The Alabama game was on. The Crimson Tide was beating Texas, and my heart sang.
We were at a family reunion. I was sitting on a porch overlooking the Choctawhatchee Bay of my youth. There were people everywhere. The weather was coolish, but not unpleasant. Many of the family members were devout Baptists. Others were Methodists, but hey, nobody’s perfect.
Family members were mingling, cheering for the game, telling old stories. Because that’s what family reunions are for. Storytelling.
And the memories were getting so thick you had to swat them away like gnats.
There were a lot of empty chairs at today’s gathering. The mean age of the attendees was much younger than in years past, which gave a touch of melancholy to the air. Because all the good ones are gone.
I had checked out, mentally. I was staring at the old pier where I had one of my first dates with my wife, a few decades ago.
I remember it clearly. She wore pink. I don’t know what I had on, but I was trying out a new cologne that night,
purchased on clearance from TJMaxx. My date kept gagging whenever she came too close.
“Why are you gagging?” I asked.
“I think someone spilled some gasoline on your shoes,” she answered.
We sat on a swing built for two. We looked at the water. We held each other and I asked if it would be okay if I kissed her.
There was a long silence.
She said, “Most boys don’t usually ask that sort of thing before they do it.”
“They don’t?”
“No.”
“Well then what do most boys do?”
She shrugged. “Normally they sense the right moment and they just go for it.”
I said nothing.
She said nothing.
“But,” I asked, “what if the boy’s senses are a little off?”
She smiled. Probably because I smelled like a crude petroleum product.
“Yes,” she finally…