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Welcoming 'Lisy' to the family

THE BALTIMORE SUN

LISA SCHWATKA AND KYRLE PREIS III

After his first marriage broke up, Kyrle Preis III made his daughter, Ashley, the priority in his life.

Kyrle, a paramedic at the Baltimore County Fire Department's Fullerton station, shares custody of his daughter with his former wife. When they divorced, Kyrle was determined to spend as much time with Ashley as possible.

And so on his days off, Kyrle took Ashley -- then a toddler -- along while he ran errands. If he wanted to work out, he popped his daughter into the child's seat on the back of his mountain bike or carted her off to his gym. Kyrle became adept at putting Ashley's hair up in "piggy tails" and in drying little-girl tears.

And when he began dating again, Kyrle was cautious with his heart and even more so with his daughter's. He knew, he says now, that whoever came into his life would have to have her own strong and positive relationship with Ashley.

It was a chance meeting with an old friend after a 3:30 a.m. fire call in August 1996 that led Kyrle to call Lisa Schwatka.

The fellow firefighter, Walt Brewer, knew that Kyrle and Lisa had met in 1991. She was working as a hygienist then for Kyrle's family dentist and had assisted when Kyrle had a root canal.

"Call her," Walt urged, giving Kyrle Lisa's phone number.

"Walt has always been like a big brother to me, watching out for me and hoping I'd find someone to treat me right," Lisa explains.

Lisa had just started nursing school at Union Memorial Hospital. And Kyrle had Ashley to tend to, so their relationship progressed slowly. They talked on the phone often, but dates were infrequent, arranged around their busy schedules. And Kyrle waited several months to introduce Lisa to Ashley.

Ashley immediately christened Lisa, "Lisy," and the two became fast friends.

As Kyrle and Lisa continued to date, going out by themselves and with Ashley, they realized they were falling in love.

As their love grew, however, Kyrle and Lisa rarely talked of marriage. In fact, smart aleck that he is, Kyrle often teasingly held up as his role models movie stars like Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell, who have maintained a long-term relationship without a marital bond.

When he decided to propose to Lisa on Valentine's Day 1998, Kyrle first sought Ashley's blessing. After she gave it, Kyrle shared his secret with Lisa's parents, Suzanne and William "Herdie" Schwatka III of Towson, and his own parents, Kyrle and Dolly Preis Jr. of Kingsville.

The proposal -- coming after Lisa had spent a long day answering ambulance calls with Kyrle as part of the Fire Department's ride-along program for "spouses" -- was quite a surprise, Lisa says.

When she finished nursing school in May, Lisa and her cat moved in with Kyrle and Ashley. (Lisa recently began working as a labor and delivery nurse at the Greater Baltimore Medical Center.)

On March 6, Lisa and Kyrle, both 32, were married at Ascension Lutheran Church in Towson.

Lisa entered the church to trumpet fanfare, a family tradition begun by her uncle Jim Kyne, an amateur but accomplished musician.

Kyrle's brothers, Joe and Dan, served as his best men. Lisa's brother, Bill, was a groomsman. Kyrle's sister, Maria Bulla, was a bridesmaid. The wedding party also included Walt Brewer, the man who brought Kyrle and Lisa together, as well as his wife, Terri.

Ashley, now 5 1/2 , watched excitedly from a front pew where she sat with Kyrle's parents. Around her neck gleamed a heart-shaped gold locket that Kyrle and Lisa had presented her with at the previous evening's rehearsal dinner.

As the guests made their way to the reception at the Padonia Park Club, Ashley cuddled close to her grandmother and whispered exactly what her father and her new stepmother must have been thinking, too.

"I'm so happy that Lisy is a Preis now," the little girl said with a grin.

JUST MARRIED

How did you two meet?

To share your unique story with readers, send a brief letter to Just Married, Features Department, The Sun, 501 N. Calvert St., Baltimore, Md. 21278. Or fax us at 410-783-2519. Tell us how you and your fiance or fiancee met and how you courted. Did you meet on the job, at a health club or through a dating service? Where did you go on your first date? To a neighborhood coffeehouse or an amusement park? We want to know.

Letters must reach us at least 30 days before the wedding and must include the wedding date and a daytime and evening phone number for the bride and groom.

If your letter is selected, someone from The Sun will contact you so that we can get the full story for our Just Married feature.

Right now, we are looking for May and June weddings to spotlight.

Pub Date: 03/14/99

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