***The Roots Is The
Toots- The Music That Got Them Through The Great Depression And World War II…
For
Prentice John Markin and Delores Maude Markin (nee Riley) who lived through it
all, survived it all, and never drew a blessed break…
…some
guys, some guys like him, just though they were God’s gift to women. Maybe it
was the wavy black hair and fierce brown eyes in a blue-eyed world, maybe it
was the swaggering wiry figure behind the walk, maybe it was the soft-edged
curlicue wisp of a southern drawl when he spoke, maybe it was the Marine dress
blues set off against the Pacific island-hopping tan earned from the blistering
sun but he had the girls turning their heads as he entered the USO dance that
night. Some of the guys in the barracks, half-kidding, had named him the Sheik
out of envy or out of respect for his full-blown prowess with the women, the
cold yankee women who helped people the
weekly dances. Dances held each Friday night after the week’s work was done at
the Hullsville Naval Depot (and hence the Marine contingent presence).
The
idea of the dance, simplicity itself when one thought about it, was to keep up the morale of those like him,
like the Sheik and his comrades stationed at Hullsville and other local
military installations, who had returned from hard island-hopping battle, those
whose numbers had been called, and those ready to board the troop transports
being built just up the road at the Centerville Shipyard. And that morale was
kept up best, as it has been since man first started fighting his fellow man
for good reasons or bad, by enlisting the aid of all the eligible young women
around the Depot and those who worked in the civilian office buildings across
the road. And that was how the “Sheik” met her, met his match.
Funny
she had noticed him, like every other girl in the room had, when he walked in
from her position behind the refreshment table which she had volunteered to
cover on the sign-up sheet the week before. Then she had been distracted by the
needs of a customer and had dismissed him from her mind as just another “love
them and leave them” Marine looking to cash in on his war hero status among the
man-starved females on the ballroom floor.
And he gave no indication, not so much as a glance, as he slid across
the floor with Agnes, Gladys, Doris, Martha, from work and some other
good-looking girl whom she did not know but who was dressed to the nines, that
he was interested in her.
But
as soon as Jimmy Mack and The Pack, the local cover band performing that night,
finished up the first set after playing I’ll
Get By to close the set and took an intermission break he appeared right
behind her out of the blue. And began without as much as a hello, except to
call out her name, to start what turned out to be his courting while she was
busy serving donuts and coffee to the gathering crowds in front of her. (It was
not until later, much later, that she realized how clever he had been to make
his play at that time and in that way
when she could not abandon her duties and where to leave would require
her to try to go around him. She thought as well that with that look in his
fierce brown eyes she had as much chance of getting by him that night as an
enemy soldier did out on some isolated desolate Pacific atoll.)
She
secretly thrilled to his soft southern drawl as he told her that one of his
dance partners, Agnes, he thought, had told him her name and he had asked
whether she was going with a fellow. No,
and so here he was the Sheik at her beck and call. (That sheik thing had nothing
to do with being a lady’s man, as least that is what he told her then, but was
taken from the name of a group of good old boys that he played music with up
and down the Ohio River before the war who named themselves the Kentucky Shieks
after the fashion down south in the 1930s for groups playing old time country
and mountain music.) So she talked to him, or rather he laid out his case,
while she poured coffee and yessed him to death, until she could hear Jimmy and
the guys warming up for the final set. He asked her if it was alright for him
to wait for her after the dance. She said no. He asked for a date. She said no.
No way, as much as she wanted to leave her family house and get married to get
away from her tyrant father, was she going to allow herself to fall into the
clutches of this good-looking, soft- spoken “love them and leave them” Marine.
And that was that …
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