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 early June 1944, two years plus into World War II, and they are waiting.
(AI NotebookLM Infographic - Betty and Fred's Story, Early 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: The Waiting -- Early
June 1944
The Waiting
June arrived in Chula Vista with its usual indifference to human
anxiety — warm mornings, the marine layer burning off by noon, the
afternoons bright and salt-scented from the bay. The bougainvillea on
the fence at the end of Twin Oaks Avenue had gone into its summer
extravagance, the kind of color that still surprised Fred
occasionally, a man raised in Massachusetts where flowers had the
decency to be modest.
He noticed it less than usual in June. He was watching the mail.
He didn't say this to Betty directly, not every day, but she knew
it the way she knew most things about him — by the particular
quality of his attention when the mail slot clicked in the early
afternoon, the way he'd developed a habit of coming home from Rohr
and checking the small table by the door before he'd even set down
his lunch pail. The draft notice, if it came, would come in an
envelope like any other envelope. It would arrive on a Tuesday or a
Thursday with the electric bill and a letter from Leominster and
there would be nothing to distinguish it until you read it.
Fred had decided not to spend the month imagining it. He was
mostly successful.
The thing at Rohr made it harder to ignore.
It happened in the second week of June. Garfield, Fred's
supervisor, called him into the small glass-windowed office off the
main floor and sat down across from him with the expression of a man
who has thought carefully about what he is going to say.
"I want you to start bringing Hooper up to speed on your
accounts," Garfield said.
Hooper was Walter Hooper — fifty-four years old, careful and
thorough, a man who had come to Rohr from a hardware wholesaler in El
Cajon when the younger men had started leaving for the service. He
was competent. He was methodical. He had, Fred had observed, the
patience of a man who understood that getting it right mattered more
than getting it done quickly.
Fred looked at Garfield for a moment.
"All of my accounts?" he said.
Garfield met his eyes. "All of them."
There was a silence between them that didn't require filling. Both
men understood exactly what was being communicated and what was not
being said, and the distinction was professional courtesy rather than
any real ambiguity.
"How long do I have?" Fred asked.
"I'd like him solid on everything by end of July,"
Garfield said. "Earlier if possible."
Fred nodded. He thought about what he wanted to say and chose the
version that was true without being more than the moment called for.
"He's a good man. He'll do fine."
"I know he will," Garfield said. "You'll make sure
of it."
Fred drove home that evening with the windows down and the June
air coming through warm and steady, and he thought about the
conversation with the deliberate care of a man who has received
information he already knew was coming and needs to find a place to
put it.
By the time he pulled onto Twin Oaks Avenue, he had found the
place.
He came through the door, set down his lunch pail, checked the
mail — nothing — and went to find Betty.
She was in the backyard with Randy on a blanket in the shade, the
afternoon light filtering through the lemon tree they'd planted in
March. Randy, almost eight months old, was sitting with the solid
self-satisfaction of a baby who has mastered sitting and is not sure
what the fuss was about. Betty was sketching something — not Randy,
for once, but the garden, the particular angle of the late light
through the lemon tree's branches.
She looked up when Fred came through the back door and read his
face with the speed of long attention.
"Tell me," she said.
He sat on the blanket beside Randy, who immediately redirected his
investigation toward Fred's shoelaces, and told her about Garfield
and Hooper.
Betty listened to all of it. When he was done she set her
sketchbook aside.
"Well," she said. "At least they're thinking
ahead."
"That's one way to put it."
"It means they know you do something worth learning."
She looked at him steadily. "You train Hooper well, and you do
your job well until whenever, and if the notice comes we have a plan
and if it doesn't we'll be grateful." A pause. "That's all
there is."
Fred looked at his son, who had successfully untied his left shoe
and appeared to consider this an achievement worth savoring.
"Yes," Fred said. "That's all there is."
He reached over and retied the shoe. Randy watched this reversal
of his work with an expression of philosophical acceptance.
Betty and Randy, June Mornings
Betty had developed, over the winter and spring, a deep
appreciation for the baby buggy the Carringers had given them at
Christmas.
It was a good one — sturdy, well-sprung, with a hood that
adjusted against the sun — and it had become the organizing
technology of her mornings. Randy in the buggy, the world available.
Without it she was anchored to the house by the logistics of carrying
a seven-month-old everywhere. With it, she was mobile.
She had mapped the neighborhood over the months — the routes
that had good sidewalks, the park two blocks east with the mature
trees and the bench in the shade where she could sit and let Randy
watch the pigeons with his studying look. The small grocery on H
Street where the owner, a stout Croatian man named Mr. Kovač, had
decided that Randy was the finest American baby he had personally
encountered and made this known every visit with great sincerity. The
block on Shasta Street where three other young mothers with babies
lived within fifty yards of each other, a coincidence of wartime
housing that had produced a reliable informal gathering most Tuesday
and Thursday mornings.
The Shasta Street mothers were: Pauline, whose husband was in the
Army in Europe and whose daughter Clara was six months old and had
opinions about everything; Helen, a transplant from Ohio whose
husband worked at the Naval Air Station and whose twin boys, Gordon
and Earl, were just past a year old and were conducting what appeared
to be a sustained campaign against all available household order; and
Frances, whose husband was at sea on a destroyer escort and who had a
nine-month-old named Thomas and a dry wit that Betty had come to rely
on.
They gathered on doorsteps and front walks in the warm June
mornings with their babies and their coffee — real coffee when they
had it, which was not always — and talked. About the babies and the
ration books and the neighborhood news and the war, always the war,
quietly and without drama but honestly, the way women talk about the
things they are all carrying together.
"Harold's ship was in Pearl last month," Frances said
one morning, about her husband. "He got to call from there.
Three minutes." She paused. "Three minutes after eight
months."
No one said anything for a moment, because nothing useful could be
said.
"How was his voice?" Pauline asked, finally.
"Good," Frances said. "He sounded good." She
looked at Thomas, sitting in her lap chewing a teething ring with
aggressive focus. "He asked if Tommy was walking yet. I said not
yet. He said he couldn't wait to see it." She stopped. "That's
what we talk about. What Thomas is doing."
Betty thought about Fred coming home every evening. She thought
about the mail she checked every day.
"We're lucky," she said, carefully. "That they're
close."
"Yes," Frances said, without bitterness. "You are."
Betty walked home that morning with Randy in the buggy and the
June sun warm on her shoulders and felt, as she sometimes did after
the Shasta Street mornings, the specific texture of her own fortune —
its warmth and its fragility both, present at the same time,
inseparable.
Randy, meanwhile, was conducting the business of being seven
months old with his customary thoroughness.
He had four teeth now — two on the bottom, two arriving on top
with considerable announcement — and was of the opinion that
anything within reach was a candidate for investigation via mouth.
Betty had developed a peripheral awareness of this that operated
independently of conscious thought, a reflex that manifested as an
automatic interception of objects heading toward Randy's face before
she'd consciously registered the danger. Fred had it too. They
compared notes occasionally on what had been rescued.
He was pulling himself up. This had begun in earnest in the second
week of June — using the couch, the coffee table, Fred's pants leg,
anything with structural integrity — hauling himself from sitting
to a shaky, triumphant standing with the concentration of someone
doing something that matters. He would stand for thirty seconds,
forty, sometimes a minute, his face arranged in the particular
expression of someone performing a physically demanding calculation,
before sitting down again abruptly.
"He's going to walk early," Betty told Fred.
"Is that good?"
"Ask me in six months," Betty said.
Fred looked at his son, pulling himself up on the coffee table
with the determination of a man who has decided a mountain needs
climbing.
"God help us," he said, with genuine feeling.
Randy stood for forty-five seconds, let go with one hand to reach
for a wooden block on the table, lost his balance, and sat down hard
on his padded bottom. He regarded the block. He reached for it from
his new lower position. He got it.
He appeared to consider the whole sequence a success.
Early June Sundays
The first Sunday they went to Fern Street to visit The Carringers.
The house was in its June mode — the windows open, Emily's
garden at its early-summer best, the roses along the back fence in
their first flush. Emily and Georgianna had made pot roast, because
pot roast was what the Fern Street kitchen did on Sundays and had
always done, and the smell of it reached them from the front walk.
Austin was there, as he was most Sundays now. He had settled into
widowhood with the stubborn practicality of a man who has decided
that Della would not have wanted him to stop eating properly, and he
came to Fern Street for Sunday dinner because Della would have wanted
him to come to Sunday dinner, and this was how he organized his
continued navigation of the world — by asking what she would have
wanted and doing that. He was thinner than he had been at Thanksgiving, but Della and
Georgianna provided basic groceries for him, and made hot meals and
took them over to him every night. But his eyes were clear and he
moved well enough for ninety years, and he lit up with something
approaching his old self the moment Fred carried Randy through the
front door.
"There he is," Austin said, from his chair. "There's
the boy. Bring him here."
Randy was delivered to Austin's lap and conducted his standard
assessment of the new situation — scan, evaluate, conclude. Austin
passed. Randy settled.
"He's bigger," Austin said, with satisfaction.
"He's heavier," Fred said, with the candor of a man who
had been carrying him.
Austin put a hand on Randy's back and looked down at his
great-grandson with an expression that Fred had seen before on this
old man's face and that he still found difficult to look at directly
— not because it was sad, exactly, but because it was too much of
something, too concentrated, the look of a person who understands
what they are looking at and what it costs and what it is worth.
"You're going to know things," Austin told Randy, in his
low, unhurried voice. "You're going to know all kinds of things
that none of us could have imagined." He glanced up at Fred
briefly, then back to the boy. "That's how it's supposed to
work."
Randy put his hand on Austin's finger and gripped it.
Austin closed his own hand gently around the small fist.
Fred had to find something to look at across the room.
Later, in the garden, while Emily and Georgianna held Randy and Lyle
showed Fred the progress of the tomato experiment from spring, Betty sat on the low greenhouse bench in the afternoon
shade and did a thing she had been doing more of lately — simply
being still.
She was good at stillness, when she allowed it. She watched her
husband and her father move between the garden beds, Fred crouching
to look at something Lyle was showing him with that focused attention
he gave to things that interested him, and she thought: there.
That is him. That is Fred being himself, in an afternoon in June, in
her father's garden. She wanted to draw it. She would remember it
instead, for now, and draw it later from memory.
Georgianna came and sat beside her after a while, Randy in her
arms, the 75-year old woman and the baby conducting their own quiet
investigation of each other.
"He has good hands," Georgianna said, looking at Randy's
fingers.
"Fred says he'll be an engineer," Betty said.
"You say?"
Betty considered. "I say he'll be whatever he decides. But
he'll be thorough about it."
Georgianna smiled and said something softly in Dutch to Randy, who
regarded her with his serious eyes.
"What did you say, Nana?" Betty asked.
"I said: you are well-loved, little one. Welcome to the
family." Georgianna paused. "It sounds better in Dutch –
my mother was part-Dutch."
"It sounds wonderful in Dutch," Betty said.
The second Sunday in June they went to the park — not the small
neighborhood one, but the larger park near the center of Chula Vista
where there was shade enough for a real gathering. The Steddoms came
with Clark, and the Tazelaars with Richard, and the Lyonses with
their characteristic energy, George Lyons arriving with a large
Zenith battery-powered radio on a dolly and the conviction that a
Sunday afternoon without baseball commentary was an afternoon
improperly spent.
Rod Steddom had news from his brother in Europe — nothing
specific, nothing that passed the censors — just that he was all
right as of his last letter, which had been written three weeks
before and arrived two weeks ago, and you learned to calculate these
delays and find comfort in the arithmetic.
Dick Tazelaar had heard something at his work about France that he
shared in the careful, partial way of a man who is not sure what he's
allowed to say — something was happening, had already happened
perhaps, something large and coordinated. The papers had been full of
it since the sixth. The Normandy landings.
They talked about it the way Americans everywhere were talking
about it that June — with a held breath, with desperate hope, with
the particular exhaustion of people who have been waiting a long time
for a tide to turn and are afraid to believe it has turned.
"If it holds," Rod said. "If they can hold what
they've taken —"
"It'll hold," George said. He said it with the
conviction of a man who needs it to be true.
Fred listened and thought about Ed in Portland, on his LCI,
preparing to sail south. The Pacific was a different ocean than the
Atlantic, a different theater, a different arithmetic. But it was the
same war, the same enormous turning, and somewhere in it was his
brother.
He sat in the park shade with Randy in his lap and felt the day
around him — the radio, the baseball, his friends' voices, the warm
June air — and held it all carefully.
To be continued...
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Here is the Google NotebookLM Video Overview about Betty, Fred and Randy's life in early 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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