NOTE TO OUR READERS: This has taken a long time to produce because we took time out to get married β yes to each other! We're concluding our story with this chapter. We'll stay in touch with several of you who have contacted us via email. But mostly Lissia and I are going to get 'caught up on our lives together'. We hope this closing chapter brings everything into focus for you and that you share in our joy.
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"How's the cystitis baby?"
She smiled, "It's almost gone, thank you for asking. You make me happy Steven darling."
"Are you still taking the antibiotic?" I was hovering again.
"I am - just like Dr. Andres told me to," she winked.
"Thank you baby I want you to be healthy and happy..."
She tightened her hold on me, "Oh Steven my life is so different because of us; I don't know what adjectives I can use to talk about how I feel β you said you never expected us β I surely didn't; our families didn't either. I don't know what the future holds for us but baby I'm in our relationship for the long haul..."
I kissed her slowly beginning with her forehead and her nose...I kissed every soft spot on her beautiful face and finally her sweet lips. A few weeks back I'd never even shaken hands with a black woman and now I was lost in love with the most beautiful woman I'd ever known or would ever love...she happened to be black. Our relationship had traveled so far past lust that it was a speck in the rear view mirror of our shared personal relationship journey. Our breathing began to match breath for breath and it wasn't long before we were asleep in one another's arms. There is no feeling like falling asleep with the love of your life; feeling her tender touch and soft caress; the lingering fragrance of one another mingled with the sweetness of love.
We awoke to one another after a while, not caring the hour, just filled with a satisfied joy that caresses lovers into forever. We talked about what would happen on Monday when I had to report to school for the ride to Hobby Field. We were both a bit melancholy about my leaving but we knew I had to do this. My greatest heartache was making sure that she and my parents stayed connected while I was away. Mom and Dad would drive over to Lissia's house Monday and the four of us would go to the ROTC area so I could board the bus for Hobby Field. We would have to be careful at school β we discussed our goodbye kiss β think about the stupidity of having to plan your goodbye kiss.
"Steven?"
"Yes baby?"
"I need us to talk about something that has been rolling around in my brain ever since your interview for graduate studies and the dual degree," she admitted.
I sat up and rearranged the pillows so we could lean on them against the headboard, "What's troubling you," I asked her as I interlaced our fingers and kissed her lips. I watched her eyes carefully.
"Dr. Kaplan was trying to make you fold and run when he said to you, 'That you quoted Mill precisely β I think it was and he asked, aren't you worried that if you go to war you'll be killed or maimed β and why do that when there's so much work to do here to right so many social wrongs.' Do you remember what you answered him?"
I nodded, "I do. I told Dr. Kaplan that our nation has allies that one of those allies is the government of South Vietnam, whom we promised to help; that there are young men and women in South Vietnam that the Bolsheviks don't want to be successful or to be productive, to learn at the university level, professors like you that they'll murder - doctors, lawyers and religious leaders whose lives are in danger while we chatted idly among ourselves. I told him that his work is here fixing the societal wrongs and that my work is preserving liberty wherever it is. Then he said something like 'They haven't known liberty...' And I told him that was the greatest reason that they should and challenged him to think about someone other than himself. He just doesn't understand that it sometimes it takes our blood to dissolve and destroy tyranny. It goes back to Mill again."
Lissia smiled, "Then you recall the events you cited about original Constitutional Convention when Thomas Jefferson argued with John Adams telling him, "That the tree of liberty must be refreshed with the blood of tyrants and patriots."
"I remember it well β I thought I'd shot myself in the foot. Why do you ask?" I pushed her.
"Do you think we should be fighting wars in other lands when we aren't threatened directly?" She was worried.
"If I make a promise to you that I will help you if you get into trouble no matter what would you expect me to keep that promise?" I asked her.
"You would without question...but this is a war," she was anxious.
"I would to honor my word to you and yes it's a war β freedom can only be gained with shared sacrifice β even if it means my life..." the words were chilling β her expression was frozen as her eyes searched mine trying to understand how I arrived at that conclusion.