edge of the world, off the face of the earth. I even had a
friend from law school-he's in Washington-check her
Social Security payment records, and there hasn't been
a payment since she worked a part-time job the
summer before she disappeared." He sucked on his
whiskey glass, his hand trembling so badly that the lip
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of the glass rattled against his teeth. "I can only assume
that either she doesn't want to be found or that's she's
dead. Though if she is, she didn't die in San Francisco
or any place in the Bay Area. At least not in the first
five years after she ran away."
"How do you know that?"
"I checked Jane Does in county morgues for that
long," he said softly, as if the memory made him very
tired.
"You went to a lot of trouble. "
" I was very much in love with her," he said, "and
Betty Sue was a very special lady."
"So I've heard," I said, then regretted it.
"From whom?" he asked in a voice that tried to be
casual.
"Everybody."
"Which everybody, specifically?"
"Her drama teacher, for one," I said.
"Gleeson," he snorted. "That faggot son of a bitch.
He didn't know anything about Betty Sue, didn't care
anything about her. He encouraged her acting so she
would think he was a big man, that's all. She was good
at it but she didn't even like it. She used to tell me,
'They just look at me, Albert, they don't see me.' "
"I thought Marilyn Monroe said that. "
"Huh? Oh, perhaps she did," he said. "I'm sure it's a
common psychological profile among actresses. Betty
Sue was very sensitive about her looks. Sometimes
when we would be having a . . . spat, she would cry
and tell me, 'If I were ugly or crippled, you wouldn't
love me.' "
"Was she right?" I asked without meaning to.
"Damn it, man," he answered sharply, "I haven't
seen her in ten years and I'm . . . I'm still half in love
with her."
"How does your wife feel about that?"
"We don't talk about it," he said with a sigh.
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"Could Betty Sue have been serious enough about
the acting to have run off to Hollywood or New York,
something like that?"
"Do girls still do that?" he asked, glancing up at me.
"People still do everything they used to do," I said.
"What about her?"
"Oh, I don't think so," he said, then asked if he
could freshen my drink. When I shook my head, he got
up and made himself a new one. "I don't think so at
all," he said from the bar. "She enjoyed the workrehearsals and all that-but for her, the play wasn't the thing." He sat back down. "She suffered from passing
enthusiasms, you know," he said, as if it were a disease
from which he had been spared. "One month it would
be the theatre, the acting just a preparation for writing
and directing, and the next month she would be
planning to go to medical school and become a
missionary doctor. Then she would want to be a painter
or some sort of artist. And the worst part of it was that
she could do damn near anything she set her mind to.
For instance, I wasn't a great tennis player-though I
nearly made the team at Cal--and when I could get her
on the courts, she gave me a hell of a time, let me tell
you." He paused to look at his drink, then decided to
drink about half of it in a gulp. "And, you know, in
spite of all the things she could do, she was the loneliest
person I ever knew. That was the heartbreaking part of
it, that loneliness. I couldn't help her at all. Sometimes
it seemed my attempts just made it worse. I couldn't
stop her from being lonely at all. "
"Not even i n bed?"
"You're a nosy bastard, aren't you?" he said quietly.
"Professional habit."
"Well, the truth is that I never laid a hand on her,"
he said with proper sadness. "Maybe if I had, I
wouldn't still be carrying her around on my back."
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"Did anybody else lay a hand on her?"
"I always suspected that she wasn't a virgin," he said
with a slight smile. "But she wouldn't talk about it. "
"Did you two fight about it?"
"I fought, but she wouldn't fight back," he said.
"She'd just sit there, drawn into some sort of shell, and
weep. Or else she'd make me take her home."
"Did you have a fight the day she walked away?"
"No," he murmured, shaking his head. "It was just a
normal day. We drove over to San Francisco for dinner
and a movie, and on the way she decided that she
wanted to drive through the Haight to see the hippies.
We got stuck in a line of traffic, and she just opened the
car door, stepped out, and walked away. Without
looking back. Without saying a word," he said slowly,
as if he had repeated the lines to himself too many
times.
"You didn't chase her?"
"How could I?" he cried. "I didn't know she was
running away, and I couldn't just leave my car sitting in
the street, man."
"I thought you had tickets for a play," I said.
"Hell, I don't know," he said. "It was ten years ago,
ten god damned years ago."
"Right.,
"Need another drink," he either said or asked. When
he stood up, I handed him my glass, but he paced
around the office with it in his hand.
"Can you tell me anything else about her?'' I asked.
He stopped and stared at me as if I were mad, then
started pacing again, taking the controlled steps of a
drunk man. But his hands and mouth moved with a will
of their own; he waved his arms and nearly shouted,
"Tell you about her? My god, man, I could tell you
about her all day and you still wouldn't see her. Tell you
what? That I had loved her since she was a child, that I
63
couldn't just stop because she ran away? I tried to stop,
believe me I tried to stop loving her." Then he paused.
"It all sounds so silly now, doesn't it?"
"What?"
"That the disappearance of a damned high school
chick that I'd never touched was the most traumatic
experience of my life," he said. "And let me tell
you, I know something about trauma, growing up
with a drunken father. What do you want to know anyway?"
"Everything. Anything."
"That I married a safely dull woman and fathered
two safely dull children that I can't bear to face and
can't bear to leave and can't bear to love because they
might all run away too," he said.
"Hey, man," I said, "take that crap upstairs to the
shrinks. Don't tell me about it. I asked about her, not
you." He stopped to stare at his feet. "You've already
been upstairs, right?"
"I've been going for two years now," he said with
that mixture of pride and shame people in analysis so
often have. "And, in spite of the jokes, it's working. I
meant to go to medical school, you know, but all those
visits to the morgue, all those anonymous faces beneath
the rubber sheets, were too much for me." He went to
the bar to splash whiskey aimlessly into our glasses,
then kept mine in his hand. "As you so aptly said, as a
lawyer I'm not even a good joke. But I'm enrolled in
next fall's medical school class out at Davis. Thanks to
Betty Sue, it's taken me ten extra years to get started,
but now I'm finally going to make it."
"Good luck," I said.
"Thank you," he muttered, not noticing my irony.
"Anything else?"
"One more question," I said, "which I hate to ask,
but I really would appreciate an answer. "
"What's that?" he asked, then saw the two glasses in
64
his hands. He still didn't give me mine. "And why do
you hate to ask it?"
"I heard a rumor that Betty Sue had made some fuck
films in San Francisco."
"That's so absurd I won't even bother to answer," he
said, and finally ga�e me my drink.
"You don't know anything about that, huh?" I asked
as I stood up and put some ice in the warm whiskey.
"Don't be ridiculous," he said, facing me across an
expanse of Persian carpet.
"Okay," I said. "Do you remember a girl named
Peggy Bain?"
"Of course. She was Betty Sue's best friend. Only
friend, I guess."
"You wouldn't know where she's living?"
"Actually, I might," he said. "I handled a divorce for
her some years ago, and she sends me a Christmas card
once in a while." He stepped over to the desk and
thumbed through his Rolodex, then wrote an address
and telephone number on a card with his little gold pen.
The simple chore had restored some of his fac;ade, but
his knuckles were white around his glass when he
picked it up. "Two years ago she was livirig at this
address in Palo Alto. If you see her, please give her my
regards. "
"Thanks," I said, " I will."
"Say," he said too loudly, "let's sit down and have a
drink. Pleasure instead of business."
"No thanks," I said, setting my unfinished Scotch on
the coffee table. "I've got a date."
"Me too," he said sourly as he checked his watch.
"With my wife." We shook hands as he led me toward
the door, then he held my hand and asked, "Would you
do me a favor?"
"What's that?"
"If you should, through some insane circumstance,
find Betty Sue, would you let me know?"
65
"Not for love or money," I said, and took back my
fingers.
"Why's that?" he asked, confused and nearly crying.
"Let me tell you a story," I said, which didn't help
his confusion. "When I was twelve, my daddy was
working on a ranch down in Wyoming, west of a hole in