He slowly made his way to the room where the magic of his life and memories became stored in a cloud. For over fifty years, that room was his sanctuary, filled with mementos he'd picked up along the way. A snow globe of a small-town Christmas, pictures tacked to the wall that gave him inspiration to write, and a family rocking horse that goes back one hundred years and was eventually passed down to him. His son would take the reins one day and lug it around from house to house, like he had done, because that's what you do with anything handed down to you.
The attic held many memories for him. In a corner were a couple of bicycles his now-grown kids had ridden, their laughter ringing in his ears and putting a smile on his face. A red flyer snow sled, a push cart, and snow skis. There were boxes too many to count, mostly labeled with the names of those who had passed on from this life. But also boxes that held Christmas lights, Christmas decorations, grade-school homework, Halloween decorations, and more than one diploma. He remembers the day he got a railroad set with all the cars and an engine, you put a pill-looking thing in the smokestack, and it blew out white smoke, and a whistle that never grew silent. He closed that box, hoping one day his grandson would find it and cherish it as he had so long ago. There were boxes postmarked between 1941 and 1945, letters of love and promises to come home soon.
Generations of forgotten or misplaced memories he tried to capture with written words. Some boxed up and labeled with his name, hopefully to be found and read when the rays of light sifting through the rafters and beams grow dim, and his stairway to heaven can only be reached with a red rope swinging in a summer breeze, just out of his reach.