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EDITOR'S NOTE
The
Saudi-American Forum is very pleased to present "Lunch with
a Prince" by Steve Furman. This
memoir of the early days of Americans working and living in
Saudi Arabia is excerpted from the book, Dhahran Fables,
Fiesta Room Tales by Steve Furman, Clark Magruder and Ann
Peart. We
hope you enjoy this story and will join
us in a discussion.
Check below for information to order a copy of Dhahran Fables,
Fiesta Room Tales.
Lunch with a
Prince
By Steve Furman |
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It was December, the weather had turned
chilly, and we'd had a lot of rain.
I was seven-years-old and looking forward to our first
family Christmas in Arabia, reunited with my father after WWII.
The world was at peace again.
Our
household shipment had finally arrived, and my mother was trying
very hard to decorate our house at 1151-B for the holiday
season. Everything
looked very festive, except for the lack of a tree.
My dad drove out to the company's wartime cattle farm and
brought back a small tamarisk, thinned from a row planted as
windbreakers. When
my mother had hosed off the dust and strung it with lights, it
made a magnificent sight. I
was as happy as a clam.
One of the presents I found under the
tamarisk tree on the morning of December 25 was a blue tin boat.
But, this was not just any ordinary run-of-the-mill boat.
This was a boat that was powered by the heat of a single
candle. When set in
place and lit, the candle warmed a diaphragm where air expanded
and propelled the boat forward with a wonderfully audible "putt
putt."
I was delighted with my boat and
immediately gave it a "shake-down" cruise in the
bathtub at 1151-B. Of
course, as any self-respecting sailor knows, a bathtub is fine,
but such a super vessel as my tin boat had to be destined for
better things. It
had to be launched on bigger waters.
So, my search began.
There was the swimming pool, of course, but
that was out because if the boat got out in the middle of the
pool and the candle went out, I wouldn't be able to retrieve it.
I hadn't learned to swim yet, so the swimming pool was
not an option.
A few days later, it poured rain.
A cold front had rolled in from the north, and the rain
came down in buckets. I
was sitting out on our front porch, bemoaning the rain when all
of a sudden, it came to me.
I knew where I could find an expanse of water broad
enough to give my boat the voyage it deserved.
I bolted from the porch, boat in hand, and ran south down
11th Street to the recreation area.
I was soaked when I arrived, but there it
was, a lake of rainwater pooled by a newly constructed sidewalk
on the east side of the tennis courts.
It was not unusual in those early days before top soil
and grass for concrete sidewalks to be a foot or so high.
The new one by the tennis courts made a terrific dam.
I kicked off my shoes and socks, rolled my pants up over
my knees and waded in.
This was perfect.
I rigged the boat with the candle and tried to light the
wick with a match from a confiscated matchbook that I hoped my
father would never miss. I
couldn't get the wick going right away, but after several
attempts, I was successful.
In the meantime, I had soot on my hands and smudges on my
face. All in all, I
was a very wet, muddy and messy seven-year-old.
From the shore, I placed the boat gently in
the water and proudly watched it make its way across the
shallow, wind-blown pool. I
could see little clouds of smoke emerging from the cabin where
the candle was hidden, as the boat chugged toward the sidewalk
on the far side. Before
long, I was lost in my imaginary world of seafaring, sailing on
my boat to far-off places and grown-up times.
Suddenly, a shout brought me back to reality.
"Steve, get out of that water, and put
on your shoes and socks! We're
going to lunch." It
was Tom Barger, a friend of my dad.
He had climbed out of his car and was standing by the
sidewalk smiling down at me.
Mr. Barger was wearing a suit! A suit, mind you, a very unusual thing in Dhahran in those
days. My dad had a
suit, but I'd never seen him wear it.
I was in my muddy pants, rolled up to my knees, a Fruit
of the Loom t-shirt and a wet sweater that was maybe one or two
sizes too large for me.
"Where are we going to lunch?" I
asked. "Who's
in the big car, and why are you in a suit?"
"Just get yourself fixed up and roll
down your pants," he said.
"First, get out of the water.
Come on over here. We haven't got much time, so hurry."
Soon, I was marching off to the big car,
Tom Barger leading me by one hand and me holding my boat tightly
in the other.
"Where are we going, Tom?
Whose car is that?"
Tom opened the door and inside was Mr. MacPherson and his
son Jimmy. Jimmy
was a big kid, maybe eight or nine.
"Hi, Mr. Mac.
Hi, Jimmy. Are
you going to lunch too?"
Jimmy was dressed in a suit too and he was wearing a tie.
His hair was slickly combed the way my mom would try to
comb mine when she could catch me.
Off we drove to the dining hall, only a block or two
away.
When we got there, Tom took me into the
men's room and spruced me up as best he could.
Then, into the central dining room we went.
There were lots of people at long tables, and I still
remember how nice everything looked with flowers and everything.
Tom told me we were going to have lunch with Crown Prince
Sa'ud of Saudi Arabia. I
remember asking if I could have rice pudding for dessert.
I don't remember what we had for lunch or
dessert, but it was good, and I sat my boat right on the table
next to my plate. Afterwards,
Tom offered to give me a ride home, but I thanked him and said I
had to go back to sail my boat a little more.
I walked back to the muddy pond and resumed
my nautical adventures. As
usual when I wandered home that evening, I was late.
"Where have you been, young man? You've been gone all day.
And, just look at your pants."
I looked at my mother and explained, "I
sailed my boat and went to lunch with the Crown Prince."
Join
a discussion of "Lunch with a Prince" [Click
Here]
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Steve
Furman was born in Inglewood, California in 1938. He
traveled to Saudi Arabia in June of 1945 and was the
first American child into the Kingdom after the end
of World War II in Europe. He was also the first
American child enrolled in the Aramco School System in
October of 1945. Furman lived in Dhahran, Saudi
Arabia until 1962. He graduated from Holy Cross
College, a Jesuit Liberal Arts College in Worcester,
Massachusetts, with a B.A. degree in English
Literature.
In
his career, Furman served as an Infantry Officer, USMC
from 1960 to 1965. He has worked for various oil
companies and contractors in West Africa, Brazil, Iran,
Kuwait and Bahrain. He also worked for Aramco in
Dhahran, Saudi Arabia.
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ABOUT
THE BOOK
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Dhahran
Fables: Fiesta Room Tales
By Steve Furman, Clark Magruder and Ann
Peart
TO ORDER:
Send a check for
$20 (includes shipping/handling to US addresses) to <
Steve Furman, 1727 Valley Vista Drive, Houston, TX 77077
>
MORE INFO:
Email
Steve Furman > stevejanefurman@worldnet.att.net
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