When I was stationed with the US Army in San Francisco in
the mid-Seventies (during my “B.C.” days), I somehow became involved with this
super rich married couple named Paul and Nancy. We met at Zach’s Restaurant and
Bar in Sausalito one Sunday afternoon when Paul suddenly appeared at my table
to ask me if I would mind sharing, as the place was packed and there was
standing room only.
I immediately liked this couple, odd as they seemed. Paul, a
62-year-old short and squat lawyer, resembled Jabba The Hut; while his wife,
Nancy, in contrast, was a tall, slender and gorgeous 28 year-old sporting a
headband and doing her best to look like a Native American goddess. Nancy was
his fourth wife. Her mother had been his third….
Anyway, that’s how it all started, and before I knew it, I
was spending all my free time with this very strange, yet very fun couple. We
were constantly going and doing, every single weekend. If we weren’t doing
champagne brunches at expensive restaurants, then we were cruising the Bay Area
in Paul’s yacht, or dancing or going to movies or sightseeing in one of their
Rolls Royces, and hob-nobbing with doctors and TV producers and people with
money. And sometimes we simply hung out in their gorgeous Penthouse overlooking
the San Francisco Bay.
I never had to pay for a thing when I was with them. Paul
was loaded and he didn’t mind throwing his money around. He also didn’t mind
ordering people around as if they were his slaves – especially Nancy who, I
soon discovered, was totally and completely submissive. He talked to her like a
dog, sometimes, and I found it a little disconcerting that she never talked
back.
In short, he was a total control freak. Of course, it didn’t
work on me, but for some reason, he liked having me around, anyway, to keep his
wife company since she didn’t seem to have any friends. He once told me (and I
remember laughing it off), “Carmen, you’re ruined because you’re too
independent. Someone should have gotten a hold of you when you were young and
raised you properly!”
(This, after I had told off Nancy’s brother-in-law who was a
raving, hateful Neo-Nazi from Oregon, who came into town on business one
weekend. Paul became upset because I refused to “date” the guy to “keep him
company” while he was away from his wife…..) Suffice it to say, Paul quickly
discovered that he couldn’t tell me what to do when it came to my personal life
– although he constantly tried.
Regardless, feeling star struck and very privileged to be a
part of this rich couple’s life, I chose to remain blind – and, for a while, I
honestly thought bumping into them at Zach’s was the best thing that had ever
happened to me because surely, through this couple, I would end up meeting “the
love of my life” who would sweep me off my feet and buy me a mansion.
Reality began to set in a few months later, however, as I
began to see that Nancy’s life was not exactly “a bowl of cherries.” The little
twinge of jealousy I had initially felt for her lavish and seemingly carefree
lifestyle, waned as time went on. It completely disintegrated when, one weekend
while Paul was on a business trip in Chicago, she tearfully opened up to tell
me about the prison that was her life.
As we were lounging in the luxury of their sunken living
room surrounded by wall paper of pressed autumn leaves spattered with real gold
flakes, Nancy suddenly blurted out that she envied me. I remember emitting a
short and unfeminine snort as I gawked in disbelief. “You’re kidding!” I
screeched.
“You envy ME? Me, A little old Army sergeant bringing home
$700 a month and living in a dump in San Rafael? Girl, I’m the one envying
YOU!”
Her eyes filled with tears as she broke down and told me all
about the hell that was her marriage. Paul, she said, was in the Mafia (which
explained the picture of Marlon Brando’s face with scenes from “The Godfather”
hanging over their fireplace), and that’s why he occasionally traveled to
Chicago on business trips. “He treats me like property, Carmen!” she cried. “He
makes me do whatever he wants, whenever he wants … and I have to have sex with
whomever he wishes, while he watches….”
Well, I was at once dumbstruck; confounded, terrified,
because I had always suspected there were some behind-the-scenes shenanigans
going on. I just hadn’t known the extent. So, for a moment, I simply sat there,
not knowing what to say; and when I finally found my voice, I asked her why she
didn’t simply leave.
“I can’t,” Nancy responded. “I’ve tried. He won’t let me. He
always manages to find me because he sends private detectives after me. I once
made it by bus all the way to Sacramento after a bad argument. He met me at the
station and promised to buy me a new Rolls Royce if I gave him another chance.
He always ‘buys’ me. It’s what he does. And when I tell him no, he becomes
abusive. I can’t win.”
“…So, maybe you could try going through legal channels to
get away from him?” I offered shakily.
“Carmen, he will KILL me if I do that. Believe me when I say
that, even if he were to end up with prison time, he WILL find me and kill me
when he’s released. There’s no escaping him! There is no place on earth I can
go to escape from Paul!”
Suddenly - while I was perched there like that proverbial
“bump on a log,” mind racing while staring at Nancy in disbelief - everything
fell into place, and it dawned on me that I needed to get away from this
relationship somehow, and remain on the path I was on. I was exactly where I
needed to be: nurturing my Army career and being content in my own little
world, without some jerk telling me what to do at every turn.
The Army had been a safe haven for me, a way to get out from
under the control of my horribly abusive parents after high school graduation,
so I knew first-hand what Nancy was going through. I wasn’t about to put myself
back under THAT kind of tyranny….
Naturally, I kept Nancy’s secret, but over the course of the
next few weeks, I slowly began to extricate myself from their life. The luxury,
the decadence, the rich men Paul tried to set me up with – these things had all
lost their luster. I had thoroughly learned the lesson that happiness doesn’t
necessarily come from riches; it comes from within and from using some common
sense to make life’s choices. It comes from being content with “enough.”
Happiness was having a job, a roof over my head, food in my
belly, and learning to “bloom wherever I was planted.” At least, for the time
being.
My complete extraction from this strange life, thankfully,
came a couple months later when I was transferred to Stuttgart, Germany.
Looking back, it was truly a “God thing” because two things
happened:
(1) Through a set of weird circumstances in Stuttgart, YHWH
caused the field of journalism to “drop into my lap” (something my mother had
stolen from me when I was 15, by making fun of my efforts to write a book); and
the Army ultimately sent me to journalism school, which changed the course of
my career, and basically, my life.
(2) And best of all - unbeknownst to me in my “lukewarm
toward God” state back in those days – YHWH was leading me from “Point A” to
“Point B” and beyond in a “walk” I didn’t even realize I was on; guiding me the
whole time, until I finally arrived at the final “point” in my journey … the
day He opened my spiritual eyes in a little Baptist church in Missouri; and
continued to lead me until I found my way to Torah in 1998….)
YHWH is so amazing! He truly does give us “as much as we can
handle” (1 Cor. 10:13) because, sometimes the ONLY way to truly learn something
is through personal experience. We either learn and grow, or we don’t! Some
advance; most stay behind because they don’t “hear” that “small, still voice.”
I GREW through my relationship with Paul and Nancy and
myriad other relationships that YHWH put on my life’s path. Some were good,
some bad, some are not worth remembering. But in the end, all my combined
experiences led me to find my way to YHWH/Yeshua/Torah! Halleluyah!
(I lost contact with Paul and Nancy over 40 years ago, but I
often wondered whatever happened to poor Nancy. One day, approximately five
years ago, I decided to Google their names, and discovered that Paul had died
in 2007, which was when Nancy FINALLY managed to gain her freedom and move on
with her life. (In his obituary she was still listed as his wife.) What a
tragedy that she was stuck with that monster for over 30 years! I just pray
that she, like me, found her way to our Creator, where TRUE shalom reigns.)