***Legal Disclaimer***
The following is entirely a work of fiction. Any similarity to real persons, alive or deceased, including but not limited to names and/or personal descriptions is purely coincidental. Nothing in this story is intended to be defamatory or metaphorical. This work was produced entirely with the intent to entertain the reader. Nothing more. All characters in this story are assumed to be at least 18 years old at the time the story takes place. This is an original work of fiction and the author retains all rights to it. Limited license is granted to 'Literotica' for publication according to their requirements and conditions. Copyright © 2022 by Scottish Texan. In an unprecedented move, I chose to forego with submitting this work to my crew of Beta Readers. I proofread and edited this entirely on my own, so any mistakes that were made are purely on my own shoulders. This is strictly a romance short story without any explicit sex scenes in it. If you want to jerk off, you probably should skip this one.
Preface
I was inspired to write this one by two different songs. My main inspiration comes from the Jimmy Buffett song by the same name. It first appeared on the
Floridays
album as track number 4. I fell in love with the song the very first time that I heard it. As for myself, I have been a loyal Parrothead since 1973 when 'Come Monday' hit the charts.
I liked 'Margaritaville' when it first came out as well, but I quickly grew extremely tired of it because when it went to number one, the radio stations played it far too often causing me to quickly get burned out on it. It took about ten years to get that worked out of my system and acquire a new appreciation for it. Only a true Parrothead knows that there is a missing verse written for 'Margaritaville'. What everyone assumes is Verse 3 is actually Verse 4. The actual Verse 3 can be easily found if you know where to look. It starts out with the phrase "Old men in tank tops,". Jimmy's next big hit was 'Cheeseburger In Paradise' and even though it was played very often too, I never grew tired of it. Anyway, having drifted too far off topic I digress.
The second song that provides inspiration for this is 'Walking In Memphis' by Marc Cohn. I often pull these two songs up and listen to them back to back. For some strange reason, they just seem to fit together really well for me. But maybe not so much for other people.
Jimmy Buffett has already addressed his vision for 'Meet Me In Memphis' as a short story in one of his books. I read it and enjoyed it, but it just didn't fit the song correctly or hit the same resonate chord in me as the song did (pardon the pun). When I heard the song, I envisioned two high school sweethearts who ended up on differing paths but never lost their love for each other. So that is what I have to share with you here.
For visual references, picture Anthony Edwards in his Top Gun days for Eric and Jennifer Nettles in the music video 'Who Says You Can't Go Home' for Erin. Jennifer has a total Amanda Bynes vibe going in that video.
Chapter One
Eric Martin paddled his canoe slowly down Dusenbury Creek. It was still mid-morning when he had departed from his shack in the 800 block of Narragansett Lane on Key Largo. When people asked Eric what he did for a living, he would laugh and tell them that he was self-unemployed. Truth be told however, Eric had numerous open doors just waiting on him to walk through them. Southwest Airlines was his last employer and they eagerly wanted him to return to them as a Captain. No one but Eric and God Himself knew why he had suddenly walked out the door when they had offered him the promotion from First Officer to Captain. Now he worked as a fishing guide part time for cash off of the books.
He spotted the empty one gallon milk jug floating up ahead easily enough. It was far enough back in the mangrove roots so as not to be too obvious. To anyone else, it was just trash that had floated in there and become entangled in the roots. But for Eric, it marked his favorite fishing spot. For some reason, Gray Snapper flocked to this particular spot in huge schools, albeit sporadically. Still, it was an easy way to put meat on the table cheaply enough. Eric's electric bill was his biggest expense at roughly $200.00 a month during the summer.
Eric wasn't living off of the grid exactly. But he had no mortgage payments since he totally owned the property where he lived outright, so his only expense was his yearly taxes. His grandfather had left him a substantial amount of money by buying several whole life insurance policies over the years. The man had named each one of his grandchildren individually as the beneficiary of each $250,000.00 policy. Eric's Mom had inherited all of the real estate in San Leon, Texas and her brother James had received the shrimping business with the five boats and property on Offatts Bayou.
Eric reached over the side of his canoe, about a foot below the surface easily locating the trout line where he had tied it onto the root of a mangrove the previous evening, and began his run. His hooks were placed on foot long leaders and spaced about eighteen inches apart. When he reached the far end, he had his legal limit of fish for the day so he untied it and gathered it back up. No sense in giving a game warden any reasons to realize that he had been working that area. It was why he had not been hassled about it so far. He was actually good close friends with the local warden, Nicholas Gomez. They had a favorite bar that they both frequented and so it was pretty much inevitable that they would meet and hang out together.
Nick and his wife Samantha would frequently invite Eric around for dinners on Saturday Nights. They had tried several times without success to set up Eric on blind dates with single ladies that they called friends. The closest that they had come to hooking Eric up into a permanent relationship was with Jane Woods. Jane and Sam had grown up together as neighbors. Jane's family had moved from Savanna, Georgia to South Carolina when the two girls had finished 8
th
grade, but the two girls stayed in close touch and called each other regularly to maintain their friendship. They were separated only by a distance of less than a hundred miles, so it worked out well enough.
Eric and Jane could have become an item if it weren't for two big hurdles that the couple faced. First, Eric was very adamant about not selling his Key Largo property to move north to South Carolina. Jane was equally adamant about not leaving Charleston to live in Key Largo year round. Second, Eric's heart already belonged to another. Just like the title to the song written by Cat Stevens says, the first cut is the deepest. So Jane and Eric enjoyed a 'NSA' fuck-buddy relationship wherein they hooked up three or four times a year at best.
After Eric arrived back at his shack and cleaned his catch, he turned on his hot plate and got out the blackened Lodge® cast iron skillet that had been handed down to him from his Paternal Grandmother. Tossing a little bit of margarine into it, he prepared to fry up part of his catch.
It was about then that the bicycle bell that he had mounted on the post next to his mailbox tinkled. Dave, the mailman was another good friend who always announced his arrival by ringing the bell for Eric. Something that he would not have normally done for anyone else on his route. But he didn't really mind taking the extra step for Eric since he only came by about once every two weeks or so. Bills were about the only mail that Eric received. Dave knew not to bother with delivering the circulars because Eric would only let them sit in the mailbox until it overflowed.
Eric stepped out of the front door and walked down the sidewalk. Dave normally just dropped the mail into the box, rang the bell, then moved on to his next stop on the route, but not today. Today Dave stood by the mailbox with a goofy look on his face. He fanned himself with an envelope made from a rose colored stationery. Just before Eric reached him, he drew the envelope along under his nose and sigh out loudly, "Hmmmm!"
"Don't you have some kind of oath to respect the privacy of the citizens who reside on your route?" Eric asked as he approached his buddy and reached for the missive.
"A postman's version of the Hippocratic oath?" Dave chuckled heartily. "Sorry, buddy, but no. But I have to admit that my curiosity is piqued. This is loaded with so much perfume that it just
HAS