We were sitting with my parents on the fancy white chairs in the Lobby Atrium of
the Norwegian Cruise Line’s Breakaway with two thousand other people, most of
whom had been refilling their rum and ginger beers since 9:30 that morning.
The
twins were at night activity.
The
cruise director, Alvin from the Philipines, was laughing into the mic at his
own question, which he did a lot.
He was choosing couples for the Newlywed/Not
so Newlywed Game. The giant Jumbotron behind him glittered all the way up to
the next deck—packed with more drinkers looking down at the rest of us.
"So—who
is the longest married couple on the ship?”
There
was a noise from some folks on the other side of the lobby. “Fify years! Fifty
years!” The couple was cruising for their Anniversary.
I
don’t know what came over me, but I wasn’t about to let my parents be dissed by
some pisher parvenus who’d only been married fifty years.
“Fifty
SEVEN!” I screamed, jumping up and down, defensively.
“Fifty
SEVEN Fifty SEVEN!” My husband, Sruli, echoed, enthusiastically jabbing at the
air over my parents’ head. “Right here! Right here!”
Naturally,
Alvin noticed. Then he noticed my dad’s cane.
“Fifty
SEVEN! Congratulations! But you can take a pass if you want.”
A
pass? A pass?
My
parents had taken us on this cruise because since we moved to Maine, we don’t
get to see them for long chunks of time, and the twins are growing up and have
just hit that not-quite-as-annoying-to-older-people-anymore age.
When
the cruise idea was first bandied about, my mother had said, “How about next spring?”
My father had said, “How about soon?”
Which,
of course, scared me.
My
father turned 80 this year and it’s sobering to see this force of
intellectualism, musicianship and discipline morph into a slow, benign and very
easily tired man, just because of stupid age. And Hydrocelphalus.
So,
no pass. No pass. How about soon? How about NOW?
And, as the crowd cheered, my mother, my father and his cane rose and made their way
to the stage.
I remember my father shooting me a look right before he got up. It
said, “Wow, Lisa, thanks for volunteering us because this is going to be so
much fun!” I’m sure that’s what it said.
They
were Couple Number Three. Couples One and Two were easy to find. Number One had
been married only 2 days before. “Do they look happy to you?” I nudged Sruli.
“Resigned,” he said.
Couple
Number Two was a riot. She was black and demonstrative, he was white and
silent. They earned a place in the crowd’s heart because of their passionate
kissing when they were chosen. They’d been married four years.
The
Jumbotron now featured my beautiful mother, 100 feet high in her drapey,
sparkly cruisewear, my father in his new black sweater and pants with, of
course, the white sneakers.
My
face was frozen in the shape it makes when you try to eat a hamburger that is
too big for your mouth. Sruli’s jaw was stuck on gape, too—as were his eyes,
and there were wrinkles of disbelief way up on his forehead.
The
three wives were escorted out of earshot first and the questions started
coming.
“Where did you go on your first date and how much did you spend?”
Ok,
I knew this. They had gone to see the movie Operation Petticoat, and then out
for ice cream. Chocolate for my mother, vanilla for my father.
It
was a blind date, and my mother met him when she opened the door of her
parent’s house in Philadelphia, 18 years old, dressed in a 1960’s frock and
heels.
She
took one look at my five-foot-seven father, kicked her heels off under the
chair and said, “I’ll get my shoes and be right down.”
By the second date, they
knew. And the second date was the next night.
My
father got it wrong. He said they went to a restaurant in New Jersey and he
spent about 50 dollars. When my mother came back and said “Operation Petticoat”
and the crowd groaned, she considered my father’s answer.
“That
was our third date, Babe,” she said to him and to everyone else. She turned to
Alvin. “Hawaiian Cottage—it was a swanky supper club-- with an orchestra.” Then
she explained to Alvin that 50 dollars in those days was different than now.
“What,
like 5000 dollars?” he laughed, respectfully.
Luckily
for 57 Years, Couples One and Two got it wrong, too. In fact, I don’t think
Couple Number One got any questions right. I guess Husband Number One was
resigned to a long cold night in the brig.
Next
question: “Who from your wife’s family would you least likely to be stuck on a
desert island with?”
Easy.
“My wife’s brother,” my father said.
“Why?”
Alvin was no Julie from The Love Boat. He wanted dish, he wanted dirt.
“Why
your wife’s brother?”
And
then, my father, my PhD in physics, professor of Mathematics, author of books,
composer of symphonies, speaker of 6 or 7 languages, High Holiday Cantor,
leader of a Gemorah shiur for forty years father said, in front of 2000 people:
“Because he’s an asshole.”
The
place erupted. Ha Ha HA! My mouth could not close. I looked over at Sruli. His
mouth couldn’t close. This could not be happening. My father had never said
that word in his entire life.
Alvin
was ebullient.
They
got that question right—Ding Ding Ding!!
The
next questions compared a male anatomical part to a limousine or a mini-cooper
and the couple’s love life to either Thanksgiving—grateful for what you get—or
Memorial Day—commemorating the dead.
But
the final question was the bomb.
The
men had gone out, the women had answered, and now the men were back.
It
was the question that you expect in the Newlywed Game, the one where Bob
Eubanks leers at the contestants, his perfectly polished teeth poised like
fangs.
“Where
was the weirdest place you ever made whoopee?”
And
that’s when I realized that maybe this wasn’t such a good idea.
I
mean, here we are in front of thousands of people. It’s our first night on the
ship and now everyone’s gonna know. Everyone WANTS to know.
Sruli
didn’t want to know. And I certainly didn’t want to know.
My
mother had tried to be decorous with her answer. “Oh, you know,” she said, not
looking at the audience, “in bed, at home.”
“That’s
not weird,” complained Alvin. “Come on!”
“No,
no, in bed, at home,” she didn’t say anything more.
But
now was my father’s turn.
He
didn’t hesitate. “On a train.”
AYYYYYYYYY! The crowd started to hoot and holler: A
train a train! A TRAIN!
Yeeesh—oy—my
parents!
“Reeeeeeeeeta!”
Alvin stretched out my mother’s name in complete delight. “You didn’t TELL us!”
“What
train?”
“From
New York to Miami,” my father said, matter of factly. On the Jumbotron. In front of 2000 people.
Ding
Ding Ding! They won, anyway.
“Fifty
SEVEN YEARS!” Alvin kept laughing into his mic. “What’s it like to be married
fifty-SEVEN years?”
They
won a couple bottles of champagne, Championship T-shirts and other tchotchkes
from the gift shop on Deck 7.
And
all the rest of the week, as we cruised to the Bahamas and back, my parents
were recognized on every deck, in every buffet, in every restaurant, at every
slot machine, and in every elevator.
“Hey—aren’t
you the Newlywed Couple of 57 years?” and then, to me, “Wow you don’t hear that
any more!”
Wow,
you really don’t.
But
I guess I wanted to make a moment, a big moment for my parents.
Winning the Newlywed Game will be a fun story my parents will be able to
tell their friends, the other once-forceful and accomplished friends, now with
long-worded ailments of their own– who won’t need to be told what it’s like to
be married 57 years, because they are, too.
My
parents are good sports.
You
have to be, to be married 57 years.
I wonder what it’s like to be married 57
years?
I
look over at Sruli and I think—we’ll never know.
We
started too late—we’ll never make it.
We’ll
never even get the chance to get the answers wrong.
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