Note: This is a true romance tale. Those seeking graphic sex should look elsewhere. Also, because I've submitted it for the Winter Holiday's Contest, please vote if you enjoy it. Thanks.
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I had always wondered what it felt like to actually be in Times Square on New Year's Eve. For years, I had watched the ball drop from the safe, warm confines of my parents' living room. I was no different from many Americans who had turned this into a New Year's ritual. New Year's just didn't feel like New Year's without watching the ball drop (and for close to a half-century the presence of Guy Lombardo as well).
So, being nineteen years old and on winter break from college, I decided that this year would be the year. The decade was turning, and what better way to greet the 1970s than celebrating it in what many considered the center of the human universe on December 31-January 1. Not wishing to go alone, I recruited my friend Miles to come along. We had known each other since junior high. In fact, in years past, we sometimes found ourselves at the same New Year's Eve parties. We knew the same people, the ones from the local teen center and the YMCA where we pumped iron in that dingy hole of a gym that hadn't been updated since Eisenhower was president. We were both muscle heads, albeit smart muscle heads. I was a pre-med major, while Miles studied civil engineering.
Remarkably, we called a few days ahead and got a night's stay at the Hotel Edison. On the last day of 1969, we left Penn Station for the morning train ride up. After checking in, we had lunch and then walked over to Times Square. Already, there were people milling around. "Damn, Troy, if it's like this now, you can imagine the crush of humanity we'll run into tonight," Miles said. "Maybe we should stick around to save a space."
He might have been right, but there was no way I was standing around in a bulky overcoat in thirty-five degree weather for over ten hours with nothing to do but save a space. "I'll take my chances," I said, and then suggested we do something to kill time. Reluctantly, he agreed. On previous trips with our parents, we visited the Statue of Liberty, the Empire State Building and other Gotham tourist haunts. We'd seen Rockefeller Center, too, watching the skaters glide around the ice rink. Perhaps now was a good time to join them.
After walking the five blocks to the ice rink, we rented skates and then hit the ice. Neither of us was a Dick Button or Gordie Howe. Still, after taking a few tumbles, we got ourselves in gear, did okay for big guys who hadn't been on skates for a few years. As we gained more confidence, we speeded things up, began to race each other. We competed with each other in the gym all the time, had an ongoing contest on bench press to see who could reach four-hundred first. We were both around fifty pounds away, but at just past two-hundred, Miles outweighed me by over ten pounds. Pound for pound, I was stronger, and he didn't like that one bit.
Little wonder that he went hell-bent for leather to outdo me on skates. Heavier or not, Miles could move. He passed me on the turn and gained more distance on the straightaway. As we went into the next turn, I threw caution to the wind in an effort to catch up, lost control, and found myself careening toward two young women. "Watch it!" I yelled, just seconds before rear-ending them. The three of us went down, slid across the ice and into the guardrail. Thump!
Hearing the noise, Miles turned and shook his head. "Race over, buddy," he said after skating over, a gratified smile plastered across his slightly bearded face.
The ladies were not amused. "Where the hell do you think you are?" snapped one of them. "This isn't a speed skating venue." She wore a red wool cap, denim skirt over striped leggings and a heavy blue ski sweater. Her blond hair fell in curls below her ears.
After apologizing, I stood and then reached out to help her up. Miles did the same for her friend, a raven-haired beauty in a double-breasted green coat and tight gray slacks. "Sorry, girls," he said. "Guess that's what centrifugal force will do."
Miss Raven-Haired flashed an admonishing look. "No, that's what being inconsiderate will do," she said, her tone a model of indignation.
From their accents, I gleaned they weren't from Maryland. "Native New Yorkers?" I asked, watching them brush the ice from their clothing.
They glanced at each other as if to give mutual approval to engage in conversation. "New York State, not the city," the blond said. "We're from Woodstock, Ulster County."
Miles' face lit up. "Woodstock, where that big rock concert was held last summer? Were you there?"
Miss Raven-Haired looked slightly annoyed, as if people had asked this many times before. "Actually, the concert was in Bethel, over fifty miles away. And no, we didn't make it. It put us on the map, though."
"So we figured we can at least make Times Square for New Year's," the blond said, "something I think someone should do at least once, especially if they're from New York." She paused, then: "So what are you guys doing here besides tearing up the ice and plowing into people?"
I deduced from her faint smile that her anger was dissipating. "Well, believe it or not," I said, "we're here for the same reason, to make the scene in Times Square."
They told us their names after we introduced ourselves first. The blond was Lea, her friend, Marie. Like us, they attended college. Lea went to Hofstra, while Maria attended SUNY. Both were juniors. We stood around next to the guard rail, talking about our majors and watching the skaters whiz by. Both said they had skated here before. "And I've always wanted to go inside and sip hot chocolate afterward," Marie said. "Never did that." She peered through the glass of a coffee shop where patrons could snack and watch the skaters. "It doesn't look too crowded."
"Great idea," Lea said. "You guys care to join us?"
Miles and I looked at each other and nodded. "Okay, but it's our treat," I said. "It's the least I can do after crashing into you like that."
I had had just one New Year's date in my life, and a disastrous one at that. It was a blind date set up by a well-meaning friend's girlfriend. Diane was my date's name—not bad looking but she had the personality of a bitter, hen-pecking wife, critical and demanding. Not that we didn't get along, but I drove her home right after having dinner at one of our town's better restaurants, fed up with Diane bashing everything from the food to the service, both of which I found excellent. Needless to say, I watched the ball drop alone.
Technically, what we had at the rink wasn't a New Year's date, though I was beginning to think of it as such. We seemed to mesh well, laughing and joking, discussing everything from The Beatles' rumored breakup to movies we'd seen ("Alice's Restaurant," Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid," Easy Rider"). Feminists would no doubt call something else I was doing chauvinistic—silently rating them numerically on looks. Both earned sevens in my book—all subjective of course, particularly with them because they looked so different: Marie, the olive-skinned raven-haired, dark-eyed, Latin-looking senorita (in fact, she was of Italian and Irish ancestry she told us later) versus Lea, the blond, blue-eyed Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm or Tom Sawyer's Becky Thatcher, two images of her that came to mind. Take your pick, I thought.