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One Hundred Years of Sass MAG
My mother always says that the water in North
 Carolina must be from the Fountain of Youth.
 From what I have seen, I believe her.
 I hadn’t seen my Great-Aunt Maxine since I was
 14, and though the drive was eight hours and paved
 with mind-numbing boredom, I was excited to visit.
 Besides, it is not every day that a family member turns
 100.
 My parents and I arrived at Aunt Maxine’s house at
 the same time as a number of relatives who had made
 the trek for her birthday too. I was eager to get out
 after the claustrophobic ride, but I made sure not to
 rumple my dress, hair, or sun hat. Something about her
 and her house always made me want to look my best.
 The towering magnolia tree cast just the
 right amount of shade over the porch. Add
 a glass of sweet tea and it was the perfect
 place to watch the fireflies come out on a
 summer evening. Within seconds of our
 arrival, Maxine herself appeared on that
 porch. She could hardly get a word out
 she was so excited, her eyes watering with
 happiness. I imagine that she had been
 watching for us at the window.
 Though it had been many years since I had been
 there, I knew her house by heart. Everything about it
 was big, old, and Southern, even the smell. It smelled
 like old and like art, but not old art. No, the art – all of
 it painted by Maxine – had a definite “new” smell. It
 only felt old. That old-feeling house made me feel like
 an intruder, like I was interrupting the centuries-old
 hum with my modern tech-savviness.
 Aunt Maxine was the same as the house, aside from
 her size. Shorter even than me, she never wore anything
 but skirts that went just past her knees and crisp
 blouses neatly tucked in. She was a Southern Belle
 through and through. She plopped down on the couch
 with the rest of us. Maxine could hardly hear us even
 if we shouted – her only disability – so she did most of
 the talking and we listened.
 She certainly had a lot to say. In her Southern drawl,
 she caught us up on everything that had happened since
 we last were there. It was part of her news that sparked
 my mother’s comment about the water.
 “My friend across the street just turned a hundred
 and one,” Maxine told us. “We have a contest to see
 who will live longer. I have to say, I look much better
 than her. She’s all wrinkly and fat.”
 I couldn’t stop smiling. Maxine’s stories just got
 better and better, painting pictures with words just as
 well as she did with her brush. We were all so transfixed
 that after a bit she asked, “Why am
 I the only one talking? This has got to be
 boring for y’all.”
 We assured her it was not, and to our
 delight she continued updating us.
 “You know, I got kidnapped.” She nodded
 at our wide-eyed looks. “My lawyer
 wanted me to look at a nursing home. I
 told him I’d go because he wouldn’t shut
 up about it, but I told him, ‘I’m just goin’ to look. I
 ain’t giving up this house. I don’t need to live in a
 nursing home.’ So he took me there, and when I turned
 around, I saw him driving away.” She shook her head.
 “I was there for three days before I got to a phone. The
 staff tried to stop me, but when a lady grabbed me, I
 bit her hand! Then the police came, but I had known
 the officer since he was a boy. I looked right at him and
 told him to take me home. He sure listened.”
 If I were that police officer, I would have too. Eventually,
 Maxine spread out a copy of the local newspaper
 on the coffee table and said, “Look! I’m famous,
 like a movie star!” She pointed at a headline that read
 “Local Artist Celebrates One Hundred Years.” The
 article was three pages long and all about her life and
 work as an artist.
 Even for us, who knew her life story, it was amazingly
 interesting. It was even informative, to a degree,
 as we learned about a fourth husband that none of us
 had known of in between breakups with my Uncle Jack
 (which means that because she is my aunt by marriage,
 she was first not my aunt, and then my aunt, and then
 not my aunt, and then my aunt again when she got
 back together with my uncle permanently).
 Like the cool lemonade I drank at dinner, the visit
 was wonderfully refreshing. As Aunt Maxine said
 good-bye to me that night, she began to cry. “When
 you’re old and sentimental like me, you get all worked
 up and make a jacka** of yourself,” she sniffed. As I
 laughed and hugged her, a wave of happiness, warm as
 the summer sun, washed over me.
 One hundred years of sass and counting, and Great-
 Aunt Maxine is still going strong.
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