Although inspired by real life events this is a work of fiction and it is not based on any real person or persons. I'd like to thank Randi for her editorial guidance.
Damn it! It was 2AM, and Rob Mason, the Mayor of the small Mid-Western town of Blandings Crossings, was angry with his wife, Clarissa, again.
He had dropped any number of hints that it was unseemly for her, in her position of First Lady of the town, to keep going out and partying almost every night of the damn week.
She had sneered in his face and said, "First Lady, Rob? Don't make me laugh! You are a two-bit mayor of a two-bit town, so get real! Nobody cares what I do."
The next part of what she said she uttered it under her breath, probably hoping Rob wouldn't hear it, but he did. When she said, "Nobody cares what I do or who I do it with," it stung Rob and he knew that one way or another he would have his revenge on her.
He had turned to her and said: "Actions have consequences, Clarissa."
He would also have his revenge on the asshole, Harvey Clinker, the owner of Harvey's Tavern in the center of Blandings Crossings and the bastard who, Rob was reasonably sure, was, to use old British Navy expressions that Rob had picked up when he'd served in the US Navy in the UKs Devonport, splitting her whiskers or giving her a good portion.
They'd seemed quaint and highly amusing expressions at the time. Now? Now, maybe not so amusing and no longer all that quaint.
Rob had first been an agnostic, sort of, when it came to the Coronavirus. He had doubted if it was as serious as some people were saying, but he had watched with increasing horror some news coverage from Italy (of all places, poor Italy, where they'd enjoyed their honeymoon two decades previously) when he realised that he would be able to rig the situation in his favour and to really stick it to Clarissa and Harvey, and with no repercussions blowing back on him. In fact, if he played it right, he would look like the hero and not the villain.
He had received an official notification from the Governor of the state that included the following order:
"Prohibited activities. All public and private gatherings of any number of people occurring outside a single household or living unit are prohibited, except for the limited purposes permitted by this Executive Order. Pursuant to current guidance from the CDC, any gathering of more than ten people is prohibited unless exempted by this Executive Order. Nothing in this Executive Order prohibits the gathering of members of a household or residence.
"All places of public amusement, whether indoors or outdoors, including but not limited to, locations with amusement rides, carnivals, amusement parks, water parks, aquariums, zoos, museums, arcades, fairs, children's play centers, playgrounds, theme parks, bowling alleys, movie and other theaters, concert and music halls, and country Clubs, bars or social clubs shall be closed to the public".
It was the second paragraph that interested him, in particular. He had heard that Harvey liked to squire Clarissa at his tavern and then take her to his tawdry living quarters and have sex with her to the amusement of his regular customers who remained in the bar area, chugging down their beers, cheering on the adulterous pair.
Rob had called the Police Chief of the town's small police force into his Mayor's office. "Sit down, please, Tony". Chief Tony Draper had sat and waited for the Mayor to speak. He obviously had something on his mind.
"You have seen the latest orders from the Governor's office about the Coronavirus, COVID-19. At first, I was skeptical about it, the virus, but the latest reports from Italy and the rest of Europe gave me pause for thought. I think that we need to make sure that Blandings Crossings keeps on top of this thing.
"We need to ensure we have zero tolerance for any assholes who try to breach the lockdown. A friend of mine from the UK sent me a Facebook message the other day, apparently a police patrol found some idiots having a barbecue party outside an apartment block, and when they refused to disperse, the police officers tipped the barbecue over.
"We need to be as hard and as firm as that. If not more so. I want you to step up your patrols as much as you can and to make sure that anyone caught operating anything like that barbecue gets treated as firmly as you can. Any pubs, bars, taverns or amusement places in the town that are breaking the law, they must have the full weight of the law brought down on them, no matter who they are."
Tony nodded. "Anyone or any place you have in mind, especially?"
Rob gave the impression of someone who was doing some deep thinking. "Well, there's that amusement arcade on the Avenue, but under the new owners they seem to have got their act together. Thinking about it I'd guess the only place you might get problems with his Harvey's Tavern, on Cooke Street. That guy always seems to be pushing the boundaries just that little bit more, always trying to give the bird to the police and the authorities."
Tony gave him a regarding, searching look. "Sure, thing, Mayor. You are right about Harvey Clinker. His dad who opened the place back in the 1950s as an Italian restaurant was a different kettle of fish: he always kept it nice and respectable. If his oldest boy Alfonso hadn't died over there in 'Nam, Alfonso would have run the place and not that little waster, Harvey. Oh, well. All water under the bridge, now, but I'll make sure we keep tabs on Harvey and his tavern."
Originally, the tavern had been a high-quality Italian restaurant and modest hotel operated by Mario Bastini, who had come from the old country in the early 1950s.
After his father had died, Guido Bastini had decided to change his name to something more American, Harvey Clinker was what he chose, for some reason nobody had ever figured out, and he reopened Mario's as Harvey's Tavern, closing the hotel rooms because he was too lazy to keep operating them. The Italian cuisine was replaced with standard bar room crud.
"And I want to make sure that anyone found there is given the full power of the law, Tony. Anyone," added the mayor, forcefully.
Tony nodded and stood. "Okay, Mayor, I'll do that." He had guessed at the game the Mayor was playing, for he had also heard the rumors about what the Mayor's pretty, but pretty empty-headed, wife had been getting up to with Harvey Clinker.
He guessed that Clinker was still smarting that Rob had won Clarissa's heart fair and square back in High School, and that what he was doing was trying, all these years later, to earn some payback on Rob.