What is it about weddings?
"Come with me," Meg, my son's bride-to-be said, taking my hand and tugging me along behind her. At about 5'2" and maybe 110 pounds she looks tiny but that doesn't stop her from being strong and understanding leverage. Gymnasts are like that.
So I followed and, okay, if I'm being honest here, admired. She looked terrific.
She stopped behind a tiny woman who was engaged in a conversation, well, let me adjust that.
She stopped behind a tiny woman who was issuing orders to a group that I assumed were the various staff that would be involved in the wedding tomorrow. She was almost military in her demeanor as she explained the procedures following the ceremony, who would drive the shuttle golf carts, how the chairs were to be moved, and the logistics of moving a hundred or so people around.
We waited, Meg and I, and watched.
Finally, as the group started to disperse, Meg pulled me forward and touched the tiny drill sergeant on the arm.
When she turned I thought she was handsome rather than cute or pretty. A cap of white hair, cut in a classic boy's fashion, covered a long narrow head and a longish face. I guessed her to be at least ten years my senior although she was dressed almost like a teenager in a tight gingham cowboy cut shirt, form-fitting jeans, and cowboy boots. She had deep-set, very dark eyes, a straight, almost pointed, nose, very thin lips on a generous mouth, and slightly oversized ears. A deep tan and that leathery-looking skin old people get when they spend a lot of time in the sun suggested an outdoor lifestyle.
"Wilhemina Franklin, Phillip Morgan, Phillip Morgan, Wilhemina Franklin," Meg intoned in the classic introduction formula and then, "Grammy Billi, Phil."
Billi looked up at me, smiled, and said, "Oh, he'll do," to Meg.
Then she extended her hand and I could see the twisted fingers and swollen knuckles of arthritis so I took it, very carefully. My own arthritis is pretty minor, but I know how much it can hurt.
"Pleased to meet you, Plus One," she said, making me chuckle.
"And to meet you too, Plus one," I replied.
Someone came and Meg was whisked away, leaving me with my blind date.
"Come on," she said, taking my hand in a surprisingly firm grip although she did use just fingertips, "Organizing is hard work."
I laughed and said, "Lead on."
As she moved down the porch toward a door I noticed a bit of a dowager's hump suggesting osteoporosis and vowed to myself to make damn sure she didn't fall. Beyond that, she moved with amazing grace and I wondered if Meg might not be a third-generation gymnast.
She led me to the front room, blessedly quiet after the hubbub of getting ready for the wedding rehearsal.
"Be a dear," she said, "and find us a beer."
She gave me directions to the kitchen and as I went in search of libation I dodged a couple of grandchildren and unknown other children, a bustling woman I didn't know, and my daughter who gave me a quick "hi" on her way to some unknown duty. I survived the obstacle course, found the refrigerator, said a quick prayer of thanks to the Gods of Beer that it was simple
Budweiser
and not some craft concoction, and headed back to my blind date.
She drank with gusto. It looked to me like she knocked back about half of that beer in her first pull and I wondered if I would be sent to the refrigerator again.
And she started talking.
The woman could talk and as I listened I understood how lonely she was. It turned out she was an Alzheimer's Widow, rattling around in a big house while her husband, who no longer recognized her, waited in a specialty nursing home for his days to pass. Making matters worse, about half of the family seemed to think she should have stuck with him and were angry that she, and she laughed bitterly at the phrase, "had put him in a home."
I said nothing through this narrative, just listening, and understanding at least a little. My wife spent two years dealing with a declining mother and I had seen the toll it took on her.
Finally, she wound down. I imagine it had been a while since she had a sympathetic ear to hear her out.
"How long," I asked, holding her hand carefully, "have you slept alone?"
The expression on her face changed subtly as sometimes happens when you strike a nerve in a conversation.
"Are you offering?" she asked.
I smiled and asked the question again, "How long have you slept alone?"
She sighed and said, "Seven years."
"Nothing has to happen," I said, holding her eyes with mine, "But no one should sleep alone at a wedding except for the bride and groom on the night before."
She grinned then, a face-splitting grin showing too-white teeth.
"Oh no, youngster," she said, "You're puttin' out."
I laughed at that and said, "Naughty girl."
She laughed back and said, "You betcha."
The mood was broken, the deal done I guess, and we talked of other things then. Of our hopes for the new bride and groom. Of the beauty of this place. Of why
Budweiser
was better than craft beer. Of why guns are good, abortion is bad, and
Fast and Furious
movies are great fun. A free-wheeling conversation between two people meeting and liking each other.
One of the bridesmaids, the bride's sister actually, found us and told us to get out there, that things were starting. I helped Billi to her feet and we walked out to be directed.
In the event, it was pretty straightforward. The mother of the bride was escorted by my ex's new husband. We were given directions - when they get to this point you start, stuff like that. The father of the groom (me) followed with my new best girl on my arm. Then the groomsmen and bridesmaids, my grandchildren as flower girls, other grandchildren as ringbearers, the groom and the mother of the groom, and finally the bride and the father of the bride.
It was all pretty straightforward and when we ran through it a second time it went without the proverbial hitch.
As the second run-through wrapped up my son, ever the quick wit, announced, "Good job, lackeys, let's eat. Dinner at Randall's Restaurant. Bar is open."