thrown out," she said. "Those scars on his ham look as
if it might have been serious."
"Minor stuff," I said.
"How did it happen?" she asked, but I didn't have
the impression that she was pumping me.
"Frankly, I was too drunk to know exactly what
happened," I said.
"Well, thank you for taking care of him," she said.
"We had a pretty good time," I said, "and I'm not
sure who was taking care of whom."
"It sounds like . . . sounds like a wild trip." She
paused. "You know, we got to know each other on just
the same sort of trip. I was teaching in a summer
workshop in Sun Valley and having a drink with some
of my students in the lodge, and Traheame came in off
the terrace, this huge, beautiful, alive man, and he sat
down at the bar beside me, bought me a drink, then
another, and somehow we ran away with each other. I
didn't realize who he was until we had driven aU the
way to Mexico--we wouldn't tell each other our names,
it was like that, you know-and then I heard him spell
his name for the Mexican border people, for that
form-visitor's card, you know-and I just couldn't
believe it. Here he was, the most alive man I had ever
met, and he turned out to be Abraham Traheame. Life
is so strange. Who would have thought all this could
come of a simple thing like buying me a drink."
"Speaking of the great man," I said, trying not
to be ironic, "would you like me to help you get him to
bed?"
"Not at all," she said. "He'll wake up in a couple of
hours shouting for whiskey and wild, wild women. "
The grin on her face suggested that she could handle
the wild woman part perfectly well. For an instant I
believed her, then she turned her face, and I thought
134
that if she was wild, she kept it well hidden behind
plain. "I've bored you, haven't I, with my little love
story?"
"It's not that," I said. "I thought I'd hook it up and
leave while I'm still sober."
"Trahearne will be so disappointed," she said as if
she meant it.
"Yeah, but I've got this other case I'm working on," I
said, "and I need to be in Oregon yesterday."
"Tomorrow's never soon enough, is it?"
"No."
"And that's such an exciting phrase. "
"What's that?"
" 'Working on a case,' " she said. "It suggests dark
intrigue, tangled mysteries, the sort of romance denied
to mere mortals."
"I'm afraid the reality is usually repossessing cars and
combing bars for runaway husbands," I said.
"Or runaway children. "
"Sometimes. "
"That should b e exciting," she said. " A prince stolen
by gypsies or something like that . "
" I don't know any gypsies o r princes," I confessed.
"That's no reason to quit looking," she said, a
plaintive note creeping into her voice, soft like the cry
�f a lost and dying animal. "I do wish you wouldn't
leave. "
" I have to go," I said.
"I understand," she said. "I'm sure that Traheame
would want me to tell you that you're always welcome
in our house. I feel the same way. Please come b�
whenever the mood suits you . "
"Sure," I said, "thanks. " But I couldn't think of any
moods that would bring me back to this crazy ptace. We
said our goodbyes, and as I drove away, in CDDttalft, my
search for Betty Sue Flowers seemed alDlOit 58Jle.
135
Driving hard, I made it to Grants Pass in one straight
shot, nineteen calm hours behind the wheel, then
checked into a motel and slept like a child until ten the
next morning.
At the Josephine County Sheriff's Department,
when I stopped by to let them know I was in the county
and I wasn't planning to break any laws, they seemed
bored by the prospect but they told me where to go.
They didn't tell me what to look for, though, and a
couple of hours later I was driving up into the Siskiyous, following a washboard gravel road along a small creek that ran into the Applegate River. About
ten miles up the road, the land opened up into a nice
little valley, and I understood the smile on the deputy's
face.
A prefab A-frame cabin sat beside the road surrounded by multicolored plastic flags flying from loose guy wires. A large sign in front announded SUNDOWN
SUMMER ESTATES. When I parked, a tall young man
bounded out of the cabin, his hiking boots rattling the
cheap pine porch.
"Yes, sir," he said brightly, "what can we do for you
today?"
"I think I'm looking for a place to retire," I said, and
it sounded suddenly true. A quiet place where I could
settle back and think about all the wild goose chases of
my life.
"I've got just the place for you," he said quickly, "a
ten-acre plot with creek frontage, a spring, and a great
building site. Unimproved, of course, but cheap."
"Actually, I was looking for a hippie commune," I
said.
"You're in the wrong place," he said, his spiel over,
his voice hard now.
"This place belong to you?"
"That's right," he said.
"No hippies, huh?"
136
"Not now."
"Where did they go?" I asked.
"Wherever hippies go when they find out that living
on the land in the old way is hard work."
"How did you get the place?'' I asked.
"If it's any of your business, I inherited it from my
grandmother," he said, then looked away and shuffied
his feet. "You're some kind of law, right?"
"Private," I said, then showed him my license.
"Wouldn't you know," he grumbled. "I've had three
prospective buyers today-a Fresno chicken farmer,
two kids driving a brand-new Continental, and a
rent-a-cop."
"Didn't mean to raise your hopes," I said.
"That's what they're for, aren't they?" he said sadly.
"It was your commune, right?"
"Everybody makes mistakes. " He grinned. "What
the hell, man, I turned twenty-one in Nam and came
into this place and a little bread, and when I came back,
all I could think of was peace and dope and hairylegged hippie chicks. Sounded like heaven on earth."
"What happened?"
"Times changed," he said simply, "and my money
ran out. I thought we could make a living up here, but
nobody wanted to be on the duty roster. The lazy
bastards wouldn't work, so I got a little freaked on acid
and conducted a search and destroy mission of my own,
burned their hooches and relocated the fuckers. Man,
you should've seen them run."
"So now you're selling out?"
"Everything but the back quarter section," he said.
"It's either that or another six months up on the
pipeline, and Alaska is great, man, if you don't have to
work out in the cold-but it's always cold. "
"How long ago did everybody leave?"
"Four or five years ago," he said. "Who're you
looking for?"
137
"Betty Sue Flowers," I said, then showed him the
picture.
"You've got to be kidding," he said as he looked at
it.
"No, I'm really looking for her."
"Not that, man, I mean you got to be kidding that
this is her," he said. "When she was here, man, she was
a cow. A sweet fuck but as big as a barn."
"You remember her, huh?"
"Nobody ever forgets a fuck like that," he said, then
sighed darkly, as if he remembered too many other
things, too. "Say, you wouldn't have another one of
those beers, would you?" I nodded and got two fresh
ones out of the cooler. We strolled over to sit on the
steps of the A-frame porch. "She was wild, man, too
much. How come you're looking for her, anyway?"
"She hasn't been in touch with her family for a long
time, and they'd like to find her, see her again."
"Probably not."
"Why?"
"Mao, I've known some crazy ladies-in Nam and up
on the pipeline-and I've done some numbers I don't
like to remember during the daylight hours, but this
one, she was something else."
"Was she your lady?"
"Everybody was everybody's," he said. "You know,
trying to destroy the concept of private property and
personal ownership. What the hell, man, you do
enough drugs, it sounds okay."
"At least you hung on to the land."
"Just barely," he said. "They were pushing me to put
the title in all our names, you know, telling me that I
was on some sort of power trip because I owned the
land, and that's when I finally freaked."
"Was that when she left?"
"No, she was gone by then," he said. "She didn't
stay around too long before she split with this older
138
dude. She may have even come with him, you know,
but I just can't remember. "
"Remember his name?"
"Jack. Something like that. We weren't too heavy on
last names, you know, shedding another vestige of the
middle-class fascist life or some such crap. "
"Randall Jackson."
"Sounds good to me, man, but I don't remember."
"Potbellied, bandylegged, balding?"
"That's the creep," he said.
"Creep?"
"He wanted me to finance a skin flick dressed up as a
sociological study of sexual freedom in the communes.
He said he had all sorts of distribution connections and
claimed we'd make a bundle. You know him?"
"We haven't exactly met," I said, "but I know him."
"Whatever happened to him?"
"I heard a rumor that he was in Denver dealing dirty
books," I said.
"Figures," he said, then we sat for a bit listening to
the flutter of the plastic flags. "Looks like a fucking
used car lot, doesn't it?" I nodded. "I guess when I
decided to sell out, I wanted it to look as sleazy as
possible," he said. "Hey, if you've got another beer,
maybe I'll trade you a lot for it. "
"You can have a beer," I said, "but I've already got
five acres up in Montana on the North Fork of the
Flathead. Sorry."
"Don't be sorry," he said as he came back with two
fresh beers.
"How are the plots selling?"
"Like cold hot cakes," he said. "Two five-acre plots
in the last month, and I had to carry the paper on those,
Money's too tight. But I've got a standing offer from a
land syndicate-you know, one of those outfits that sell
acre lots on television and in the Sunday supplements.
Only thing is, they want the whole place, you know,