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The Good Stuff
Short Story
Meeting Kathy
by Patrick Coyle
Length: 1,460 words

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Meeting Kathy

Kathy’s dad is with us from Saskatchewan, Canada. Bill is 84 and we are lucky he can still visit us, as he has most years since we’ve been married. We lost Betty, Kathy’s mom, over ten years ago.

We drove to the Piatti Locali restaurant in Danville in two vehicles - not enough seat belts for all of us in one. Our daughter, Liz, drove our son, Scott, and his girlfriend, Sylvia, in one car. I drove Bill and Kathy. It is her birthday.

I remember when we met. It was the 4th of July 1975. I’d come into Belize City from the ranch.

I’d been in Belize since October 1974, when I arrived with my family, Jay and Jeannie, my sister Erin, and brothers Mike and Matt. I’d agreed to help them relocate to Gold Button Ranch to work on Roy Carver’s 20,000 land development project.

My family had rented a house in Belize City on A Street. Jeannie set up housekeeping there so we had a place in the city.

Jeannie had met a number of people in the city including Jack and Eve Garden. Jack was a retired RAF pilot and ran the USDA certified meat-packing plant, an important asset to market beef production from the ranch.

Jeannie told me, “Pat, when I was at the Gardens, I met a really delightful, young woman - Kathy Scott. She is a Canadian and works on the Canadian Aid project to bring water and sewerage systems to Belize City. I think you’d like her.”

I’d already seen Kathy’s photo on the cover of “Belize Magazine”. She was featured in a story about the project and her role as the chief administrative officer. She was twenty-three, very accomplished and professional, and extremely attractive. I can see her face: short brown hair, bright eyes, glasses, and pretty smile with a hint of mischief. I was interested in her.

I’d come into Belize City for the 4th of July. It was about 90 miles by dirt roads from the ranch between San Felipe and August Pine Ridge, through the villages to Orange Walk Town and then down the Northern Highway to Belize City. When we first got there, it was a 3-4 hour bone-jarring ride that almost always broke something on your vehicle.

Radio Belize, “the voice of the Caribbean Basin”, had been advertising for days, “... Come on in to the party mon, it ‘gwin be the 4th of July and the Bellevue Hotel and Bar ‘gwin have one big dance and celebration … Not just for the Americans, it d’ be fo all de wan a party ...”

Jack Garden gave me a ride from the A street house to the Belle-Vue. Jack’s face was dark, florid, almost purplish. He was still handsome – an ex-fighter pilot, with a confident assured manner. We stopped at an intersection - no breeze, sticky and humid, the rank, sweet smell of scotch filling the space, as he metabolized it out through every pore of his body, as he had every day for years.

Jack drove the yellow Morris Mini-Moke – a jeep-like, little, open-air vehicle with canvas roof and roll-up side curtains - across Belize City, over the turn bridge across the river and parked by the sea wall facing the harbor. It was still hot and humid, but there was a stiff breeze coming in off the water.

Jack liked to say, “You can fall in love with a rich woman just as easy as a poor one.” As near as I could tell, his wife Eve was not rich. She liked to read the Ouija board at her parties.

I walked into the Bellevue and paused in the lobby entrance area, leaning against the reception counter.

The music was blaring – rock, reggae, country and western, with a Belize local take on all of them. The bar and dance floor were crowded with people for the party.

The British had a 600-person garrison in Belize, out by the International Airport, with Harrier jump jets to deter Guatemala’s territorial claim to Belize. Lots of RAF guys were on the dance floor. The Harrier pilots were just as you’d expect: young, brash, extremely confident guys.

I looked past the brightly lit lobby, into the dance floor. They had cleared the tables from the dining room to make room for the dancing. It was packed. I see young Belizean guys leaning against the far wall; some were hotel staff, others just checking out the scene.

I spotted Kathy Scott. She was in an animated conversation with a dark-haired, bearded man and a woman, with sandy-blond hair. They were gesturing, with lots of facial expressions and body language between them.

“All right. I’m going to finally meet her. I’ll wait 'till there is a chance, then ask her to dance”

Suddenly she turns from them and is walking toward me. I am watching to see where she goes. She keeps walking right up to me.

“Hi, do you want to dance?” she asked.

I’m startled, “Sure.”

We walked out onto the dance floor and started dancing.

“I’m Pat Coyle. I know you’re Kathy Scott. I recognized you from your photo on the cover of Belize Magazine. I was going to ask you to dance as soon as I got a chance.”

She laughed, “ My friends, Marten Meadows and Christine Dixon, agreed we would all stick together so I wouldn’t have to face the Harrier pilots hitting on me. Then Christine said she was going to go dance with Marten, I needed to do something. I saw you and thought you look safe, wholesome, like someone from a Methodist Church camp, so I said 'go ahead. I’ll go ask that guy to dance'."

We talked. I said, “My mother said she’d met you and thought I’d like you.”

Kathy said, “ Jeannie is great, it is really nice to be able to talk to her.”

We talked and danced.

When the party was winding down, she said, “ I’ve got my car. I can drive you home.”

Marten and Christine had gone their own ways so this worked fine. We walked out of the Bellevue. The water lapped against the sea wall. The breeze came in across the harbor, cooler now. The music trailed away into the Bellevue as we walked to her car.

We talked as we drove back across the turn bridge and over to the A Street house. It was late.

I said, “ Kathy, I am so glad I met you tonight. I’ve known of you for some time and really wanted to meet you. I want to see you again. I’ll call you.”

“Good night, Pat. I’m glad I asked you to dance. Do call me.”

I did, again and again. We saw each other more and more, although when I ask her about the transitional details, she says she doesn’t recall.

Later on, Kathy considered buying a VW Thing, so she could get up to the ranch more often.

I said, “Wait, if you are thinking of that, don’t. That road will just tear it up. Let’s partner on an airplane.”

We bought a used Cessna-172, an older one, the N number was N-2871U. A high-wing, 4 seater, it cruised at 120 mph, with a range of about 4 hours with reserve. Kathy had Lois Young, an attorney in Belize City, draw up papers so it was clear in the event anything happened to us, that it didn’t just go to my brother.

It changed our love life dramatically. With the plane, the trip from the ranch to Belize City was 15-20 minutes. I could stay over and go up, in the morning, to work.

We were in New Orleans, on one of our R&R breaks, sitting in a little room in the French Quarter, overlooking a garden courtyard.

“Kathy,“ I said, “ All the people in our lives are going to be a lot more comfortable if we are married. I know I have talked about the issues I have from having been married before, but that just doesn’t matter. I love you and I want to be with you. Marry me.“

I don’t recall just what you said, but the bottom line was yes. We called your folks to let them know.

We flew the plane to Canada from Belize to be married in January of 1977. Flying back to Belize, the paint fell off.

We stayed almost another year, leaving Belize in December of 1977. We re-entered in Phoenix, back in the USA, then to Livermore in 1980.

Now a family with children grown into young adults, we are looking at retirement.

I called her. I did, again and again. I do now. I will forever. I love you Kathy.
 

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