everybody piling into the rusted-out â59 Studebaker he and Star had bombed across the country in and then on into Santa Rosa to the county welfare office to apply for food stamps. It must have been a hundred degrees, the streets on fire, the tie-and-jacket TGIF world closing in, big-armed mothers going to the supermarket in their forty-foot-long station wagons and nobody with even so much as a roach to take the pain away.
It was late afternoon and Ronnie was stretched out by the pool, his hair greased to his head with the residue of a whole succession of dunkings in the vaguely greenish waterâand shouldnât somebody dump some chlorine in it, isnât that the way itâs done?âthe sun holding up its end of the bargain, birds making a racket in the trees, the sound of somebodyâs harmonica drifting across the lawn along with the premonitory smells of dinner firming up in the big pots in the kitchen. Last nightâor was it the night before?âit was veggie lasagna with tofu and carrots standing in for meat, and that was one of the better nights. Usually it was just some sort of rice mush flavored with stock and herbs and green onions and whatnot from thegarden. He wasnât complaining. Or actually, he was. His food stamps were going into the communal pot along with everybody elseâs, and that he could live with, but NormâNorm was insane, because Norm insisted on feeding anybody who showed up, even bums and winos and the spade cats from the Fillmore, who incidentally seemed to have taken over the back house in the past week, with no sign of leaving.
Theyâd come up over the weekend, seven of them crammed into an old Lincoln Continental with fins right off a spaceship that could have taken them to Mars and back, very cool, very peaceful, just checking out the scene. Ronnie had been on the front porch with Reba, Verbie, Sky Dog and a couple of others, watching the light play off the trees and doing their loyal best to cadge change off the tourists who always seemed so timid and thankful to be able to do something to support the lifestyle, because they really believed in everything that was going down here, they really did, but their mother was sick and they were behind in their house payments and the orthodontist was threatening to rip the wires off their kidsâ teeth, and could they just sit here a minute on the porch, would that be cool? Some of them would bring cameras, and Sky Dog would charge a quarter for a picture with a real down and authentic hippie in full hippie regalia, and the braver ones would stay for supper and line up with a tin plate in their hands and maybe even take a toke or two of whatever was going round once the bonfire was lit and the guitars emerged from their cases. Theyâd even sing along to Buffalo Springfield tunes or Judy Collins or Dylan, if anybody could remember the words. Just like summer camp. Then they got in their Fords and Chevys and VW Bugs and Volvos and went home.
The spades were different. They didnât so much emerge from the car as uncoil from it, all that lubricious menacing supercool spade energyâand Ronnie wasnât a racist, not at all, he was just maybe a bit more experienced than the rest of his brothers and sisters here at Drop City, who, after all, were maybe just a wee bit starry-eyed and lame âand they came across the dirt lot in formation, like a football team.Lester was the name of the one in charge. He was soft-looking, small, with a face made out of putty, and he was wearing a red silk scarf and high-heeled boots. âPeace, brother,â he said, spreading wide his middle and index fingers and looking Ronnie in the eye. Ronnie didnât say anything, but Sky Dog and the rest flashed the peace sign and made the usual noises of greeting in return. A heartbeat later Lester was sitting on the steps of the porch, taking a hit from the pipe that was going round, his black bells hiked up to show off
Carol Wallace, Bill Wallance