L
OVE
S
omething else happened to me that spring that had an enormous
impact not just on my military career, but on my life.
I fell in love.
I don’t know if you believe in love at first sight; I don’t think I
did before the night in April of 2001 when I saw Taya standing at a
bar in a San Diego club, talking with one of my friends. She had a
way of making black leather pants look smokin’ hot
and
classy.
The combination suited me fine.
I’d just joined Team 3. We hadn’t started training yet, and I was
enjoying what amounted to a week of vacation before getting down
to the serious business of becoming a SEAL and earning my place
on a Team.
Taya was working for a pharmaceutical company as a drug rep
when we met. Originally from Oregon, she’d gone to college in
Wisconsin and moved out to the coast a couple years before we
met. My first impression was that she was beautiful, even if she
looked pissed off about something. When we started talking, I also
found out she was smart, and had a good sense of humor. I sensed
right away she was someone who could keep up with me.
But maybe she should tell the story; her version sounds better
than mine:
Taya:
I remember the night we met—some of it, at least. I
wasn’t going to go out. This was all during a low spot in
my life. My days were spent in a job I didn’t like. I was
fairly new in town and still looking for some solid female
friendships. And I was casually dating guys, with not
much success. Over the years I’d had some decent
relationships and a couple of bad ones, with a few dates
in between. I remember literally praying to God before I
met Chris to just send me a nice guy. Nothing else
mattered, I thought. I just prayed for someone who was
inherently good and nice.
A girlfriend called and wanted to go down to San
Diego. I was living in Long Beach at the time, about
ninety miles away. I wasn’t going to go but somehow she
talked me into it.
We were walking around that night and we passed a
bar named Maloney’s. They were blaring “Land Down
Under” by Men at Work. My friend wanted to go in but
they had an outrageous cover charge, something like ten
or fifteen bucks.
“I’m not doing that,” I told her. “Not for a bar that’s
playing Men at Work.”
“Oh, shut up,” my girlfriend said. She paid the cover
and in we went.
We were at the bar. I was drinking and irritable. This
tall, good-looking guy came over and started talking to
me. I’d been talking to one of his friends, who seemed
like a jerk. My mood was still pretty bad, though he had
a certain air about him. He told me his name—Chris—
and I told him mine.
“What do you do?” I asked.
“I drive an ice cream truck.”
“You’re full of shit,” I told him. “Obviously you’re
military.”
“No, no,” he protested. He told me a bunch of other
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