Authors: Catrin Collier
âShould we sing to keep up our spirits?' Paul gave the officer at the desk a sideways look.
âI wouldn't. The stateside police are not renowned for their sense of humour, particularly at this time in the morning.' Bobby rubbed her hands between his in an effort to warm his own as well as hers.
âAnyone any idea of the time?' Paul asked.
The two girls held up their bare wrists.
âSo, they took your watches too,' Paul commented.
âShut up!' the officer behind the desk bellowed a second time. He rifled through a box of cookies and picked out half a dozen.
âWe were driven here sometime after three; it must be about four by now,' Bobby whispered.
The duty officer left the desk and waddled to the cage. He shook his fist, but as it was with the hand holding the cookies the gesture was more ridiculous than terrifying.
âIf you know what's good for you, you'll shut it,' he reiterated when he saw Bobby and Paul suppressing smiles.
The door banged open. A pale-faced officer walked in. âBobby Kennedy died a couple of hours ago.'
The duty officer stopped chewing his cookies. His mouth opened, his lips fell slack and he dribbled crumbs. âOh no! God no!'
Penny looked from the officers to Bobby. The only indication he'd heard the conversation was the increased pressure of his fingers on hers.
Â
Silence reigned in the holding cage and the room beyond. Bobby's arm lay heavy on Penny's shoulders, but she found the pressure too comforting to shrug it off. She closed her eyes but the fierce light from the single electric bulb burnt through her eyelids. The foul smell of the drunk lying on the floor, coupled with the stench of the blanket wrapped around her shoulders, was making her nauseous. Without a watch she felt as though time had frozen.
As there were no windows in the room it was impossible to gauge whether dawn had broken or not. The two children on the woman's lap woke. Their eyes opened but they didn't make a sound. Only clutched her dress tighter.
Footsteps echoed. They stopped outside the door. It opened. An officer stood, dwarfed by the massive figure of George.
Bobby moved his arm, rose from the bench and went to the door of the cage. âGeorge?'
âMr Bobby, what are you doing in there?' George walked over to him.
âResearching a thesis on life in a Hyannisport holding cell,' Bobby answered sourly.
The officer at the desk joined George and the officer who'd escorted him in. âYou know that man?'
âI sure do. He's Bobby Brosna the Fourth.'
âHe's
really
Bobby Brosna?' The officer clearly didn't want to believe it.
âSure is,' George confirmed.
âWe picked him and the girl up skinny-dipping on the beach in the early hours.'
âI told you it was a private beach,' Bobby reminded.
âYou were breaking the law on two counts. You were on a beach after 6.00 p.m. and you were in a state of indecency.'
âYou want me to apologise after you locked me and my girlfriend in here all night?' Bobby's voice had changed to imperious. Yet again Penny was reminded how little she knew him.
âI suppose we could let you go with a caution,' one of the officers demurred.
âAnd, I suppose if I felt magnanimous, I could decide not to complain about the treatment we received.'
Bobby's threat was enough. The officer manning the desk fetched the keys and unlocked the cell. Bobby offered her his hand. She took it and moved slowly upright waiting for the circulation to return to her limbs.
âYou here to fetch us, George?' Bobby asked.
âNo, Mr Bobby. I didn't know you were here until I walked in.' George drew closer to where the woman
with the children was sitting behind bars. âYou called your cousin last night, ma'am?'
âI did,' she answered.
âShe sent me to get you and the children.'
A tear rolled down her cheek.
âHere, let me help you with the little ones.' George stepped inside the cage and took one of the children from her lap. Paul lifted the other.
âDon't suppose there's any chance of you getting Mary out of here, Bobby?' Paul asked. âI don't mind for myself but this is no place for a lady.'
âWhy did they pick you up?'
âVagrancy. We could only raise three bucks between us. We came to town hoping to find live-in jobs.'
âThere's a couple of cottages free, isn't there?' Bobby turned to George.
âOnly one, Mr Bobby sir, after this lady and her little ones move in.'
âOne is all they need.' Bobby looked at Paul. âWe can help you with accommodation.'
âI just said we have no money â¦'
Bobby lowered his voice to a whisper. âNeither have we. What the owner doesn't know isn't going to upset her. Just keep the place clean.' He turned back to the officer. âCan we take â¦?'
âPaul Smith and Mary Night,' Paul said.
âCan we take them to the Brosna Estate?'
âYou'll vouch for them, sir?'
The elevation to âsir' surprised Penny but not Bobby.
âI'll vouch for them,' Bobby answered.
âAlthough the girl is Native American?'
âMakes no difference to me,' Bobby said coldly.
âTake them away.'
âWe should arrest you every night, Mr Brosna,' the overweight officer joked. âYou have a way of cleaning up the holding cell in the morning.'
âWhat about us?' one of the thin girls asked.
âTranssexual soliciting. You need more than a Brosna to get you out of that one. You need a good lawyer,' the officer barked.
Â
She was dreaming that she was rocking in a boat on the sea. The rocking grew wilder, more violent â¦
âWake up, sleepyhead.'
She opened her eyes. Bobby was shaking her.
âDon't you dare suggest another swim,' she warned.
âWe have to be at work in an hour. I thought you'd want time for a shower and a meal.'
âNo, I don't.' She snuggled back down in the bed and held out her arms.
âIf I get down there with you, I won't get up again this side of sunset.'
âGood.'
âIf it wasn't our second day in the job, I'd agree with you and spend the afternoon sleeping on the beach.'
âDon't mention the word “beach” to me ever again.'
âNot until after our shift,' he joked. âCome on, sleepy. We can't let Cosmo down.'
She reluctantly forced herself to sit up in the bed. âFive minutes I'll be with you.'
âI'll be in the garden with Sandy and Kate.'
When she emerged freshly showered with wet
hair, dressed in jeans and T-shirt, Kate pointed to the washing line. âI washed your uniform and apron.'
âThank you, but how did you know I hadn't done them?'
âBecause we saw them on the floor of your bedroom when we looked for you this morning. They should be dry.'
She felt them. âThank you. They are.'
âHi, Brits.' Marion opened the gate and walked into the garden with a handsome young Hispanic in tow.
âJoe. You're looking good. Great to see you.' Sandy left his chair and hugged the young man.
âI don't know who you are but put the love of my life down,' Marion ordered Sandy.
âNice to meet you guys.' Joe shook hands all round.
Like Sandy, Joe was tall, dark and very handsome, with a Clark Gable moustache and long dark hair.
Marion hugged Penny and Kate.
âHow did you know where to find us?' Kate asked.
âWe didn't. We came here to see George. He told us Sandy was staying here with Bobby and two Brit girls,' Marion divulged.
âAre you in one of the cottages?' Bobby asked.
âNo freebies for us, unfortunately. We're renting a room the other side of town. Joe has a friend who works at the Melody Tent and can get half-price tickets for concerts that aren't sold out and hard-to-get tickets for those that are. We brought round two for the Joan Baez concert that George ordered. He offered us a cup of coffee and we got to talking. He told Joe that Sandy was here. I mentioned the Brits I'd met yesterday in town and
he said two Brits were staying here. I wondered if you were the same ones. And you are.'
âCan you get us half-price tickets for the Joan Baez concert?' Sandy asked eagerly.
âI might be able to get tickets, but not half price, not for Joan Baez,' Joe warned. âLast time my friend looked there were only half a dozen left.'
âBefore you buy any tickets we have to square time off with Cosmo,' Bobby reminded, âand speaking of Cosmo, we have to leave for work in five minutes.'
Penny took her uniform and apron from the line, dived indoors and changed. When she came out Sandy and Kate were making arrangements to visit Marion and Joe when they came off shift.
âWe'll know then when we'll have our evening off and will let you know about the tickets,' Sandy told Joe.
Joe noticed Bobby's guitar propped against a chair. âYou play as well as Sandy?'
âHe thinks he's better than me,' Sandy winked at Joe.
âBring them. Marion has a good voice and we have music most evenings.'
âThanks, we will.' Bobby walked them to the gate.
âThat should keep you and Bobby off the beach and out of mischief in the early hours.' Sandy waved Marion and Joe off as they left on Joe's motorcycle.
âAnd there was me looking forward to another swim.' Bobby opened his car door. âWork everyone.'
âNot until we've packed a change of clothes. There's no way I'm going to any party in a waitress uniform.' Kate ran back into the house and Penny followed.
* * *
None of them expected a gathering the size of the one outside the white clapboard house where Joe and Marion were renting a room. The yard was crowded. More than a dozen people were roasting franks and marshmallows on sticks over a campfire. Even more were clustered around a makeshift bar set up on crates from which Joe and Marion were dispensing drinks. A sign pinned to the tree above it, said
ALL DONATIONS GRATEFULLY IMBIDED
.
âGlad you could come.' Marion handed Penny and Kate glasses as soon as they walked through the gate. âCold white wine, the only way to drink it.'
âSandy, Bobby, you've brought your guitars, great. Over here with them.' Mark, the sous-chef from Cosmo's waved to them.
A few moments later the sound of Bob Dylan's âI Shall Be Released' was being belted out by an improvised choir and half a dozen guitars.
Penny and Kate sat between Bobby and Sandy. Someone handed her a hot dog. Every time she set her paper cup on the ground it was refilled, so she clung on to it.
Six Dylan songs in, Bobby started playing âThe Times They Are a-Changin”. Penny left the circle round the campfire and went in search of a bathroom. She was leaving the house when she noticed a man sitting apart from the others. He looked lost and lonely, although she couldn't have said with any certainty why.
She walked over to where he was sitting, leaning against a tree, brown paper bag in hand, and offered a tentative, âHi.'
He lifted his hand in acknowledgement but didn't say anything.
âYou OK?' she asked.
âNope, but I'll be better when they stop playing that,' he muttered. The song had changed to âWith God on Our Side'.
She opened her bag, took out a pencil and artist's block and sat on the grass. âMind if I sketch you?'
âWhat do you want to do that for?'
âI'm studying art. And there's something about your face â¦' She was already making broad outline strokes on the paper.
Joe brought her a fresh cup of wine and looked over her shoulder. âThat's good.'
She glanced up. âIt's very rough, but thank you.'
âYou've met my brother, Eric?'
âWe haven't been formally introduced.' She smiled at Eric. âHi again, Eric.'
Eric nodded.
âEric, this is Penny, she's a Brit and a friend of Marion and Sandy. He worked with us last season, remember?'
Eric lifted his hand again and gave another perfunctory wave.
âEric's back from his first tour in 'Nam,' Joe confided loud enough for Eric to hear.
âAnd returning as soon as I've had the regulation dose of R&R prescribed by the shrink.'
âI'm sorry,' she sympathised.
âWhy? You didn't send me there.'
âI'm sorry that anyone has to fight a war. It's such
a horrible concept. Two armies of men lined up and ordered to kill one another.'
âIt's not a concept when you're there. And the armies aren't facing one another. It would be a cleaner fight if they were. We're fighting the whole goddamn population.' He looked at her. âYou really are sorry, aren't you?'
âYes.'
âWish I'd met you before I got my draft papers.'
âI have a boyfriend â¦'
âI've a girlfriend. She's a nurse in Mexico City. I didn't mean it that way. If you'd invited me to stay with you in England, I could have become a draft dodger like the rich kids.'
She carried on sketching. âWhat's it like over there?'
âYou don't want to know.'
She longed to reach out to Eric, offer him more than sympathy, but as she couldn't even begin to imagine what he'd experienced, she didn't know where to start.
âI have to talk about it soon,' Eric murmured. She had the feeling he was talking more to himself than her. âI promised to visit my buddy's wife.'
âYou OK, Pen?' Bobby joined them. There was a suspicious look on his face that she would have liked to interpret as jealousy.
âThis is Joe's brother, Eric. He's a soldier, back from Vietnam.'