Today started at 0500 when I stumbled out of my room with no sleep
and passed by endless rows of luggage stacked on the dungeon floor (Deck 2)
piled floor-to-ceiling on my way to the stern for our last star session. Venus, Mars, the moon, and another star all
aligned in a rare event we’re told happens only every 70 years. It was chilly, and I stuck with those that
brought their blankets from their rooms, which turned into a massive wobbling
group hug that spilled over into the raising of the American flag, a privilege
two students bought at the shipboard auction.
Our giant group hug stumbled and eventually split as we passed through
the doorway and made our way to the aft for breakfast. The food on our last day was unremarkable,
but it was accompanied by the most magnificent sunrise as we pulled into Port
Everglades at 0700.

A group of us stuffed ourselves and our luggage into a van and
headed toward the airport. The girls
checked in their luggage for their evening flights (I stored mine), then we sat
in wait until Cari gave us a meeting place for lunch/dinner. (As an aside, Fort Lauderdale was by far our
most difficult port; we were hit hard with having to deal with our copious
baggage and the stark lack of public transportation.) We met in a posh neighborhood where we could
afford nothing and finally settled on the Cheesecake Factory. We talked over humongous portions about our
travels together and nuances about ship life that others, including Cari’s mom,
who had joined us, would probably never understand. Before we knew it, we were again stuffing
ourselves into Cari’s mom’s rental and heading for the airport. We got stuck saying goodbyes somewhere
between the car and the various terminals, not able to leave. There were just a few tears.
I emerged from the elevator and halfway down the hallway my
friends came out to greet me. I was so
relieved! We hugged it out and I
followed them into a spacious, modern, white apartment with two boys playing
video games. One of them must have been
Francisco. He didn’t look up. Not knowing how to introduce myself, I
tiptoed around, marveling at everything.
I asked to see the view from the balcony and awkwardly slipped between
Francisco and his video game on the way out.
What a spectacular view it was! I
was looking straight into the heart of downtown Miami, bustling highways lit up
with heavy traffic below me, grandiose technicolored skyscrapers above me.

Not missing the chance to snap a few more photos, I posed with my
friend Alfredo before going inside. Back
in the apartment, I hooked up to wi-fi just because I could. Before long, we went out again in search of
sushi. Francisco did, in fact, have a
car, and I volunteered to take the middle seat in the back of his Mustang
coupe. He brought us to a classy sushi
restaurant with very dim lighting and graphic music videos playing on every
wall. It really is hard to take your
eyes off them. The sushi dinner was
great, but more so was the dessert, some form of brownie-ice cream-cake-pastry
concoction. And the check came with
cotton candy.
After dinner, we filed back into the Mustang,
drove to the lavish apartment, took the elevator up fifteen floors, passed
through the expansive living room, and…it’s time to wake up. It was 4:15 am and my taxi had arrived. I found myself in someone’s bed…Alfredo’s,
apparently, given that he was next to me (though you can never be too sure). I unfortunately woke Alfredo, who was kind
enough to walk me down and see me off, and he was the last person I hugged
before I reluctantly departed for Iowa.
At the gates to the port, parents and family were yelling and
holding up large signs welcoming home their kids. It was an adorable sight! They had to bide their time, however, because
it would be another several hours.
Sometime after breakfast I collapsed in the usual spot, the Piano Bar
couch, into deep sleep. Apparently Emily
shared some big news with me and I had a conversation with her during my
slumber. I have no memory of this. I awoke in a panic, not knowing what time it
was or where any of my friends were. I
ran around the whole ship searching fruitlessly. Finally, the PA announced the first Sea that
was to debark. I ran to my room and
scrambled to get the rest of my belongings packed up and stuffed into the
couple bags I kept out. There were no
signs left of my roommate. At last, the
Aegean Sea was called and I grabbed my customs form and a pen to fill it out on
the way.
To my relief, I found my friends at the line to debark the ship,
and we stepped off Deck 5 starboard together into the customs building. We picked up our luggage, and I looked in
vain for the drug-sniffing dogs they promised us. A half hour later we passed through customs
without incident, without even so much as a stamp in our passports. We awkwardly tugged our luggage out of the
building and into the throng of family and friends waiting for someone behind
us. We met some of our friends’
relatives and said long goodbyes and made many, many promises for the future.
I picked up my luggage and stayed behind with Cari and her mom. We went to rest at a hotel, and Cari passed
out almost immediately, all of us getting virtually or actually no sleep last
night. By the time she woke up, it was
time to drop me off at the train station so I could get to Miami. It all happened much too fast, and the train
even departed sooner than I could get to a seat and wave goodbye from the
window. I took out my computer to
continue working on a video project, and I had just enough time to make some
progress, have my computer freeze, and delete the whole file before I arrived
in Miami.
I was fortunate enough to make some very kind friends on the ship
who made arrangements for me to stay with them.
I was supposed to take a taxi from the train station, but there were
none. I waited in despair. By chance, someone had come via taxi to the
station, and I must have made a fool of myself making sure to flag it
down. I got in while the driver
complained about my luggage: “What do you have in here – a boy!?”
Some 20 minutes later, we pulled up to a driveway of what looked
like a hotel I could never afford. I had
double-checked the address before, but I had the driver assure me once more
that this was the place. I dragged my
luggage into a pristine ultra-white hall with large, decorative lit pillars of
ultra-white fabric. I thought for sure
security would come over and kick me out without a second thought. I approached the desk and asked for
directions to #1503. The receptionist
asked if Francisco was expecting me, and I – never having heard of any
Francisco – nodded assuredly. So
naturally, she picked up the phone and dialed.
No response. Heart rate
rising. She tried twice more before he
decided to pick up and I could breathe again.
The receptionist pointed me toward the elevators – 15th
floor.