
 A COLLECTION OF COLUMNS BY HARPER LEE WEINSTOCK
Roadkill on the highway of love
Harper Lee Weinstock
When I was in the seventh grade, I had a huge crush on a classmate by
the name of Lou Anne Wilson. Lou Anne, who was named after both her mom
and dad, was a cute little thing with long, blonde, Marcia Brady-style hair,
a mouthful of perfect teeth, and big, blue eyes that could reduce even the
most worldly twelve year old boy to a shivering mass of pubescent jelly,
myself included.
I was luckier than most of the guys who lusted after Lou Anne because
I got to sit in front of her in homeroom (thanks to the Grace of God and
alphabetical seating). Whenever my name was called on the role, she'd poke
me in the back with her pencil eraser and giggle.
"Hocker Lee!" she'd say in that angelic voice of hers. "Hocker
Lee Whiny Snot."
Dumbstruck, I'd manage a weak, "Here..." and the whole class
laughed at the crack in my voice. Most boys my age would have been racked
with embarrassment, I suppose, but not me. With a name like Harper Lee Weinstock,
you come to expect a fair amount of teasing. Plus, I knew the only reason
Lou Anne poked fun at my name was because she was sweet on me. At least
that's what my best friend Scooter Turner said. And Scooter should have
known because he was an old hand at love. He'd been getting laughed at by
girls since the fourth grade.
At Scooter's urging, I decided to ask Lou Anne to the annual harvest
dance. Being twelve and having absolutely no practical experience with the
opposite sex, I turned to my dad for advice. My dad was a poor, dirt farmer
with a third grade education, but that never stopped him from dispensing
pearls of wisdom when his boy was in need.
"Son, there are just two things you gotta remember about women:
One, they're always right, even when they're not; and two, you can put a
dress on a pig and take it to the school dance, but when the music stops
and the lights come up, you're still gonna be left holding a pig."
I said he dispensed pearls of wisdom. I didn't say they were coherent
pearls of wisdom. The fact is, I had no idea what he was talking about.
I do recall that my next question was, "Daddy, why don't we have a
pig?"
By the time I got the nerve to ask Lou Anne to the dance she had already
accepted an invitation from Earl Ray Shively, the captain of the junior
varsity football team. I went to the dance with Scooter Turner and we spent
the entire night sitting on the bleachers with the other losers who had
gotten lousy advice from their fathers. Lou Anne didn't make fun of me after
that. She was too busy making fun of Earl Ray.
Lou Anne married Earl Ray right out of high school and they moved to
Athens, where I think he works as a plucker at the Sweet Sue chicken plant.
Last I heard they were raising six boys and Lou Anne had put on so much
weight she was being considered for her own zip code. Next time I see Earl
Ray, I'll have to remember to shake his hand. And thank him. A lot.
I thought of Lou Anne today while reading the newspaper account of another
young man in love, an Egyptian fellow named Farouk. Farouk was innocently
seeking love and companionship in his native Cairo, but like me, all he
found was heartbreak and pain. Here's his story. Most of it is true.
Farouk courted his beloved Fatima for over a year without seeing what
lay beneath the veils that covered her face. He spent thousands of dollars
on jewels and clothes and rented a fine house for them to live in after
the wedding. Farouk suspected nothing out of the ordinary since it's customary
for the women of his culture to keep their faces covered until their wedding
night. Only then may the groom unwrap his bride to see what he got. It's
kind of like getting a Christmas present from your aunt who lives out of
town. You never know what's in the box until you open it up.
When the wedding night finally arrived, Farouk, quaking with anticipation,
removed his new bride's veils to find not the voluptuous young virgin her
family had promised, but a wrinkled hag old enough to be his grandmother!
His blushing bride wasn't blushing, after all. It was high blood pressure
making her face red!
Farouk passed out cold and had to be revived by paramedics. Fatima claims
to have tried to give him mouth-to-mouth, but her false teeth kept getting
in the way.
"We thought he knew it was Granny under there," the bride's
grandson later told reporters. "We just thought he liked older women."
The bride, who was sound asleep in a rocking chair, could not be awakened
for further comment.
Farouk says he is permanently scarred by his ordeal and may never have
a meaningful relationship again. "I will never trust another woman.
Never."
Farouk is suing his estranged wife's family for misrepresentation and
fraud because they failed to mention that Granny was old enough to qualify
for the free government mummification program. When asked what he will do
with the money if he wins the lawsuit, Farouk says, "I will move far
away from here. And I will buy a pig."
A pig? Maybe Farouk is going to be okay, after all.
Read last week's column: Who Cracked My Crystal
Ball?
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