But before you say “dames what can you do with them,
or without them” like all of Jake’s corner boys whom he hung around with in
front of Jimmy Jake’s Diner (run by Jacques Jean LeBlanc who had enough sense to
anglo-up the names of his establishments, that one on Atlantic Avenue for the
touristas and blue-haired lady luncheon specials and the one on Main Street
that catered to the younger set, and that had a be-bop bop jukebox with every
possible tune for the music hungry young to deposit their three for a quarter
selections in) said every time they
heard the latest installment of the Marnie leading Jake by the nose saga hear
her side. Then, perhaps, you will not worry so much about the how and whys of
Jake’s breathing.
Marnie, for all the world to know, for all the
important world to know in 1958 in Olde Saco, Maine, and that meant her
friends, her friends known since high school if not before now mainly working alongside
of her in the front offices of the MacAdams Textile Mills which drove the town’s
economy, her girls, whom she hung around on Friday and Saturday nights in front
of, guess, Jimmy Jake’s Diner (the one on Main Street, naturally) , had been
minding her own business when one Jake LeFleur came swooping down on her a few
months before. And she would swear on a stack of seven, hell, seventy sealed
bibles (as all her “corner girls” would attest to after they had heard the latest
installment of the Jake leading Marnie by the nose saga) that she had no
intention of finding herself riding in Jake’s ’55 two-toned souped-up Chevy
after a few minutes of Jake smooth talk. But she did, although she would also
swear, at least for public consumption, that she had a problem breathing when
she found herself in that position (or later in more intimate positions, as she
would slyly allude to when describing her latest date with Jake.)
But at some point Jake, or maybe Marnie, it was
never clear discovered two things, one, that Jake was crazier about Marnie that
she was about him, and, two, more importantly , Marnie was taking more than a
few peeks at a new boy in town, Bernie Albert, who if one could believe this,
had neither a car, hot or otherwise, nor had the least inclination to hang
around Jimmy Jake’s Diner because he was crazy for the sea, and crazy for
writing stuff about the sea once he
found the best spots over at Olde Saco Beach (naturally including the exclusive
lovers’ lane hot spot at the Seal Rock
end). Bernie came in like a breath of fresh air and before long one did not see
Marnie Capet riding, front seat riding, in any funny old ’55 Chevy. She was
breathing the sea air down at the beach after walking there with Bernie. She
had decided that she had one chance at getting out from under that secretarial
job at the mill, getting out from under Jake-or-name-the-car-crazy-guy cruising
Main Street, getting out from under hanging in front of Jimmy Jake’s with her
girls discussing what to play next on that damn jukebox, getting under from
under about six kids and money enough to support only about two, and getting
out, well, just getting out from under.
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