tucked in the foothills of the White Mountains. An estimated crowd of 70,000 music-lovers
surrounded the huge outdoor stage of the New England Bluegrass and Jazz Festival. Orr circled
the vast sprawl of people, tents, and cars before setting the Blackhawk down on a packed-earth
landing pad inside the fenced backstage area. A couple of roadies dashed out to meet Jessup as he
climbed out, then backed off, confused that the helicopter's lone passenger was not a performer.
One of them made a call on his wristphone and a few minutes later the stage manager stalked
over, convinced that Jessup was a high-rolling gate-crasher. It took a few minutes for Jessup to
settle the dispute; it was not until the stage manager made a phone call to the promoter and
verified that Jessup was there as an invited guest that he calmed down. Jessup was relieved; he
did not want to produce his government I.D., which would have ended the dispute more quickly
but also would have raised some uncomfortable questions.
On the other hand, the stage manager seemed irritated that he couldn't have Jessup arrested
by the security guards. "Just get that bird of yours out of here," he snapped, pointing at the
Blackhawk. "We've still got people flying into this place."
"Okay," Jessup replied. "Can you tell me where Ben Cassidy is?"
"He's onstage. You can talk to him when his set is over. Now get your chopper out of here."
Jessup waved to Orr and gave him the thumbs-up, and the pilot pointed at his watch and
lifted two fingers. Two hours. That was sufficient time. Jessup nodded, and the Blackhawk lifted
back up into the clear August sky. Jessup turned back to the stage manager, but he was already
walking off to harangue someone else. Jessup wondered if he ever listened to the concerts he
ramrodded, or if he was merely in this business because it gave him an excuse to be a jerk.
Jessup found his way to the stage and walked up the stairs to a small area between a stack of
equipment boxes and a table covered with folded rally towels and bottles of mineral water.
Roadies and various hangers-on moved back and forth around him; he felt out of place, wearing
his beige business suit and tie, among the jeans and T-shirts which were the uniform for this
Labor Day weekend gathering. Too much like a government official on official government
business. People shied away from him as if he were an IRS agent there to audit the gate receipts.
Jessup was sure that, if he were to identify himself as a NASA administrator, it would not make
any difference. Not with antispace sentiments growing as they were now . . .
He turned his attention to the lone figure on the stage, a burly figure sitting on a wooden
stool with his back turned to Jessup. Ben Cassidy was performing solo, as usual, with no backup
band. He was a middle-aged man—balding, beard turning white, the creased and heavy-browed
face of a longshoreman turned itinerant musician—plainly dressed in baggy dungarees with shirt
sleeves rolled up above his elbows, hunched over the keys and digital fretboard of a Yamaha
electronic guitar.
It seemed impossible to Jessup that one person could entertain the vast ocean of faces that
lapped at the shoreline of the stage, that his music would not be drowned in the tide of humanity.
Yet, as Cassidy played, Jessup found himself empathetically melding with the current: the crowd,
the mid-afternoon heat, and above all else the music which flowed from Cassidy's guitar. He was
coming out of a blues number—Jessup, who had briefly been a blues fan in his college days,
vaguely recognized it as Muddy Waters's "My Dog Can't Bark, My Cat Can't Scratch"—and was
gliding into free-form improvisation.