CHAPTER 1: A Dance and a Song
Josiah Langer looked around the VFW hall. Older people sat at cafeteria tables, talking over the music which was just a bit too loud. There were pitchers of beer or Coke and baskets of potato chips and pretzels about. Lots of younger children were running here and there. One girl looked about his age, and he didn't want to look away from her as long as she wasn't looking at him. He'd be a freshman in high school soon, and he liked girls.
She was beautiful in a sleeveless summer dress: big eyes, dark hair, thin, and quite animated talking to her relatives in the dim room. She sat on a metal folding chair among some of her family, at a long cafeteria table covered with a paper linen. Josiah didn't think he'd ever seen her before. After some furtive glances and much courage-building, Josiah made his way across the room and stood before her. She wasn't talking to anyone just then, and she looked at him. He felt insignificant.
"Hi. Would you like to dance? With me?" he stammered, and he feared she'd laugh. He felt eyes on him. The woman across the table stifled a smile. The girl was looking at him, not in surprise but consideration. When she didn't answer right away, he said, "I don't know anyone here but the guy playing the music."
"Who are you?" the girl asked.
He smiled sheepishly. "Josiah. I'm Josiah."
She hesitated as if it were a hard decision to make. She looked over at the woman he assumed was her mother, who nodded shortly. The girl said, "My name's Erin. Okay, I'll dance with you."
She got up. She was an inch taller than he and probably a year older. They walked over to the dance floor, not touching, and waited for the end of Frank Sinatra's "My Way" and the start of the next song.
Roy saw them waiting and started in surprise, then smiled and shook his head. Josiah averted his eyes and felt his face flush; he'd hear about this, sooner or later. Roy was Josiah's friend Patrick's big brother, in his early twenties, and Josiah was along to help him set up his speakers and hook up the wires because Patrick was at a tennis match. Once the music started, Josiah had no work until the reception ended.
"My Way" soon concluded, and Roy held up a cassette. He announced into his microphone, "This is not a professional recording, but it's a good song. I play it at every reception, and people always request it again. 'Of Hope and Love' by Ava Fortner." He put the cassette in his machine and a thin voice sang a beautiful song, the first time Josiah heard it.
Josiah held Erin close because that was all he knew of dancing. He delighted in the feel of her arm on his, her right hand in his left, her left hand on his shoulder. They shuffled about, bodies occasionally touching, her hair smelling of Prell. After some minutes, Erin let go of his hand and clasped both hers behind his neck. He felt her back under his fingers. Every touch was electric.
The recording was amateurish and raspy in spots, but the melody and lyrics were gentle and hopeful about losing someone but never losing love. It was romantic. The girl singing it had a pleasant, clear voice.
Josiah and Erin looked at one another's eyes occasionally, but mostly they looked aside. Speaking quietly and nervously, they exchanged ages and schools and small talk, but mostly they were quiet. He was careful not to hold her too close; she might think he was trying something. They turned in languid circles until the song finally ended. Josiah looked at her for another second with his hands on her waist and hers on the back of his neck, and then he held her hand and escorted her back to her family's table.
"Thanks for dancing with me," Josiah said.
"You're welcome," she said back.
He hesitated, but he couldn't think of anything else to say, so he wandered off. He looked back and saw Erin talking to her mother, who was smiling.
The rest of the evening he wondered if he should ask her again, or just sit with her and talk, but he couldn't find the courage. Now when his glance went her direction, a few times she was looking back at him, and he blushed.
All wedding receptions end, and Roy announced it eventually. As her family left, Erin looked over at Josiah and tilted her head. He waved, and she smiled and waved back. It was simple and adolescent. Two kids danced, perhaps for the first time for each. It was wonderful to have a girl in his arms.
He helped Roy pack up his equipment, and he fell asleep on the ride back to Greenville.
The next day was a Sunday, and Josiah visited Patrick's house that afternoon, like many afternoons. They listened to music in Patrick's living room. Patrick's dad insisted on good music systems. He worked for a small recording studio in Mt. Healthy, on the Hamilton road from Cincinnati, and often handed them tapes that he'd rejected for some reason.
Roy walked through, carrying the big suitcase in which he stored his music.
"Hey," Josiah asked, "do you have that song where the guy dreams of his lost love? I liked it."
Roy smiled. "Yeah, I remember it. You danced with that girl." Roy couldn't resist teasing.
Josiah blushed. "Uh, I was wondering if I could hear it again."
"Sure. Let me find it." Roy opened his case and started shuffling things around. He held it up after a few seconds and flipped the cassette to Patrick. Ava Fortner was the handwritten name on this cassette.
"It's good but just a kid playing a guitar and singing. Not in good enough shape. I knew it was slow." Roy winked at Josiah, who felt his face flush again. "Listen all you want, but I'd like it back," he said. "Dad said the songwriter passed away before he could arrange anything."
Josiah said, "Thanks, Roy."
Josiah and Patrick listened to that song over and over that afternoon, as fanciful kids sometimes did on lazy summer afternoons. They lay on the carpet in the sunbeams slanting through the plate glass window of Patrick's living room, dozing or talking or just listening. Occasionally, Josiah sang along with the tune, memorizing the lyrics by repetition, watching dust motes float in the sunbeams. He mused about his one dance, remembered Erin from the night before, and life was good, dreamy, and warm.
CHAPTER 2: Singing in a Mall
It was a very pleasant reminiscence 12 years later. Josiah felt dreamy and warm again and wondered why it came to him in a shopping mall on a Sunday afternoon. Memories of that wedding reception long ago flooded his mind: images of Erin Somebody, two adolescent kids clinging gently and awkwardly for brief minutes. He imagined Erin's body against his, smelled her hair again (do they still have Prell, he wondered?), heard her soft voice, remembered her hand pressing his. He never forgot that unique elation, so rare in his life since. It was a wonderful, gentle recollection. His eyes were closed for thought of her again, for a moment.