August 1968
The old man sat in his chair watching the evening news. For the last several days, there was a minor story on a large hurricane, named Doria, traveling up the middle of the Atlantic. Since it was not predicted to make landfall, the news channels were not making their typical dire warnings of "
the apocalypse is upon us
".
Tonight, however, appeared to be different.
They were reporting that a smaller cruise line had offered the services of one of its older ships for a humanitarian effort to bring several hundred children out of a war-torn African nation. The "perfect storm" was occurring just offshore of the Carolina sand islands; the ship's engine had failed, the until then meaningless hurricane had engulfed the vessel and there was nothing the Coast Guard could do to help. The few helicopters they could task to the effort would not be enough for a rescue effort and over the years since the War, Congress had allowed their fleet to diminish and grow old. A reporter was yammering on and on about how the plight of the children was worsening and that they were facing certain doom.
The late teen male sitting on the couch beside the old man's chair was reaching for the TV tuner dial when the old man said, "William, leave it. I wish to see what the next reporter has to say."
With a surly smirk, the young man yelled, "MOM! Gramps is hogging the TV! They are showing 'Rowan & Martin' from last week."
A disembodied female voice came out of the kitchen, "Dad, why don't you take a nap. I'll have dinner ready in about two hours. The rest will do you good. That way, Billy can watch his show."
"I don't need a nap. I WANT to see what is happening with this cruise ship!" the old man yelled in return.
During this short back and forth, Billy had reached out to dial and was turning it to WYFF, the NBC affiliate in Greenville, SC.
"Boy, put the channel back or lose the fucking hand," the old man said.
"MOM! Gramps is cursing again," Billy yelled.
"DAD! You know I don't allow that kind of language," said the woman, bustling out of the kitchen.
By this time, the old man had risen to his feet and fixed a gimlet stare at the young man. "Boy, when I was your age, I had respect for my elders."
"Was that before or after they discovered dirt, old man?" Billy scoffed.
The man's hands had begun to clench into fists and his vision was narrowing when the female entered the living room, saw the situation and began to move the old man along. "Dad," she said, "why do you have to keep picking at Billy? You know he's sensitive."
"Sensitive, my ass," said the man as he was harassed out of the living room and down the hall by his daughter-in-law, "He is a self-centered slug."
"DAD! Billy has issues with authority figures and it's not his fault that the police have it out for him."
They were just entering the old man's bedroom. His daughter-in-law was shepherding him along as if he was an imbecile. "The police do NOT have it out for 'poor Billy'. If the boy would get a job instead of hanging out with that crowd of petty criminals and losers all the time they wouldn't be after him," he said, "And the way you coddle him does him no good service either."
"Dad," she said, "How many times do I need to remind you that you are a guest in our house? I will not let you get away with badmouthing my son!" With that parting shot, she closed the door and left the old man to his thoughts.
On her way back to the kitchen, she detoured long enough to ruffle Billy's hair, give him a hug and say, "You're a good boy, Billy. Don't let that useless old man get you down."
With the 'old man' issue resolved, they both went on about their daily routines.
+++++++
The old man turned away from the closed door. His blood pressure was way up and the bile in his stomach was roiling. He turned on the small TV on top of his dresser just in time to hear the end of an interview with the PAO from Charleston Navy Base. "While the Navy is deeply concerned over what is happening just off our coast, we are in the same boat, sorry for the pun, as the Coast Guard; we simply do not have the active resources available to stand up a rescue mission."
"There you have it, Tom," the reporter said, "Standing here in North Charleston, in this mild rain storm, it is hard to imagine that there is a life or death drama playing out a short distance off our coast. What would be a short drive on land, is an eternity away for those poor children and the adults working to save them from the jaws of war. Back to you, Tom."
The old man opened his closet and yanked a battered footlocker out from under the neatly hanging row of clothes. There IS an asset that can do this, he thought as he opened the footlocker and began to dig through its contents. First, he tossed a well-worn O-2 coat off to the side, followed shortly by a set of equally worn khakis, their metallic gold emblems winking at him from the collars. As he was dressing, he was working out in his head how to dig up his old crew.
+++++++