Chapter 13 — Commencement
August 1974
It was four in the Saturday afternoon of August 24. Jim was in the driver's seat and Hildy was next to him in the passenger's bucket seat of the '71 Mercury Cougar that Douglas Chemical had sold to him. They were in the parking lot of the Erie Canal Inn as about a dozen people surrounded the car, wishing them well.
After a few moments, the small crowd stepped aside. Jim put the car in gear and it was official that he and Hildy were on their honeymoon.
"You can't get on the Thruway with that stuff tied to the back of the car," Hildy said.
"I know," Jim answered. "Darlene and Tom think I didn't see them tie it on just before we came out. I'll let them think it for a few seconds longer."
He drove to the exit of the parking lot and put on his turn signal. He glanced in the rear view mirror and could see that the small crowd was still watching them. Jim put the car in Park and then got out of the car and made his way to the back of it.
"Now I can win my Oscar," he said to himself.
Jim threw up his hands in an 'o-my-gosh' pose and then untied the "Just Married" sign, streamers and cans that Darlene and his brother had put there. He set the material on the grass alongside the parking lot. In a half minute he was back in the car and he and Hildy were on the road. The small crowd watched and cheered them as he got back into the car.
They were on their way to the Interstate. Their plan was to stop in a motel in Utica where they'd made reservations—about three hours to the east.
"I'm so happy, I could burst!" Hildy exclaimed and threw her arms in the air as they reached the State Highway.
The next morning they would turn north for four days at an isolated cottage on Long Lake in the Adirondacks. After that, they would be moving to Jim's apartment near the campus and Jim would be preparing for his Masters work.
"It was a nice wedding," Jim said, "even if it was a small one."
It was a small wedding by any standard. After Hildy and Jim announced their engagement to his parents that Saturday in June they drove out to Hildy's parents' house to tell them and try to patch things up. Old Herbert threw them out and Hildy's mother started to cry. It was sad, but Jim and Hildy tried to make the best of it and hoped something would work out when the time was right.
"I'm glad that your father decided to come to the wedding after all," Jim said.
"I guess I am, too, after everything. I wasn't convinced at first."
"We've got to leave an opening to mend fences sometime in the future," Jim said. "It's not right for families to be divided."
Old Herbert appeared at the last moment in the chapel just before the ceremony with Hildy's mother and Aunt Mildred in tow. It had been unknown until that moment whether he was going to attend or not. He copped a dour attitude, but it was good that he had shown up. No one thought that he would until Jim's brother showed him and the two ladies to their seats.
"It was lucky that we had extra chairs ready to set in the front for them," Hildy said.
With Hildy's family assumed to be out of the picture, Jim and his parents decided on a small ceremony with an intimate dinner at the Erie Canal Inn afterward. Hildy wore a light blue, sleeveless dress and Jim wore his navy suit. It seemed a bit silly to go for the big wedding gown and tuxes with such a small wedding party.
Jim invited Rich to be his best man, but his old roommate couldn't get away from his new job in Illinois. Jim's younger brother, Tom, had just turned eighteen and filled in. Darlene stood up for Hildy.
There was an aunt and uncle of Jim's from Buffalo whom Jim couldn't leave out. To Jim's surprise, Professor Stark attended with his wife. It was an unexpected honor and Jim was flattered. Add in Jim's parents, and that was the whole wedding.
There were, of course, the priest who married them and an associate priest, whom Jim had known during his school years, who asked if he could assist.
"Are you disappointed you couldn't get married in your own church?" Jim asked.
"No," she answered. "This was nice."
After Jim and Hildy finished their visit that Saturday in June Herb was on the phone to the Lutheran minister at Hildy's church. Later, when Hildy approached the minister, he refused her, according to Old Herbert's wishes.
It had hurt Hildy when it happened. She told Jim, and he consoled her by saying that it was her final break between past and future.
"Let's just find a JP who will do it for ten dollars," Hildy had said.
"No, it will be in a church," Jim insisted, and so it was.
Jim's parish priest hadn't helped, either. Jim approached his pastor for help. Then the elderly priest called Hildy's minister and found that Old Herbert refused his consent to the marriage.
"Get yourself straight with the bride's father and then come back and see me," he told Jim.
In the end, two priests from the Jesuit high school Jim had attended were glad to perform the ceremony. They were married in the tiny school chapel. It was Fr. Baldwin who officiated and Fr. Hoffman, who had been Jim's math teacher for two of his four years, assisted.
"My pastor wasn't very happy when he found out the Jesuits were willing to do it," Jim said. "The Jesuits and our regular church guys are always at each others' throats."
"You can't please everyone," Hildy rejoined.
"I should have said my ex-pastor," Jim corrected himself.
They stopped at the toll booth to the Thruway and Jim took the ticket and stuck it in the visor.
"Do you wish that it had been a big wedding?" Jim asked
"I gave up that idea when I had my troubles with Henri in high school," Hildy said. "What about you?"
"Well," Jim said, "if there had been more guests we could have raked in a lot of wedding gifts. Think of all the blenders and carving sets we'd have in the back seat right now."
"Wise guy," Hildy said. "I was hoping that I could have a piece of wedding cake shoved in my face. When you have the frosting in your nostrils it really makes you appreciate it. You don't know how girls dream about that."
Jim looked over and could see that she was covering up a laugh while she waited for him to catch up with her joke.
"Honestly, I think my parents would have liked something more traditional, but they understood the situation. For my part, anytime I can avoid wearing a tux it has to be considered a good day."
Hildy was looking at the new rings on her finger. They were shiny gold. Jim had only saved enough money for a very modest diamond two weeks before the ceremony. He had almost been too embarrassed to give it to her.
"Someday I'll buy you a decent diamond in a nice setting," Jim said.
"No!" Hildy gasped. "I would never part with this ring."
"But Hildy," Jim pleaded, "it was the cheapest stone they had in the store. Someday..."
"It doesn't matter, Jim. This will be a reminder of how we started out. I don't ever want to forget these days, and I'll never let this ring out of my sight."
It was a coin with two sides and Jim could see the heads and tails of it. It was Hildy's ring, after all, so she could keep it if that's what she wanted to do.
"It was nice of your father to put on the wedding dinner," Hildy said.
"It was," Jim agreed. "I'm glad that we stipulated 'no gifts' to the attendees."
"Well, your parents' gift was the reception," Hildy reminded him.
"My father slipped me a check to cover the honeymoon, too," Jim said. "I was going to tell you later."
As they drove along they were quiet for a while. Jim was reflecting, not just on the day, but everything over the past year that had led to the moment that he was living in at that time and place.