by Jim Bates
English Breakfast Tea
Swing dancing night at the Long Lake Retirement Home.
"It don't mean a thing if it ain't got that swing," sang the singer. Jerry could
dig it as he sat off to the side in the community room, watching. One of the orderlies had a boom box set up on
a card table and was playing dance music from the thirties and forties. It was
the best. In his memory Jerry could picture a long ago nightclub filled with
sweaty bodies dancing up a storm, cigarette smoke swirling and the band wailing
to the big beat of the drums and the thumping rhythm of the standup bass. He
tried to contain himself but he couldn't.
When
the next song started he turned to his wife. "Let's go cut the rug, Alice," he
said, standing up and reaching for her. "Let's get on that dance floor and show
them how it's done."
He grinned as she took his hand and stood with
him, smiling. How wonderful she looked tonight, she in her blue and white
checked poodle dress, looking like she was born for this, jitterbugging and
jiving with him. Swing dancing. What a lucky man he was. He smiled, thinking
this must be what heaven was like.
With
Alice by his side, Jerry hurried out to the floor ready to dance like there was
no tomorrow, ignoring the fact that it'd been fifteen years since Alice had been
with him. Fifteen years, since she'd passed away from a valiant battle with
cancer. But tonight that was all
forgotten.
The
crowd watched awestruck as Jerry pivoted onto the floor and began jiving to "In
The Mood," by Glenn Miller, dancing up a storm, a smile as wide as the key board
of a piano, as energetic as the wailing of a saxophone. They watched him there
on the floor, lost in his memory of those long ago days, swing dancing across
the floor with Alice, the love of his life, together again the way it should be,
never wanting the music to end.
About the author
Jim lives in a small town twenty miles west of
Minneapolis, Minnesota. He grew up on the jazz and swing music his parents
loved. He even played trombone in his junior high school band, much to
everyone's chagrin. His stories have appeared in CafeLit, The Writers'
Cafe Magazine, A Million Ways, Cabinet of Heed, Paragraph Planet,
Mused - The BellaOnline Literary Review, Nailpolish Stories, Ariel Chart, Potato
Soup Journal and The Drabble. You can also check out his blog to see more:
www.theviewfromlonglake.wordpress.com.
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