“Wow,” I said out loud, kind of
thinking saying wow is sort of dorkish, “I’ve never gotten into a fistfight
over Star Wars before,” at once realizing that the rest of the statement made
it all a moot point.
She looked at me and patted me on
the head. It hurt a little. Not my pride. No, my head. It’s where the guy who
insisted on telling me that “No, Return of the Jedi, was never actually called
Revenge of the Jedi” had hit me on the noggin with his chair. It bled a lot.
But in the end, he bled more. And he was wrong.
Thankfully, no one had a
smartphone. It would have kept the whole thing from happening. It also would
have kept me from meeting Rose.
She’d been sitting off in the distance
while I was eating my pastrami sandwich. I’d driven 113 miles for this
sandwich, so I was going to enjoy it. And while I was, indeed enjoying it, I noticed
Rose sitting by herself in the booth next to the jukebox. She had long red
hair, curly red hair, and deep blue eyes. She was wearing a Hunter S. Thompson
t-shirt and a pair of oddly orange plaid shorts. I actually think I have a pair
very similar to them. So, I decided to go up to her and talk about those orange
plaid shirts.
It wasn’t normal for me to go up
to strangers. Especially women. Except on the job. There, I talked to just
about anyone. Even if in “real” life I’d never have the guts to do so. I’ve
always thought that somewhere in my mind that’s why I became a journalist.
Because it forced me to talk to people, and I wasn’t going to do it any other
way. Unless they came up and talked to me. And how often does that happen to a
guy like me? Not very often, I’ll settle on.
I finished my sandwich a little
quicker than I would have liked, but I had a new goal. It was now I drove 113
miles for a chance to talk to this redheaded beauty. She couldn’t have been
sent here by anyone other than God. Well, by fate, at least since I don’t
really believe in God so much.
I took my final swig of lemonade –
don’t drink carbonated sodas anymore – and walked up to her. I stood in front
of her and stalled. My mind raced about. “This is not what you want to be
doing,” I thought to myself. “She’s going to freak out. You’re some random dude
with a shaved head and a long-ass goatee standing and staring at her.”
“Yes, you would freak me out if
you did that,” she suddenly said without looking up from her book – “The
complete history of Star Wars”.
“Did I say that out loud?” I asked.
“Yep, you sure did,” she said,
putting her straw to her lips and sucking up a swig of Diet Coke. I’d noticed
earlier what she was drinking when she got a refill.
“Whoops. Well, now you know why I don’t
talk to strangers.”
“Did you just say that to the beat
of Rick Springfield?” she asked.
“I don’t think so, but I did hear
that in my head as I was saying it.”
“So did I,” she laughed. Good sign
I thought. And I waited a second to make sure it was just a thought, not an
utterance.
“May I sit down?” I asked.
“Only if you tell me exactly what
you were originally planning on saying to me when you so awkwardly approached
me,” she countered, taking another swig of Diet Coke, this time staring me down
as she did.
“Well, I was sitting over there,” I
pointed to the table I was at.
“And you were wolfing down that
pastrami sandwich …” she said spinning her hands in the air as if to tell me to
speed it up a bit. Kind of like Peyton Manning does when he’s trying to run
through plays in the no-huddle.
“And I was wolfing down a
fantastic pastrami sandwich that I drove 113 miles one-way to have, when I
noticed your shorts. Well, I noticed you first, and then your shorts…”
“Just the shorts?” she interrupted
coyly.
“Well, and your hair and eyes.”
“Nothing else?”
“And the Hunter S. Thompson shirt.”
“Nothing else?”
“Um, and you were drinking Diet
Coke.”
“Nothing else?”
“No, that’s about it.”
“Continue then…” with the same
waving arm motion.
“So, I thought, ‘Damn, I love
those shorts. I have a pair just like them. This is a sign to at least go up to
her…’”
“And make a bloody fool out of
myself.”
“Yes, and make a bloody fool out
of myself. And may I say, I love that you use bloody.”
“Why thank you,” you may sit down
now.
We laughed and joked for another
five minutes when Return/Revenge guy walked up.
“Hey Rose,” he said. “What are you
doing with that guy?”
“Having some nice conversation,
Charlie, that’s what I’m doing,” she replied angrily.
“I see,” he said, sizing me up.
Charlie was about 5-foot-9 and weighed in at 225-230 pounds. None of it was
muscle.
I looked at Rose, she looked back.
Not showing her cards, I thought.
“You guys know each other well?” I
asked.
“She’s my step sister,” Charlie
said. I felt better. I looked at Rose for confirmation. I got none.
“Why are you talking to this
clown,” he said, motioning at me. Obviously, this was not a brother-sister
conversation.
“Because he’s sweet and charming
and handsome. So, everything you aren’t,” she said. “Plus, he knows more about
Star Wars than anyone I’ve ever met.”
I was a little shocked by that
comment. We hadn’t mentioned a word of Star Wars in our talks, at least that I
could remember. I hadn’t even mentioned the book she was reading. I looked at
Charlie, and it dawned on me. He was dressed up like Lando Calrissian, blue
shirt and all.
“No shit?” he said looking at me,
then her, then me again.
“Yep,” she said. “I think you two
should do a quiz off!”
I looked at her with desperate
eyes. I knew a lot about Star Wars, but I didn’t know that much. Probably not
as much as someone who dressed up like a pretty minor character in a popular
eatery near the college.
“You’re on!” Charlie said,
plopping down in the seat next to Rose. “And the loser has to eat whatever the
winner wants out of her shoes!”
I found that a pretty odd request.
I found Rose’s reaction to it, even more odd.
“Yes! Yes! Yes!” she screamed,
taking off her shoe – a green Adidas running shoe that had seen better days.
She finally looked at me and
winked.
“May the best man win,” she said.
Soon we were reeling off questions
to each other. Each of us started off with what we thought were softball
questions, and we were both right. The answers being Ewok and 1138. But the
questions instantly got harder.
After 25 minutes, we’d both stayed
perfect. That’s when I started to get bored. I wanted to talk to Rose, not some
guy. And I let an easy one slide. “What was the original name of ‘Return of the
Jedi?’” I asked.
Charlie snickered. “You think you
can trick me?” he said. “Of course not! They never changed the name.”
“Ha!” I said. “It was Revenge of
the Jedi. They even made posters that said it, sent them out, and had to recall
them at the last minute.”
“Bull shit!” Charlie yelled.
“Nope. You lose jack,” I said,
looking at Rose’s shoe.
Then a punch. It hit me square in
the ear. It didn’t hurt as much as Brad Pitt made it seem like in “Fight Club.”
But it did startle me. Enough to fall out of my chair. I got back up and threw
a punch back, right into Charlie’s nose. It started to bleed. He lunged for me,
but missed as I stepped aside. He grabbed a chair and leveled it right on my
head. I fell in a heap. Blood everywhere.
I got up, staggering and kicked
the fucker right in the balls. He fell. I kicked his face. He bled some more. I
turned about and grabbed Rose’s shoe.
“Let’s get out of here,” I said,
breathing heavily.
“Second best idea you’ve had all
day,” she said.
“And what was the first?”
“The urge to eat Pastrami,” she
said.
I smiled and felt my teeth. One
was chipped, I could feel it. I hadn’t chipped a tooth since I was in college.
And that time I bit down on a spoon. Yep, the wild life.
We walked outside just in time to
avoid the cops. A mall security guy had called them. Told them to look for a “Keifer
Sutherland looking guy” and “a white Lando Calrissian.” The cops, obviously,
weren’t in any hurry to arrive on this scene, so we walked right by them.
Ten minutes later, we were at a
Tasty Freeze enjoying some more conversation and a couple of sundaes. I’d
completely forgotten I had to be at work later that night.
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