Back to The Five People You Meet in Heaven
The Five People You Meet in Heaven
By Mitch Albom
Day 1 Audio |
THIS
IS A STORY ABOUT A MAN named Eddie and it begins at the end, with Eddie dying in
the sun. It might seem strange to start a story with an ending. But all endings
are also beginnings. We just don't know it at the time.
THE
LAST HOUR of Eddie's life was spent, like most of the others, at Ruby Pier, an
amusement park by a great gray ocean. The park had the usual attractions, a
boardwalk, a Ferris wheel, roller coasters, bumper cars, a taffy stand, and an
arcade where you could shoot streams of water into a clown's mouth. It also had
a big new ride called Freddy's Free Fall, and this would be where Eddie would be
killed, in an accident that would make newspapers around the state.
AT
THE TIME of his death, Eddie was a squat, white-haired old man, with a short
neck, a barrel chest, thick forearms, and a faded army tattoo on his right
shoulder. His legs were thin and veined now, and his left knee, wounded in the
war, was ruined by arthritis. He used a cane to get around. His face was broad
and craggy from the sun, with salty whiskers and a lower jaw that protruded
slightly, making him look prouder than he felt. He kept a cigarette behind his
left ear and a ring of keys hooked to his belt. He wore rubber-soled shoes. He
wore an old linen cap. His pale brown uniform suggested a workingman, and a
workingman he was.
EDDIE'S
JOB WAS "maintaining" the rides, which really meant keeping them safe. Every
afternoon, he walked the park, checking on each attraction, from the
Tilt-A-Whirl to the Pipeline Plunge. He looked for broken boards, loose bolts,
worn-out steel. Sometimes he would stop, his eyes glazing over, and people
walking past thought something was wrong. But he was listening, that's all.
After all these years he could hear trouble, he said, in the spits and
stutters and thrumming of the equipment.
WITH
50 MINUTES left on earth, Eddie took his last walk along Ruby Pier. He passed an
elderly couple.
"Folks," he mumbled, touching his cap.
They nodded politely. Customers knew Eddie. At least the regular ones did. They
saw him summer after summer, one of those faces you associate with a place. His
work shirt had a patch on the chest that read EDDIE above the word MAINTENANCE,
and sometimes they would say, "Hiya, Eddie Maintenance," although he never
thought that was funny.
Today, it so happened, was Eddie's birthday, his 83rd. A doctor, last week, had
told him he had shingles. Shingles? Eddie didn't even know what they were. Once,
he had been strong enough to lift a carousel horse in each arm. That was a long
time ago.
"EDDIE!" . . . "TAKE ME, Eddie!" . . . "Take me!"
Forty minutes until his death. Eddie made his way to the front of the roller
coaster line. He rode every attraction at least once a week, to be certain the
brakes and steering were solid. Today was coaster day—the "Ghoster Coaster" they
called this one—and the kids who knew Eddie yelled to get in the cart with him.
Children
liked Eddie. Not teenagers. Teenagers gave him headaches. Over the years, Eddie
figured he'd seen every sort of do-nothing, snarl-at-you teenager there was. But
children were different. Children looked at Eddie—who, with his protruding lower
jaw, always seemed to be grinning, like a dolphin—and they trusted him. They
drew in like cold hands to a fire. They hugged his leg. They played with his
keys. Eddie mostly grunted, never saying much. He figured it was because he
didn't say much that they liked him.
THIRTY
MINUTES LEFT.
"Hey, happy birthday, I hear," Dominguez said.
Eddie grunted.
"No party or nothing?"
Eddie looked at him as if he were crazy. For a moment he thought how strange it
was to be growing old in a place that smelled of cotton candy.
"Well, remember, Eddie, I'm off next week, starting Monday. Going to Mexico."
Eddie nodded, and Dominguez did a little dance.
"Me and Theresa. Gonna see the whole family. Par-r-r-ty."
He stopped dancing when he noticed Eddie staring.
"You ever been?" Dominguez said.
"Been?"
"To Mexico?"
Eddie exhaled through his nose. "Kid, I never been anywhere I wasn't shipped to
with a rifle."
He watched Dominguez return to the sink. He thought for a moment. Then he took a
small wad of bills from his pocket and removed the only twenties he had, two of
them. He held them out.
"Get your wife something nice," Eddie said.
Dominguez regarded the money, broke into a huge smile, and said, "C'mon, man.
You sure?"
Eddie pushed the money into Dominguez's palm. Then he walked out back to the
storage area. A small "fishing hole" had been cut into the boardwalk planks
years ago, and Eddie lifted the plastic cap. He tugged on a nylon line that
dropped 80 feet to the sea. A piece of bologna was still attached.
"We catch anything?" Dominguez yelled. "Tell me we caught something!"
Eddie wondered how the guy could be so optimistic. There was never anything on
that line.
"One day," Dominguez yelled, "we're gonna get a halibut!"
"Yep,"
Eddie mumbled, although he knew you could never pull a fish that big through a
hole that small.
TWENTY-SIX
MINUTES to live. Eddie crossed the boardwalk to the south end. Business was
slow. The girl behind the taffy counter was leaning on her elbows, popping her
gum.
Once, Ruby Pier was the place to go in the summer. It had elephants and
fireworks and marathon dance contests. But people didn't go to ocean piers much
anymore; they went to theme parks where you paid $75 a ticket and had your photo
taken with a giant furry character.
Eddie limped past the bumper cars and fixed his eyes on a group of teenagers
leaning over the railing. Great, he told himself. Just what I need.
"Off," Eddie said, tapping the railing with his cane. C'mon. It s not safe.
Whrrrssssh, A wave broke on the
beach. Eddie coughed up something he did not want to see. He spat it away.
Whrrssssssh. He used to think a
lot about Marguerite. Not so much now. She was like a wound beneath an old
bandage, and he had grown more used to the bandage.
Whrrssssssh.
What was shingles?
Whrrsssssh.
Sixteen minutes to live.
NO
STORY SITS by itself. Sometimes stories meet at corners and sometimes they cover
one another completely, like stones beneath a river.
The end of Eddie's story was touched by another seemingly innocent story, months
earlier—a cloudy night when a young man arrived at Ruby Pier with three of his
friends.
The young
man, whose name was Nicky, had just begun driving and was still not comfortable
carrying a key chain. So he removed the single car key and put it in his jacket
pocket, then tied the jacket around his waist.
For the next few hours, he and his friends rode all the fastest
rides: the Flying Falcon, the Splashdown, Freddy's Free Fall, the Ghoster
Coaster.
"Hands in the air!" one of them yelled.
They threw their hands in the air.
Later, when it was dark, they returned to the car lot, exhausted and laughing,
drinking beer from brown paper bags. Nicky reached into his jacket pocket. He
fished around. He cursed.
The key was gone.
FOURTEEN
MINUTES UNTIL his death. Eddie wiped his brow with a handkerchief. Out on the
ocean, diamonds of sunlight danced on the water, and Eddie stared at their
nimble movement. He had not been right on his feet since the war.
But back
at the Stardust Band Shell with Marguerite—there Eddie had still been graceful.
He closed his eyes and allowed himself to summon the song that brought them
together, the one Judy Garland sang in that movie. It mixed in his head now with
the cacophony of the crashing waves and children screaming on the rides.
"You made me love you—"
Whsssshhhh.
"—do it, I didn't want to do i—"
Spllllldddaashhhhhhh.
"—me love you—"
Eeeeeeee!
"—time you knew it, and all the—"
Chhhhewisshhhh.
"—knew it . . ."
Eddie felt her hands on his shoulders. He squeezed his eyes tightly, to bring
the memory closer.
TWELVE
MINUTES TO live.
" 'Scuse me."
A young girl, maybe eight years old, stood before him, blocking his sunlight.
She had blonde curls and wore flip-flops and denim cutoff
shorts and a lime green T-shirt with a cartoon duck on the front.
Amy, he thought her name was. Amy or Annie. She'd been here a lot this summer,
although Eddie never saw a mother or father.
" 'Scuuuse me," she said again. "Eddie Maint'nance?"
Eddie sighed. "Just Eddie," he said.
"Eddie?"
"Um hmm?"
"Can you make me . . ."
She put her hands together as if praying.
"C'mon, kiddo. I don't have all day."
"Can you make me an animal? Can you?"
Eddie looked up, as if he had to think about it. Then he reached into his shirt
pocket and pulled out three yellow pipe cleaners, which he carried for just this
purpose.
"Yesssss!" the little girl said, slapping her hands.
Eddie began twisting the pipe cleaners.
"Where's your parents?"
"Riding the rides."
"Without you?"
The girl shrugged. "My mom's with her boyfriend."
Eddie looked up. Oh.
He bent the pipe cleaners into several small loops, then twisted the loops
around one another. His hands shook now, so it took longer than it used to, but
soon the pipe cleaners resembled a head, ears, body, and tail.
"A rabbit?" the little girl said.
Eddie winked.
"Thaaaank you!"
She spun away, lost in that place where kids don't even know their feet are
moving. Eddie wiped his brow again, then closed his eyes, slumped into the beach
chair, and tried to get the old song back into his head.
A seagull squawked as it flew overhead.
HOW
DO PEOPLE choose their final words? Do they realize their gravity? Are they
fated to be wise?
By his 83rd birthday, Eddie had lost nearly everyone he'd cared
about. Some had died young, and some had been given a chance to grow old before
a disease or an accident took them away. At their funerals, Eddie listened as
mourners recalled their final conversations. "It's as if he knew he was going
to die. . . ." some would say.
Eddie never believed that. As far as he could tell, when your time came, it
came, and that was that. You might say something smart on your way out, but you
might just as easily say something stupid.
For the record, Eddie's final words would be "Get back!"
HERE
ARE THE sounds of Eddie's last minutes on earth. Waves crashing. The distant
thump of rock music. The whirring engine of a small biplane, dragging an ad from
its tail. And this.
"OH MY GOD! LOOK!"
Eddie felt his eyes dart beneath his lids. Over the years, he had come to know
every noise at Ruby Pier and could sleep through them all like a lullaby.
This voice was not in the lullaby.
"OH MY GOD! LOOK!"
Eddie bolted upright. A woman with fat, dimpled arms was holding a shopping bag
and pointing and screaming. A small crowd gathered around her, their eyes to the
skies.
Eddie saw it immediately. Atop Freddy's Free Fall, the new "tower drop"
attraction, one of the carts was tilted at an angle, as if trying to dump its
cargo. Four passengers, two men, two women, held only by a safety bar, were
grabbing frantically at anything they could.
"OH MY GOD!" the fat woman yelled. "THOSE PEOPLE! THEY'RE GONNA FALL!"
A voice squawked from the radio on Eddie's belt. "Eddie! Eddie!"
He pressed the button. "I see it! Get security!"
People ran up from the beach, pointing as if they had practiced this drill.
Look! Up in the sky! An amusement ride turned evil! Eddie grabbed his cane
and clomped to safety fence around the platform base, his wad of keys jangling
against his hip. His heart was racing.
Freddy's Free Fall was supposed to drop two carts in a stomach-churning descent,
only to be halted at the last instant by a gush of hydraulic air. How did one
cart come loose like that? It was tilted just a
few feet below the upper platform, as if it had started downward
then changed its mind.
Eddie reached the gate and had to catch his breath. Dominguez came running and
nearly banged into him.
"Listen to me!" Eddie said, grabbing Dominguez by the shoulders. His grip was so
tight, Dominguez made a pained face. "Listen to me! Who's up there?"
"Willie."
"OK. He must've hit the emergency stop. That's why the cart is hanging. Get up
the ladder and tell Willie to manually release the safety restraint so those
people can get out. OK? It's on the back of the cart, so you're gonna have to
hold him while he leans out there. OK? Then . . . then, the two of ya's—the two
of ya's now, not one, you got it?—the two of ya's get them out! One holds the
other! Got it!? . . . Got it?"
Dominguez nodded quickly.
"Then send that damn cart down so we can figure out what happened!"
Eddie's head was pounding. Although his park had been free of any major
accidents, he knew the horror stories of his business. Once, in Brighton, a bolt
unfastened on a gondola ride and two people fell to their death. Another time,
in Wonderland Park, a man had tried to walk across a roller coaster track; he
fell through and got stuck beneath his armpits. He was wedged in, screaming, and
the cars came racing toward him and . . . well, that was the worst.
Eddie pushed that from his mind. There were people all around him now, hands
over their mouths, watching Dominguez climb the ladder. Eddie tried to remember
the insides of Freddy's Free Fall. Engine. Cylinders. Hydraulics. Seals.
Cables. How does a cart come loose? He followed the ride visually, from the
four frightened people at the top, down the towering shaft, and into the base.
Engine. Cylinders. Hydraulics. Seals. Cables. . . .
Dominguez reached the upper platform. He did as Eddie told him, holding Willie
as Willie leaned toward the back of the cart to release the restraint. One of
the female riders lunged for Willie and nearly pulled him off the platform. The
crowd gasped.
"Wait . . ." Eddie said to himself.
Willie tried again. This time he popped the safety release.
"Cable . . ." Eddie mumbled.
The bar lifted and the crowd went "Ahhhhh." The riders were quickly
pulled to the platform.
"The cable is unraveling. . . ."
And Eddie was right. Inside the base of Freddy's Free Fall, hidden from view,
the cable that lifted Cart No. 2 had, for the last few months, been scraping
across a locked pulley. Because it was locked, the pulley had gradually ripped
the cable's steel wires—as if husking an ear of corn—until they were nearly
severed. No one noticed. How could they notice? Only someone who had crawled
inside the mechanism would have seen the unlikely cause of the problem.
The pulley was wedged by a small object that must have fallen through the
opening at a most precise moment.
A car key.
DON'T
RELEASE THE CART!" Eddie yelled. He waved his arms. "HEY! HEEEEY! IT'S THE
CABLE! DON'T RELEASE THE CART! IT'LL SNAP!"
The crowd drowned him out. It cheered wildly as Willie and Dominguez unloaded
the final rider. All four were safe. They hugged atop the platform.
"DOM! WILLIE!" Eddie yelled. Someone banged against his waist, knocking his
walkie-talkie to the ground. Eddie bent to get it. Willie went to the controls.
He put his finger on the green button. Eddie looked up.
"NO, NO, NO, DON'T!"
Eddie turned to the crowd. "GET BACK!"
Something in Eddie's voice must have caught the people's attention; they stopped
cheering and began to scatter. An opening cleared around the bottom of Freddy's
Free Fall.
And Eddie saw the last face of his life.
She was sprawled upon the ride's metal base, as if someone had knocked her into
it, her nose running, tears filling her eyes, the little girl with the
pipe-cleaner animal. Amy? Annie?
"Ma . . . Mom . . . Mom . . ." she heaved, almost rhythmically, her body frozen
in the paralysis of crying children.
"Ma . . . Mom . . . Ma . . . Mom . . ."
Eddie's eyes shot from her to the carts. Did he have time? Her to
the carts—
Whump. Too late. The carts
were dropping. Jesus, he released the brake!—and for Eddie, everything
slipped into watery motion. He dropped his cane and pushed off his bad leg and
felt a shot of pain that almost knocked him down. A big step. Another step.
Inside the shaft of Freddy's Free Fall, the cable snapped its final thread and
ripped across the hydraulic line. Cart No. 2 was in a dead drop now, nothing to
stop it, a boulder off a cliff.
In those final moments, Eddie seemed to hear the whole world: distant screaming,
waves, music, a rush of wind, a low, loud, ugly sound that he realized was his
own voice blasting through his chest. The little girl raised her arms. Eddie
lunged. His bad leg buckled. He half flew, half stumbled toward her, landing on
the metal platform, which ripped through his shirt and split open his skin, just
beneath the patch that read EDDIE and MAINTENANCE. He felt two hands in his own,
two small hands.
A stunning impact.
A blinding flash of light.
And then, nothing.
Today Is Eddie's Birthday
It is the 1920s, a crowded hospital in one of the poorest sections of the city.
Eddie's father smokes cigarettes in the waiting room, where the other fathers
are also smoking cigarettes. The nurse enters with a clipboard. She calls his
name. She mispronounces it. The other men blow smoke. Well?
He raises his hand.
"Congratulations," the nurse says.
He follows her down the hallway to the newborns' nursery. His shoes clap on the
floor.
"Wait here," she says.
Through the glass, he sees her check the numbers of the wooden
cribs. She moves past one, not his, another, not his, another, not his, another,
not his.
She stops. There. Beneath the blanket. A tiny head covered in a blue cap. She
checks her clipboard again, then points.
The father breathes heavily, nods his head. For a moment, his face seems to
crumble, like a bridge collapsing into a river. Then he smiles.
His.
The Journey
EDDIE
SAW NOTHING OF HIS FINAL MOMENT on earth, nothing of the pier or the crowd or
the shattered fiberglass cart.
In the stories about life after death, the soul often floats above the good-bye
moment, hovering over police cars at highway accidents, or clinging like a
spider to hospital-room ceilings. These are people who receive a second chance,
who somehow, for some reason, resume their place in the world.
Eddie, it appeared, was not getting a second chance.
WHERE . . . ? Where . . . ? Where . . . ?
The sky was a misty pumpkin shade, then a deep turquoise, then a
bright lime. Eddie was floating, and his arms were still extended.
Where . . . ?
The tower cart was falling. He remembered that. The little girl—Amy? Annie?—she
was crying. He remembered that. He remembered lunging. He remembered hitting the
platform. He felt her two small hands in his.
Then what?
Did I save her?
Eddie could only picture it at a distance, as if it happened years ago. Stranger
still, he could not feel any emotions that went with it. He could only
feel calm, like a child in the cradle of its mother's arms.
Where . . . ?
The sky around him changed again, to grapefruit yellow, then a
forest green, then a pink that Eddie momentarily associated with, of all things,
cotton candy.
Did I save her?
Did she live?
Where . . .
. . . is my worry?
Where is my pain?
That was what was missing. Every hurt he'd ever suffered, every ache he'd ever
endured—it was all as gone as an expired breath. He could not feel agony. He
could not feel sadness. His consciousness felt smoky, wisplike, incapable of
anything but calm. Below him now, the colors changed again. Something was
swirling. Water. An ocean. He was floating over a vast yellow sea. Now it turned
melon. Now it was sapphire. Now he began to drop, hurtling toward the surface.
It was faster than anything he'd ever imagined, yet there wasn't as much as a
breeze on his face, and he felt no fear. He saw the sands of a golden shore.
Then he was under water.
Then everything was silent.
Where is my worry?
Where is my pain?
Today Is Eddie's Birthday
He is five years old. It is a Sunday afternoon at Ruby Pier. Picnic tables are
set along the boardwalk, which overlooks the long white beach. There is a
vanilla cake with blue wax candles. There is a bowl of orange juice. The pier
workers are milling about, the barkers, the sideshow acts, the animal trainers,
some men from the fishery. Eddie's father, as usual, is in a card game. Eddie
plays at his feet. His older brother, Joe, is doing push-ups in front of a group
of elderly women, who feign interest and clap politely.
Eddie is wearing his birthday gift, a red cowboy hat and a toy
holster. He gets up and runs from one group to the next, pulling out the toy gun
and going, "Bang, bang!"
"C'mere boy," Mickey Shea beckons from a bench.
"Bang, bang," goesEddie.
Mickey Shea works with Eddie's dad, fixing the rides. He is fat and wears
suspenders and is always singing Irish songs. To Eddie, he smells funny, like
cough medicine.
"C'mere. Lemme do your birthday bumps," he says. "Like we do in Ireland."
Suddenly, Mickey's large hands are under Eddie's he is hoisted up, then flipped
over and dangled by the feet. Eddie's hat falls off.
"Careful, Mickey!" Eddie's mother yells. Eddie s father looks up, smirks, then
returns to his card game.
"Ho, ho. I got 'im," Mickey says. "Now. One birthday bump for every year."
Mickey lowers Eddie gently, until his head brushes the floor.
"One!"
Mickey lifts Eddie back up. The others join in, laughing. They yell, "Two! . . .
Three!"
Upside down, Eddie is not sure who is who. His head is getting heavy.
"Four! . . ." they shout. "Five!"
Eddie is flipped right-side up and put down. Everybody claps. Eddie reaches for
his hat, then stumbles over. He gets up, wobbles to Mickey Shea, and punches him
in the arm.
"Ho-ho! What was that for, little man?" Mickey says. Everyone laughs. Eddie
turns and runs away, three steps, before being swept into his mothers arms.
"Are you all right, my darling birthday boy?" She is only inches from his face.
He sees her deep red lipstick and her plump, soft cheeks and the wave of her
auburn hair.
"I was upside down," he tells her.
"I saw," she says.
She puts his hat back on his head. Later, she will walk him along the pier,
perhaps take him on an elephant ride, or watch the fishermen pull in their
evening nets, the fish flipping like shiny, wet coins. She will
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