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The Fickle Finger of Fate - Pt II

Posted 12-07-08 at 06:40 PM by Boone
Updated 12-08-08 at 09:47 PM by Boone
It was early May, 1987 and the 747 I’d hitched a ride home on from Okinawa, Japan skidded to a stop on the scorching tarmac at Washington National Airport. No longer attached to a Marine unit, I’d had to beg, plead, and threaten my way home. But I’d finally made it back.

A month prior, my plans had been well-laid and seemingly perfect. Gracefully exit the USMC, apply for veterinary school, talk the girl of my dreams into marrying me, and commence happily-ever-after. But a near-death experience and 60 days of surgeries, recovery, and drug-induced haze had blurred the lines of that roadmap considerably. Somewhere in the fog of those months, I’d apparently agreed to continue my Marine Corps career as an officer. I’d get a brief 30 day hiatus at home before having to head to San Diego for the summer to attend a Marine preparatory program, designed to ensure as one of the USMC’s prime investments, I didn’t flunk out of school when I got there.

I was to return to the scene of previous academic crimes, the University of Virginia. My experience there 5 years before had left scars. Unlike seemingly everyone around me, I had felt lost, rudderless, and frightened. I’d had no idea what I wanted to do with my life, I had never had to study and frankly, didn’t really know how to study. I did enough to get by while comforting myself with a hundred friendships and plenty of partying. Finally, after 2 and ½ years of floundering, the pressure of trying to preserve a scholarship, being a disappointment to my parents and myself, and just plain depression over my poor performance was too much. Instead of going home for Christmas my 3rd year, I stayed in Charlottesville, hiked to the Marine Recruiting Office downtown, and enlisted.

The Marine Corps saved my life. The ultimate meritocracy, all the Marine Corps asked of you was 100% commitment and your absolute best performance. You didn’t have to worry about direction, the Corps provided that for you. You just had to perform. So I performed. I dove into every training course I could gain entry to. When I was sent to a school, I finished first, whether there were 20 course members, or 200. I’d been failing for so long, excelling felt like salvation. There was no pressure. I was a US Marine infantryman. I belonged to the United States government, and believe me, in their eyes I was expendable. What I did with the opportunity mattered little to anyone except myself.

In a year I was a corporal. In 3 years, I was a sergeant running a mortar platoon. And now, I was about to come full circle, completing the circuitous journey back to where I’d started – back to the University of Virginia enroute to becoming a demi-god, an officer in the United States Marine Corps.

But first, I had some loose ends to wrap up.

Her name was Diane. She’d grown up around the corner from me, the younger sister of one of my best friends. A year ago, she’d politely asked me to go out bar-hopping with a mutual friend, probably feeling sorry for me as I was back home for a weekend with nothing to do and no one to do it with. That night, we drank beers, listened to music, sang along badly to Springsteen’s ‘Drive All Night’. We left the bar, her running 50 yards ahead of me. When I turned a corner there she was, one of the most beautiful things I’d ever seen, pulling me close and kissing me. That was it. I lost my mind for most of the next 6 months, going through the motions of Marine Corps life, but mostly thinking about when I could see her again. I was knocked senseless, hopelessly bowled over, mindlessly stupid in love. I’d have sworn then that this beautiful girl was my future.

But there were problems. She was a college student at the time, and as miserably lost there as I’d been at Virginia the first go-round. I couldn’t help her. Her family was Catholic – and I mean ‘Godfather’ Catholic. I’d done every stupid thing a kid does right around the corner from them, often with one of their sons along for the ride. They’d caught us smoking pot together for God’s sake. Despite all that, they liked me. But liking me and accepting me into their family? Well, those were ultimately two different things.

Then I’d made the mistake, a fatal one it turns out, of going on a weekend trip with Diane up to Charlottesville. My folks knew where I was going, and with whom. But Diane had lied. When we got back, all hell broke loose. I was a 25 year old Marine used to doing whatever I wanted. She was their only daughter who’d just spent the weekend with a Marine. I trudged around the corner to speak to her father about it. I told him I loved her, and he believed me. But the damage was done. I wasn’t Catholic. I wasn’t worthy of their daughter. And I couldn’t be trusted. The irony was, for the first time in my life, I was beyond trustworthy. I had a bright future and I’d have done anything to protect their daughter.

The tension started then and slowly started to tear apart our relationship. We’d barely held it together before my deployment. She’d written often, sent packages, all the usual expected stuff. We told each other we loved each other and would start over when I got back.

Now I was back. Back, but a mess. I’d lost 25 lbs. I had an incision from the middle of my back running to the edge of my sternum, and four healing garden-sized holes where chest tubes had been a month prior. And I had 30 days to get myself mentally and physically together before I’d be off to California and back in the Marine Corps fold.

I arrived home from the airport, greeted my family, and tried to relax. I knew I had to call her. She’d be home for the summer. After working up some courage, I made the call. She came over. She was as intoxicatingly lovely as she always was. She wore a clinging cotton sundress and dark shades. We went out on the deck to talk in private. The one thing that has stuck with me all these years is that through the whole conversation, she never took off those damned sunglasses. She cried some, told me how much she had missed me, and asked me if I could have breakfast with her that Saturday so we could really talk.

I found out later that while I was gone, she’d started seeing her high school boyfriend again. Marines of old wrote marching songs about the guys stealing our girls while we’re halfway cross the world doing God knows what, God knows where. Joedy is his name. ‘Ain’t no use in looking back, Joedy’s got your Cadillac, ain’t no use in lookin’ down, Joedy’s got your girl and gone’. That’s the bastard’s name, and for 200 years he’s been making our girl forget all about us. It’s what he does. And you know what? We never blame her. Who’d want to sit around waiting for a Marine to come home, knowing it’s only a brief respite from another long wait to come?

So Friday came, and sensing the train wreck of love barreling down upon me at high speed, hearing the tumultuous roar of a breakup's approach, and almost feeling the excruciating agony of the collision, I made a decision. I packed up my Honda Civic that morning, kissed my folks goodbye for the summer, and drove west. It hurt like hell to leave, but I knew there was more distance between us now than perseverance or passion could bridge. By the time I got to Oklahoma, my heart was just a little less heavy. As I rolled into San Diego, I vowed I wouldn’t look back.

I’ve heard people say a thousand times ‘things happen for a reason’. I think it just as likely we’re at the mercy of dumb, blind luck. Or maybe, once in a rare while, God just throws us a karmic bone. The greatest gift I’ve ever received was about to be bestowed upon me. 6 months before, blind to its value, I might have given it back. I’d thought I’d found true love, a destined path to walk with someone perfectly matched for the journey. But here I was, absolutely alone, without a friend within 1000 miles, and only the slightest of ideas how I’d gotten here or where I’d be in 10 years.

Then it happened.

I was 3 week’s early for my report date for prep school in San Diego. For lack of a better idea, I shacked up at an Econolodge and watched bad daytime TV, read books, and ate delivery pizza. After a couple days of that wholesome regimen, I felt stir crazy and decided to do some exploring. I took a taxi downtown, and headed out on foot to get the lay of the land. After a stop at a bookstore, and an hour sitting in a coffee shop reading, I decided to head back. As I turned a corner looking for a taxi, I ran right into a couple going the other way. I’d nearly knocked the gentleman over. As I looked up and prepared to apologize for not watching where I was going, I was suddenly speechless.

The guy I’d run into was Pete Reddy. Pete had been my roommate at Virginia. He’d made it successfully through the UVa Marine ROTC program and was now an Air Defense officer stationed at 29 Palms, California. He and his wife had made a quick jaunt to San Diego to do a little shopping. And I had almost knocked him on his ass.

We chatted for an hour and caught up on each other’s lives. Then I remembered something I’d nearly forgotten over the past year - that Pete’s wife Lisa had roomed with a girl at Virginia who I’d always been very interested in. Her name was Valerie Hall. Valerie was a tall, slender brunette from South Carolina. She had the unforgettable slow southern drawl of a real South Carolinian, piercing brown eyes, and a smile that could light up a room and never seemed to leave her face. I’d approached her intermittently throughout my college days, but she was entrenched in a long-term relationship. Almost as soon as the thought crossed my mind, Lisa said ‘You should look up Valerie when you get back to school! She’s living in Richmond now and she’s single. I’m going to tell her to call you!’

Running into dear friends out of the blue like that, in such an unlikely place, made the whole encounter seem surreal. I filed away the information about Valerie, but the thought of entering into another ‘relationship’ was the farthest thing from my mind. The summer moved on, I got through the Marine prep course, and before I knew it, it was fall and I was back in beautiful Charlottesville. Finishing up the move into my new apartment, I decided to give my sister Anne a call from a local payphone. Anne lived nearby at the time and worked at UVa’s hospital. We chatted for awhile and agreed to get together for dinner soon. As I was about to hang up, she informed me she’d had a strange phone call from a girl named Valerie who claimed to know me – did I want her phone number?

I wanted it.

I called. And a few days later, she was knocking on the door of my apartment. From the minute she walked in and we started talking, it felt like we’d known each other our whole lives. A year later we were engaged, and 2 years later, in a snow-covered church in Richmond, I married my best friend, the sweetest, kindest human being I’ve ever known. We’ve been together for 19 years this 9th of December. We have 2 of the most wonderful kids in America, and every day of my life I am thankful for the drunken idiot Marine who tackled me to the ground that night in 1987, sent me to the hospital, and almost cost me my life.

Were it not for the Fickle Finger of Fate, I never would have gone to that hospital. Had my drunken friend decided to target one of the other 5 Marines I was with, instead of me, I never would’ve stayed in the Marine Corps. I wouldn’t have had a reason to be in San Diego, wouldn’t have decided on a whim to take a tour of downtown, and wouldn’t have had a chance meeting with dear friends. I would never have known what happened to the girl I admired from afar in college, found out where she was, or reconnected with her. I wouldn’t have a beautiful marriage to a wonderful woman, or 2 amazing kids who bring me incredible joy and pride every day. I don’t know where I’d be, but I wouldn’t be here, where I most want to be.

I don’t know if I believe ‘everything happens for a reason’, or that some deity oversees our lives and steers us to the course meant just for us.

But I think I may believe in Fate...

How could I not?
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Comments

Old
Om's Avatar
Damn, J. What a wonderful read.

I try to live by the philosophy that one should always look forward, not back. But I have to admit that every once in a while, I find myself reliving certain crossroad moments of my life--some I recognized as such at the time, others not--and marveling at how any one small deviation along the way would have led me along a different path, to a different life.

Then I look at the three beautiful souls I helped bring into the world, and realize it simply went the way it had to go.
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Posted 12-12-08 at 08:28 PM by Om Om is offline
Old
Boone's Avatar
Absolutely
As always, you've said in a paragraph what it takes me 4 pages to get to. Thats one of the reasons I love you brother.
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Posted 12-12-08 at 08:47 PM by Boone Boone is online now
Old
Sasparilla Gretsch's Avatar
Magnificently written, Boone.

I'm looking forward to seeing what you'll write about next.
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Posted 12-13-08 at 12:59 PM by Sasparilla Gretsch Sasparilla Gretsch is offline
Old
Bruce's Avatar
Soooooo......what REALLY happened?

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Posted 12-17-08 at 09:06 PM by Bruce Bruce is offline
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Pravda's Avatar
What a treat to read--I need to catch up on the past few.

You've really got a gift for the written word J. And a late congratulations on your 19 year anniversary.
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Posted 01-03-09 at 11:59 AM by Pravda Pravda is offline
Old
Boone's Avatar
I don't know about all that ...but thanks for the kind words. I'm enjoying having an expressive outlet...

I'm making some changes in my life these days. Gonna write about that soon...
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Posted 01-03-09 at 04:07 PM by Boone Boone is online now
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