“We just got married,” said the young couple in the supermarket checkout lane.
The newlyweds were ahead of me in Checkout Lane Six, dressed in beach attire. Their faces could have doubled as stadium lights for a Fenway Park night game.
Just married. These words set off a chain reaction of responses among those of us in line. The news immediately traveled, single file, moving from person to person like that old game telephone.
Everyone heartily congratulated them. And I do mean heartily.
“Congratulations,” said the bearded guy, holding a toddler in his arms.
“Congratulations,” said the woman who was dressed in an EMT uniform.
“Congratulations,” said five or six others.
“Mazel tov,” said the supermarket bagger—who looked maybe 95 years old.
“We’ve been dating for a year,” said the newlywed woman. “But on Wednesday we just thought, ‘You know what? Let’s do it.’ We went to the courthouse and…”
She showed the ring.
“Then we drove here to Florida this morning, spur of the moment. We don’t even know where we’re staying tonight. But we’re married.”
Her husband slipped an
arm around her. “It’s pretty awesome,” he said.
The EMT lady was first to jump in the conversation: “I remember when I got married. My husband and I took a honeymoon cruise to Cozumél. Best week of my life—from what I can remember of it.”
The guy with the toddler said, “We went to San Francisco. Each morning I kept waking up and saying, ‘Holy cow, I’m married. We’re really married.’ You say that a lot in the beginning.”
Everyone agreed with his last statement. Again, heartily.
The elderly bagger chimed in. His voice had an old-world lilt to it.
“When I was growing up in New York, I met a girl when I was 12, she was 14, she lived in my neighborhood. She was the most beautiful girl I ever saw. I told her, ‘I’m gonna marry…