I rewarded her with the story about Charlie the barber in Cincinnati. Charlie was my neighborhood's master flat-top cutter in the mid-to-late 1950s. Most jocks wore flat tops then, and all us pretend jocks copied them. Business boomed for Charlie. He bought commercial property from my parents, who lived next door, and opened a bar. There was immediate trouble. People peeing, and worse, in my parents' back yard. Drunken shouting outside their bedroom window. And, of course, drunken fights.
My mother was supervisor of nursing at a local big hospital on the 3 to 11 pm shift. She arrived home one night to find Charlie lying in his parking lot, having been shot in the upper chest below a shoulder. Shot by a jealous husband or boyfriend, as I remember. Everyone begged my mother for help. She leaned over Charlie and claims she gave a moment's thought to just letting him die in payment for all the aggravation he put her through over the years. Then she says she thought, "No, I'll save his life." But she took a middle approach. She grabbed the bar rag, stuck it in the bullet hole, told one of the drunk bystanders to hold it there until the ambulance arrived, went into her place and went to bed. Charlie lived.
From "Hi, my name's Vikki, what's yours?" to "Charlie lived." - exactly 15 minutes.
Like speed-dating, but with a haircut thrown in.
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