MY LOST VALENTINE: MY CATHOLIC ROMANCE
"It's Valentine's Day," said my buddy Doctor Joe. Did you buy your wife some flowers?"
"I don't do flowers," I said.
"Why is that?"
"Years ago, during one of our breakups, Jo-Jo had a boyfriend who would fill up his whole car with flowers when he was courting her. I can't compete with that. And besides, if I did, it would remind her of him."
"Pat, you really have to stop living in the past. So you let the holiday pass without doing anything?"
"No, I tell her to buy herself an expensive gift. I never know what fancy Louis Vuitton Bag or Prada outfit she has her eye on. When I used to buy her things, she always took them back to the store. My choices were not to her liking. I gave up on that."
"Okay," Joe had a dissatisfied look on his face. "Maybe you should take her out for dinner?"
"Yeah, I could get some Chinese Takeout or Sushi. She likes that."
"Sure, then she won't have to cook."
"Cook? She doesn't cook. I offered to send her to cooking school to learn how to boil water, but she refused. Just like the men in Italy, I do the shopping and cook the meals."
"Well," said Joe, "You must be doing something right. She's as thin as she was when we were students."
"And as curvy. I've got a list of all the guys waiting for me to kick the bucket so they can marry her.
"I hope you don't have me on that list," said Joe.
"Nah, you're not her type.
Doc Joe and I have been friends for over fifty years. We both went over to Italy to study medicine while the Vietnam War was going on. Joe finished school and returned to the US, passed the foreign student's doctor's exam, and then went on to specialize in psychiatry.
My student life was not so successful. While Joe remained single, I was married. I had a problem paying the bills for myself and my young wife. My parents, who were well off were to busy fighting to care. I met a neighbor in the building's elevator, Aldo Mazzini, who lived on the 3rd floor, and knowing I was a med student, he asked if I could translate from Italian into English for a medical manual. Mazzini's friend invented a new capsulized electronic heart stimulator or pacemaker coated with a substance that the body's immune system would accept.
I was happy to help and besides the manual, worked on an application to get FHA approval for the device. I named the device the 'Valentine Pacemaker,' and that went over well. We were deluged with interest. The consortium offered to hire me to help export the device to the USA and other countries. My success at lining up distributors led to a partnership in the venture. I even found a Chinese company to produce the pacemaker for the Asian market. They called it the 'Qixi' Pacemaker, which is Valentine in Chinese.
I gave up my studies and stayed in Italy working with the firm. Our daughter had started college and was living with my mother-in-law. Jo-Jo and I returned to the USA when I was in my mid-fifties. At that time the tax code was favorable, money earned outside the US was hardly taxable. I had earned a great income and once back in the USA I was able to increase our net worth through clever real estate investments.
Doctor Joe and I stayed in contact, and he ended up at UCLA. I was semi-retired. We both bought condos in the Wilshire Corridor. Besides being my closest friend and fellow pool player, Dr. Joe Shrimkin is a certified shrink. I value his opinion, but I am not open for treatment.
Our large condo is in a luxury building just below the penthouse. Joe and I play pool together at least once a week and sometimes more. I have an extra room for my regulation pool table covered in emerald green felt. We were in the middle of a game of 8-ball, when hoping to distract me, Joe interrupted me while I was lining up my shot. Doc Joe spoke up,
"I'm working on an article for the Psychiatric Journal on the effect of love on the human experience. Let me ask you a question. How many times have you said, "I love you to a man or woman and meant it?"
"What do you mean by "meant it?"
"That you'd die for them."
"Okay, let's see, I guess the first love was Jo-Jo. She was the girl I married after a cluttered romance, fighting off all her suitors and other complications I don't want to discuss. Ours was an odd, on-again, off-again relationship, but the sex was great; it was fantastic. She had double-D tits of gold, nipples that cried out to be sucked, and she could orgasm nine times in an hour, but it took years before I got my dick inside her pussy.
I admit, there was one girl in between, called Crista, during a short season when Jo-Jo and I had cooled it. Crista was the first girl with no regrets or stories who never used drama to put me off. Crista was the first girl who was happy to spread her legs wide enough for me to fit my cock inside. Crista was supposedly a virgin, but sometimes, the first time a girl has sex, if the hymen was already broken, they don't bleed, and then you can't be sure if some guy beat you to the spot--you never know.
You can't be sure of their virginity. I've heard lame excuses, "Lost it on my bicycle. The Gyn popped my cherry with his damn finger while giving me a routine exam, or as one Australian girl said, "I was so intent on masturbating, I tried it with a bloody banana."
"Did you ever ask, why they didn't bleed?"
"Of course not. You never ask them why they didn't bleed."
"Any others in that basket?"
"You mean other virgins?
"Yes, a few more with hard-to-believe excuses. Then there was Margo, who wanted to marry me. She was a certifiable virgin, she bled the whole bed red. Still, I abandoned her when Jo-Jo said she wanted me back.
"Listen, Doc, if the gal shows blood or not, when you're fucking a would-be virgin or a down-and-out slut, it's always been easy for me to fall in love with the girl I was having sex with. It's the way my heart works. After a few weeks or months, you realize this gal is not marriage material, and you cut the cord."
"I'm sad at the pain I caused a bunch of women who were in love with me. I plowed them over and then left them to get back to Jo-Jo. She was my lodestone. You know Doc, it was as if she was magnetic. I could never free myself from her magic tits. But regrets, as Sinatra sang, I have more than a few, but Doc, I do have old-fashioned ethics."
"Or the lack of them?" said Doctor Joe.
"I guess. Would you shut up for a minute and let me take this shot."
I wacked the eight ball too hard. The pool ball rolled into the side pocket and then hopped out.
"When will I learn that a soft shot is a better approach? I'd seen Mosconi years ago, and he never slammed the ball into a pocket. Joe, do you know who Willie was?"
Doc Joe responded, "Probably the greatest billiard player the game has ever seen."
"You got that right. But if you permit me to correct you, I'd say, 'pool player.' Billiards is a game with only three balls and no pockets. A pool table has six pockets and fifteen balls. Willie's game was a 'straight pool.' The winner was the first to dump 125 balls down the hatch."
"If I had 15 balls, I'd be a fucking miracle," said Joe.