The Fat Cat Memories
Today while cleaning out a closet I ran across a framed T-shirt emblem. This emblem was none other than a T-shirt I had purchased in the late 1970s from a Pacific Grove, CA restaurant. This piece of an old T-shirt reminded me of the following memory.
Along time ago (late1970’s) in the far far off land of Pacific Grove California, I was an undercover agent in charge of the Fort Ord, California, undercover ops team. If you were young, crazy and had a lot of energy you could be an undercover agent in those days. In fact if you are crazy and have a lot of energy you can be an undercover agent today. Of course the catch is you have to be an undercover agent. The recent 1999 movie “The Generals Daughter” gives you a good idea of what the Army CID was and is like. Now of course it is not always as exciting as the movie was, but almost.
Now working at Fort Ord, CA was not all work and no play. My trusty assistant and I (Guy) use to take a break from the day to day hassle of arresting drug dealers. One of our stress release activities was to have breakfast or lunch at a not so famous restaurant, The Fat Cat, located in Pacific Grove, CA. Now for those of you, who are not familiar with the Monterey CA area, Pacific Grove is a suburb of Monterey.
Guy and I who both looked like we were drug dealers and users (long hair, side burns, bell bottoms, T-shirts, fake tattoos, mustaches, etc), because we had to look that way, who knew, found a place that served great food and information. Now the people at the Fat Cat would just die if they ever herd that comment, but most people who ate at the Fat Cat were locals and you had to be one of the local crowd for people to even sit in the place with you. If you were not a local, the locals would leave until you left, then they would come back and enjoy their food and conversation. Now how did Guy and I find this place?
The Fat Cat was one of two Fat Cat restaurants located in the Monterey Bay, CA area. Both of these restaurants were local hangouts for beatniks, yes I said beatniks. Pacific Grove was the original location and the final destination of the legendary beatnik culture. So you can imagine what these places looked like. This may be where I picked up my liking for Jazz. In fact except for the logo on the front picture window, you would not even know the place was a restaurant. I had stumbled across the Fat Cat near 17-mile drive in Monterey previously and that is the only way I knew this Fat Cat was also a restaurant. The Fat Cat near 17-mile drive was in what used to be a trailer park, but it served some of the best squid omelets you could ever want to taste. Yes, I had strange taste in those days.
This Fat Cat in Pacific Grove was on a main street with parking in front and in the rear. The layout of the PC FC was not bad. When you walked in there was a large open area with about twenty tables. The largest table sat right in the picture window area and could seat about 15. There was a serving counter and bar to the left and the kitchen was located just behind a door and half wall in the rear. There was also a door that leads to a long hall where the toilets and the rear entrance and exit were located. To the right the floor had been elevated, so you had to walk up some steps to another area with another twenty tables. Now half way up the floor separation there was a kind of stage for the singers, poem speakers, and who ever to do their thing. Any one could walk up to the mike, yes there was a mike, say what you had to say, and go sit down.
Now one day Guy and I must have been talking about going to the Fat Cat while we were at the CID office. Someone must have heard us and decided that would be a good place for the entire CID office to go to for breakfast. Of course no one discussed that idea with Guy and myself. The last thing we needed was for 15 or so Army CID Agents to come eat breakfast in our hangout. Now I am not saying drugs were sold at the Fat Cat, Guy and I did over hear conversations about drugs while at the Fat Cat, but we never saw any drugs or purchased any drugs at the Fat Cat. It was a good place to be seen and know about to be part of the drug culture. The Fat Cat was just a neat place to go and have breakfast. On this ill fated day, Guy and I parked in the back, walked in and took a seat at a table in the loft area where we could talk without being bothered and where we had a good view of the entire place. Guy and I were considered locals at this place, so when we came in all who were there checked us out, nodded, we nodded, and they all got back to eating and talking.
At 9:00 AM on that Monday morning, the world as the Fat Cat knew it ended for about 1:30 minutes. It all happened in slow motion. Four low slung 1975 Ford, four door sedans (just like the ones in the TV show “The FBI” pulled into the parking slots located in front of the Fat Cat picture window. Each car was tan, had a whip antana mounted on the rear, and four, yes four very large CID agents were seated in each of the cars. All the car doors opened at the same time, and all the blue suited (blue suits, white shirts, strange colored ties, guns, badges, and radios) CID Agents got out of their cars at the same time. I am not sure why Guy and I and everyone else in the Fat Cat were looking out the window as the cars pulled up, but we were. Before the CID Agents were out of the cars, everyone in the place (about thirty people were sitting on the lower floor) except Guy and I, was moving towards the rear door of the Fat Cat. The five or so waiters and waitreses were moving to the tables and removing the food and taking it to the kitchen area. By the time the CID Agents had gathered on the side walk talking cop talk with police radios blaring, the Fat Cat was empty. The tables were cleared and if you had not been sitting in the place five minutes earlier, you would not know anyone had been there. The 16 CID Agents moved into the Fat Cat and sat at the table in front of the picture window. The table was situated so that none of the CID Agents had their backs to the window. Go figure. Guy and I sat quitely in our loftly location just out of sight of our CID gang below. We could not believe they were at our Fat Cat. Now cops are cops and it was funny to hear them talk about evey cop case they were currently working. It was as if they did not believe anyone was going to listen. Guy and I took notes. Now I will admit no one at the Fat Cat was listening, they were just watching to see what was going on. The CID Agents got A-1 service, the food was great, and all the CID Agents loved the place. However they did not know it would be the last time they would eat there on duty. Guy and I would later have a converstaion with the CID CW4 Operations Officer about the Fat Cat being off limits for on duty CID Agents. As quickly as the CID Agents had arrived (even though it lasted 1:30 minutes) they departed. Surprizingly they left a good tip and did not act like cops can act without thinking. As before, once the CID Agents were out the door, the Fat Cat staff was putting food back on the tables and the same crowd that had been there earlier was coming back in to resume eat
ing their food and discusing the invasion of the CID Agents. No one seemed to noitce Guy and I were still sitting at our table drinking coffee and watching.
Those were the days of fun and excitement when you leased expected it.
Keep smiling and having fun for these are the good old days
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Oh. My. Gosh! Too funny. And, of course, cops never sit with their backs to a window or door. 🙂 I’m still thinking about you with long hair, side burns, bell bottom pants, etc. You must have fit right in at the Fat Cat. *smiling a lot*
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a narc? Yikes! and sounds like a Cute narc too. Tricky. Oh dear. You didn’t notice Me there, didcha?
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Fascinating! Not sure I’d call that my kind of fun, but it reads well. 🙂 And oh my it has been years since I heard the term “beatnik”
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