances can be a huge issue even with the best of planning. The thought of not being able to drive and losing independence is painful. The decision to consider a move to a retirement home means giving up privacy and independence for the rest of life. The novel also touches on end-of-life choices. How do we prepare to face these difficult decisions? Discuss others you know who have helped determine what you'd do - and what you wouldn't do.
8. What does the novel suggest about the importance of stability in family life? How has lack of it affected Dixie? Morgan? Tony?
9. How important are the following people to Tony and how do they influence his outlook and attitude? his father, his stepfather, Eddie, Officer Pfeiffer, Dixie, Morgan, Laura. How important is Tony to Dixie? to Morgan?
10. As the novel progresses, the reader sees change and growth occurring in Morgan, Dixie and Tony. What events seem to most influence growth and change in Morgan? Dixie? Tony?

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