Rachel Hardy's eyes were misty, and she had a faraway look on her face as she gazed over the grassy meadow where it all happened so many years ago.
In her mind's eye she could picture the meadow as it had looked back then, the sea of humanity covering the area as far as one could see, the high stage at the far end at the bottom of the hill, the many tents that had been set up to help handle the throngs that had flocked to the area.
She looked over at the young man standing next to her, looking over the area in awe. Rachel pointed in one direction.
"Over there was where we set up the medical tent," she said. "I'd been a candy striper in high school, and they knew I had a little bit of a medical background. You know, it's a miracle we only lost two people that weekend. Half-a-million people, and only two fatalities, and one of those probably couldn't have been helped."
"What happened?" Craig Burford said.
"I think it was a burst appendix," Rachel said. "I remember, I helped deliver three babies."
"Wow," Craig said. "Well, Gram, did you get to see any of the acts?"
"Oh, I made it a point to see the Dead, although they really sucked that night," Rachel said with a laugh. "They were really fucked up, plus it was threatening to blow up a storm. The wind was blowing hard, and Phil Lesh told me a couple of weeks later when I ran into him that they thought the whole stage was about to collapse."
"Anybody else that you remember?" Craig asked. He was enthralled by the stories his grandmother was sharing, and utterly captivated by being this close to the object of his long-held desire.
"Oh, the Who," Rachel said. "Definitely the Who. I managed to get fairly close to the stage for their show, and it was the highlight of the weekend, especially when Pete Townsend threw that asshole Abbie Hoffman off the stage. That was priceless. The jerk jumped on stage and started spewing this revolutionary bullshit, and Pete told him to, 'get off my fucking stage,' And when Hoffman refused, Pete cold-cocked him."
"What about Hendrix?" Craig said.
"Missed him," Rachel said. "By the time he came on, I was burned out, tripped out and exhausted. It was about 9 o'clock in the morning on Monday, and I was already five miles back down the road, walking."
"Best time... of my life," Rachel said, and she couldn't stop the tears from the memories that flooded her mind.
Instinctively, Craig pulled Rachel into a hug, and he felt a chill race up his body as he felt his grandmother's trim body against his. Rachel leaned into her handsome young grandson, and not for the first time, felt the forbidden feelings rush through her.
Rachel was giving her grandson a guided tour down memory lane, a three-week cross-country trip for his high school graduation. He had grown up on her stories of Haight-Ashbury, of Greenwich Village and of Woodstock, and they utterly fascinated him.
They had spent several days in New York and were spending this day visiting the site where the Woodstock Festival had been held, then they were headed off to Niagara Falls and points west.
When she had composed herself somewhat, Rachel took Craig's hand and led him down the hill, where 400,000 young people had turned the area into a muddy mess.
"We thought we were going to change the world," Rachel said. "But, really, we just found a different way to fuck it up. We were so fired up when we left here, then it all fell apart, almost overnight. Three-and-a-half months was all it took to go from peace, love and happiness to sympathy for the devil, Hell's Angels with pool cues and some poor bastard getting stabbed to death right in front of Mick Jagger."
Rachel idly fingered the almost invisible scar on her forehead, the result of being accidentally hit by a cue stick during the melee at Altamont.
"You know, the thing is that Rock Scully thought Woodstock and Altamont were just the flip sides of the same coin," Rachel said a trifle bitterly, after a period of reflection. "But I don't recall seeing him out here working the kitchen to feed hungry kids or helping the doctors take care of the overdoses. He was too busy sitting backstage smoking pot with Jerry Garcia."
"Well, Gram, what else was he going to do?" Craig said. "He was their manager, for crying out loud."
"Yeah, I guess so," Rachel said, flashing her grandson her thousand-watt smile. "But, dammit, for one time in our lives, we were a community, we all came together without thinking about anything but helping people who needed it. That's why you and I are here. Dammit, this meant something to me!"
Craig had to laugh, in spite of himself. He loved his grandmother more than anyone in the world, especially when she got like this, when her tattered liberalism showed a brief flicker of life.
Rachel had been a true child of the Sixties. She'd been born in 1947 in San Francisco, and had grown up in the suburbs south of the city. Even before she graduated from high school in 1965, she'd begun to sample some of the underground life that was sprouting all through the Bay Area, and when she was 18, she moved into the city.
Her stated motive was to attend San Francisco State and go to nursing school, but that quickly fell by the wayside as she immersed herself in the counterculture of the time. For the next 4½ years, she lived the hippie life, criss-crossing the country in search of high times, and not even having a baby in early 1967 slowed her down.
Her daughter Linda had been dragged from pillar to post for most of the first three years of her life, alternating between living with Rachel and Rachel's parents, and that had always colored their relationship.
Altamont, in December of 1969, was the ill-fated "festival" on the East Bay that was supposed to feature the Jefferson Airplane, the Grateful Dead and the Rolling Stones. It had been an unmitigated disaster, and it had left Rachel with blood dripping from the gash in her forehead and her illusions shattered.
After the first of the year, she decided it was time to grow up a little bit. She took Linda in for good, got a job as an ER tech for one of the city's hospitals while she went to nursing school – this time seriously – and set about making a life for herself that didn't involve sex, drugs and rock-and-roll.
Yet, she didn't completely cut her ties with the old days, and in 1974, she finally married an old friend from the Haight named Jack Hardy. She wasn't sure if she ever really loved Jack, but he offered companionship, great sex and a link to her youth. So she had made a life with him for the next 20 years.
The problem with Jack was that he still bought into the old counterculture attitudes of nonconformity. He absolutely refused to get a job, "working for the Man," as he put it, and tried to make a living making pottery and selling a little weed on the side.
Throughout their 20-year marriage, Jack had been in and out of jail on minor drug charges, and in and out of drug rehab.
Naturally, Linda was never taken with him, and when she turned 18, she moved out, to Arizona, and was married within a year. In 1986, she had her only child, Craig.
In 1994, Jack's life of relentless self-abuse caught up with him, when he had a sudden heart attack and died. About the same time, Linda's marriage broke up, so Rachel had moved to Arizona to get away from her memories and to help Linda with Craig.
It was during the four years that Rachel stayed with Linda and Craig that the tight bond between grandmother and grandson had been formed. Rachel taught Craig how to play guitar and had filled his fertile young mind with the music and ideals she'd had in her youth, all to the chagrin of Linda, who hated everything associated with that period.
When Craig was 12, Linda remarried and Rachel moved out, but she took one look at the relationship between Linda, her new husband and Craig, and decided to stay in Arizona, close at hand. She understood that Craig was going to need a refuge, and she had provided one.
She loved her sensitive, intelligent grandson in a way she never had quite loved her daughter. But there was something else under the surface that drove the relationship between Rachel and Craig. Lust.
Rachel was the first woman Craig developed a hard-on for after reaching puberty, and he had never wavered in his desire, even as he developed into a striking young man who was a big hit with the girls in his high school.
Ordinarily, a teenager lusting after his grandmother might be considered a little sick, except that Rachel at 58 was better looking and sexier than most women half her age.
She was fairly tall, about 5-foot-10, and slender. She'd kept herself in good shape and had managed to retain most of her ivory complexion. She had long tapered legs, a firm ass and a pair of 36As that still sat up on her chest in open defiance of age and gravity.
Her only concessions to her age were the salt and pepper hair that she wore stylishly short, a few wrinkles right at the corners of her eyes and the rimless glasses she was forced to wear. Otherwise, she was still the raving beauty she'd been 40 years ago, with a dazzling smile and big, gorgeous brown eyes.
And Rachel often thought about how handsome and how sexy her grandson was. There was no shortage of men wanted to date Rachel, but none of them held the least interest for her.
She had always believed that the quality of sex was more important than the quantity, and she preferred celibacy to sex just for the sake of getting physical release. She had her trusty vibrators and a couple of dildoes that gave her all the fulfillment she needed. Most of the time.
But as Craig had matured, she had found herself looking at him in an entirely un-grandmotherly way. He had grown into a strapping young man, about 6-foot-1 and a trim 185 pounds. He was handsome in a rugged sort of way, with bright eyes and thick curly hair that he wore shoulder-length.
Craig's only real physical defect was his nose. An avid runner and a talented soccer player, he'd had a collision with another player during a match that left him with a broken nose. As far as Rachel was concerned, it just made him look that much sexier.
For a long time, she had fought the perverted desires that had bubbled under the surface, but she wasn't sure she could fight them off much longer, or whether she even wanted to.
She had always sensed that Craig felt the same way about her that she did about him, and she had planned this trip as a reward for his outstanding academic achievement in high school. If there was something there, it would happen; if not, they would still have a wonderful time together.