Please do not make the mistake of assuming the "when" in this story. It could be 1970, 2006, 2030 or whenever. I've intentionally blurred the time frame so that I don't get a bunch of inane political comments concerning current events from the lunatic fringe of any orientation.
This is a story with military overtones; there are no dogs and no corporate America anecdotes---although I almost added the dogs near the end. This story does deal with the publishing world; I don't have any first hand experience so apologies in advance if I've missed some nuances. Then again this is fiction in an unstated era so who's to say how the industry might evolve?
There's a wonderful romance here but probably not the one you expect; I thought about, "that one" and changed my mind as I was writing. There's no outrageously raunchy sex; what little titillation there is comes very late. If you were hoping for stroke material, just move along...nothing to see here.
Savannah will always be one of my favorite cities along with San Francisco, Chicago, New Orlean, Fort Worth and Portland. All are unique; all are tied to important moments in my life.
* * * * *
"Taxi!"
The battered yellow vehicle screeched to a stop a few feet past him. He had noted the attractive well dressed woman some years his senior standing a number of yards up the urban street also attempting to acquire carriage.
"Where are you headed?" He shouted to her.
"Airport." She replied.
"Same here. Do you want to share a cab?"
"That would be great!" She exclaimed, seemingly surprised that he had offered. The cabbie showed his irritation at the delay by lowering the flag on his meter prematurely. The woman had a single Pullman; moving with surprising speed she was beside him in a matter of seconds. Settling in for the half hour ride to the airport they introduced themselves.
"I'm Mike---Mike Carson."
"Victoria...Simms." She replied, extending her hand, checking him out briefly and then seemingly losing interest. Mike was all of twenty-seven; he judged Ms. Simms to be at least two decades his senior...his mother's age? She was a handsome woman, impeccably and conservatively dressed. Mike was in the mood for conversation.
"Where are you off to today, Ms. Simms?"
"Savannah."
"Business or pleasure?" He inquired, refusing to be deterred by her remoteness.
She turned and examined him closely. He was a good looking young fellow at a hair under six feet with a stylish suit and highly shined shoes. He looked respectable; probably a young executive on the early rungs of the corporate ladder, she mused. She really didn't want to hear about his recent marketing adventure but he was persistent and she was always polite.
"A little of both. I have some work to do---brought it with meβbut this is essentially a pleasure trip...a family thing."
"Well it would seem that we are headed to the same final destination; Delta through Atlanta at nine?"
"Why yes. And you, Mr. Carson, a business trip?"
"Returning home, actually. I came up to spend a few days with my grandmother. She still wears me out at eighty-six. Are you from Savannah?"
"No, not really...ah...Mike. It just happens to be a favorite city. Every year the women in our family---sisters, daughters, mothers---get together for a long weekend...'girl fest' we call it. Last year it was Chicago; this year Savannah, although we'll be staying out at Tybee. Are you from Savannah? I didn't note any accent."
"No, but I do like it and I did choose it as a place to live for a short period. I'm stationed there---in the Army...Hunter Army Airfield."
"You're in the military? In the Army?" She responded almost incredulously.
"For another six months or so; I'm an officer...Captain. You seemed surprised. The suit? Not an Armani but a very well made and obscenely inexpensive knockoff complements of Bangkok, Thailand---six for the price of one original. The shoes are also of Thai origin, hand made and custom fitted. The watch? The real thing at a third of the U.S. price. My hair is probably just past the regulation limit---I'll need a haircut before work on Monday."
"I confess I've never really talked to or known anyone in the military. Were you drafted?"
"Nope. I accepted a fully paid four year education at the best school to which I was accepted and in return for that four years I owed Uncle Sam four years."
"Where'd you go to school?"
"Dartmouth."
"Really?"
"Same school my current boss went to...thirty some years earlier. He was the captain of the Dartmouth ski team; the entire team enlisted on the day after we were attacked."
What was your major?"
"English Lit officially but essentially pre-law."
"That seems like an unusual major for a military person."
"We're a very eclectic organization."
"Did you attend law school?"
"That I did; University of Virginia. I even graduated---JD."
"Doesn't the military have a special program for lawyers?"
"That they do---JAG---Judge Advocate General Corps. I had to fight like hell to stay out of it. Fortunately they weren't that short on lawyers at the time I graduated so they let me switch to something more to my liking."
"Which was...?"
"Aviation. I'm a pilot; dual rated actually but I spent most of my time flying helicopters."
"Have you been overseas?"
"I spent a year and a half in the current combat zone. The first year was a given---98% of my flight school class went. The second six months was my own choice."
"Why on earth would you do that?"
"I liked what I was doing and the people I was doing it with; extending gave me a chance to command a detachment. I got a free round trip ticket to anywhere in the world and a thirty day vacation. By agreeing to extend for six months I reduced my active duty obligation by about a year. I'll be a free man in under six months."
"Did you see combat?"
"I was assigned to and later commanded a flight detachment in support of Special Forces; so yes, someone seemed to be trying to kill me almost every day."
"Were you wounded?"
"Not seriously; certainly not seriously enough to get one of those damned purple things."
"I thought every wounded soldier received the Purple Heart?"
"Only if the powers-that-be find out about it."
"Didn't you want the award?"
"No, nor did most of the people I served with. First---and this is a commentary I suppose on the perceived invulnerability all young pilots seems to have---most of us viewed it as the, "I screwed up and got hurt' medal. I guess we also thought that the kids that really got chewed up, lost essential pieces of their anatomy and such deserve it...earned it. A piece of shrapnel here or a clean through and through there..."
"Clean through and through?"
"A bullet that passes through the body without doing any permanent harm."
"That happened to you?"
"Only once, thankfully plus a few assorted pieces of shrapnel here and there."
"Do you come from a military family?"
"Let's see...my father joined right after graduating from college immediately following our being attacked---Cornell. 'Served in the airborne as an officer; today he's a chemical engineer. One brother served in another crappy war as an enlisted Marine---more a judge's decision than a choice. My other brother---Yale---was a Navy carrier pilot during peace time. In carrier aviation even in peace time people get hurt; roughly ten percent of the guys he graduated from flight school with died in accidents. He's an aeronautical engineer and always loved to fly and found something ludicrous about designing military airplanes without actually flying them."
"What are your plans?"
"I wish I knew. I don't really want to practice the law. I'll probably end up working for some corporation we've all heard of."
"Mike, I can't say I approve of this war...no offense intended."