CHRIST
IN WINTER: The Irrelevant Memories of An Old Man—PERILOUS PROM [F, 5-22-26]
Yes,
I’ve told this story before, but it’s prom season, and, as I have also said
before, this column no longer makes any pretense of being useful to anyone but
me…
I
think it was Mike who first told me that I was taking Judith to the prom at Ft.
Branch, 20 miles from my home town of Oakland City. It was news to me. I had
never heard of her.
Judith
was the only child in a wealthy family. Her father was a judge. Her parents had
given her a new Chrysler convertible at the start of the school year. That
guaranteed that no Ft. Branch boy would date her, since no Ft. Branch boy had a
car that could compete. So as prom time approached, she was dateless.
Judith’s
mother was a friend of Ann’s mother. Ann was in my high school class. Judith’s
mother told Ann’s mother of the prom date problem. Ann’s mother asked what
Judith was interested in.
“Journalism.
She’s editor of the school newspaper.
“Have
I got a deal for you,” said Ann’s mother. “My daughter is in class with the
editor of our school newspaper. He’s a nice boy.”
That’s
the curse all the mothers always put on me: He’s a nice boy.
So
Ann’s mother and Judith’s mother decided I would take Judith to the prom. The
irony is that I was poorer and further out of my league than any boy in Ft.
Branch. My family didn’t have a car of any kind.
Judith’s
mother told her that she had a prom date with me, a boy she’d never heard of.
Ann’s mother told Ann, and Ann told Mike, and Mike told me.
I
had no way to get to Ft. Branch, to take Judith to the prom, so the mothers
arranged for Mike and Ann to get invitations to that prom, too. How, I have no
idea, but in a small town, the mother of the judge’s daughter can usually get
whatever she wants.
I
had nothing to wear to a prom, so my sister, who had graduated and was working
fulltime, bought me a suit, and a pink and gray tie, which I still have. [You
don’t outgrow ties.] Ann’s mother, of course, knew all about Judith’s dress, so
she bought a corsage that would coordinate with it.
When
the great night came, Mike and Ann drove down the gravel roads to our farm to
pick me up, and I rode to Ft. Branch in the back seat of Mike’s two-door
hardtop Pontiac. Since Ann’s mother had bought the corsage for Judith, it rode in
the front seat beside Ann. When we arrived at Judith’s house, Ann scrunched up
toward the dashboard so that I could push the seat down to get out…forgetting
about the corsage, which got flatly crushed.
It
was a big house, fronted by a high porch with a dim light. I carried the
crushed corsage up the long walk and climbed the creaking steps to the shadowed
front door. I knocked. The door opened. A classy blond girl in a formal stood
there. I spoke one of the best opening lines in the annals of blind prom dates:
“It looks like I’ve come to the right place.”
I
pushed the crushed corsage at her. She looked at it and was speechless. An
older blond appeared over her shoulder, took the corsage away to the kitchen,
where she performed voodoo on it. Judith and I stood there and tried not to
look at each other. “That’s my father,” she said, indicating a man sitting in a
dark corner of the living room, peeling an apple, with a butcher knife, one
long peel sliding off the apple with surgical precision. He didn’t say
anything.
Judith’s
mother returned with the sort-of repaired corsage, and taking no chances that her
daughter might get crushed, too, pinned it on Judith herself. She handed Judith
a boutonniere. Judith tried to slip it through the button-hole of my new lapel.
It wouldn’t go. The mother tried. “It’s not cut,” she said. [What farm boy
knows you have to slit the buttonhole in a new suit yourself?]
“I’ll
take care of him,” her father said, jumping up and advancing on me with the
butcher knife. He grabbed my lapel and began to saw at it, the knife an inch
from my throat. He was really good with that thing. The slit was perfect, and
Judith slipped the flower into it.
I
don’t remember much from that point. I assumed my job was to make the Ft.
Branch boys jealous, since Judith must have gotten such a much better date, because
she had to go out of town to get one, and out-of-town is always better, so I
acted mysterious, which meant I spent the evening telling Judith stories of
editing our school newspaper, while Mike and Ann danced. The only thing I
remember for sure was that I mispronounced the word “intricate,” while explaining
my reasons for eschewing all dances but the “bunny hop.”
I
never saw or heard of Judith again.
It’s
important when looking back on such experiences to find the good in an
otherwise disastrous event. I have done so, and it’s this: I’m sure Judith won the contest among the Sisters
of Perpetual Responsibility for who had the best reason to become a nun.
John
Robert McFarland