Here is the latest chapter in the story of the courtship and early married life and times of my maternal grandparents, Emily SAuble and Lyle Carringer, who married in June 1918. The background information and the list of chapters of their life together are listed at the end of this post. This is historical fiction with real people and real events, and is how it might have been.
I asked my AI Assistant Anthropic Claude to tell the story of Emily and Lyle in July 1917 when he came home from on three days leave from the U.S. Marines Boot Camp in Balboa Park in San Diego. Here is the next chapter of Emily and Lyle's story:
(AI Google NotebookLM Infographic: Lyle Comes Home From Boot Camp)
Emily and Lyle's Story:
Coming Home -- Lyle's Leave, July 1917
Thursday, The Reunion
The graduation ceremony ended at noon, and Lyle Carringer changed out of his dress blues and into his service uniform in record time. He was on Hawthorn Street by two o'clock, his kit bag slung over one shoulder, his heart hammering with an anticipation that eight weeks of Marine Corps training had done nothing to diminish.
He'd barely raised his hand to knock when the door swung open. Emily stood there in a pale blue dress, her brown hair loose around her shoulders, her eyes already bright with tears.
For a moment, neither of them spoke. Eight weeks of letters, eight weeks of imagination, and now here she was—real and close and more beautiful than he'd remembered.
"You're here," she whispered.
"I told you I'd come home," he said.
Then she was in his arms, and he held her tightly, breathing in the scent of lavender water, feeling the trembling in her shoulders and realizing she was crying. He felt the sting of his own tears and didn't fight them. After eight weeks of not being allowed to show weakness, of keeping every emotion locked behind military discipline, it felt like release—necessary and right.
"I missed you so much," Emily murmured into his shoulder. "Every single day."
"Every single hour," Lyle corrected, and she pulled back to look at him, laughing through her tears.
She studied his face with searching eyes—the leaner jaw, the steadier gaze, the indefinable quality of a man who had been tested and had not broken. "You look different," she said softly.
"Different bad or different good?"
"Different good." She reached up and touched his cheek. "You look...capable. Like you know who you are."
Lyle caught her hand and held it against his face. "I know who I am because of you. Your letters kept me sane in there. On the worst days, I'd read them again, and it was enough to keep going."
Emily shook her head. "I just wrote about ordinary things. Marston's customers, the weather, what mother cooked for dinner."
"Exactly," Lyle said simply. "That's exactly what I needed."
Down to the Bay
They walked down toward the harbor, falling naturally into step the way they had during those months of evening walks before he'd enlisted. San Diego glittered around them in the July afternoon sun—the familiar streets, the familiar smells of salt and eucalyptus, the familiar sound of the city going about its business. But everything looked different to Lyle, sharpened somehow, more vivid and precious.
At the seawall, they sat close together, watching the Navy ships moving in the bay, the same ships he'd gazed at during boot camp from the barracks windows.
"Tell me everything," Emily said. "In the letters you were always careful—protecting me from the worst of it. Now tell me really."
Lyle was quiet for a moment. "It was harder than I expected. Not just physically—though that was hard enough. It was the relentlessness of it. Every moment controlled, every action directed, no privacy, no solitude, no choices of your own." He paused. "I'm not sure I understood what freedom meant until I didn't have any."
"But you managed."
"Barely, some days." He looked at her. "I need you to know something, Emily. During the third week, I had a night when I genuinely thought I couldn't continue. Everything hurt, I hadn't slept properly in days, and a drill instructor had spent most of the afternoon singling me out for what felt like personal hatred." He smiled faintly at the memory. "I went to my cot that night feeling completely broken. And I took out your last letter—the one where you'd written about taking tea with my mother—and read it three times. Something about the sheer ordinariness of it reminded me what normal felt like. What we're working toward."
Emily's eyes glistened. "I had no idea a letter about tea could do anything useful."
"It did more than you know." He took her hand. "You kept the world real for me, Emily. All those small details you wrote—the difficult customer who wanted to exchange gloves she'd obviously worn, the afternoon when it rained and you and your mother got caught without umbrellas on the way home from the market. Those stories were my lifeline. They reminded me that ordinary life was still out there waiting, that there was something worth coming back to."
"There is," Emily said firmly. "There always will be." She squeezed his hand. "And I want you to know—I'm proud of you, Lyle. Genuinely proud. Not just because you graduated, but because of who you showed yourself to be in those letters. Thoughtful, honest, willing to be afraid and do the thing anyway. That's who I love."
He lifted her hand and pressed his lips to it. "Let's go see your mother before she thinks I've forgotten my manners."
Emily laughed. "She's made gingerbread. She started it this morning when she knew you were coming."
"Then I'm definitely going in."
Georgia Auble met them at the door with a sharp, appraising look that softened quickly. "Well," she said, studying Lyle the way she might evaluate a plant that had been repotted and returned looking better for it. "They fed you at least. You've filled out a little."
"Yes, ma'am." Lyle held out his arms. "Eight weeks of mess hall cooking will do that."
Georgia surprised them both by stepping forward and wrapping her arms around him briefly but firmly. "Welcome back, young man," she said gruffly. "We're glad you're home."
Homecoming on 30th Street
An hour later, Lyle stepped off the trolley at 30th Street and walked the short block toward his childhood home. The neighborhood looked exactly as he'd left it—every house, every tree, every crack in the sidewalk exactly as he remembered—yet it looked more beautiful than he'd ever noticed before.
His mother Della appeared at the screen door before he was halfway up the front path. She came down the steps at something close to a run, and Lyle dropped his kit bag just in time to catch her.
"My boy," she said, and that was all, holding him as though she might not let go.
Over her shoulder, he saw his father Austin standing on the porch, arms folded, eyes suspiciously bright. When Della finally released him, Austin came down the steps and took Lyle's hand in a strong grip, then pulled him into the kind of rough, brief embrace that said everything Henry Austin Carringer would never put into words.
"You look well, son," Austin managed.
"You both look well too," Lyle said. "Better than I expected, honestly. I worried about you."
"We worried about you," Della said, taking his face in both hands and studying it the way mothers have always studied returning sons. "But here you are. Here you are."
His uncle Edgar and his grandmother Abbie Smith were waiting inside—Abbie in her chair by the window, Edgar standing nearby with a wide grin. At seventy-three, Abbie moved less than she once had, but her eyes were as sharp as ever.
"Come here where I can see you properly," she commanded, and Lyle obediently crouched beside her chair. She took his face in papery hands and looked at him for a long moment. "Your grandfather would have been proud," she said finally.
That night, Lyle slept in his own bed for the first time in eight weeks. The familiar smell of the room, the particular quality of the night sounds on 30th Street, the weight of his own blankets—it was so achingly ordinary that he lay awake for an hour simply savoring it before exhaustion took him under.
Friday - Old Friends and A Special Dinner
Emily had to work at Marston's on Friday, so Lyle arrived mid-morning to visit his former colleagues. He'd barely stepped through the employee entrance when Charlie Morrison appeared, shaking his hand vigorously and then looking him up and down.
"Well, look at you," Charlie said. "When they said the Marines would make a man out of you, I didn't think they meant literally."
Around the store, he was greeted warmly by coworkers who clapped his shoulders, told him he looked splendid, and generally treated him as a returning hero rather than a former floorwalker who had moved sideways rather than up. He spent a pleasant hour making the rounds, but his eyes kept finding Emily across the floor—assisting customers with her customary grace, catching his gaze occasionally and smiling.
That evening, he took her to dinner at The Alhambra Cafe, one of the finest restaurants serving Balboa Park's visitors. The dining room glowed with candlelight and the soft sound of a piano. They sat across from each other over white linen and ordered the roast chicken, which was the evening's specialty.
"This feels impossibly civilized," Lyle said, looking around the room.
"After eight weeks of mess hall food, anything with a tablecloth must feel civilized," Emily observed.
"The food was actually adequate. But the company was terrible." He smiled across at her. "This is considerably better."
They talked for two hours over dinner—really talked, the way they hadn't been able to in letters, finishing each other's thoughts and laughing freely and discussing the future with the ease of two people who have decided to build it together. When Lyle described his assignment to the base administration office, Emily's relief was visible and immediate.
"Don't apologize for it," she said, before he could qualify the news. "You're serving. That's what matters."
"It isn't exactly heroic."
"Heroic is overrated," Emily said firmly. "I'll take you alive and behind a desk over heroic and dead in France."
Lyle reached across the table and took her hand. "You have a talent for cutting straight to the essential point."
"One of us has to."
Saturday - San Diego From the Sea
Saturday was all sunshine and salt air. With his father's Model T loaded up and Emily beside him in the front seat, Lyle drove them out through the waking city toward La Jolla, the Pacific glittering to their left through occasional breaks in the coastal scrub.
They parked above the cove and scrambled down the rocks to where the surf came in cold and clear and relentless. Lyle took off his shoes and rolled his trousers to the knee, and Emily pinned up her skirt with the pragmatic efficiency of a girl who had not grown up near the ocean. When the first wave came in and swirled around their ankles, they both yelped at the cold and then laughed at themselves.
"You'd think a Marine could handle a bit of cold water," Emily said.
"Marksmanship training does not prepare you for the Pacific Ocean," Lyle answered with dignity, then immediately lost it by yelping again as a larger wave broke over their knees.
They drove down the coast through Pacific Beach and Mission Beach and over the bridge to Ocean Beach and walked out on the pier, watching pelicans glide below and fishermen work their lines in companionable silence at the railing. The Pacific stretched away to the horizon, vast and indifferent and beautiful, and Lyle stood with Emily's arm through his and thought about how good it was to be alive.
Lunch at a nearby diner was simple—tomato soup, grilled cheese sandwiches, and pie—and wholly satisfying in the way that only humble food eaten hungry in good company can be.
"Do you remember the last time we came to Ocean Beach?" Emily asked over her pie.
"Before I enlisted. When I told you I'd decided to join the Marines." He looked at her. "You were so brave about it."
"I was terrified," Emily corrected. "But there didn't seem to be any point in both of us being terrified at the same time."
That evening, Lyle drove his parents' car carefully to the Florence Heights neighborhood to collect Emily and Georgia, then brought them to 30th Street. Della Carringer had cooked for two days—roast beef, potatoes, green beans from the garden, fresh bread, and a peach cake. The table was crowded and cheerful, everyone talking at once.
Abbie Smith sat beside Emily and subjected her to a gentle but thorough questioning about her family history and opinions on various matters. Emily answered everything directly and without artifice, and Abbie pronounced her acceptable in the way of old women who know their judgments carry weight and use them carefully.
Austin Carringer, who rarely showed enthusiasm, showed it now—his only son home in uniform, a fine young woman beside him, the family together around the dinner table. He said grace that evening with an earnestness that made Della reach for her handkerchief.
Sunday - Church and Farewell
Sunday morning found Lyle in his dress uniform, sitting between Emily and Georgia Auble in the pews of Central Christian Church at 820 E Street, where Reverend W.E. Crabtree preached with his customary straightforward warmth. The congregation was dotted with other young men in uniform—San Diego was a military town now, and the church reflected it.
Reverend Crabtree's sermon touched on sacrifice and service and the responsibility of the living to honor both the dead and those who remained. Lyle sat very still through it, aware of Emily's hand finding his somewhere in the middle and not letting go until the final hymn.
Georgia sang beside him in a strong, clear contralto that surprised him. He glanced at her, and she gave him a small, satisfied nod, as though she knew exactly what he'd been thinking and found his surprise amusing.
After the service, Reverend Crabtree shook Lyle's hand and held it an extra moment. "We'll pray for your safety and safe return," he said simply.
"Thank you, Reverend." Lyle meant it more than most things he'd said that weekend.
The afternoon was quiet. They returned to Hawthorn Street, and Georgia, true to form, produced a Sunday dinner from what seemed like thin air—roast pork, sweet potatoes, apple sauce, and a bread pudding that made Lyle close his eyes in appreciation.
"You'll have to give me the recipe," he said.
"You're not going to be cooking anything where you're going," Georgia replied with characteristic practicality. "But I'll give it to Emily, and she can make it when you come home next."
After dinner, the afternoon light began to slant toward evening, and there was no avoiding what came next. Lyle found his kit bag by the door where he'd left it, packed and ready. He said his goodbyes to Georgia with genuine warmth—she stood straight and dry-eyed and told him to write his letters and keep his head down, in that order.
On the front path, he and Emily stood facing each other in the long golden light of a San Diego Sunday evening.
"Same as last time," Emily said. "This isn't goodbye."
"See you soon," Lyle agreed. He held her face gently in both hands and kissed her—not briefly, not chastely, but the way a man kisses the woman he intends to marry. "I love you, Emily Auble."
"I love you, Lyle Carringer." She straightened his collar with unnecessary precision. "Now go be a Marine. And write me tomorrow."
He picked up his kit bag, walked to the corner, and turned. She was still there, watching, one hand raised. He waved back, then turned toward the trolley stop and the Marine Barracks and the Monday morning that waited.
But this time, he carried something he hadn't carried eight weeks ago when he'd first reported for duty. He carried the certainty of being loved by someone worth every sacrifice, every hardship, every lonely night. He carried the memory of seventy-two hours—the best seventy-two hours of his twenty-five years—that would sustain him through whatever came next.
The trolley came, and Lyle Carringer climbed aboard, heading back to Balboa Park and his duty. Behind him, the city glowed in the last of the evening light. Ahead of him, the rest of his life waited—uncertain, dangerous, and full of promise.
Here is the Video Overview of this post by Google NotebookLM:
This is historical fiction based on the facts that are available for the life and family of my maternal grandparents, Lyle and Emily(Auble) Carringer. It is based on my research, social history and society norms at the time and place, and it is likely realistic. It might have happened this way.
Stay tuned for the next chapters in this family story.
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The AI-assisted biography of my maternal grandmother is in ABC Biography of #7 Emily Kemp (Auble) Carringer (1899-1977) of Illinois and California. I wrote a story about her life in 1916 in Ask AI: Describe Emily Auble's Life After the Death of Her Father In 1916.
The AI-assisted biography of my maternal grandfather is in ABC Biography of #6 Lyle Lawrence Carringer (1891-1976) of San Diego, California. I wrote a story about Lyle being a young working man in 1916 being teased about being boring in Lyle's Story: Finding Courage in 1916-1917.
- Emily and Lyle's Story: The Dance.
- Emily and Lyle’s Story: A San Diego Romance In 1917.
- Emily and Lyle’s Story: The Promise Made.
- Emily and Lyle’s Story: Letters From Boot Camp – Part 1, May 1917
- Emily and Lyle’s Story: Letters From Boot Camp – Part 2, May-June 1917.
- Emily and Lyle’s Story: Letters From Boot Camp – Part 3, Weeks 5 and 6, June 1917
- Emily and Lyle’s Story: Letters From Boot Camp – Part 4 (Weeks 7 and 8), Late June to July 1917
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