Class of '59 (American Journey Book 4) (12 page)

BOOK: Class of '59 (American Journey Book 4)
3.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Ben paused to consider that comment. It was as loaded as a hunting rifle.

"You don't think I can be a gentleman?"

"No," Piper said.

"Then let me prove it to you."

"I don't like where this is going."

"The Spring Fling is coming up," Ben said.

"What's the Spring Fling?"

"It's a hop."

"Do you mean a dance?" Piper asked.

"I mean a dance," Ben said. He looked at his passenger and smiled. "What are you doing Saturday night?"

 

CHAPTER 19: MARY BETH

 

Laguna Beach, California – Friday, March 27, 1959

 

Mary Beth ran out of the surf like she was fleeing a shark. She liked swimming and loved the ocean, but she did not like or love bathing in water that was at least twenty degrees cooler than the Gulf of Mexico.

"The water is freezing," Mary Beth said.

Mark laughed as he handed her a dry towel.

"I take it you're used to something warmer."

"I'm used to something
much
warmer."

"Then next time I'll take you to San Diego."

"You do that."

Mary Beth toweled off her cold, wet, shivering body and then placed her towel next to Mark's on a boulder. She didn't know if the waters off San Diego were any warmer than the ones off Laguna Beach, but she was more than ready to give them a try.

"Do you want to go for a walk?" Mark asked.

Mary Beth nodded.

Mark placed his arm around Mary Beth as they started to walk, but he pulled it back a minute later and let it drop to his side. Despite his obvious interest in the time traveler from Huntsville, Alabama, he was not yet comfortable demonstrating that interest in an affectionate way.

"Thanks for bringing me here," Mary Beth said. "This is really nice."

"Don't mention it," Mark replied.

"I still can't believe you skipped two classes. For someone who wants to 'focus on academics' and 'graduate with honors,' you sure play hooky a lot."

Mark smiled.

"I'm not missing anything important. I brought you here today because I knew we would have the beach mostly to ourselves. That wouldn't be the case tomorrow or Sunday. This place is packed on weekends."

"I believe it," Mary Beth said.

She smiled at the engineering student at her side and then turned her attention to the rock outcroppings that punctuated the beach. She decided she could live in a place like this.

The two walked in blissful silence for another five minutes and took in the sights. A surfer on a large wooden board navigated small waves. Seagulls fought over what looked like the carcass of a fish. An elderly man picked up shells and placed them in a bag.

Mark finally broke the silence with a question that took Mary Beth by surprise.

"Who is Jordan?"

Mary Beth slowly met his gaze.

"He was my fiancé."

"Did you say
was
?" Mark asked.

Mary Beth nodded.

"He died eight months ago – or at least eight months ago as I measure time. He was shot in a holdup at a convenience store."

Mark stopped.

"I'm so sorry. I can't imagine getting news like that."

"I didn't get
any
news," Mary Beth said. "I was there."

"You saw him get shot?"

She nodded.

"He died in my arms."

Mark sighed.

"I feel stupid now."

"Don't feel stupid," Mary Beth said. "You asked an honest question."

Mark looked at her.

"I still feel stupid."

Mary Beth did not respond to the statement. She instead shifted her focus to a slightly different matter as the two resumed their stroll down the sandy beach.

"How did you learn about Jordan?"

"Piper mentioned him in passing the other day," Mark said. "I didn't press her for more information, but I figured he was someone important."

"He was," Mary Beth said.

"What was he like?"

Mary Beth took a deep breath. What a question, she thought. How did one describe Jordan Taylor in a nutshell? How did
she
describe him to someone she wanted to impress?

"He was a lot like you," Mary Beth said. "He was smart, thoughtful, and kind, the type of person most people want in their lives."

"Did he have any interests?" Mark asked.

Mary Beth laughed.

"It's funny you ask."

"Why is that?"

"Jordan was really into the 1950s," Mary Beth said. "He loved this era. He loved the movies, the music, the TV shows, and especially the cars. He was in the process of restoring a '57 Chevy when he died. I think he would have loved talking to Ben."

"I'm sure he would have," Mark said. "Did you share his interest?"

"I didn't at first. I thought his obsession was nutty. Then I started checking out some of the things he liked. I began watching a lot of movies that were set in the late fifties or early sixties. I must have seen
Grease
,
Pleasantville
, and
American Graffiti
at least a dozen times."

"That's commitment."

Mary Beth chuckled.

"That was just the beginning. I also went to fifties functions and fundraisers and listened to a
lot
of old music. Within a few months, I was as into this time as he was. I even insisted on having a fifties-themed reception at our wedding."

"That's funny," Mark said.

Mary Beth smiled as she considered the irony of befriending a man who actually
was
from the 1950s. She wondered how Jordan would have spent a day in 1959, if given the chance.

She also wondered what she could do with a friendship that was doomed to end and feelings that would not go away. As much as she wanted to enjoy Mark's company indefinitely, she knew she could not. Her sojourn to the fifties was as temporary as a sand castle.

Mary Beth pondered the coming weeks as she and Mark approached a cluster of rocks that essentially cut the beach in half. She felt a twinge of sadness and then a spark of electricity when Mark took her hand and led her through the rocks and back onto the beach.

"Do you mind if I hold your hand?" Mark asked.

"No," Mary Beth said. She giggled. "I don't mind at all."

She smiled again as she pondered his question. What kind of man asked a woman if he could hold her hand? What kind of man opened car doors? A gentleman, she thought.

They walked another hundred yards in silence until they approached a bevy of boulders. The rocky obstruction marked the turnaround point in their mile-long stroll.

Mary Beth released Mark's hand and walked about twenty feet to the largest boulder. A moment later, she sat on top of the rock, patted the space next to her, and smiled.

"Sit!"

Mark laughed.

"Someone's feeling assertive today."

Mary Beth grinned.

"I'm a fan of succinct commands."

"Giving them or taking them?"

"Sit!"

Mark laughed again and did as commanded. He climbed up on the massive rock, sat next to Mary Beth, and threw his arm around her.

"Is this better?"

"Yes."

Mary Beth said no more for the next several minutes. She leaned into Mark's side and stared blankly at an ocean that had grown more restless during their walk.

"You seem deep in thought," Mark said.

"I am."

"What are you thinking about?"

"I'm thinking about a lot of things," Mary Beth said.

"The plot thickens."

Mary Beth took a breath.

"Do you ever think about the craziness of all this?"

"I do," Mark said. "I do all the time."

"I'm looking at a world that my parents never saw and a lot of older people from my time can't remember. I'm still trying to wrap my head around that."

Mark tightened his hold.

"Do you like the fifties?"

Mary Beth nodded.

"I know many in 2017 don't share my view. They see how we treated black people, women, and others and wonder how anyone could view this time with anything but scorn, but I think they miss the point. People here seem happier. They talk. They play. They enjoy life. Too many from my time isolate themselves from others and stare at plastic screens."

"Surely you miss some things," Mark said.

"I do. I even miss some of the gadgets with plastic screens, but I don't miss everything. I like it here. I like the people," Mary Beth said. She paused. "I like
you
."

Mark lessened his hold on Mary Beth, leaned forward, and looked at his new friend like someone he had just discovered. He placed his free hand on her face, turned it toward his, and gave her a long, soft kiss.

Mary Beth sighed and burrowed into Mark's side. Then she smiled and looked again at the surging sea. In just a few seconds, her troubled life had taken a turn for the better. It had also, she realized, become infinitely more complicated.

 

CHAPTER 20: PIPER

 

South Pasadena, California – Saturday, March 28, 1959

 

Piper tapped her right foot in front of her left, brought it back, and tapped it again as she slowly worked her way toward the front of a conga line. She didn't need to remember to step, cross, and step. She had learned "The Stroll" in a dance class and knew the steps by heart.

So, apparently, did Ben. He tapped, stepped, and crossed with precision in the same position in the facing queue. Like most of his classmates, no doubt, he had done this before.

Piper smiled at Ben when he smiled at her. She didn't trust him. She still wasn't sure she even liked him, but for the first time since he had asked her to the Spring Fling, she conceded that he was probably a decent guy. He certainly knew how to surprise a girl.

Tap. Tap. Tap. Step. Cross. Step.

Piper watched with interest as another boy and another girl stepped forward at the head of the lines, met in the middle, and strolled to the other end. She loved "The Stroll" and the song of the same name, which an Anaheim band named Otis and the Operators covered to perfection.

Piper smiled again at Ben and then turned to other things. No matter where she looked, she saw something new, iconic, or interesting. Blue and white crepe streamers hung from the rafters of the gym. Tables of refreshments lined the walls. Boys in button-down shirts and cuffed slacks and girls in crisp blouses and knee-length skirts filled every section of the floor.

The time traveler saw pompadours and ponytails, wingtips and saddle shoes, and enough bobby socks to fill fifty chests. When she took in the trappings of the Spring Fling, she saw more than two hundred students enjoy themselves on a Saturday night. She saw the fifties on parade.

Tap. Tap. Tap. Step. Cross. Step.

Piper looked at Ben as they reached the head of their respective lines and noticed that his silly grin had morphed into something resembling a thoughtful smile. Was this a sign of humility? She hoped so. She returned his smile, took a breath, and stepped forward.

Piper laughed when she met Ben in the middle. She had no idea how he wanted to proceed between the rows. Couples at this point did their own thing. She guessed from watching others that Ben might go with the standard step. She guessed right.

The pair joined hands, came together, turned away, and then turned back as they began their slow journey between two rows of smiling schoolmates. The journey was electric.

Piper drew energy from every touch and turn. She gained confidence with every step. She could not imagine a more exhilarating public experience. This was what she had wanted when she had thrown caution to the wind.
This
was her fifties experience.

A dozen touches and turns later, Piper and Ben reached the end of the aisle, separated, and headed for the back of the gym. They finally met up at a table bearing large bowls of punch.

"Well, that was fun!" Piper said.

Ben grinned.

"I see you've done this before."

"I learned 'The Stroll' in a dance class. But trust me when I say I've never performed it with a cocky ladies' man in 1959," Piper said. She laughed. "That part is new."

Ben chuckled.

"You're not going to let that go, are you?"

Piper grinned.

"Nope."

Ben smiled and then looked at Piper thoughtfully.

"Do you want some punch?"

She shook her head.

"No, thanks. I just want to stand here a minute and take it all in."

"OK."

As the band finished "The Stroll," Piper scanned the gym and looked for familiar faces. She saw more than a few. Tina Green, a girl in her literature class, snuggled up to her boyfriend. Peggy Henderson, a fellow student in civics, straightened her date's collar. Two girls from gym class spoke to each other in an animated fashion. Chip Bennett, prom king candidate, shared a laugh with another boy. Bunny Martinez, his would-be queen, had apparently hopped away.

Piper gazed at the scene for another minute as the band started playing "Blue Moon." Then she turned to the boy who had picked her up in a red Thunderbird and brought her to the dance.

"Thanks for bringing me."

Ben grinned.

"Are you having fun?"

Piper laughed.

"You know the answer to that question."

Piper started to say something else but stopped when she saw a bubbly blonde, her first girlfriend in the Age of Eisenhower, approach the punch table. She laughed as Sally Warner, dressed in pink, pulled her hunky date across the floor like he was a little red wagon.

"You two are hilarious," Piper said.

"There you are," Sally said. "I've been looking for you all night. Where have you been?"

Piper pointed at Ben with her head.

"I've been dancing with this guy. Believe it or not, he knows how to dance."

Sally laughed. She turned to her date.

"I told you she was funny."

"Is this your letterman?" Piper asked.

"He is. This is my boyfriend, Wayne Bridges," Sally said. She turned to her male companion. "Wayne, this is my friend Piper McIntire. We met in our literature class. She says she's an Army brat from Germany, but she's really a redneck from Alabama."

BOOK: Class of '59 (American Journey Book 4)
3.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Blood and Sand by Hunter, Elizabeth
Among the Missing by Dan Chaon
Skinned -1 by Robin Wasserman
Something About Witches by Joey W. Hill
The House by the Liffey by Niki Phillips
Engleby by Sebastian Faulks
Flashman's Escape by Robert Brightwell
The Lady and the Duke by Olivia Kelly
The Barbed-Wire Kiss by Wallace Stroby
Lightning by Dean Koontz