the wind, and smelling the salt air. Now he had been sidelined at one of the most important events ever to happen in his city. He felt it deeply. Lesser men than he had arisen to higher office, but Lou was happy to live in a small town where he could be in personal touch with his people.
He had been challenged for election over the years for this office, but he had been successful in fending off all comers. There were some, perhaps growing in number, who felt that Lou had served his time and his usefulness to the city.
He believed in God, but he wasn’t sure of much beyond that. His parents had taken him to a Presbyterian Church. Now, he went to church on occasion, once, maybe twice a month, at different congregations, more for his relationships with his constituents than anything else. He always put a generous check in the offering, which, he theorized, made people remember that he had been there and they would forgive him for not being there more often. He felt closer to Father Callaghan than any other clergy in town, although he had grown up to suspect the Papacy of corruption and superstition.
“All that mumbo jumbo,” his father had once said after they had attended a Catholic funeral. “Up and down and up and down! Thinking that those saltines are Christ! I don’t know much, but I know a cracker when I see one!”
He often called the priest “Frank” without any titles. Hope said it was disrespectful, but he had a feeling that Father enjoyed just being called by his first name once in a while by someone who didn’t want anything from him.
He knew that he would have fought Joe tooth and nail on this parade business if he had been present, but since he was not, he had been ganged up on by the Steering Committee and undermined by his own wife. But, now he could see that he had been wrong. He didn’t know what would come of this, but something about this parade seemed right.
Lou had always been highly aware of image, both his and the city’s. He didn’t see them apart from one another. He had been afraid of what people would think of this kind of a parade. But now something transformative was going on within him. He was, suddenly, very much at peace with the parade bringing out into the light those who were usually kept in the shadows, the disabled, the poor, and yes, the “dippy hippies,” as Lou had once called them. Yet, at the same time, the business community was involved, the schools, the arts community, and others.
No decent mayor, Lou often said, could care for only a few of the citizens. The blind, the mentally disabled, yes the poor who had taken up residence in the Pastor Luther’s shelter. They were citizens too. They were all his people. What had bothered him most was that Joe hadn’t consulted him ahead of time about the changes, and for the first time he was not chairing the Steering Committee for the parade. Joe was in charge, absent or present.
“We can do this out of our love and respect for him this year,” Hope had said. “We don’t know what the future holds.”
Now, it was as if some fated plan beyond the parade was being carried out, an inevitable event, the outcome of which was yet to be realized. He sat back in his hospital bed, watching the people around him, sad that he wasn’t downtown, still, all in all, happy to have such loving friends and family around him.
Chapter 27
The sound of the motorcycles could be heard as the town’s bad boys, Jens Marsden and Roy Edgefield, descended upon Safety Harbor via Highway 101, that came through town and became Main Street. Through traffic was being diverted onto residential streets and directed out through the city limits to the other side. Jens and Roy had ignored the detour signs and now came riding into town heading directly toward a head-on collision with the parade, stopping everything in its tracks.
Daniel got out of his pick-up and went to talk reason with them. He didn’t know them and he didn’t know that the whole town of Safety Harbor did, in fact, know them very well.
“There’s a parade going on here, guys,” he began as if he didn’t know they were up to no good. “If you turn around and go back to the city limits, you can see where to go to get through town.”
“That so,” said Jens.
“Where’s your badge, buddy?” Roy challenged him.
“Look guys, we don’t want any trouble, but you are holding up the parade and we’d appreciate it if you would move your bikes so we can get on with it!”
“Not gonna happen,” said Jens.
It didn’t take long for Daniel to realize they were in a hostile mood and he would have to back off. Nate and Jeremy and several others began to move toward the front of the parade.
Nate called Carmelita from his float. “You’d better get down here. Marsden and Edgefield have blocked the parade and there’s a standoff. There’s going to be trouble.”
By the time Nate arrived, a crowd had gathered on the scene. He sensed, as he approached, that the situation was serious.
“Okay,” Nate said, “we’re all going to back off here and wait for Carmelita.”
“Oh, you’re bringing that woman cop into this so that she can settle a man’s fight?”
“She’s the law, Jens, and she’ll settle this,” said Nate.
“Like hell she will,” Roy piped up. “Let us through or we’re going to mow everybody down!”
Suddenly one of the blind students called out, “Uncle Roy, is that you?”
“No, it’s not me, kid!” he sputtered. “You’ve mistaken me for someone else!”
“Oh yes, it is you!” the little voice continued. “I know your voice. I’m Little Therese, your niece. You know, Momma works at the hospital. Momma and I know you. Are you in the parade too?’
Silence followed.
Suddenly Jens began to laugh at Roy. “You fool!” he said. “What do you mean, ‘It’s not me?’ What kind of a dumb answer is that? You got family in this shin-dig?”
This could have been the end of it, but Roy was humiliated and couldn’t let it go.
“You stay out of this, kid. It’s not any of your business!”
Suddenly Nate remembered that there was a Ruth Edgefield-Martin who worked at the hospital. She had come down to his boat with the local ambulance and attended one of his customers. Was that Therese’s mother? If so, maybe she could come down and talk some sense into her brother.
Nate called the hospital.
“Ruth, this is Nate Beard. Do you have a brother named Roy?”
There was silence on the other end, broken by a long sigh.
“What’s he done?” she asked.
“Well, Jens and he have just ridden their motorcycles into town. They’ve blocked the parade from going forward with their motorcycles and refuse to move. It’s getting tense down here. It must be your daughter who recognized his voice. I figured that maybe you could come down here and at least talk some sense into Roy and maybe Jens would follow on after. Carmelita is on her way. I just thought it couldn’t hurt if you were here with us to provide some back-up and support.”
“I’ll be down!”
“Thanks. And . . .”
“Yes?”
“Please don’t tell Lou. It will just upset him and there isn’t a thing he can do about it.”
“Okay. Sounds good.”
Ruth had never done this before so it came as a surprise to her supervisor, when she asked to leave her shift.
“Now?”
“Right now!”
“What’s going on?”
“I can’t say.”
“You have to say. I can’t let you off for no reason.”