Chapter 13. George and Martha
Martha was at her desk that late June afternoon. She was alone at the school district office since her young assistants James and Jay were involved in a wedding that weekend, the first was a nephew and an usher and the other was the groom. For a change she had escaped having a major role in the proceedings. She had a curriculum project to complete.
Martha sensed that someone was at her office door just looking at her. She lifted her head and caught her breath.
She said, "Hello George."
"Hello Martha," he said.
More than thirty years disappeared between them. Their minds went back to when they were inseparable friends. To the time they were lovers. They had lost their virginity to each other.
She had promised him she would wait until he returned from the war. She had not.
George graduated from the university a semester before Martha and was immediately drafted into the army. While he was at officer candidate school Martha brooded. When George finished the training they spent their last weekend together in a hotel. She promised to wait for him.
Before Martha graduated from the university she allowed another guy to sweep her off her feet. His name was Harvey and he was the life of the party. She married him even though her father and sisters had grave reservations about him. She did not have a real choice by then, she was pregnant.
She did write George and told him as honestly as she could about Harvey. He wrote back wishing her well.
She never saw him after he returned from the war and never heard from him directly, but the very first flowers each of her daughters received were on the day they were born and they were from him. He had signed them "Your friend George." He was still in Asia when her first two daughters were born so Martha was curious about the logistics but her life had rapidly careened into crisis-to-crisis mode so she gave it little thought.
Martha had frantically tried to find him when her youngest daughter Carly's flowers were delivered to her. Her marriage to Harvey had ended almost exactly nine months before and she wanted George back in her life. But no one knew where he was, not even the local florist. They had all been phone orders.
The flowers for the girls continued through their eighteenth birthdays. On those occasions the girls got eighteen pink roses.
Martha began to get roses on her own birthdays after her marriage ended. They were signed "Your friend George." Martha was very irritated by the fact that George knew everything going on in her life yet she knew nothing about his. She did not know if he was a hundred miles away or ten thousand miles away.
Now, there he was standing at her office doorway, still slim although he had added the fifteen pounds he had always needed to. His hair was sprinkled with gray. He still had the erect bearing; he still flashed that endearing shy smile.
"I was hoping you would be free for lunch," he said.
"Absolutely," she said and stood as she picked up her purse.
As they neared the outer doors of the school Martha dropped her purse and flew into his arms and gave him a crushing embrace. She cried. He held her in his arms until her sobs ebbed. Martha did not hear his sigh of relief as he held her.
"I'm sorry," Martha said. "As you see I am still prone to sudden emotional outbursts."
George said, "I did enjoy that one."
He took her to the resorts restaurant and he enjoyed seeing Martha receive kisses from fellow diners, waitresses, and cooks. He also saw that a few did a double take then smiled widely after Martha said, "This is George," without further explanation.
They were just finishing their appetizers when Martha's sisters Wendy and Mo rushed in. They each gave George big kisses and ferocious hugs.
Mo was never shy about digging for information and for once Martha was glad for that characteristic. Under Mo's intense interrogation she learned that George had been widowed for two years. His son worked for a major corporation in Chicago and his daughter had married just two weeks before and moved to Shreveport with her husband, an Air Force captain.
About himself George said that he had been part of an investment firm that dissolved when the face of the firm died. He considered himself to be retired.
When Mo asked where he lived he said, "I have been living in The City since I returned from the war but I just put my house up for sale so I don't know where I am going to live next."
Wendy saw the expression on her sister's face and immediately decided it was time to leave them alone. She and Mo kissed both and left as abruptly as they had entered.
Martha had done her best to keep a pleasant face all through their conversation but she knew that Wendy had read every emotion that touched her. The sadness at hearing he was a widower, the relief that he had lived a happy life were likely obvious enough for even Mo to see them. But Wendy had also seen the flash of hopefulness that came with his alleged homelessness.
Martha was concentrating so hard on keeping an even keel that she did not notice that Wendy had not taken part in the interrogation of George.
Before their lunch was over each of her daughters called Martha and asked to speak to George. The each told him they loved him, thanked him for their flowers and made him promise that he would not disappear until they had a chance to kiss him. Although each of them had learned about him from their mother and their aunts none of them had ever met him.
Martha's oldest daughter Rhonda told George that her Aunts Wendy and Mo had been ragging her mother for thirty years about picking the wrong guy. She told him that her mother had conceded that her sisters were correct. That she should have waited for him. She was in effect asking George to forgive her mother.
Martha did not hear that of course and all she heard George say to Rhonda that was not a problem and congratulate her on her landslide victory in the mayoral race.
Martha was truly at a loss for words that afternoon. She wanted to ask him to consider Felicity as his new home, to escort her to the wedding rehearsal dinner the next day, To give her another chance.
She knew he should hate her. Martha was pretty sure he didn't but she knew he had a good reason to hate her.
Martha described her recent life and her joy at having all four daughters' back home. She told him about being coerced into being part of the town council and drafted as school superintendent but somehow she felt he knew all of that.
She did commit a small error as she valiantly rambled on, she let it slip that he still had the most beautiful eyes she had ever seen.