***Out In The Be-Bop 1960s Night-Could This Be Magic?
A YouTube film clip of The
Dubs performing the classic Could This Be Magic.
From The Pen Of Frank Jackman
THE DUBS
"Could This Be Magic"
"Could This Be Magic"
Could this be magic
My dear
My heart's all aglow
Could this be magic
Loving you so
Could this be magic
My dear
Having your love
My prayers were answered
So far from above
I thought it would be
Just a memory
To linger my heart in pain
But too much pride
I opened up my eyes
And I'm with you dear once again
Could this be magic
My dear
Having your love
If this is magic
Then magic is mine
Could this be magic
Then magic is mine
I suppose everybody in America
knows, knows by heart now, John O’Connor
and I, Jenny Dolan, are an “item.” The poster boy and girl sweethearts of North
Adamsville High according to one piece of gossip that I heard, or overheard,
Joanne Doyle saying sarcastically, in the girls’ “lav” at school one Monday
morning when she was giving her weekend round-up report to all who would
listen. What I couldn’t spread around about her and lover boy, Frankie, but
that was the old Jenny, the old miserable Jennie, before I got my John, and got
him good. Of course Joanne only retells what the pizza pie in your eye corner
boy king, so-called, Frankie, Frankie Riley if you’re one of the about three
people in the Class of 1964 who doesn’t know him, has already started spreading
around. The gist of tale is that he has lost his ace-in-the-hole (really just
his bodyguard for when he makes the wrong move on some real tough guy's girl),
Jumping John O’Connor (although I am putting a stop to calling him that name,
and fast) to a frill (that’s me, or that’s me when Frankie does his 28 flavors
of disrespect to girls thing, except no-nonsense mistress Joanne, by calling
them frills, molls, frails and everything else that he has picked up from
watching too many 1930s gangster films, and reading too many Raymond Chandler
crime novels). See John and Frankie go back to first grade together over at
North Adamsville Elementary and somehow Frankie thought that was enough to keep
the “twists” (girls again) at a distance so John could be his full-time
“body-guard.”
And if Frankie hasn’t spread the
news around about John and me then Peter Paul Markin did, clueless Peter Paul
when it comes to knowing anything about girls (and girls and guys who get
together for more than reading books at the library, or going to a debate or
stuff like that that he is thrilled to death about, ugh!), once Frankie
unleashed him to spread the word around. Now everybody respects Peter Paul for
his knowledge, for his devotion to learning more about stuff, and for sticking
up for the, as he calls them, “fellow down-trodden” of the earth but he has
been strictly blind-sided by Frankie ever since he came to North Adamsville.
When I was lonely (lonely for my John, if you want to know) I went out with
Peter Paul, once, but no thanks. So between Joanne (really Frankie), Frankie
(really Joanne) and Peter Paul (really Frankie, and maybe Joanne) you’ve
probably got the story all wrong. Like the why behind why John and I did not
get together until just now, although we were made for each other and that’s
the truth, and has been the truth for a long time.
Let me tell the story, my side, and
see if it is anything like you heard from Frankie, or Peter Paul. Although now
that I think about it if you got it from Peter Paul then you haven’t finished
reading the treatise on the subject of John O’Connor and Jennifer Dolan yet and
I can save you some time, and save your eyes too. See back in sixth grade when
I was just starting to get a little shape but was still really just a stick I
went to Chrissie MacNamara’s twelfth birthday party. Now Chrissie and I had
been friends for ages so I expected to be the party but what really got my girl
temperature up was that John was going to be there.
Now John was good-looking even then,
kind of quiet, a good all-around athlete (a great football player-in-the-making
even then, even then in little Pop Warner League), and, I think, shy around
girls but I had eyes for him. Big eyes, and not just twelve -year old big eyes,
but going way back to first communion at Sacred Heart where we were boy white
suit and girl white dress paired together to walk down to the communion rail
and I had to calm him down because he was scared of the idea of eating the
wafer, the body and blood of Christ. No, I was not every day in every way
crushed up on him, but crushed up somewhere deep inside since then. In sixth
grade time though when I started getting my shape a little, you know, I
couldn’t keep from thinking of him. So at Chrissie party I was flying high in
expectation. I had my best dress on, had taken a long soapy bath, and worn some
of my mother’s perfume (don’t tell her, okay). And I wasn’t disappointed
because he asked me to dance, dance close, dance airless close. I almost kissed
him then but I waited until the lights went out that signaled the time for some
“petting” games to start and then I ran over to the sofa and planted the
biggest, hardest kiss I could on him. Boy, did I have my signals crossed
because he pushed me aside (not hard but definitely aside) and ran out of the
house. That’s how he got the name “Jumping” John O’Connor once Frankie got the
story out. He hated the name, and I did too.
After that I didn’t run into him
enough to get nervous because at school we were in different classes and,
obviously, I wasn’t hanging around shabby, two-bit, greasy pizza parlors
wasting my good time and energy listening to Frankie (and his lap dog, Peter
Paul) play his lordship. Besides Joanne, Joanne Doyle, Frankie’s plain jane,
so-called girlfriend, and I never got along ever since I told her that Frankie
was calling me up on the telephone any time they had a “misunderstanding.” She
flat-out didn’t believe me but ask Peter Paul, he knows, he knows everything
about Frankie Riley and his “love” life.
This year though, sophomore year,
John and I have our daily last period study class together and a couple weeks
into the class I noticed that he kept looking (for a second anyway) in my
direction. And more than once. And I started looking in his direction (for a
second anyway, and more than once). As we found out later everybody in the
class, including the study class monitor, Miss Wilmot, the old dyke, knew we
were “making eyes” at each other. Except, of course, maybe Peter Paul who was
also in the study hall down front and reading. Still, naturally, that will not
stop him from claiming in his treatise that he was the key to introducing John
and I.
Believe me I didn’t know what to do
at first. I was “gun-shy” from that sixth grade fiasco party so I was afraid to
think that he might be interested in me. But, and I admit it, I was miserable,
and had been pretty miserable since John’s rebuff that Chrissie’s party night,
even though I went out with lots of boys. Then one day I figured out (and
talked to Chrissie about it, and she agreed) that John, shy, quiet John wasn’t
going to do anything about me unless I started the ball rolling. And here is
what I figured out to do (on my own, no Chrissie help). I was going to go into
the lion’s den, the holy of holies, Salducci’s Pizza Parlor where Frankie and
his boys, including John, hung out a lot and just flop myself in John’s lap and
dare him, no double dare him, to throw me off in a public place. And I was
going to do it too, once I got my courage up, or was miserable enough to try
anything.
Well, one Friday night, one October
Friday night, a few weeks ago I got so miserable at home that I decided to go
for broke. I walked up the Downs and entered Salducci’s, fearful, very fearful,
but then I saw John sitting on the outside of the booth with the boys (Frankie,
Peter Paul, Fingers Kelly, John and a couple of other denizens) and saw my
chance. I quickly walked over and flopped myself on John lap. And you know what
he said. “I’m sorry” as he gently, very gently, broke my fall with his strong
arms. My heart went crazy with fear. I thought that I had misinterpreted his
looks at me in study class just like at the party and started to get up. But as
I started to get up John held me close, held me close like maybe it was going
to take the whole football team, both offense and defense, and scrubs and water
boys thrown in to get me of his lap before he finished his red-faced say.
And this is what he said, and said
in a way that he had been thinking about it for a while. “I’m sorry, real
sorry, that I pushed you away at Chrissie’s birthday party and ran out and
never apologized. I just didn’t know what to do then.” And he added, “Will you
forgive me?” Frankie and the boys were flabbergasted but John, red-faced and
all, maybe more so after saying his piece, held his ground. I wanted to say all
kinds of witty, smart things but all I could blurt out was, “yes.” I started to
get up but he would not let me up (and truthfully I wasn’t trying hard anyway)
until he asked to walk me home. You know the answer so I will not be coy.
As we walked and talked it seemed
like an instant until we got to my house. The lights were out but John said he
wanted to talk a little, and we did, boy and girl things that you don’t need to
know about. And while we were talking he reached out and held my hand. And I
got all red-faced, especially when every once in a while he would loosen up his
grip and then gently squeeze my hand again like he was afraid to let go. And I
was afraid to let him let it go. I will tell you that night, I swear, John
could have done anything he wanted with me, anything, but we just held hands,
tight hands. Okay, you have the story straight now.
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