EMY92 and I are classmates so I figured he'd have a story or two

Mom, after I posted this, this morning, I remembered that when I first started working at Eckerds, both Pharmacists were named Roy. It was funny, the older fellow who retired while I was there was preferred by the older (age 75+ crowd). Roy Tate was either a WWII or Korea vet (I can't recall which, maybe both, it's been a long time).
But it was Roy Patrick who was 4F in the draft so became a Pharmacist. Again, genuinely one of the nicest/most caring people I've ever met - anywhere. When I started working with him in 1987, he was already a single father. I guess his wife must have passed not too long before that. I never knew and never asked.
The night you're talking about with the sitter, I'm not positive but, I think I almost remember that. I remember more than one occasion where Roy Patrick made house calls like that. Again, going way above and beyond the call of duty. And definitely not something that would show up on a corporate profitability report.
You're right, I am privileged to have worked with him. And I bet during 1987-1988, our paths most likely did cross. Since your oldest daughter is classmates with my sister, I know we were at the same HS Graduation at the minimum. Remarkable that that was only a few months before Aggie History changed forever in November 1999.
Another one from those HS days. Working with Billy Arndt was very educational. When it came to being a Pharmacist, he was a machine. He would run circles around anybody else and never make a mistake. But, he lacked the people skills of Roy Patrick. Billy also managed to steer me in the right direction with respect to attending A&M. I had my heart set on going to Rice or the US Air Force Academy. Billy encouraged me to go to A&M (ironically where he had been kicked out of school for among other things, urinating on the Lawrence Sullivan Ross statue - which of course meant nothing to me as a High Schooler who was not a dyed in the wool Aggie). As it turns out, Billy's advice was some of the best advice I'd gotten.
As a Texas grad, Billy talked about "School Support" which I now know to be "The Aggie Network". And he was right.
I also learned a lot about the Cattle business as Billy was filling 150 prescriptions/day and running cattle out of the pharmacy. Good Times.