**The Roots Is The
Toots- The Music That Got Them Through The Great Depression And World War
II…The Inkspots If I Didn't Care
For Prentice John Markin and Delores Maude Markin (nee
Riley) who lived through it all, survived it all, and never drew a blessed
break…
He spied her or she spied him they never did quite agree on
who did the first peeking but both agreed that their earliest encounter
proved both fruitless and frustrating. Fruitless and frustrating but would
turn out not to be quite the "that was that" and never more of the
first meeting. Let's pick up their story from there...
…Well not quite that was that. The very next Friday night, a
night she had for some reason not volunteered to do refreshment service, she
Agnes, Dorothy, and a couple of other young women from the office pool found
their way to that weekly USO dance. And guess who was there in his dress blues
doing a double-take when she came into the ballroom lobby (she had not been
sure at first that it was a double-take but when he looked her way again a
second later she knew). Of course that look did not make him stop his world,
his pretty young thing he was talking to world. And did not stop him from
taking that pretty young thing out onto the dance floor when that week’s cover
band, Dick Glover and The Rovers, played the upbeat Andrews Sister’s tune Rum and Coca-Cola while they danced. She was glad, mostly glad,
that she had not succumbed to his charms the previous week.
Then the “not quite that was that ” started as a few dances
later he swayed his wiry frame over to her and her crowd to say “hi” and to ask
her for a dance (as “their song, ” or what would become their song, If I Didn’t Care, came on). She said
yes, and so they danced, danced a couple of dances in a row. Then the rules of
the USO dance for hostesses to mix closed in on them and another soldier
requested a dance. Later at intermission he again spoke to her, asked her
once again if he could wait for her at the end of the dance. Again she said no.
Same thing when he asked her for a date. No. He couldn’t figure her out,
couldn’t figure why she seemed to reject him out of hand when he sensed she
liked him. What he did not know, could not know then was that besides her
feeling that he was strictly a love them and leave them guy, that Sheik
designation whatever his story to the contrary told it all, and that she should
not succumb to his charms there was another reason. After mentioning him to her
mother, mentioning that he was from the south, her mother warned her off.
Reason: Tyrant father, tyrant Irish Catholic father (although barely observant)
would raise holy hell, would go crazy if she brought some redneck Protestant
around. And so whatever she felt, they would be doomed before they started.
Still he…
…Yes, still he disturbed her sleep that week, made her a
little cuckoo at work and around the house if you asked anyone within fifty feet
of her. Was made more cuckoo when she talked to that non- observant Irish
Catholic tyrant father about his opinion (theoretically, of course) of
southerners, American southerners, Protestants, Anglo-Saxon Protestants, the
British kind, and Marines (she did not add the love them and leave them kind).
His response was horrific. Yes, he had opinions of all three categories, none
good, and not just none good. He sensed what she was getting at (her mother had
vaguely posed the question to him earlier in the week) and said in no uncertain
terms that he would not, his word, abide, an ignorant, uneducated (this before
she even knew her Marine’s lack of formal education), whiskey-drinking (despite
his rages her father was a tee-totaller having survived a drunken
besotted father), redneck southern Protestant (or northern Protestant for that
matter) ne’er –do-well Marine, or any other military man from that part of the
country in his house. End of conversation,
forever.
Still she thought of him, wondered whether he would be at
the dance that week. Maybe he had shipped out, maybe he was off with some
pretty young thing (although those fierce brown eyes when he spoke to her
should have told her otherwise). In any case she was going to make her case,
despite her father (or who knows maybe because of the old tyrant) and despite
her qualms about his intentions. So come that Friday she prepared herself, put
on her best party dress (which had first served as her graduation dress but
with the war efforts eating up textiles at a prodigious rate serious dresses
were not be had), make herself up special with a little rouge and some ruby red
lipstick and, and, put on nylons, nylons, even more than special dresses not to
be had then. Her best come hither soldier boy look.
And you know that he was there, the Sheik was there that
night all in dress blues, as she walked while Jimmy Mack and the Pack back
again warmed up on Til The End Of Time. She did not know where it would all
lead but when he asked her after they had danced a couple of numbers if maybe
they could go down to Hullsville Beach and talk instead of staying for the
dance she said yes…
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