
By Gregory Clark, Illustrated by James Frise, June 6, 1942.
“Hey, look,” interrupted Jimmie Frise, “your gas gauge shows empty!”
“Aw, that,” I said. “I fixed it so it always shows empty. It keeps me worried all the time about how little gas I have. And, besides, it’s a useful dodge for your friends. You can always show your friends that you haven’t any gas, in case they suggest you drive them places.”
“It’s very good of you to drive me,” said Jim humbly.
“It isn’t my gas I’m wasting on you,” I informed him. “It’s my tires. There are 20 miles in a gallon of gas, and that worries us terribly. But there are only 15,000 miles in a tire, with luck. But that doesn’t worry us at all. Yet every mile you roll a tire, you are one mile nearer the end of your driving days.”
“Of course, we can all live in hope of the war being over,” mused Jimmie, “before our tires give out.”
“Gather ye rosebuds while ye may,” I quoted.
“And some day,” sighed Jimmie, “the war will be over. All things come to an end.”
“And I wonder where the peace conference will be held,” I idled. “London, Berlin, Washington, Tokyo or Moscow?”
“Maybe in Ottawa,” suggested Jim. “Or maybe in Rio de de Janeiro. There is a lot of war ahead of us yet.”
“And doubtless a lot of surprises,” I said. “The surprises, with the exception of Russia, have mostly been against us. According to the law of averages we ought to be getting a few pleasant surprises any day now.”
“We sure can take it,” declared Jim. “Think of this time just two years ago. Let’s see: Dunkirk was just over. The whirlwind in France was coming to an end. The last of the British army was being rescued from Belgium. We were holding our breath the way we hold it when we watch our house burn down.”
“What immense changes,” I added, “have come over us all since that day! Think of how we felt about the United States then. And how we thought about Russia. Think how alone we felt then. Think how great a company we feel today. Yet not only are the people with us utterly, completely different from what we thought they were two years ago, but we ourselves are different. Not one of us is the same person he was two years ago. The only thing that is not changed is the mere skin which contains us.”
“I don’t know who I feel sorrier for in this war,” said Jimmie, “the young people or the old people. I feel sorry for the young men and women because their lives are interrupted, broken, altered, sometimes shattered, by the war. Yet the young ones at least have the thrill, the adventure.”
“And the pain and the death,” I reminded.
“Everything Taken From Us”
“But the middle-aged and old people,” went on Jim, “have the uprooting, the surrender, the change, the loss, the sense of guilt. It was our generation that stood by while the world slowly toppled into hell.”
“It is the young ones I feel sorry for,” I asserted. “Think of the lovers parted. Think of the young years wasted in hard, stupid soldiering…”
“Aw, rats,” cried Jimmie. “Do you realize that there are tens of thousands of young Canadian boys today flying airplanes? And not one of them would likely ever have been in an airplane, let alone flying one, if it hadn’t been for war?”
“Are you in favor of war?” I demanded hotly.
“Certainly not,” replied Jim, “but I am not being stupid. I am looking at what can be said in favor of things as they are. For all except the favored few, in this world, life is a pretty drab adventure. During a man’s early twenties he has a little fun, a little romance, a little adventure. He falls in love. He gets his job and starts the battle of working up. But soon he has to settle down to the humdrum round of life, the job no longer exciting, the sodden round of days, up in the morning, off to work, back home to bed.”
“Let me tell you, sir,” I informed him, “that very thing is what we are fighting so fiercely now to re-establish!”
“What chance,” continued Jim, “has the average young man of having any fun in life, normally? Only the crafty, the smart, the shrewd, the foxy get any fun in peacetime. The plain, everyday guy is a cog in somebody else’s wheel before he is thirty, as a rule. But along comes war. And every man can be a man. No more does the manly guy have to make way for the foxy guy. No more does the young kid from the sticks have to live little more excitingly than the cows in his pasture. No sir: the foxy guys, the crafty, the shrewd, the wise, find themselves in an awful hole. It is men who are wanted. And men get their innings.”
“What terrible nonsense,” I interrupted.
“So, with nothing but their manhood,” climaxed Jim, “the men of the nation get their innings. They become soldiers, airmen, sailors, fighters. They go forth to see the world. They journey thousands of miles. They mix with their fellow men, and while the foxy guys still have the edge on them in the early stages, the nearer they get to the fight, the less they are troubled or gypped by the wise guys. Until at last, in battle, they are men. They get their promotions, their decorations. They rate as men among men, not as foxes among foxes. If peace had continued throughout their lives, they would have barely lived at all, except as men in a world in which manhood is one of the minor qualifications.”
“You’re a Socialist,” I accused.
“But I feel sorry,” said Jim, without much sorrow,” for all us middle-aged and elderly birds. Everything is being taken from us, our property, our privileges, all the things we have worked so hard to gather around us and snuggle down into. We are like owls, whose nest has been discovered and the tree cut down. In daylight.”
A Flustered Set of Owls
“We weren’t such a bad generation,” I said. “We had our good points.”
“But we’re a pretty flustered lot of owls, right now,” said Jim. “Is there anything more like an owl disturbed in sunlight than one of us who has all his life been contemptuous of the Yankees and hated the Russians trying to reorganize his life-long beliefs? We flop from branch to branch, trying to get a comfortable grip. And we blink so.”
“You’re not really sorry for us older people at all,” I stated. “You are making fun of us.”
“Well, there is one member of the younger generation I feel sorry for,” said Jim, indicating a young air force man who was standing beside a dilapidated old motor car on the far side of the stop-street intersection where I had pulled up.
“He’s in a dither,” I admitted. The young chap was tall and fair-haired. In his cap was the little white stripe, the badge of distinction, which means he is in training for air crew – that, is, to become a pilot, navigator, observer or bomb aimer.
He was standing beside the car, clutching his cap in his hand. And he seemed to be talking to himself. His face was flushed, his hair rumpled, his eyes wild and he was glaring excitedly up street and down the street and turning to look in the car window at the dashboard.
I drove across the intersection and slowed as we passed him.
“Oh, oh, oh,” he moaned as we passed. “Oh, OH, oh!”
Jim opened the car door and stepped out.
“Hey, young man,” said Jim, “what’s up?”
“Oh, oh, OH,” was all the boy could say.
“Here, snap out of it,” said Jim, taking the boy’s sleeve. “What’s the matter.”
“It’s two,” said the brindle-haired boy, in a dazed way,” it’s two minutes to three!”
He raised his wrist and looked at his watch as if it were a rattlesnake.
“Okay,” said Jim. “What’s the matter. It can’t be this bad. Can we help?”
“Married,” said the boy, swallowing. He had one of those large Adam’s apples like a knee cap in his neck, which clunked up and down conspicuously above his air force collar.
“Indeed,” said Jim. “When?”
“Three o’clock,” said the boy. “No gas.”
“Well, hop in” shouted Jimmie, grabbing the boy’s elbow. “Here, hop in! Where to?”
“My best man, my best man,” moaned the young airman, resisting and drawing back. “He’s gone for gas.”
I jumped out of the car and went around the other side of the boy so as to lend Jimmie a hand.
“Come on,” I commanded. “Step lively.”
“Oh, oh, OH,” said the young fellow, fighting us free. “Wait a minute. My best man. He went away 20 minutes ago to get gas at the nearest gas station. He’ll…”
Three o’clock,” I announced firmly, showing my watch. “Do you want the girl or don’t you?”
“My best MAN,” shouted the young fellow fiercely. “How do I…”
“We’ll serve as your best man, kid,” I shouted back, trying to bring order into his chaotic mind.
“We ran out of GAS,” he bellowed back at me, clinging to the car door handle to resist our pulls and pushes. “Of all the silly, bloody things. It’s 3 o’clock. She’ll…”
“Where’s the wedding?” I demanded quietly, to appease, the frantic frame of mind
of the poor boy.
“The church,” he said. “The… the big church….on Bloor St. You know the church? It has a steeple.”
“Look,” I soothed. “Hop in our car. Your best man has met some difficulty. Maybe he can’t get gas. Has he got a permit?”
“I gave him mine,” said the boy, biting his lip to pull himself together quietly… “He should have been back in five minutes. We had plenty of time, even as it was. But he hasn’t come back. He hasn’t come BACK. And here I am sitting, watching my watch…”
“Hop to it, lad,” said Jim, firmly taking the boy’s elbow. “Pull yourself together. Never mind your best man. Let’s get to the church.”
“Okay,” said the young man heavily. And he swung into the back seat of the car. And in a swipe, I had her in motion and we were down the street, heading for Bloor.
“Which church?” I inquired again. “The big gray one? On the south side?”
“That’s it,” said the groom. “My best man knows all about it. He was there this morning and last night both, for the rehearsals.”
“Weren’t you?” I demanded.
“I couldn’t get out until noon,” said the boy, exhausted. “I left my leave as late as possible so as to have more time for the honeymoon. So, Bill – that’s my best man – attended to all the details.”
“Listen, son,” I reassured him, “this is all as easy as pie. It’s only five minutes past. Everything will be waiting. The minister will in the vestry. Your bride will be out in the car, in front, waiting for your arrival the signal to enter, on her father’s arm. These church weddings are pie. All that’s going on now is, they are playing the organ a little longer, the guests are having a little longer to sit and look at each other’s hats, and the only guy that is at all excited is your best man, wherever he is…”
“I can’t understand what happened to him,” grated the young flier, who was appreciably calmed now by our soothing talk and the fact that he was en route.
“Two blocks to go,” I cried cheerily.
“And this way,” said Jimmie, “it will be all over quicker.”
I could see, far ahead, the throng of cars in front of the church, the usual gathering of spectators around the steps and pavement in front of the church. We drove to a space left in front of the vestry, and even as the policeman strolled towards us, we all three were out of the car and up the sidewalk to the vestry and in the door.
All was silent.
The vestry was deserted.
I tip-toed over and pushed the swinging green baize doors that led into the church, to peek in the crack.
The sight that met my eyes froze me with horror.
There, in the packed church, the gowned clergyman was in the very act of handing the ring to the bridegroom, with the bride standing there and the best man and all. And the groom was an airman.
It all came to me in a flash.
The best man was perfidiously marrying the bride for himself!
“Quick,” I hissed, beckoning the groom and Jimmie towards me. “Quick!”
“Wha… wha…” said the groom, relapsing into his terror again.
“There’s your best man,” I hissed, “marrying your girl!”
In the Wrong Church
The groom peeked through the crack. He kicked the green baize doors apart. At the very instant the ring was about to be placed on the bride’s finger, he kicked those doors wide open with a great bang and strode into the church.
Jim and I stood transfixed. Talk about romance! Talk about excitement. Oh, to be young once more.
The groom took five terrific paces forward in front of a paralyzed church, minister, bride, and all.
Then he halted. Then he executed the perfect Manning Pool about turn, in the best precision drill style.
And towards us he marched back, his heels ringing on the stone floor.
“Wrong church,” he said, as he passed us.
Wham went the green baize doors. Out the vestry we went, helter skelter, just as the cop was starting to take down our car license number on his nasty little one dollar pad.
Into the car we bounced.
“Hey,” said the cop.
“Wrong church,” I said to him, stepping on starter.
“Oh,” said the cop.
We raced west three blocks.
“Will this be it?” I cried over my shoulder.
“Hey, yes, whoa, wait,” yelled the boy, half opening the door. “There’s my bride, just the way you said, in the car with her father.”
“In the side door,” I yelled, as he streaked across the street heading straight for his bride.
“Okay,” he shouted back, turning to point. “My best man.”
And coming out the vestry door was another airman, as red and tousled and flustered as the groom, waving his arms and gesticulating.
“All’s well that ends well,” sighed Jimmie.
And we blocked traffic for a couple of minutes as we sat and watched the groom and the best man pull themselves together on the vestry sidewalk and then, side by side, in the best Manning Pool tradition, step off by the left and march, stiff, straight and chins high, into the vestry.
Then we heard the organ resounding in the church and still another airman appeared on the church steps and bowed stiffly towards the bride’s car.
And her Daddy got out, poor, bewildered, excited old boy, and bowed his pretty little daughter out, and gave her his arm.
And they went up the church steps, amidst the crowd, all eyes leaping, all mouths open.
Including ours.







