
      The Writers Voice
      The World's 
      Favourite Literary Website

      
      The Dangerous Summer
      
      
      
      by
      
      Harry Buschman
      
This is the story of Ronnie Locke and how he came to give me a speeding ticket 
for something I mentioned to him ten years after it happened.
Ronnie and I worked at Peavey's Grain and Feed. It was late summer and we were 
making plans for the fall. I was planning to finish high school and Ronnie was 
going to skip it, say goodbye to Grassboro and go to New York. He was already a 
class behind ... "Y'don't need to finish high school to be a rock star, Artie," 
he said. We lived in the outskirts of the town of Grassboro, and New York City 
in those days was the center of the universe.
For the time being, however, we were free and easy – town boys mixing with the 
crowd who spent their summers up here in Grassboro. Every trailer park was full, 
every cabin around the lake was rented, every restaurant took reservations and 
there were open air concerts in the band shell every night. That's where you'd 
find Ronnie and me, freshly showered and sauntering through the crowd in our 
stone washed jeans. We showered because when you spend all day in a horse barn 
you carry a lot of it home with you. The stone washed jeans were a symbol of the 
sixties, and we wanted to be with it just as much as the city people were.
Our prey were the city girls, of course – up with their families for the summer. 
Tanned girls wearing heart-shaped sunglasses day and night. Slim hipped girls in 
sandals, with highlighted, perfumed hair that hung limp and heavy. We'd check 
them out indifferently, somewhat the way you'd check out a horse, from the 
ankles up to the head – not from the head down as you would check out a man.
The pickings were plentiful and somehow the girls sensed that Ronnie and I were 
town boys. It was the way we walked, I suppose – like we owned the place. We 
lapped it up. For me it was the interlude between the eleventh and twelfth grade 
and the sudden emergence of manhood ... for Ronnie, I guess it was the making of 
connections that he could use when he hit the big city. The girls were another 
story. They were willing but not able I mean. They were hampered by the watchful 
presence of their parents ... who always seemed to show up just as our efforts 
were about to bear fruit.
But Ronnie, if not too bright, was persistent, and now that summer was on the 
wane, he was more than ever determined to set up a few liaisons that he could 
cash in on later when he got to New York City. He told every young girl within 
earshot that he personally knew Mick Jagger and he'd see to it that he'd get the 
Rolling Stones to come to Grassboro for the Labor Day weekend. There was a brass 
band concert planned for that Saturday night in the band shell and he’d get the 
Stones to play during the intermissions. He knew a trio playing in a bar on 
Route 17 on the way to Pittsfield. They called themselves the "New Stones," and 
they traveled from bar to bar in an old Ford van with blacked-out windows. The 
singer looked a little like Mick Jagger, but probably old enough to be his 
father. He was a hot tempered little bastard who walked like a pouter pigeon 
with his shirt open down the front. His lead guitar was a man we called "Scarface"... 
he had a bad case of chicken pox when he was young. The two of them used to get 
together at parties and do "I Can't Get No Satisfaction" laying special emphasis 
on the lines ...
I can't get no girly action.
I try and I try and I try and I try.
That was Ronnie's plan. He was going to pull the wool over these barely legal 
age city girls while the band was playing selections from Victor Herbert's "Red 
Mill." "It's gonna be a blast, Artie," he winked at me, "we get 'em in the van, 
have a joint or two, and ... SCORE!"
The image of Ronnie, the girls and the "New" Stones SCORING in their blacked-out 
Ford van spelled trouble to me. I could hear the police whistles while he spoke.
"I'm not up for it tonight, Ronnie. I'm gonna sit this one out ... see you in 
the morning ... don't forget, we got a mare comin' in for stud tomorrow."
That was okay with Ronnie ... "One more fer me, Artie," he said. The fact that 
the “Stones” had the reputation of getting out of hand at the drop of a hat 
didn’t seem to make any difference to him.
I sat with my folks on an old shower curtain my mother brought from home. We 
spread it on the village green up in front of the gazebo and listened to the 
band playing Victor Herbert. It was peaceful for a while. My father didn’t know 
beans about music and he tended to talk while they played ... that was okay for 
the music I like, but it put Victor Herbert at a disadvantage. The three of us 
didn’t get together very much as a rule, and when we did we usually found we 
didn’t have a lot to talk about. It was almost fun to be there with them for a 
change, the whole town, and the visitors up from the city ...
But it didn't last long ...
If you're familiar with Victor Herbert's "Red Mill" you may recall a chipper 
little tune entitled, "Every Day is Lady's Day with Me." The hullabaloo began as 
the band was playing this prophetic little ditty, in fact I was humming it to 
myself when the cries of two young women erupted from the New Stones blacked-out 
van parked behind the bandstand. That seemed to create a general hubbub and the 
band petered out. One by one the players leaned over the rail, ignoring old Mr. 
Martinelli who still gamely waved his arms, trying to keep the Red Mill going.
I heard a female voice wailing "Daddy! Daddy!" People, townsfolk and city 
vacationers alike, surged toward the van. The rear door swung open, revealing 
the depths of youthful depravity, My father turned to me and shouted, "What in 
the holy hell ...!" My mother, breathing a sigh of relief knowing I was not 
involved, asked me, "Isn't that your friend Ronnie what's his name in there? 
Dear me, what will his father say?"
It sort of put a sudden end to summer. The tourists from the city emptied their 
cabins loaded their cars and took off for home that very weekend. The parents of 
the two girls pressed charges against Ronnie and his two twisted rock stars. 
Ronnie spent the night in the town jail ... I visited him in the morning and 
found him in a cell of his own. They were going to release him at noon, Peavey's 
had a mare coming in for stud service in the afternoon and it would take both 
Ronnie and me to keep the stallion from getting out of hand. The “Stone” boys 
were a different problem altogether. They had a rap list as long as your arm and 
to make things worse, "Scarface" was driving an unregistered van with a 
suspended license .... "I think they're gonna throw the book at them," Ronnie 
told me.
Ronnie got off easy. He was let off with a promise to straighten up, do ten 
hours of volunteer work at the station house, and show up for school when it 
opened in two weeks. He liked the work he had to do at the station house – it 
had something to do with the firing range down in the basement and it changed 
him a lot. He fell in love with police work and he told me they were going to 
send him to the police academy in Vermont after he graduated high school.
His dreams of going to New York seemed to vanish like a puff of smoke the night 
of the band concert. From then on Grassboro was home sweet home to him, and he 
wanted to spend the rest of his days patrolling a beat within sight of the house 
he was born in. The nearest I got to the Big Apple was Boston and the 
Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education. It wasn’t New 
York but at least it wasn’t Glassboro.
Ten years later, Ronnie was the last person on my mind when I drove home for the 
Thanksgiving holiday. Maybe I was ten miles over the limit, but it was ten 
o’clock in the morning and I knew the roads like I knew the back of my hand. 
Suddenly there was a low growl of a siren behind me and a quick look in the 
mirror told me I was dead in the water.
I pulled over to the shoulder and rolled my window down. I turned on my most 
innocent face and tried to remember where all my papers were. There seemed to be 
something familiar in the walk of the figure in dark glasses ... he stopped to 
copy down my license number ... and then it dawned on me that the cop was none 
other than Ronnie Locke ... in uniform.
He lowered his bug-eye sunglasses and peered over them. “Well, guess who I 
caught this morning,” he said. “How the hell are ya, Artie, what is it eight 
years or so? Happy Thanksgiving.” He opened his summons book and commenced 
writing.
“More like ten, Ronnie. I heard you’re on the force ... how you doin’?”
“My kinda life. Never knew it would be ... you was doin’ forty in a thirty mile 
zone.”
“Well, anxious to get home I guess. I haven’t seen my folks since Easter. I only 
have two days with them ... have’ta be back in Boston by Saturday.” I couldn’t 
believe he was actually going to give me a ticket.
“I’ll need your license, your registration and your insurance card.”
I had already put them back in my pocket when I saw who got out of the patrol 
car ... old times sake and all that. “Come on Ronnie. We’re buddies ... it’s 
Thanksgiving.”
“Your insurance card is expired, Artie. Do have insurance on this car?”
“Course I do. I got the new card a month ago. It’s still tacked on my “things to 
do” board back home .... I keep forgetting it. You know how it is.” I tried to 
lighten things up a little. “Hey Ronnie, Remember that Labor Day weekend.”
Ronnie tipped his cap back a bit and grinned down at me. “Yeah, I remember. But 
this ain’t a very good time to bring that up.” He settled his sunglasses back 
down on his nose. “Tell y’what Artie, the traffic court judge will be on duty 
‘til five this afternoon. Y’can take this here ticket to him and he’ll set the 
fine for you ... you’ll be home before you know it.”
I shut myself up. He was not the Ronnie I used to know, the Ronnie that was 
looking to SCORE in the back of a blacked out van. He tore the ticket out of his 
book carefully and handed it to me with a grin. “Have yourself a nice 
Thanksgiving Artie. Say hello to your Mom and Dad, y’here.”
©Harry Buschman
(1910)

Critique this work

Click on the book to leave a comment about this work
      