“Thank you, ladies and gentlemen. We come to that part of
the evening when it’s time for a speech or two. And it falls to me, as the best
man, to begin. Sometimes that involves telling slightly off colour stories
about the groom meant to remind him of past misadventures guaranteed to embarrass him. Other times it involves nostalgia and
finishes up with a heartfelt toast to the happy bride and groom. Well, me being
me, I can’t resist a little bit of both.
I first met Andrew Deveraux back in our college days. We were in the
same fraternity. Andrew of course was studying law, and I was studying
dentistry. I say studying, but that was confined to what we were doing in
between the drinking, the chasing girls, the juvenile stunts that the
fraternity would regularly pull. I don’t think Professor Englehart ever knew
that we were the ones who disassembled his car and put it on the roof of
Calvert Hall. Took us all night, remember, Andrew? Lugging parts up and down
that staircase. It’s a miracle no guards found us while we were busy. By the
way, Andrew, you’re the lawyer... is there a statute of limitations where fraternity
pranks are concerned?
Those were the days, when we could goof off, drink all
evening, write exams while hung over, and somehow
manage to get through the year without failing. I don’t know if you had any
close calls, Andrew, but to this day I have no
idea how I managed to pass Professor Hendrick’s third year final exam. What
with being up all night between the sheets with Rose O’Raney, who, by the way,
really was a whole lot of fun when
you got naked with her.
That’s probably beside the point. She’s not here tonight, is
she? Because I wouldn’t have thought of making anyone else blush. Though I see
Andrew’s cousin the nun blushing. Hello, Sister Bridget! Any chance you might
be thinking of retiring from that calling? Because you and I, that could really
be a blast.
Anyway, moving on. Long story short, we spent our time
womanizing our way through college, somehow managing to keep from not getting
arrested for those fraternity stunts. Even the time we abducted the mascot from
Caltech. Andrew, is there a statute of limitations on kidnapping a beaver
suited freshman and taking him on a road trip?
And so we graduated, got ourselves established, stayed
friends. It took some adjusting. I mean, a career actually means going to work,
not getting hammered the night before like we did through college and sleeping
around with whatever girls crossed our paths. Which reminds me, Andrew,
remember those twins we came across down in Acapulco? Who’d have thought that
they were both Olympic gymnasts, and that they could be so.... flexible?
I’m getting off topic here. Life meant work. Andrew was busy
being a lawyer, taking on disreputable clients and living down to the worst
expectations people have about lawyers. I was busy establishing a dental
practice and finding out just how much people hate dentists. I don’t know why,
I mean, just because we dope people up and inflict all sorts of high pitched
drills and picks into their teeth and then take them for hundreds of bucks and
tell them we’ll see them in six months.
And there I go again, getting off topic again. We were busy
working, so it cut back on the whole drinking and carousing thing we did in
college. That, and it’s kind of a problem if you’ve got a legal or dental
practice and you find yourself in the news the following morning for throwing
up on the governor after one too many Jack Daniels. We got away with that in
college- though Governor Mathis never forgave us- but you can’t get away with that after college.
So we were becoming, for lack of a better term, at least
somewhat more respectable. Not sleeping around as much as we did. Oh, come on,
Father Darlow, stop looking like such a grouch.
I’m just saying it like it is.
Well, eventually, along came Amy. The blushing bride, who
seems to be casting daggers at me with her eyes right about now. Hi, Amy. Trust
me, I haven’t even mentioned the story about the three strippers at the
bachelor party.
Amy and Andrew fell in love, and Andrew got all settled down
and happy. It’s a wonderful thing too. For two people to find the person they
fit with and make a lifetime commitment, it astonishes me, but these two really
were meant for each other. Ladies and gentlemen, raise your glasses with me. To
Amy and Andrew, may you have years of happiness and joy, may all your dreams
come true, and may your marriage be blessed and free of annoying in-laws. No, Mrs. Deveraux, I didn't mean you, I was referring to Andrew's no good brother Ryan, who as we speak is busy drinking the scotch and making a pass at that waitress.
By the way, I still
haven’t figured out where that stripper left her g-string."
Very interesting story. I'm wondering how much of it was autobiographical. Well, actually, it was Father Darlow who was doing the wondering. I told him I didn't know, but if I had to guess...well, then someone walked in and the conversation ended. That's not true, either. Barlow collapsed and died of a stroke. I didn't want to tell you that cuz you might experience some guilt, but after reading this a second time I don't think that is a problem.
ReplyDeleteGreat fun, though! :)
P.S. You don't happen to have Sister Bridget's phone number do you? A friend of mine was interested.
ReplyDeleteLoved it.
ReplyDeleteI wonder how long it took them to get to divorce court?
ReplyDeleteUm, is Andrew still allowed to hang around with you?
ReplyDelete@Lowell: the poor priest. Doomed to a life of celibacy. Sister Bridget has gone into hiding after this one.
ReplyDelete@Mari: thanks!
@Norma: inside of a month.
@Cheryl: fortunately Andrew is a fiction. I would never make a speech like this with a friend!
If the Best Man and Big Al combine forces, no wedding will be safe!
ReplyDeleteLoved the post! Haha...look at the photo bomber!
ReplyDeleteLOL!
ReplyDeleteYeah, no one wants Big Al in their wedding photo. ;)
ReplyDeleteDo you still have any friends left that invite you to their wedding AND give the speech?
ReplyDelete