The Caribbean sunset smeared the horizon in unreal shades of orange and pink. On the Ocean Majesty, Maggie Thornton—eighty, immaculate, pearls at her throat—perched at the mahogany bar, requesting a Scotch with exactly two drops of water. Carlos, the young bartender, poured it with flair, curious about her peculiar ritual.
“Special occasion?” he asked.
“My eightieth birthday,” she said, smiling.
Soon, fellow passengers Patricia and Winston joined her, buying drinks, sharing laughter over her joke: holding liquor wasn’t the problem—water was. The bar echoed with delight, strangers connecting in fleeting camaraderie.
Later, alone on deck, Maggie watched the stars and reflected on loss and joy. “The absence is permanent, but joy isn’t,” she told Winston. She’d lived fully—love, travel, humor, curiosity. With grace, humor, and exactly two drops of water, she had learned to embrace life.
Raising an imaginary glass to the stars, she whispered, “Happy birthday to me.”