***The Roots Is The
Toots- The Music That Got Them Through The Great Depression And World War II…
…she
had not been home, back to her hometown, since he passed away. Passed away
after some kind of hellish battle against the war wounds incurred in the Anzio
beach landing where from all accounts he had acquitted himself with honor.
Passed away after he had sent for her to come down to Walter Reed to be near
him in his time of trial. It was only after he passed on that she realized that
he had sent for her knowing that he was mortally wounded and that the hospital visits
would be their last stance together. She smiled at that thought. And smiled a
more forced smile now that she was back home, back to their young love hometown
to honor his last request that she go by and throw a kiss to all of their
“spots.”
Since
those spots were close together, within longish walking distance, she decided
to do the whole thing in one trip to ease the pain of several separate trips
that she might not be able to cope with. So there she stood before her first
stop, the old high school, old blessed North Adamsville High, now that that war
was over a busy beehive of kid activity once again, the scene of their first
encounter senior year when he popped into her life after they danced and danced
at the Fall Frolic and became an “item”, no, “the item” of the senior year.
Scene too of many a Monday morning in the girls’ “lav” talking with her
brethren classmates about what did or did not happen that previous weekend
among the tribe (and all lying like crazy either because they had said they had
“done it” when they hadn’t or hadn’t when they had). He and she had but she
lied, lied like crazy because she was very concerned about her reputation, or
that her parents, strict Baptists full of fire and brimstone, might get wind of
that information and crush their young love.
As
she passed the far end of the building she blew a kiss over her shoulder on her
way to Adamsville Beach down the road to a scene of many a weekend tryst. He
would get his father’s car and they would go down to the far end, the lovers’
lane end, Squaw Rock, and steam up the
windshield with their kisses (and other acts but you know what she meant, that
“doing it” part that she lied about on Monday morning girls’ “lav” talk time).
After she passed their spot on the beach she shed a tear knowing that she would
never have his child, maybe anyone’s child the way she felt just then. Although
he told her, made her promise, just before the end to go and live a happy full
life, to do it for him.
She
then walked up Elm Street after a short rest on the beach-side seawall
to Doc’s, Doc’s Drugstore the first place that she knew she loved him
after they had blown the crowd at Doc’s away with their jitter-bugging, Benny,
Tommy, Jimmy, Les, Duke, stuff. Doc’s
was the hang-out for all the Jacks and Jills after school (and weekends)
because he had the best jukebox in town, and a soda fountain for the hungry and
thirsty. Another blown kiss as she could hear some Andrews Sister song
bellowing out into the street just then. Then on to their final spot, or rather
his, his corner boy spot, Salducci’s Diner, where only girls guys were serious
about were allowed to hang with a guy’s corner boys. She crossed the street
just before she came upon the store-front because she could see the next
generation of corner boys with their serious girls hanging in front and she did
not think she could make it pass that scene without breaking down. Blew that
last kiss from across the street and done. She was glad after all the trauma
that she had done the task in one trip. Now she just had to go have a happy
full life, for him…
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