"Kick it! Kick the ball, Merry!" I called out eagerly to my six year-old daughter on the soccer field. ("It's a Pitch, Daddy!")
Why we parents all yell at our kids during a soccer match is beyond me. None of them listen to any of us. I guess that it is just a coping mechanism so that we can pretend that these games where no one keeps score are entertaining.
Meredith did indeed kick the ball. Expertly. Right to a girl on the other team.
"For crying out loud, Merry! Not her!"
THAT Merry heard. She turned to me and scolded me at the top of her voice, "She's my friend, Daddy!"
Sure enough, the friend kicked the ball right back to Merry. Merry went to kick the ball back again, but this kick was more like her usual skill level and the ball careened off toward the rest of the players. Every kid on the field, including one goalie, chased after it.
Beside me, my friend Peter was laughing hard. He clapped me on the back, looked at me, then shook his head and laughed again. Peter's daughter was on Merry's team also. The mass of girls converged on the ball and it popped free randomly, rolling off toward the other team's goal, the one whose goalie had left to chase after the ball with her buddies.
Peter's daughter Felicity popped out of the mass of little girls first, chasing the ball as it rolled toward the goal. Now it was Peter's turn to scream head off. "Run, Felicity! Run!" She caught up to the ball as it slowed before the net, other girls chasing madly behind her. "Shoot it! Shoot it now!" screamed Peter.
It was Felicity's turn to grow ears. She turned and looked for Peter in the crowd. "What do you say, Pop?"
The rest of the mass of muddy little girls surged around the ball and play went on.
I looked at Peter with a shit-eating grin. We raised our cans of Coke and clicked them together. The game continued interminably.
Directly in front of us stood our wives, right at the spectator's line, cheering everything good-naturedly. Both were much more earnest and focused on this titanic athletic contest than we were. Meanwhile, with our daughter's moments in the spotlight with the ball fading into the distant past of three minutes ago, Peter and I both got bored again.
Peter cleared his throat and took two steps backward. I raised an eyebrow but slid back beside him. "What don't you want the women to hear?" I asked curiously.
"Nothing," said Peter casually. "I just think the vista is better from here," he added with a sweeping gesture of the field that ended with an indication of the women.
"I get your point," I said calmly, my eyes resting on my wife's shapely, jeans-clad backside. Of course, it was hard not to let my eyes slide to the right and take in Peter's wife's smaller but equally enticing tush. We clinked Cokes again wordlessly, and I reflected that Peter had just as good a view of my lady's ass as I had of his.
C'est la vie. We were lucky men.
"So, I was thinking," said Peter. "Why don't you and Sara come over for dinner Friday at our place? Could you get a sitter?"
"That would be great," I replied. It would be more than great, actually. Erika and I had just moved to town a few months ago, and aside from her parents, we didn't know many people. In our early thirties, we were discovering it was harder to make new friends than when we were younger. I went on, "I don't think we have plans, and it would be nice to actually get to know you guys and have a conversation without being interrupted constantly by watching the hellions run around like crazy people."
"Let's run it by the actual decision makers," said Peter and we stepped back up behind our wives. Peter wrapped his arms around Sara and I rested my hands on Erika's sleek shoulders. "Ladies," asked Peter, "I was hoping Erika and George could have dinner at our place Friday. How about it?
Erika asked, "Should we bring Merry?"
"I thought we'd fob Felicity off on Ma for the night," replied Peter. "Could you get a sitter on this late notice?"
Erika laughed. "Mom and Dad are always on about having Merry stay over. If George and I play our cards tight, they might take her for the whole weekend."
"Oooh!" teased Sara. "George and Erika alone for the weekend. Gonna do some hot, hot shopping at COSTCO?"
"Maybe, if we get REAL wild," snickered Erika, "George will take me to Target, too!"
"So we are on for Friday? 7:00?" said Peter firmly.
It was a date.
Friday afternoon, Peter called my cell. "Hey George! I just wanted to say, we will probably pretty much hang out in the back yard tonight, and with as hot as it it, you and Erika should dress casually. Sara and I will just be in shorts and t-shirts."
"Thanks," I replied. "I'd been dreading the inevitable conversation where Erika demands that I tell her what was appropriate to wear. Like I'm supposed to know any better than her when we accept an invitation!"
"We have that same convo, man. All the damned time. That's why I called. Just trying to help a buddy out!" We laughed and hung up.
I dropped off Merry at her grandparents' early on Friday. We tended to avoid having Erika do the drop off because all the hugs, the 'I'll miss you's, and the 'just one more story's took forever. And that was just from Erika's mom. Merry was pretty clingy with her Erika as well.