She was eating dinner by herself. White hair. Five-foot-tall I’d guess. She was staring straight forward, chewing in silence. The hostess sat us beside her table.
My wife and I were there for an early dinner. I was scanning the menu, but couldn’t figure out what to order.
“Get the calamari,” the white-haired woman suggested. “It’s the best in town.”
“The best in town?” I said.
“Best in town.”
She was pure Lousianna. You can tell a Lousiannan accent when you hear it. It sounds exactly like a Jerry Lee Lewis record played at half speed.
When the waiter asked what we wanted, I ordered the calamari.
“You won’t regret it,” she said. “It’s the best in town.”
We started talking. Her name was Maria. Her job is sitting with people. Elderly people, sick people, and the unwell.
“Sometimes I sit for ten hours with folks if they need me. Just listening is really all I do.”
She was married once. For thirty-six years. Her husband died unexpectedly. Now she lives alone.
“He died from gallbladder surgery,” she said. “The surgeon nicked him.
He was gone pretty fast.”
When she met him she was nineteen and he was twenty-three. It was just one of those things, she said. When you know, you just know.
“He didn’t even have no wedding ring, he just gave me his class ring until he could afford one.”
This makes her laugh.
They got married in ‘65. It was a big year for America. Johnson was in office, the Cold War was getting hot, Sandy Koufax was pitching, Bob Dylan went all-electric.
And Maria was in love. They moved all over the U.S. He worked in retail, she had a slew of jobs. It wasn’t easy, but they made ends meet and had fun doing it. Some people only dabble in marriage. These two were professionals.
Our calamari came.
And Maria’s story was just getting…