A Charmed Life
Copyright© 2025 by The Outsider
Chapter 35: Family Matters
25 June 1994 – West Ware Road, Enfield, Massachusetts
“Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today...”
Jeff’s smile threatened to split his face wide open. He’d never seen his little sister look lovelier or happier. He stood next to Stu and Matty Masterson – Stu’s almost eight-year-old son – as one of Stu’s groomsmen, while Matty was Stu’s Best Man. As far as Stu was concerned since the state required an adult as a witness, Jeff’s name would be on the marriage certificate, but Stu didn’t care.
Kara looked at her soon-to-be-husband with pure adoration. She smiled down at Matty. The two forged a special bond as she and Stu formed their own. Kara understood that she’d inserted herself into a very special dynamic.
Stu Masterson met Jenni Kim early in his first Navy enlistment in March 1983. She was a nineteen-year-old waitress at a favorite breakfast place outside Naval Submarine Base Bangor, Washington. Her parents were not fans of Stu. Stu and Jenni fell in love and married by the end of that enlistment. Her parents cut off all contact shortly after they announced their intent to marry.
They didn’t tell her parents when Stu was reassigned to NSB New London, Connecticut, and the submarine training school in Groton in 1987. Her parents had made their decision, which made the young couple’s decision easier. They moved without informing her parents, and they didn’t notify them a year later when she gave birth to their grandson.
Stu’s family was the only family he called two and a half years later when Jenni was killed by a drunk driver. That driver hit her head-on as she drove home from work in 1991, just before he was to reenlist for a third four-year hitch. Instead of receiving transfer orders, he was granted a hardship discharge from the Navy. He and Matty landed in Wilbraham, Massachusetts, soon after, the hometown of a buddy from New London, who recommended it as an excellent place to live.
The youngest of five, Stu was a dozen years younger than his next-oldest sibling, an ‘oops’ baby. His parents held the Masterson family together. When they both died within six months of each other – his mom of cancer and his father of a broken heart – he and Matty found themselves alone. There was no common ground between him and his siblings without their parents, so they drifted out of contact.
Stu’s life focus narrowed to Matty’s well-being. He found a local EMT class offered during the early evenings and a babysitter available those two nights of the week. He signed up. By the end of 1991, Stu was a certified Massachusetts EMT. Once he started at CRVA, he found a home-based daycare that would accommodate his unusual schedule. Both daycare workers did their best to help the single father.
While working at CRVA, he made friends again: Connie Willis, Bill Harris, and Gene Choamsky. Jeff Knox joined that list when he began. Stu helped train Jeff and partnered with him for a July 4th detail in Jeff’s hometown. Jeff introduced Stu to his family there.
It was in that instant that Stu’s life changed again. A pair of hazel eyes froze him in his tracks when Jeff introduced him to a young lady ... Jeff’s younger sister, Kara. Stu’s mind registered that, on some level, the eyes’ owner looked a lot like Jeff. He couldn’t help but stare at her. Something about her reminded him of Jenni as no woman had since Jenni’s death.
Stu spent the entire cookout portion of their standby detail talking with Kara, then another three hours at Jeff’s apartment doing the same. The drive back to the CRVA garage following their detail was the cherry on top: Jeff suggested that Stu go out with his sister if he wanted to. It was like an invisible wall crumbling away. Stu helped Jeff put the ambulance away, then rushed home to Matty.
“Matty, I think I’ve just met someone special. You need to meet her.”
Stu and Kara’s first date was at his apartment with Matty there, both at her insistence. Kara almost immediately won Matty over by talking to him like he was an adult, not as a nearly six-year-old boy. Matty gave his dad a nod during dinner.
“I like her,” he told Stu later that night.
Stu and Kara dated often after that. On most of their dates, they spent hours talking. By October, she offered to watch Matty on the evenings and nights Stu worked. That’s when she and Matty started to bond even more. By July 1993, Stu proposed marriage, with Matty’s urging and Joe Knox’s blessing. They opted for a small wedding in her parents’ backyard rather than a large church wedding.
After the ceremony, the new husband and wife walked down the aisle between the folding chairs, with their son following behind. Matty Masterson hugged his father before turning to Kara and giving her the same fierce hug. Matty then whispered into her ear. Kara’s hand shot to her mouth as tears leaked from her eyes.
“Really?” she sobbed.
Matty nodded, and she wrapped him in another hug.
“Babe?” Stu asked with concern.
“Stu, he asked if he could call me ‘Mom.’”
Jeff was glad Stu and Kara’s invitations asked everyone to dress comfortably and for the weather, forgoing the regular dress clothes for such an occasion. Even the bridal party dressed down for the ceremony, wearing summer casual clothes. Jeff sat in a lawn chair with his feet up, holding a beer while the party continued around him.
A plate of barbecue chicken, beans, Cole slaw, and potato salad sat in his lap. He soaked up the sun, happy that his sister and his friend had found someone to share their lives with. The fact that the ‘someone’ turned out to be ‘each other’ was pretty cool. The almost ten-year age difference didn’t matter to them or his family. Jeff looked at the person who dropped into the chair beside him.
“This meal isn’t going to do anything for my figure.”
“There’s nothing wrong with your figure, Heather, and you know it! You’re twenty-six and an absolute beauty! Geez, woman, stop fishing for compliments.”
“Maybe there needs to be something wrong with my figure! I keep attracting every numbnut and dickhead in the Metro Boston area! And that’s at the BU library!”
“Well, you look fabulous, Heather, all kidding aside.”
“Thanks. And thanks for being my date today. I didn’t want to come solo.”
“I thought you were my date?”
“Potaytoe, potahtoe. How have things been in Malden?”
“Busy. I’m about to change my work schedule to prepare for paramedic school. The good news is, Sean wants to keep being my permanent partner.”
“I would imagine being the owner’s son helps with scheduling, too? Has anyone else figured out who he is?”
“No, which is shocking to the both of us. We figured someone would have figured it out by now. I don’t think even the HR person knows. And that ties into his scheduling, too. We requested that we keep working together in an open schedule slot. That’s why we’ll still be together, not because he’s Seamus’ son. I have to give the kid a lot of credit. He wants to know the job before he tries to run the company.”
“’Kid?’ He’s only two years younger than you!”
“Potaytoe, potahtoe. How is the quest for your master’s going?”
“I’ll finish in time for the October commencement ceremonies, which is fine. I’ll already be working on my doctorate by then. Speaking of doctorates, any word from Allison? I know Kara sent her an invitation. It would have been cool to see her again.”
“She sent a card and a gift,” Jeff shrugged. “She’s already started her Ph. D., which doesn’t surprise me. She said she was sorry she couldn’t return for the wedding but might be up later this summer. By Christmas, at the latest.”
“It’s too bad the timing hasn’t worked for you with any of us. Pauline, Allison, me? I’m surprised you have any capacity for love left in you sometimes with how we left you high-and-dry.”
Jeff’s feet dropped to the ground as he sat straight up.
“Whoa, where is this coming from? Is that what you guys think you’ve done? Left me ‘high-and-dry?’” Jeff asked, surprised. “Don’t I tell you enough how lucky I’ve been to know all of you ladies and still count you as friends? You’re here with me now, even though there was no ‘spark’ when we dated. Allison, Pauline, and I are still in touch with each other semi-regularly. How can I complain about any of that?”
Heather had no answer for him. She sat in her chair, staring out at the woods.
“Heather? Heather, what’s going on?”
“What ... What if he’s not out there, Jeff? What if I’ve already met him and don’t know it?”
“Heather? This isn’t like you. What’s the matter?” She didn’t answer him again, only shaking her head as her eyes watered. “You think you’re destined to be an old spinster or something? You think you’ll be alone, is that it?”
She continued to stare at the trees.
“It amazes me how often smart people can be so dumb. Heather, like I said to you five years ago, some guy will be fortunate when he gets to date you in the long term. You just haven’t found the guy who is good enough for you. So, as a very wise woman said to me five years ago: ‘Cut this I’m-feeling-sorry-for-myself shit out, or I’m coming over there to kick your ass!’”
She barked her trademark laugh.
“Yeah, good luck with that. I fight dirty.”
“If it isn’t dirty, you’re not doing it right,” he responded, leaning toward her and waving his eyebrows.
Heather barked another laugh.
“Keep dreaming, hotshot. I’m a double black diamond ski trail, not a bunny slope. You ain’t ready for all this.”
“That’s the Heather I know!”
“Yeah, yeah. Hey, have you heard the latest report on the World Trade Center’s basement bombing from last fall?”
“No, I’ve been busy helping Mom and Kara out today. What’s the report say?”
“The Fibbies say the Arab terrorists who carried out the attack were angry with the US for being in Saudi Arabia during the Gulf War.”
“We’re all just dirty infidels, that kind of thing?”
“Yeah, and they’re mad at us for bringing our unclean water purification technology, too.” Jeff shook his head.
“So, we’re damned if we do and damned if we don’t yet again? If we’d stayed out of the Gulf War, we’d have been called ‘selfish,’ and because we DID go – at Kuwait and Saudi Arabia’s request, mind you – we’re still targets? Great. They can do it themselves next time.”
“You’d think between the Soviets and us, we could keep a lid on these extremists,” Jeff snorted.
“The Soviets can’t keep a lid on their own trouble-makers. The power brokers welcomed back the hardliners in 1991 when they deposed Gorbachev, but now those same people are getting fed up with the empty promises the hardliners keep making.
“The fact that they touted how good their military hardware was before we blew it all to kingdom-come in the Gulf War hasn’t helped. They can say it was poor use of it by the Iraqis all they want, but the truth is we cut through it like the proverbial hot knife through butter. It wouldn’t have mattered who was using it.”
Jeff and Sean entered one of Brophy’s contracted facilities in early August. The Malden House wasn’t as bad as the River House in Springfield, but it wasn’t the Ritz Carlton, either. The nursing home odor was mercifully faint here. This call would be Sean’s tech. That is, he’d be the one riding in the back with the patient.
He and Sean approached the nurses’ desk and asked for the patient’s chart. The nurse behind the desk dropped the chart on the counter and returned to her television. Jeff and Sean shared a look before Sean started his paperwork. Another nurse walked behind the desk.
“Who are they here for?” she asked the first nurse.
“The gorked gook,” she replied. Sean frowned at Jeff. The first nurse looked up. “They told us she spoke English when she came here but hasn’t said anything in the last week. Just some gibberish when she first got here.”
“What room?” he asked Sean, ignoring the two women. Sean then closed the chart and examined its spine.
“Seven. Bed by the window.”
Jeff glanced at the patient’s name before he walked away. He then pushed the stretcher down the hall to the indicated room.
Peering inside, Jeff saw an older Asian woman staring out the window. Her roommate wasn’t in the room. Given the patient’s last name and the report that she spoke ‘gibberish,’ he took a chance.
“Hayashi-san?” he asked as he stepped into the room. She looked back at him, surprised that someone in the Malden House would speak Japanese. He bowed to her and continued in that language.
“Konnichiwa, Hayashi-san. I’m Jeff. My partner Sean and I have come to take you to your appointment.” Mrs. Hayashi continued to look at him in shock. “It’s been some time since I’ve spoken Japanese, so I apologize for my pronunciation.”
“Your pronunciation is perfect. I am shocked to find someone here who speaks Japanese. How is it that you know the language?”
“My best friend, Ma’am. He taught me while we were roommates in the Army together.”
“He taught you well.”
“Thank you, Ma’am. How long have you been here?”
“A week. My ‘loving’ daughter and her good-for-nothing husband found a way to dump me here after my leg surgery. They’re off on some year-long cruise around the world while this place sucks my accounts dry.”
“You can’t return home once you’re finished with your rehab?”
She snorted.
“After my husband died, our daughter convinced me to sell our house and move in with them. My grandson was in college, so there was plenty of room for me. He’s graduated and is in Korea on his first assignment for the Army.
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