In January 2010, I flew to San Diego to visit family and friends. I was thrilled to escape the Michigan winter and had forgotten January was California’s rainy season. But how rainy could it be?
After the plane landed, I grabbed my suitcase from baggage claim and headed to the car rental shuttle line amid a torrential downpour. No umbrella. No raincoat. No shelter. By the time the shuttle arrived 10 minutes later, my clothes were drenched, and my bones felt the weight of the water.
Once I got to the car rental counter, a distraught young woman next to me was trying to rent a car. I couldn’t help but overhear their conversation.
“No, I don’t have the card my boyfriend made the reservation with. He’s a Marine. Stationed in Iraq.”
“I’m sorry, Miss Ashley, if you don’t have the card the reservation is under, I can’t help you.”
“He’s returning to Camp Pendleton after his deployment. I’m supposed to meet him in Oceanside. He said he’d make it easy for me. He made all my reservations from there.”
“I’m so sorry Miss. If you have a credit card and you’re 25, we can make a reservation under your name.”
“I have a card, but I’m not 25.”
The young Marine’s girlfriend was starting to panic, her voice shaking. “I just flew here from Missouri. I don’t know anyone in the area. Or even where Oceanside is. He said he’d take care of everything.”
I recognized her helplessness and panic, the same feelings I’d felt 34 years earlier. Memories came flooding back.
In 1976 as a young Private First Class fresh out of Military Police School, the Marine Corps sent me to Camp Pendleton, my first duty station, via LAX. The Greyhound bus dropped me in downtown Oceanside with no instructions on how to get to my command on the sprawling 125,000-acre base hugging the Pacific coast.
There I was...21 years old, dressed in heels and my summer seersucker Class A uniform a LONG way from my small-town North Dakota home. I was lugging a packed seabag plus a large suitcase. I was lost in a sea of California humanity, which were mostly young Marines on liberty with places to go and things to do.
Just then, a sporty red car pulled up and out jumped a slim pony-tailed female. “Where are you headed, Marine?”
After I told her my situation, she motioned to her boyfriend to pop the trunk. She turned and said, "Don't worry, I'm stationed at the MP Battalion. We'll take you right where you need to go".
They checked me in and delivered me to my new barracks. I felt an incredible sense of relief and I NEVER forgot their kindness.
Remembering my Oceanside seabag drag and the kindness that had been offered me decades years earlier, I turned to Ashley and said, “I’m going that way. I can take you.”
Not trying to seem like a crazy person, I added, “I have a karmic debt to repay,” telling them my tale of being a 21-year-old lost Marine in downtown Oceanside and the gift of strangers delivering me to my duty station.
“Are you sure?” Her tight face relaxed a bit in a questioning way.
“Absolutely, I’m going that way anyway.” Ashley seemed cautious yet grateful for the offer.
“Do you have hotel reservations?”
“Yes, he made them at the Oceanside Harbor Inn.”
“Great, I know right where it is. I’ll take you to the hotel.”
We headed North on Interstate 5 in the driving rain, sharing where we each grew up. I told her about my time in the service. Ashley talked about how she met her boyfriend Steven, his deployment, and her excitement about seeing him again after a very long year.
It warmed my heart to hear of her love and compassion for him. I was glad to play a small part in their reunion. When I dropped Ashley off, she offered to pay me for my trouble.
“Absolutely not, it was my pleasure. Please take yourselves out to a nice dinner to celebrate his safe return!”
I often wonder if they’re still together.
That is a fabulous memory and story!! I’m really stuck on the fact that you hopped in a car with two strangers when you first arrived in Oceanside many years ago… Glad they weren’t serial killers!!!
Good for you, Deb! Yes, are they still together and has Ashley had an opportunity to pay your kindness forward? Love the photo of you and your Dad!