***Out In The 2010s Be-Bop Night- A Simple Twist Of Fate-Take Two
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman, Hullsville High School Class
of 1964
As is well-known to readers of these sketches Peter Paul
Markin (just Markin hereafter and not that Mayfair swell three name stuff like
he was the Duke Of York or something) is my old friend from the days down at
the Starlight Ballroom in Hullsville in 1964 when we first met. We had met there shortly after graduating from
our respective high schools at the weekly rock and roll dances held every
Friday night. Strangely we met and became friends after pursuing the same girl,
some tease who had all the boys chasing her but who at that point had whittled
it down to Markin and me. That young woman eventually dumped us both but our
friendship outlasted that bout of competition. There would be others, other
bouts, especially over one California girl (oops, young woman) who had us ready
to go mano y mano , also outlasted. Recently he called me with a bizarre story.
A story that he knew would intrigue me, and force me to write about it. We agreed to meet as usual now that we are
both on the East coast and near each other at our favorite watering hole, The
Dublin Grille over in Centerville where he laid out the story. And he was right
that it would intrigue me although he should have written the thing himself
since it involved him, him and his seemingly eternity memory lane longings.
Now you have to know a little bit about Markin, know what
makes him tick to appreciate this story. Know about his strongly held-attitudes
toward things like mysticism, fate, kismet, the unknown and all of the other
New Age stuff to appreciate that he does not truck with any of that stuff. He
fancies himself a man of science, or at least of there being rational
explanations for things and that if no explanation was readily available that a
diligent search would bring up a rational answer. That was why the information
that he imparted to me baffled him. Me, I am more agnostic about such things
but this one did have me scratching my head a little so I might as well get to
it.
The year 2014 will be a
milestone for Markin (and me as well) marking the 50th anniversary
of his (our) graduation from high school, in his case North Adamsville High School about twenty
miles up the road from Hullsville. For a whole number of reasons that should
not detain us here Markin had been looking forward to that event for a couple
of years in the expectation of going to his class reunion (not me though,
looking forward to or going to). He had never gone to any previous reunions before
for those whole bunch of reasons that shall not detain us. But over the last
several years since his mother died he has made peace with that portion of his
past.
Moreover he had actively
attempted to put himself into the reunion mix by setting up a class reunion
event on Facebook (thus mercy thanks FB because this story could not have
developed, could not have been possible, without that social network outlet).
What he was trying to do at that point was make an ad hoc out of the blue attempt to enlist fellow classmates to help
organize the reunion. He was figuring that with one billion member that site
should at least have a few old-timers from his class that could both navigate
the Internet (not a given for our generation unlike today’s super-savvy
“information super-highway students) and who had a desire to cut up old
torches. He got the usual early sparse response from those who have nothing but
time and an itchy “click” finger on their hands. Then the response that triggered
this sketch.
A woman, Jill Gary, a fellow
classmate commented that she was interested in helping out but due to her
professional career commitments would not be able to do much. Also she lived up
in Maine and since the reunion would be held in Massachusetts that too would be
a barrier. In any case Markin, looking to find some kindred help who seemed
like they could organize something more than their stockings, began a blizzard
of e-mail traffic with her. It seems that this Jill was what they now call
“hot” back in the day, a real looker, according to Markin. And a look at her yearbook photograph that she
had forwarded to him and that he had forwarded to me attested to that fact. A
fresh dewy girl next door type who wore cashmere sweaters and who by popular
opinion was not only “hot” (boys’ locker room after sport’s practice opinion)
was unapproachable. In any case Markin had seen her around school but that was
about it.
Well some things change in this
wicked old world, some things are not eternally etched in stone and Jill like
all of us from the Generation of ’68 had
learned a thing or two had been through her share of ups and downs and survived
to tell about it. Naturally Markin was all ears to hear about this life if for
no other reason that he could say that he had actually talked to her, even at a
fifty year remove, for some reason which only Markin is privy to. And so the
blizzard of e-mails continued (she almost as crazy as him to write, write,
write).
One exchange, the one that
matters here, involved the question of where they had gone to elementary school
in the old town. She had gone to Adamsville North and assumed that he had too
since that was one of the feeder schools to the junior high that fed to North
Adamsville High. He responded that no he had grown up in the projects on the
other side of town and had gone to Adamsville South. That Adamsville South
response by Markin brought out from her the fact that Jill’s mother had been a
swimming instructor down at the Adamsville South Beach and had during her
career there saved a drowning boy. Jill, nine at the time, had been present at
the event and remembered her mother was both quite shaken up about that feat
and proud that she had been able to do so.
Markin said he flipped out when
he read that e-mail information. See, and I remember him telling me one time
about his love of the ocean but fear of it, fear to go too far out when
swimming because he had almost drowned when he was about nine down at the
Adamsville South Beach one summer. Typical boy story: as the ocean was rising
he had spied a log, an abandoned telephone pole, and had grabbed onto it. He
drifted out for a while and then, as he said sheepishly, he realized he had
gone too far but instead of holding onto the log he decided to try and swim for
shore. Not a good swimmer and just too far out he started going down. His
brother who was on the shore called for help and the swimming instructor came
out and saved him in a nick of time. When he got on shore he thanked the lady,
after catching his breath and trying to hide in shame from all the kids on the
beach. (He also swore his brother to eternal secrecy which, unless at other times,
he actually honored and his parents never found out.)
So what lesson did Markin draw
from that today. Anything about fate, karma, or just plain good luck. Anything to
explain how fifty years later the daughter of that swimming instructor reached
out to him in cyberspace. Maybe that some off-beat hand was at work. No. He told
Jill in that charming way of his that he is capable of around women,
interesting women, since they had already “met” maybe they should get together in
person and discuss the matter more fully. And guess what, she agreed.
Jesus.
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