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Edited on Fri Sep-10-10 02:03 AM by cherokeeprogressive
Hopefully the survivors will read it some day and learn from it.
Picture this: I'm a Sailor stationed in Oak Harbor, WA in the late 80s. I was what was commonly known as an "Airframer". She was a Sailor also, and worked as a "Plane Captain". We only saw each other on the flight line and that's about it. I lived off base in a house with two other guys and our house was pretty much known as party central; she lived on base in the barracks.
She was gorgeous in a Girl Next Door kind of way. Raised in a tiny town next to a two-lane road in Texas, she was as sweet as tea. I liked her from the first moment I saw her and it actually took me months to get up enough courage to talk to her. Once I did, we hit it off.
I used to be a pretty shy guy. In the context of Naval Aviation though, I was as good a wrench-turner as anybody; better than most. My advice was sought out in lots of aircraft maintenance situations. But, I digress...
It took me a couple of months to ask her for a date. She said "Finally..." and lo and behold; it was a date.
First I took her out on a boat I borrowed from a friend. Out underneath the Deception Pass bridge, past Deception Island and into the Puget Sound we went. It was a lovely day, and I packed a lunch. I cut the motor, and we just drifted between Whidbey Island and the Olympic Mountains for a few hours. Fucking awesome. We ate, had a few beers and we talked. By the time we took the boat back to the slip, I was ready to have her children.
We then went to a restaurant in Anacortes, WA called Boomers Landing. Beautiful place. Dining over the water. I had reserved a table by the windows and we watched the sun set over the Olympic Mountains together. As the room grew darker, candles were lit, and a guy starts playing guitar in the corner, alone. The ambience was so thick you could brush your teeth with it. We had a KILLER seafood dinner, and the conversation was as good as the meal.
Now for the good part: I was wearing Varnet (sp) sunglasses. I wasn't actually wearing them any longer; they were pushed up to my hairline. We were sitting at a glass table, and our dinner plates were glass. My dinner plate was protruding over the edge of the table in front of me. I had a hand in my lap. She complimented me, I looked down, and my sunglasses started to fall off of my forehead. The hand in my lap, of its own volition, snapped up to catch the sunglasses. Switch to slow motion here. On its way up, my hand hit the dinner plate on the edge of the table from underneath, and for a moment I saw my plate still half full of food, flipping away from me. Then... CRASH. CRASH BANG BOOM. Crab everywhere, even on her. A semi-dark room which was a moment ago filled with quiet conversation and sweet acoustic guitar music is now totally silent and focused on ME.
I did the only thing that came to mind... I raised both fists in the air and lowered my head. Silence. Five, ten, fifteen seconds of silence. Then, the applause started. It started at almost exactly the same time my laughing fit did. I laughed. I laughed so hard I wheezed. I laughed until tears were streaming down my face. All the while, the wait staff was bringing drinks to my table, bought by other patrons in the room. I laughed until I had to leave the table and go outside... She sat at the table. Didn't even have the good grace to get up and follow me to the door which was only five feet away.
I walked back into the restaurant a minute or two later, and the ruckus was finally dying down. I sat at our table and she lit into me like you wouldn't believe. She had never been so embarrassed in her life, and actually felt ashamed. And oh by the way, would I take her home post haste? She told me her ex-husband would have kicked the ass of everyone who clapped or laughed, and I had this picture of a hulk of a thirty-something guy in Ropers and Wranglers, jump starting his Chevy Pick'em Up after listenin' to the radio while eating at Sonic Burger, and threatening everyone who laughed with a good ass whoopin'.
Needless to say, I didn't have her kids.
I worked with her every day for two years after that and not a single personal word was ever spoken between us. How wierd is THAT?
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