ROBERT GARDNER -- The Verdict
I have mentioned before in these dispatches my career as a lifeguard
on the bayfront and 15th Street, watching over Nancy, Billy, Dorothy and
Peter while the mothers of Nancy, Billy, Dorothy and Peter played endless
rubbers of bridge.
If being a baby sitter is thrilling, I had a thrilling job. However, I
must admit that the career of baby-sitting is not considered as thrilling
as, say, skydiving.
However, the excitement of my job as a lifeguard/baby sitter had to
take second place to my career, also as a lifeguard, keeping track of the
Floater.
The Floater was a rather rotund, middle-aged woman who came down to
the beach each and every day. She would march across the beach, enter the
water, take a half-dozen floundering strokes, then flop over on her back,
stretch out her arms and legs, and float.
She didn’t float just to float. No, sir, my Floater was a traveling
floater. She would get out into the current far enough to pick up the
tide. If it was an incoming tide, she would float up toward the
canneries. If it was an outgoing tide, she would float down toward the
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
There wasn’t too much thinking involved in baby-sitting, just counting
the babies from time to time to see that no one had drowned or wandered
away, so I spent an inordinate amount of time thinking about the Floater.
Because I was so busy being a baby sitter, I couldn’t leave my post
and follow the lady, but there was a lifeguard at the adjoining
campground, and I asked him about the Floater. He just shrugged and said
that she floated out of his jurisdiction, and he didn’t know exactly
where she landed.
I knew some people at the Newport Harbor Yacht Club and asked them if
the Floater ever landed there. They said she floated right past their
club, and the last thing they saw of her, she was floating under the
White Bridge that led to Bay Island.
I came to no conclusions about the lady and was too bashful to ask her
any questions. After all, there is no law against floating, and she
wasn’t harming anyone.
And so I just kept on counting babies and pulling them out of the
water. I listed every one of those incidents as a rescue and had a record
of rescues never equaled in the history of the Newport Beach lifeguard
service.
Yes, sir, being a lifeguard is an exciting job.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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