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"Are you going to finish school?" Shirley asked, continuing
her questioning. "If you marry next summer, won't you still have half a year
of school left before graduating?"
"I intend to finish my education, even after the wedding," replied Charlie.
"Do you plan on attending college?" she inquired.
"I'm not sure," Charlie replied, honestly. "With Daddy the way he
is, I think I'll want to stay home and take care of him as much as possible. I don't
see myself entering into any kind of profession right now, when I have an invalid
father to take care of."
"Yes, of course," conceded Shirley. "So, you intend to have Chuck
live with you and my brother?"
"Yes, Adam and I have talked about that. We would also like Grandma to live
with us, too," related the young woman.
"I see. And your uncle is all right with you marrying so young?" inquired
Shirley, a little incredulously.
"Adam asked for his consent, and Uncle Jerome said 'yes,'" affirmed Charlie.
"Well, it appears you have at least given the future some thought,"
acknowledged Shirley, winding down her interrogation. "I must say, however,
that I'm glad you're both waiting until next summer before getting married. By then,
you and Adam will have had more time to consider what you're getting yourselves into.
I don't think..." Shirley hesitated, "I still don't think this marriage
will work. Life is hard enough, without so many things going against you. I sincerely
hope I'm wrong, though. Adam seems to be very much attached to you, and I would hate
to see him get his heart broken. Even at his age, I don't believe he has ever endured
that kind of heartache, before."
Shirley got up to leave.
"I'm going to go home and break the news to the rest of the family," she
said, making her way to the door. "Don't be surprised if they visit you, also."
Shirley lingered at the door for a moment. "Please don't break his heart,"
she pleaded. Then, Adam's sister left.
Wearily, Charlie flopped onto the couch and sighed in relief.
"You've had quite a day," reflected Vera, coming out from her place of
exile in the kitchen. "Imagine! You're actually engaged to Adam!"
"It is incredible, isn't it?" laughed Charlie. "I feel as though
I'm walking around in a dream! Oh, Grandma! I'm so very happy!"
"Are you sure Adam wants me to come and live with you both?" asked Vera,
unsure of the genuineness of the invitation. Vera was, after all, Charlie's grandmother,
and maybe Adam was only being polite in extending the invitation to include herself.
"Grandma," said Charlie, touching the old woman's hand, lovingly, "he
means it-- we both do."
Charlie half expected the rest of Adam's family to come and instigate their own round
of questioning, but to her relief, they let her alone for the rest of Sunday.
Back in Raleigh, after hearing Charlie's retelling of what had happened, Adam broke
his happy news to the guys. It came as no surprise to Gary, who heartily congratulated
Adam upon his engagement. Bill, Adam's long-suffering manager, was delighted for
Adam and Charlie, both. Ever since the success of the Christmas concert, Bill had
come to respect the teenager.
Melvin, however, had a teenage daughter of his own. The publicist found himself a
little uneasy with Adam's choice for a wife. Melvin privately remembered a joking
statement he had once said to his own wife, when his eighteen year-old daughter began
seeing an older man: "Let's lock her in her room, and not let her out until
she's thirty-four!" Like Shirley, he felt that such a marriage didn't have a
chance of succeeding. However, unlike Shirley, Melvin kept these opinions to himself.
After all, Charlie wasn't his daughter.
"When the LORD turned again the captivity of
Zion, we were like them that dream. Then was our mouth filled with laughter, and
our tongue with singing: then said they among the heathen, The LORD hath done great
things for them. The LORD hath done great things for us; whereof we are glad."
~ Psalms 126:1-3 ~
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