Here is the latest chapter in the story of the married life and times of my parents, Fred and Betty (Carringer) Seaver, who married in July 1942. 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.
And now we are up to late June 1944, two years plus into World War II, and they are expecting a visit from Fred's younger brother, Edward Richmond Seaver.
(AI NotebookLM Infographic - Betty and Fred's Story, Late June 1944)
Based on the biographies and the earlier stories, I asked Anthropic Claude Sonnet 4.6 to tell another story - what happened next (I offered some suggestions!)? Here is the next story (edited for more detail and accuracy):
Betty and Fred’s Story: Building A Life Together- The Ship Comes In, Late June 1944
The Second Letter from Ed
The letter arrived on a Wednesday, the fourteenth of June.
Fred was at Rohr. Betty found it in the afternoon mail, recognized
Ed's compressed handwriting immediately, and set it on the kitchen
table for Fred to open. She was curious and could have opened it —
they had established early in their marriage that they opened each
other's family letters freely — but this one felt like it should be
Fred's to open first.
He read it standing at the kitchen table still in his work
clothes, and Betty watched his face do several things in quick
succession.
June 8, 1944
Dear Fred and Betty,
We sail on the 17th. Barring anything unforeseen, LCI(G)-728
will be in San Diego Bay by the 20th or 21st — call it the 20th and
plan on it, I am an optimist about favorable winds.
I want to see you soon after the ship is
secured and liberty is granted, which I expect will be the afternoon
of arrival or the morning after at the latest. I have already written
to Aunt Emily and cousin Dorothy and they have
extended an invitation for Sunday the 25th. I hope that works for you
— I know you have a baby and I will trust you to manage the
logistics.
I have been thinking about how to describe this ship to you
and I keep coming back to the same answer, which is that you need to
see her. She is 158 feet long and she is faster than she looks and
she has enough firepower for her size to be genuinely useful, which
is what matters. The crew is fifteen men and three officers including
myself. They are young. Some of them are very young. I am thirty
years old and I feel ancient when I look at some of these boys, and I
want you to understand what I mean by that without my having to say
it directly.
The Normandy news reached us on the 7th. The whole crew heard
it together on the radio. I don't have words for what that was like.
I will just say that every man on this boat understood immediately
and without discussion what it meant, and what it meant to us
specifically, which is that the Pacific matters now more than ever
and we will do our work and we will do it well.
Janet and Peter will arrive in San Diego on the 7th of July. I
will tell you more about the arrangements when I see you. I cannot
tell you how much I am looking forward to seeing you, Fred. Your last
letter was — well. You know what I mean. You said what I needed to
hear and I will not embarrass either of us by specifying.
Tell Betty that Janet has a recipe for something she calls
Leominster Spice Cake that she intends to bring and which I am
mentioning now so Betty can prepare for it. It is extraordinary. I am
not objective about this but I am not wrong.
Also tell Betty: my nephew had better be enormous. I have been
telling the crew about him for three months and expectations are
high.
June 20th, Fred. I'll see you soon.
Your brother, Ed
LT(jg) Edward H. Seaver, USNR Commanding Officer,
LCI(G)-728
Fred set the letter down on the kitchen table.
Betty waited.
"He sounds good," Fred said.
"He sounds like himself," Betty said. "Like you
said he would."
Fred read a section again silently. "Some of them are
very young." He set it down again. "He's thirty,
almost thirty-one. He's captaining fifteen men. He signed the letter
with his rank." A pause. "I knew him he was eighteen and he
broke my father's car on a back road in Connecticut and spent a week
figuring out how to tell him."
Betty almost laughed. "Did he ever tell him?"
"He told him it was a mechanical failure," Fred said.
"Dad didn't believe him but he let it stand." Something
moved across Fred's face — something warm and complicated and old.
"He was so sure he could talk his way out of anything. Eighteen
years old. So sure."
He picked up the letter and read the postscript once more.
"June 20th," he said.
"That's next week," Betty said.
"I know." He folded the letter along its original
creases and held it in his hands for a moment. "My brother is
bringing a warship into San Diego Bay."
"He is."
Fred looked at Betty.
"I need to be there when she comes in," he said. "I
need to see it."
"Yes," Betty said, immediately and without
qualification. "You do."
The Ship Comes In
Fred arranged it with Garfield on Thursday morning — a late
start on the twentieth, with Hooper covering the early accounts, time
made up later in the week. Garfield agreed without asking for
elaboration. There were things a man needed to do and this was
apparently one of them, and Garfield was old enough to understand the
taxonomy.
On the morning of June 20th, Fred drove to the waterfront before
seven.
He stood on the embarcadero near 28th Street in the
early morning light with his hands in his pockets and watched the
harbor. San Diego Bay in the early morning had a quality he had
always found quietly magnificent — the low clouds overhead, the
water gray-blue and still, the sky lightening from the east, the
shapes of ships at anchor in the bay facing the brightness, with
Coronado across the Bay. The Navy was everywhere in this harbor —
had been since the war began, would be until it ended, and probably longer. He had become
accustomed to it. He was not accustomed to watching it for a specific
ship carrying a specific man.
He saw LCI(G)-728 come in at half past eight.
She was, as Ed had said, 158 feet long. She moved through the
harbor with the purposeful efficiency of a working vessel — no
grandeur, no ceremony, a craft designed and built and deployed for a
specific job in a specific war. She was gray. She had guns. She was,
Fred thought, watching her come through the morning light, both
smaller and larger than he'd expected — smaller physically, larger
in what she represented, in what she was about to do.
He watched her find her berth at the Naval Station at 32nd
Street. He watched the lines go out and the crew moving on deck. He
was too far to make out faces.
But somewhere on that ship was his brother.
Fred stood there for a few more minutes with his hands in his
pockets and the harbor moving around him and said nothing to no one.
Then he went to work.
Sunday at the Chamberlains
The 25th of June fell on a Sunday.
They had arranged it the previous week through Dorothy
Chamberlain, who had received Ed's letter and immediately begun
planning a meal of sufficient scale to demonstrate that the
Chamberlain household understood what a homecoming required. Fred had
spoken to Ed briefly by telephone — a two-minute call, the
connection crackling — and confirmed the time, and
Ed had said I'll be there with the simple certainty of a man
who has learned not to qualify his plans more than necessary.
Betty dressed Randy in his best — a light blue cotton shirt and
small trousers, the knit cap from Marcia set aside in favor of the
summer weather — and Fred wore his suit, the charcoal one Betty had
given him at Christmas, because his brother was a naval officer and
some things warranted a suit.
They arrived at the Chamberlain house in Kensington at noon.
Marshall Chamberlain opened the door with his usual warmth.
Dorothy could be heard in the kitchen. Emily Taylor appeared from the
hallway. Marcia came downstairs and went immediately to Randy with
her customary single-mindedness.
They had been there perhaps ten minutes when the front door
opened.
Fred turned from the window where he'd been watching the street —
he had been watching the street — and there was his brother.
Edward Seaver was three inches shorter than Fred, built similarly
but leaner, with the same forehead and the same quality of attention
in his eyes. He was in his Navy uniform — tan summer khakis, the
single stripe and half stripe of a Lieutenant JG on his collar, his
cover under his arm. He looked, Fred thought, both exactly like
himself and like someone who had become something additional since
Fred had last seen him. There was a settled quality to him — not
old, not worn, but established in a way that thirty-year-old Ed had
not quite been yet at their last meeting back in 1940.
They stood there for half a second in the entry hall, the two
Seaver brothers, looking at each other.
Then Fred crossed the hall and they did what brothers do — the
handshake that becomes an embrace, the back-clapping, the pulling
apart to look and then the surprise at what is seen — and whatever
either of them might have said in that first moment was managed
without words, which was efficient and sufficient.
"You look old," Ed said.
"You look like a sailor," Fred said.
"I am a sailor."
"I'm aware."
Ed pulled back and looked at him properly. "You look good,
Fred. You look like a man who has something to come home to."
"I do," Fred said. Simply.
"Well," Ed said. "Show me."
Betty had watched this from the doorway of the front room with
Randy on her hip, and when Fred turned and brought Ed across the
hall, she was ready.
Ed Seaver looked at his sister-in-law and his nephew, and his face
did something that Betty had not expected — something that bypassed
the social machinery and went straight to genuine.
"Betty," he said, and took her hand in both of his.
"Fred's letters don't do you justice. I want you to know that."
"Fred's letters don't say much," Betty said. "To be
fair."
"True," Ed conceded. He looked at Randy, who was
performing his standard assessment with the focused seriousness of
someone who has evaluated a great many new people and has developed
reliable methodology.
"And this," Ed said, looking at Randy, "is my
nephew."
"Randall Jeffrey Seaver," Betty confirmed.
Ed looked at Randy for a long moment. Randy looked back at Ed. The
assessment was mutual and serious.
Then Ed held out his finger. Randy looked at it. Looked at Ed.
Made a decision of some kind. Reached out and took the finger in his
fist.
Ed glanced up at Fred with an expression that Fred recognized —
the same expression Fred had worn, the first time.
"Hello, Randy," Ed said. "I'm your Uncle Ed. I've
been looking forward to meeting you for eight months. I want you to
know that the crew of LCI(G)-728 is already aware of your existence
and considers you a point of pride."
Randy tightened his grip on Ed's finger.
"He accepts," Betty said.
Lunch was what Dorothy Chamberlain did when she was cooking for
someone she wanted to honor — which was, effectively, what she did
for everyone, but scaled. There was a roast and vegetables and fresh
bread and two kinds of pie, and she accepted the compliments with the
pleasure of someone who made things to be used and appreciated their
proper reception.
They sat around the large table — the Seavers, the Chamberlains,
Emily Taylor, and Marcia who had positioned herself strategically
near Randy's basket — and it had the quality of the best meals:
noisy and warm and slightly chaotic and better for it.
Ed talked about the ship. He talked about the Pacific the way
officers talked about it — carefully, broadly, without details that
shouldn't be shared, but with enough that the shape of it was clear.
He talked about his crew. He talked about Portland. He did not talk
about August, not directly, but August was there in the room in the
way that things are present when everyone knows they're there and has
agreed, without discussion, on the terms of their acknowledgment.
Fred told Ed about Rohr, about the production numbers, about
Hooper and Garfield and the writing on the wall. He said it without
self-pity and Ed received it without false comfort, and they both
understood that the draft board question was ongoing and that Fred
was doing what could be done and that was all that could be said
about it.
Then, because they were brothers and because the afternoon had a
warmth that made it possible, they talked about other things.
About their parents — their widowed mother Bessie in Leominster,
writing her letters, loving her grandchldren, managing with the particular competence of a
woman who has always managed. About Janet and almost two-year-old Peter,
their three married sisters and their families, holding down the household,
about their sister Gerry, who was teaching and writing and keeping
things together at home.
About New England, the summers. The back roads, their friends, the swimming
holes and the car Ed had destroyed on a dirt road in 1931.
"It was a mechanical failure," Ed said, with twelve
years of practice and complete composure.
"It was a ditch," Fred said.
"The ditch was incidental."
"The ditch was the entire event."
"Dad believed me," Ed said.
"Dad said he believed you," Fred corrected. "Those
are different things and you know it."
Ed looked at Marshall Chamberlain across the table. "He's
always been like this," he said. "Very literal. No poetry."
"He married a poet," Betty said. "He's working on
it."
Everyone laughed. Fred looked at Betty with the expression he
sometimes had — the one that said you with considerable
emphasis — and she raised her water glass at him slightly.
Marcia was laughing too, one hand on Randy's back where he sat in
his basket, and Randy, startled by the sudden collective sound,
looked around the table with wide eyes before deciding, apparently,
that this was the correct atmosphere and producing his largest, most
deliberate smile for the assembly.
The table responded as one. Ed looked at Randy's smile with the
expression of a man filing something away in a permanent location.
"Write to me about him," Ed said, to Betty, quietly,
under the noise. "When I'm out there. Write to me about what he
does."
"Every month," Betty said. "I promise."
"Tell me the ordinary things," Ed said. "The
ordinary things are what I'll want."
After lunch, while Marshall and Marcia helped Dorothy clear, and
Emily Taylor settled into a comfortable chair with her knitting, Fred
and Ed took their coffee to the back yard of the Chamberlain house
and sat on the canopiy swing.
It was a warm San Diego afternoon. The Kensington garden was in
its June fullness, bougainvillea spilling over the back wall, the
smell of jasmine from somewhere nearby. From inside the house they
could hear Betty talking to Dorothy, Randy's occasional commentary,
the sound of domestic order reasserting itself.
The brothers sat without talking for a while. They had always been
able to do this — the Seaver capacity for comfortable silence,
which their mother claimed came from their father and their father
had claimed came from New England.
"Janet's going to love it here," Ed said, eventually.
"The weather. She won't say so immediately — she's a
Massachusetts woman, she has principles about things being too easy —
but she'll love it."
"When does she arrive?"
"July 7th. The train from Los Angeles." Ed turned his
coffee cup in his hands. "Peter will be overwhelmed. He's never
been west of the Berkshires." A pause. "Neither had I,
before all this."
Fred looked out at the garden. "How are you, Ed? Really."
Ed considered the question with the seriousness it deserved.
"I'm ready," he said, finally. "I don't mean —
I'm not saying it like bravado. I mean I have done the work, and the
boat is right, and the crew is as ready as I can make them, and I am
as ready as I can make myself." He paused. "I am also —"
he stopped, found the word — "aware. Very aware of what it
is."
Fred nodded.
"The boys," Ed said, more quietly. "Some of these
boys. I wrote you about it. Very young." He turned his cup.
"That's the part that keeps me up. My job. Whether I do it well
enough. Whether they all come home."
Fred looked at his brother in his Navy khakis, the stripe and a
half on his collar, the coffee cup in his hands. Thirty years old.
The back road in Connecticut. Their father's car.
"You'll do it well enough," Fred said. "You always
have."
Ed glanced at him. "You sound like you know."
"I know you," Fred said.
They sat with that for a moment.
"I need you to do something for me," Ed said,
eventually. "While I'm out."
"Name it."
"Look after Janet and Peter. Not —" he shook his head
— "not look after them like they can't manage, they can
manage, Janet can manage anything. But — be their people out here.
They'll be back in Leominster by September, after I sail, but until
then. And write to them after they’re home."
"We'll be their people," Fred said. "Betty already
is, and she hasn't even met Janet yet."
Ed smiled at that. "I know. Janet said the same thing."
A pause. "Betty writes good letters, Fred."
"I know," Fred said. "She's better at most things
than me."
"True," Ed said. "How'd you manage it?"
"I asked her," Fred said. "Before she thought it
through."
Ed laughed — the real laugh, the one Fred had known his whole
life — and Fred laughed with him, and the San Diego afternoon moved
around them, and inside the house Randy was saying something urgent
and probably incoherent to Dorothy Chamberlain, who was responding as
though it made complete sense.
They left in the late afternoon, Randy asleep in Betty's arms
before they reached the car, the day having proved sufficient to
exhaust even his considerable energies.
Ed walked them out. He stood on the Chamberlains' front walk and
shook Fred's hand and held it for a moment.
"June 25th," he said. "I'll remember it."
"July 7th," Fred said. "Don't be late to the
station."
"Never." Ed kissed Betty on the cheek. He looked at
Randy, sleeping against her shoulder, oblivious. He put a hand
briefly on his nephew's back — just for a moment, just to have done
it.
"Goodbye, Randy," he said quietly. "I'll see you next time."
Betty reached out and pressed Ed's hand once, briefly. She didn't
say anything. She didn't need to.
They got in the car. Fred drove. In the mirror, Ed stood on the
walk watching them go, and raised his hand once when Fred looked
back, and then Kensington turned and he was gone.
Betty looked straight ahead at the road.
"I like him," she said, after a while. "I like him
very much."
"He liked you too," Fred said. "He'll write to me
and tell me how much, at considerable length, which I will pretend is
annoying."
Betty smiled. Randy made a small sleeping sound against her
shoulder.
They drove home through the long June evening, the San Diego light
golden and slow, the bay visible on the left as they came down the
grade toward Chula Vista.
July 7th, Fred thought. Janet and Peter on the train from
Los Angeles. Two weeks before Ed could see them and then had to
prepare for August.
He had learned, these months, to hold what was given. June had
given him his brother's face, his brother's laugh, his brother's hand
on his son's sleeping back.
He would hold that.
To be continued...
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Here is the Google NotebookLM Video Overview about Betty, Fred and Randy's life in late June 1944:
This story is historical fiction based on real people -- my parents and me -- and a real event in a real place. I don't know the full story of these events -- but this is how it might have been. I hope that it was at least this good! Claude is such a good story writer! I added some details and corrected some errors in Claude's initial version.
Stay tuned for the next chapter in this family story.
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The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my mother, Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #3 Betty Virginia (Carringer) Seaver (1919-2002) of San Diego, California. I also wrote Betty's Story: The First-Year Art Teacher about the start of her teaching career.
The AI-assisted ABC Biography of my father, Frederick Walton Seaver, is in ABC Biography of #2 Frederick Walton Seaver Jr. (1911-1983) of Massachusetts and San Diego, California. I also wrote Fred's Story: The Three-Day Cross-Country Escape and Fred's Story: "I Need A Girl" about him coming to San Diego, and wanting a girlfriend.
Here are the previous chapters in this story:
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Links to my blog posts about using Artificial Intelligence are on my Randy's AI and Genealogy page. Links to AI information and articles about Artificial Intelligence in Genealogy by other genealogists are on my AI and Genealogy Compendium page.
Copyright (c) 2026, Randall J. Seaver
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