Gordon. Daily Clarion,â she said. âCan I have a comment on this incident?â
Rigano looked down at her and smiled grimly. âYou can say that the police have had everything under control and both sets of demonstrators were dispersed peacefully.â
âAnd the assault?â
âThe alleged assault, donât you mean?â
It was Lindsayâs turn for the grim smile. âAlleged assault,â she said.
âA woman is in custody in connection with an alleged assault earlier this evening at Brownlow Common. We expect to charge her shortly. She will appear before Fordham magistrates tomorrow morning. Thatâs it.â He turned away from her abruptly as his men began carrying the peace women down the steps. As soon as one woman was carried into the street and the police returned for the next, the first would outflank them and get back on to the steps. Lindsay knew the process of old. It would go on until police reinforcements arrived and outnumbered the protesters. It was a ritual dance that both sides had perfected.
When she saw a face she recognized being dumped on the pavement, Lindsay quickly went over and grabbed the womanâs arm before she could return to the steps. âJackie,â Lindsay said urgently. âItâs me, Lindsay, Iâm doing a story about the protest, can you give me a quick quote.â
The young black woman grinned. She said, âSure. You can put in your paper that innocent women are being victimized by the police because we want a nuclear-free world to bring up our children in.Peace women donât go around beating up men. One of our friends has been framed, so weâre making a peaceful protest. Okay? Now Iâve got to get back. See you, Lindsay.â
There was no time for Lindsay to stay and watch what happened. She ran back to the phone box, passing a police van loaded with uniformed officers on the corner of the marketplace. Gavin was standing by the phone box, looking worried.
Lindsay dived into the box and dialed the office copytakersâ number. She got through immediately and started dictating her story. When she had finished, she turned to Gavin and said, âIâll put you on to give your quotes in a sec, okay? Listen, whatâs the name of this woman whoâs accused of the assault? The lawyer will kill it, but Iâd better put it in for reference for tomorrow.
âShe comes from Yorkshire, I think,â he said. âHer nameâs Deborah Patterson.â
Lindsayâs jaw dropped. âDid you say . . . Deborah Patterson?â
He nodded. Lindsay was filled with a strange sense of unreality. Deborah Patterson. It was the last name she expected to hear. Once upon a time it had been the name she scribbled idly on her notepad while she waited for strangers to answer their telephones, conjuring up the mental image of the woman she spent her nights with. But that had been a long time ago. Now her ghost had come back to haunt her. That strong, funny woman who had once made her feel secure against the world was here in Fordham.
2
Lindsay stroked the four-year-oldâs hair mechanically as she rocked her back and forth in her arms. âItâs okay, Cara,â she murmured at frequent intervals. The sobs soon subsided, and eventually the childâs regular breathing provided evidence that she had fallen asleep, worn out by the storm of emotions sheâd suffered. âSheâs dropped off at last,â Lindsay observed to Dr. Jane Thomas, who had taken charge of Cara after her motherâs dramatic arrest.
âIâll put her in her bunk,â Jane replied. âPass her over.â Lindsay awkwardly transferred the sleeping child to Jane, who carried her up the short ladder to the berth above the cab of the camper van that was Deborahâs home at the peace carnp. She settled the child and tucked her in then returned to sit opposite Lindsay at the table. âWhat are your