This was the early
sixties and Ed worked for one of Southern Michigan’s General Motors assembly
plants. He was that era's quintessential “regular Joe." He went to work in clean but faded coveralls and carried a big, black, barn-shaped lunchbox.
And like a lot of men back then, Ed just might have been a wee bit chauvinistic.
And like a lot of men back then, Ed just might have been a wee bit chauvinistic.
But whatever Ed’s
attitudes towards women, they did not include the conviction that after work his
place was with his wife. His place, Ed felt, was with his fellow assembly
workers at a neighborhood drinking establishment; the cinder-block
construction, neon light illumination kind of drinking establishment.
Meanwhile, Ed’s wife,
Melrose was the regular wife of the regular Joe. She stayed at home even though the kids were well out of the
nest, claiming she was focused on homemaking. And she maybe wasn’t quite as on top of her appearance as when she and Ed
first met.
Melrose might also have had a tendency to meet her husband at the door (on the rare occasions he came straight home) in curlers and a house dress, the bunions on her feet peeking at Ed through threadbare slippers.
Melrose might also have had a tendency to meet her husband at the door (on the rare occasions he came straight home) in curlers and a house dress, the bunions on her feet peeking at Ed through threadbare slippers.
So there's a chance that each of them had reason to feel a bit resentful of the other.
One night, Ed was out
at the bar knocking back a few while Melrose lay in bed dreaming of
Ed’s early demise, so bitter was she over his nocturnal fellowship habits. When
Ed came stumbling through the back door, Melrose didn’t hear him.
This, of course, was before the days of cell phones when a third party could pick up the phone and either join the other two parties or just listen in, provided said person's phone was in the same residence as at least one of the others.
When the phone rang, it startled them both, Ed in the kitchen and Melrose in the bedroom. They picked up within milliseconds of one another, Melrose assuming it was Ed and Ed with no clue who it was.
This, of course, was before the days of cell phones when a third party could pick up the phone and either join the other two parties or just listen in, provided said person's phone was in the same residence as at least one of the others.
When the phone rang, it startled them both, Ed in the kitchen and Melrose in the bedroom. They picked up within milliseconds of one another, Melrose assuming it was Ed and Ed with no clue who it was.
They said hello in unison before Melrose yelled: “Where the hell have you been? Do
you know what time it is?”
“Hell, yes, I know
what time it is!” Ed yelled back. He consulted his watch but it kept
swimming around in front of his face. “By the way, what time is it?”
“It’s time your drunken carcass was here where it belongs! Why the hell aren’t you home?”
“What the hell do you
mean, why the hell aren’t I home? I am home and damned if it isn’t
hell!”
“Well, if you’re
home, get your ass in bed!”
“My ass is in
bed! It’s name is Melrose!”
“Aw, go to hell!”
“No! You go to hell!”
Ed and Melrose
slammed down their receivers.
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