Released from the war, released from the rigors - and the de rigeur wanderings - of the War Bond tour, Johnny came home. Two days later Johnny's lust and Frankie's firm "No, not until we are married!" led them from Nashville to a neighboring state where any justice of the peace would marry them.
Blissfully wed, Frankie and Johnny looked forward to a happy life together. Johnny found that his new wife could satisfy all of his lust. He was her man and they were true as a blue, blue sky. There was only one fly in the ointment, so to speak, and that was that Johnny had only two skills: killing those nasty hordes of Chinese communists and picking at his Tennessee flat-top box. He in no manner wanted to go back to Korea -- even with the nubile, willing USO girls -- but he was damned good at his guitar picking.
When Frankie started expecting something other than Johnny coming home at night … well, push came to shove and Johnny quit playing his guitar in local bars for free beer and got an agent. When all that expecting Frankie was doing eventually produced another mouth to feed, things were gonna get expensive and Frankie's man, Johnny needed to make some money.
Now Johnny's agent was a good old boy from Huntsville and he quickly got gigs for Frankie's long legged guitar picker with the wandering eye … 'cepting she didn't know about that part but he was her man nearly all the time. Johnny picked up to leave his love Frankie and her promised he'd be back.
He told her, "Honey, I just have a little pickin' to do a little farther down the track. I'm your man and I wouldn't do you wrong."
Her man played that Tennessee flat-top box from Macon to Medina and from Nashville to Knoxville to Fayetteville and all the other Villes throughout the south. He became known and crowds began to flock to every tavern and honky-tonk for miles around wherever he would play. It did seem there were lots of young ladies showing up in heat for that brown-eyed man with the curly black hair.
One night when Johnny was playing far away and couples were dancing to the music of his band, Frankie got to thinking, "He's my man … he wouldn't do me wrong."
It wasn't but a couple weeks later that Johnny and his band were playing at a dance hall in Dothan, Alabama. The crowd was happy, the night warm, the beer cold and the music hot. He had just started the second set when he saw the woman come in. If the music was hot she was even hotter. Johnny was good enough that his guitar seemed to play itself while he appreciated the lovely vision as she strutted towards a table right in front of the bandstand.
It wasn't the warmth of the stage lights that made his forehead bead with sweat. She was tall, most of six foot, with bright red hair cascading down to her waist. She was wearing a tight crimson dress with a hemline unfashionable way north of her knees. Her waist almost wasn't, her bust was straining the seams of the dress and when he lustfully looked at her hips he broke a string on his guitar and had to grab his backup to finish the song. When she sat down Johnny almost drooled as he caught sight of a flash of bare flesh at the top of her stocking as she sat down.
He could see her watching him play, a smile on her lips and in her emerald eyes. Johnny vouchsafed a wink and was rewarded with a wink back. He knew at once the game was on. He sang every song to the redhead and her smile became more and more friendly. He was Frankie's man but she was far away. What she didn't know wouldn't hurt her none.
When the break came he walked down to her table and sat down. "Wal, darlin', how 'bout a beer?"
She nodded so he waved to the bartender with two fingers. They chatted as the beers came … several times. Johnny was feeling pretty good about how his night was going to end. With the end of the music the lights were low and dim and he was feeling amorous. He leaned over to kiss those ruby lips and casually put his hand on her bare knee. Well, then the fat hit the fire. The long lanky redhead stood up and slapped him a time or two … then she slapped him again.
"I'm Frankie's sister and I was checkin' up on you! If you're her man, you better treat her right."
Well, this story ends with a moral: be good but carry a stick. Sometimes it seems a guitar picker just can't tell what to pick.
He was Frankie's man and he wasn't doing her wrong … any more.