Authors: Catrin Collier
Penny shifted slightly on the floor, padding the base of the bed with her duvet. When she'd made herself comfortable, she turned to the next photograph, a black and white snap taken with a box Brownie. She and Kate were on the pavement outside the college dressed in jeans, suede boots, thick sweaters and second-hand combat jackets. Their college scarves were draped around their necks. She had a duffel bag and Kate was clutching her âhaggis'. A sure sign they were about to hitch-hike.
That was something she couldn't bear the thought of Andy doing.
The standard ironic parental advice: âDon't do as I did, it's dangerous and you could get hurt.'
It was why she'd allowed her father to buy Andy a car. Her parents and Kate's mother would have locked
them up if they'd known how often she and Kate had disregarded their stern warnings and stood, thumbs extended, at the side of the road.
Given the number of certifiable lunatics in the world, they'd been lucky. The worst that had happened to them in Britain was a Rolls-Royce they'd been given a lift in had broken down on the road outside London.
But that had been before they'd reached America.
âWe'll never get through. It's bedlam.' Kate dropped her bulging âhaggis', a kitbag she'd knitted from odd ends of wool to a bizarre pattern created by her overactive imagination. She was careful to hold on to the drawstring that fastened the top.
They were on the fringe of Grosvenor Square. Mounted police ringed an enormous mob of students who'd linked arms to prove they were in possession of the area and intended to keep it that way. Half the protesters were standing, half sitting and lying on the grass. Their shouts filled the air.
âHo! Ho! Ho Chi Minh! We shall fight and we shall win!'
There must have been an American contingent because â
Hell no, we won't go
' had a strong eastern seaboard accent. Just as â
Make love, not war
' was shouted in very English tones.
Fired by the atmosphere and camaraderie, Penny grabbed Kate's arm. âLet's join them.'
âAre you mad?' Kate, the ever sensible asked. âWe're
here to get work permits. If we're arrested for protesting against the Vietnam War and the embassy staff see us, they'll never give them to us.'
âEveryone knows the Americans are fighting the entire Vietnamese population,' she argued. âMy brother Evan says Communism is the fairest way for the feudal medieval societies of Russia and China to progress to the modern age.'
âSay that any louder and we definitely won't get work permits,' Kate warned.
âNone of the American conscripts want to be there. That's why so many American boys are in Europe. Evan met dozens of them in music college. They would have preferred to have studied in the States, but if they'd remained they'd have been drafted. They didn't see why they should die for a cause they don't understand. It's not as though the Vietnamese are threatening to invade the States. So what are the Americans doing in Vietnam? Thousands of American boys have been killed. Some of them younger than us. Think, Kate, how would you feel if we were being shipped off to face deathâ?'
âWe won't help American conscripts by fighting the police in London,' Kate broke in. âBut, if we don't get our documents we'll lose forty-eight pounds and can kiss goodbye to a summer in America. You don't want to work another season in Barry Butlin's do you?'
âNot if I can help it.'
The protesters on the outside of the circle linked arms and surged in slow motion towards the mounted police, who began to move just as unhurriedly towards them.
âThis is hopeless. The police will never let us reach the embassy,' Kate complained.
There was a tap on Penny's shoulder and she found herself staring up into the cold brown eyes of a
grim-faced
constable.
She instantly felt dishevelled, grubby and unaccountably guilty. She and Kate had left Swansea that morning at six o'clock and most of the lifts they'd cadged had been in lorries with filthy cabs. Their jeans were crumpled and stained, their army surplus combat jackets had seen better days and they were wearing the instantly recognisable student âbadge', a college scarf. An essential accessory for hitch-hiking, but one that wouldn't endear them to the police.
âWhat you got in there, miss?' The officer eyed her duffle bag.
Penny opened it and he rifled through the contents. Thankfully they were innocuous enough. Her purse, make-up bag, toilet bag with soap and toothbrush, scent, comb, hairbrush, and a bag of mint imperials. When he finished, he turned his attention to Kate's haggis. It was lumpy and stretched to capacity, over three and a half feet long and eighteen inches wide. Even she'd wondered what Kate was carrying.
âAnd you, Miss. What you got in that thing?' he demanded of Kate.
âPersonal things,' Kate answered.
Kate might appear calm to someone who didn't know her but Penny could read the tell-tale signs of stress.
Kate's lips were compressed, her knuckles white. Just as they'd been every time they'd been sent to the
headmistress's study for a dressing-down â usually over trouble she'd instigated.
âShow me,' the officer ordered.
Kate opened the drawstring. The officer peered into the sack. âTake out those bags.'
Kate lifted out her toilet and make-up bags and purse and handed them to her friend to hold.
âAnd the rest.'
Kate piled her hairbrush, a rolled-up sweater, spare set of underclothes, jeans, socks and a towel into her outstretched arms. Penny wondered what emergency Kate had been preparing for.
âWhat's in the paper bags?'
âPasties and sausage rolls,' Kate answered.
He didn't ask her to open them, presumably because they were grease-stained and emblazoned with the logo of the Swansea Uplands baker's shop.
âThe file?'
âPersonal papers.'
A roaring filled the square. A mounted officer cantered along the clear strip of âno-man's-land' that divided the protesters from the police. He headed for half a dozen students lying flat on the ground.
Realising trouble was about to erupt, the constable didn't ask Kate to open the file. âYou two look quiet enough girls,' he allowed grudgingly. âI'd hate to have to arrest you.'
âYou don't have reason to. We haven't done anything,' Kate protested.
âYet,' he qualified. âWhy are you here?'
âWe're trying to get into the embassy,' Penny
answered feeling the entire conversation shouldn't be left to Kate.
The officer stared at them in exasperation. âIsn't there enough trouble for you out here without you two taking it inside?'
âWe need work permits and visas. To work in America. Our college has chartered a plane for a student exchange. We've bought our tickets.' Penny pulled her passport and the forms she'd completed from her duffel bag.
He flicked through them. âGiven what's going on here, why didn't you post them?'
âWe were afraid our passports would get lost in the mail. We're supposed to leave in four weeks. We tried phoning the embassy but were put on hold or sent around in circles. They kept telling us we couldn't get a work permit without a visa or a visa without a work permit. It cost us a fortune in calls. So we decided to come here in person,' she explained.
âWhere you girls from?'
âSwansea,' Kate answered. âAnd we're hoping to get back there tonight.'
âFollow me.' He escorted them around the protesters to the embassy door.
Two hours later they were back in the square, their work permits and visas tucked into their bags.
âThat was almost too easy,' Penny commented.
âThe constable who took us to the door is watching us,' Kate warned.
âI know.' She made a âthumbs up' to let him know they'd been successful, followed by a friendly wave, but he didn't wave back. âPity he's watching, I'd like to have
joined the protesters; it would have been something to tell my grandchildren.'
âYou ever thought what your and Rich's kids will be like?'
âWhy do I know you're about to say something horrid about Rich?'
âI wasn't.'
Feeling slightly guilty about leaving Rich for four months, she changed the subject. âLet's find somewhere to eat before we head out.'
âWe have pasties and sausage rolls,' Kate reminded her.
âBought yesterday. They'll be stale. Stand you egg and chips in a café,' she offered.
âI can't afford egg and chips and I refuse to sponge off you.'
âIt wouldn't be sponging. It would be a thank you for hitch-hiking with me. You know my parents hate me doing it.'
âThey hate you doing it with or without anyone. Almost as much as my mother hates the thought of me getting into a stranger's car.'
High-pitched shrieks, screams and a roar accompanied by the thunder of horses' hooves filled the square. Without warning, the mounted police charged the protesters. A tide of students swirled, changing direction before surging towards them at speed. Kate flattened herself against a wall. Penny wasn't so lucky.
A punch between her shoulder blades sent her flying sideways out of the path of a police horse. She stretched out her hands to save herself and landed on
concrete, skinning her palms and, by the feel of it, her knees. Before she could catch her breath she was hauled unceremoniously to her feet by the collar of her combat jacket and dragged to the edge of the crowd.
Furious, she looked up into a pair of deep-blue eyes. âYou pushed me over.'
âTo save your ass.' The blue eyes were topped by unfashionably curly black hair and accompanied by the most seductive American accent she'd heard away from a TV screen. In fact, the first American accent she'd heard in reality. But she was in no mood to be seduced.
âIf I hadn't pushed you, you'd have been squished.'
âWhat kind of a word is “squished”?'
âA New England one.' The American gave her a broad toothpaste advert smile. She noticed he was tall â very tall. Her two brothers and father were all over six feet and he was a couple of inches above them.
A police officer moved in behind the American. He grabbed both his arms and twisted them high behind his back. âYou knocked off my helmet, son. Where is it?'
âNot me, sir. I haven't touched anyone's helmet.' When the policeman didn't say anything in response, he added, âYou must have mixed me up with someone else, sir.'
The officer twisted the American's arms higher until he winced. âAssaulting a police officer is a serious charge, son.'
âI didn't assault anyone.'
She noticed two officers closing in on her. One pushed his face a scant couple of inches from hers.
âWhy did you throw yourself in front of that horse, miss?'
âI didn't.' Even as she declared her innocence she felt colour flooding her cheeks.
âYou all right, Pen?' Kate ran up to her, saw her hands were bloody and offered her a handkerchief.
âYou know these two, miss?' the officer who'd spoken to Penny asked Kate.
âPenny and I travelled up from Swansea together today.' Kate tried to pass her the handkerchief but the policeman closed his fist over Penny's upper arm and yanked her back, out of Kate's reach.
âYou were protesting with them?' the officer who was holding Penny asked Kate.
âThe girls weren't protesting. They were just standing outside the embassy,' the American interrupted.
âThis isn't the first time I've picked you up, is it, son?' The officer holding the American eyed him suspiciously.
âThe girls aren't with me.'
âThat's not what I asked you.'
âYes, you've picked me up before,' the American answered irritably. âAnd no, these girls aren't with me.'
âIf they're not with you, why are you talking to them?'
âOne of you maniacs almost trampled one of them under his horse. I pushed her out of the way.'
âProper Sir Galahad, aren't you, son?' the officer questioned caustically. âSaving a damsel in distress from a maniac on horseback. You see any maniacs riding horses around here, Sam?'
âNo maniacs,' his colleague replied. âOnly officers trying to do their duty while dodging missiles thrown by young idiots who think it's fun to assault police officers.'
âI think it's time we had some of the fun, don't you, Sam?'
The two officers hauled the American behind a line of buses marked POLICE. They pushed him face forward against the side of a vehicle. One of the officers pulled his truncheon from his belt and slammed it across the American's shoulders. He continued to beat him even when the boy had dropped to his knees.
Appalled, Penny shouted, âYou can't do that! This is Britain! He wasn't hurting anyone â¦'
âKnow that, do you, miss?' The policeman holding her propelled her rapidly towards the bus. The officer who'd beaten the American hooked his truncheon back on to his belt. He hauled out her hands and snapped handcuffs on her wrists before shoving her towards his colleagues who were loading protesters on to one of the buses.
âObstruction?' an officer holding a clipboard and pen asked.
âAffray, assaulting an officer and obstruction,' the officer who'd handcuffed her shouted over his shoulder as he walked away.
Rough hands bundled her inside the bus. The American was slumped, dazed and disorientated in a double seat behind the driver. She stood in the central aisle, ducked down and looked out of the window,
searching for Kate. She couldn't see her but she could hear her.
âWhere are you taking my friend?'