you have been searching for her for some time surely
you know something about her life after she ran away
from home. She came here from jail, beaten and
whipped by life, fat and ugly, but once she fasted and
cleansed her system of animal mucus, the compulsive
eating stopped, and she grew lovely again, whole. She
stayed longer than any of my charges, before or since,
even though her stay was more difficult than most. "
"Do you mind if I ask why?" I said.
"This isn't just a job to you, is it?''
"No, ma'am."
"You're not a member of the family, are you?"
"No, ma'am."
"I sensed both those things immediately," she said,
"which made it possible to talk to you. You understand
that I do not judge or criticize my charges or their life
before, but when they come here, they must follow my
rules or leave. No meat, no drugs, no sex. What they do
when they leave is their business, and if they come back
up the mountain in emotional rags, I take them in
gladly, but while they are here, they must obey the
rules or leave."
"And Betty Sue had trouble?"
"The boys followed her like a bitch in heat," she
answered flatly, "as well they should. Betty Sue had a
great capacity for love. She fended the boys off, but it
was so hard for her. She seemed to need that sort of
male affection-! suppose her father never gave her the
sort of love she needed-but she fought it to a
standstill." Then Selma paused to laugh. "She also
admitted to an intense longing for red meat, but she
never gave in to that desire either." The bit of light
laughter seemed to bring back memories, and her gray
eyes turned cloudy. "Then one afternoon in late
summer," she continued, whispering so softly that I
had to lean forward to hear her, "just after she had
decided to leave in the fall to return to school, she
150
drove my pickup down into town for supplies, and as
she drove back, a stray dog ran in front of the truck,
and she swerved to miss it, off the pavement and into
the river . . . " She rose and walked to the window, the
cat limp over her arm, and pointed down toward the
sparkling flow. "It happened on that comer right down
there."
I followed the finger's direction down the ridge to a
narrow bend, a sharp curve ending in a swift green
pool.
"She survived the crash but drowned," Selma said.
"I am so very sorry."
"You had no way to notify her mother?" I said.
"Her mother? No. I did what I could, placed
advertisements in the San Francisco papers, but Betty
Sue never talked about her childhood," she said.
"Never. Not a word the whole time she was here. In
that, too, she was different from others who have
stayed with me for a time."
"I understand," I said.
"Why do you think she wouldn't talk about her
childhood?" Selma asked, her eyes damp and serious.
"I don't know," I said. "Maybe she felt like a
princess stolen by peasants. I don't know."
"Children feel that way too often," she said, "it's so
sad."
"I guess the trick is to take what you get for parents
and try to live with it," I said lightly.
"That's very easy to say," she said, "and often very
difficult to do." I understood that I had been rebuked
for a lack of gravity. "Parents must make their children
feel loved and wanted. If they do nothing else, they
must do that, they owe at least that to their children,"
she said with such a· brittle tone to her voice that I
thought she must have been either an unwanted child
or a failure as a parent. But I didn't ask.
"You had the body cremated?" I said.
151
"Graves are too sad, don't you think?" she said.
"Yeah," I said, "it's just that her mother might not
like the idea-country people are sometimes funny
about cremation."
"It's done," she said sharply, "and there's little to
like or dislike about it now."
"Of course," I said. "You wouldn't have a snapshot
of Betty Sue?" I asked, nodding toward a corkboard
covered with photos. "Her mother might like a picture.
"
"Those are photographs of those who have found
other -lives after leaving," she said. "They send them
back. We take no photographs here, no reminders of
how they looked here to remind them of how they came
to be here."
"I guess I can understand that," I said. "Do you
mind if I ask why you do all this?"
"I would mind very much," she answered. "My
motives are my own."
"Then I won't ask," I said, and she smiled at me.
"I'm sure Mrs. Flowers would want me to thank you for
your kindness and love, and I want to thank you for
talking to me."
"I'm sorry to be the bearer of sad tidings," she said,
then shook my offered hand. "Once, years ago, I
believed that after death we moved on into some
universal consciousness, some far better life than this
flawed world upon which we must somehow survive,
but now I know, I understand that terrible knowledge
that the dead do not rise again to walk the earth, and I
take no false joy in the knowledge, I simply endure it,
so I am immensely sad to tell you of Betty Sue's death."
"I guess we should be glad she had some happy times
here," I said, "since she was so unhappy everywhere
else. You have a lovely place here."
"Thank you."
"Thank you," I said. "I'm a little old to give up
152
strong drink, red meat, and women all at once, but
some morning you might find me curled up on your
front steps," I added. "If I can make the hill."
"I'll take that as a compliment," she said as she
patted my hand. "My door is always open."
"Thanks," I said. "I guess I should know the date of
her death, too. Her mother will want to know. "
She told me without hesitation, and I left.
Down the switchbacks of the dusty path, I walked
without looking to either side, and as I drove down the
sweeping curves of the canyon highway, I didn't watch
the sunlight dancing on the riffles, didn't see the towers
and battlements of pink rock rising above the river. I
didn't stop or think or look until I reached the Larimer
County Courthouse and checked the death certificates.
It was there. I cursed myself for a suspicious bastard,
cursed the emptiness of my success, the long drive to
California before the long drive home. Then I thought
about getting drunk, a black ceremonial wake, a
sodden purge.
Thus did the good luck tum bad.
The bad luck turning worse came later when I
stumbled back to my motel room more tired than
drunk, tired of trying to get drunk without success. As I
reached with my key for the lock, somebody sapped me
just hard enough to drop me to my knees, to bring
bright flashes of darkness, stunned me long enough to
hustle me soundlessly into the room, pat me down, and
shove me into a comer. When I could see, I saw the
man who had been inside Jackson's office sitting
relaxed in the motel chair, his large ugly associate, and
another hired hand with his back against the wall as he
covered me with a small silenced automatic.
"No trouble," I muttered.
"You're in no position to cause any trouble at all,"
the man in the chair said mildly.
153
"That's what I meant," I said.
"Mr. Sughrue, you have to understand that I can't
allow you to treat my friends badly," he said.
"Hired help," I said.
"What?"
"Jackson's hired help," I said, "not your friend. "
"Whatever, I can't have you shoving a gun down his
throat and making empty threats," he said.
"Okay, I'll give it up for Lent."
"I'm afraid that won't do," he said.
"Listen," I said, "if you wanted me dead, you
wouldn't be here-"
"Don't be so sure," he interrupted.
"-wouldn't be within thirty miles of here, but if
you've got some misguided sense of vengeance for
whatever it was I was supposed to have done to
Jackson, I'm willing to take my medicine," I said as I
eased up the wall, "and I'll be as quiet as I can."
"How nice," the man in the chair said.
"Nothing personal," Torres said softly as he eased a
glove on his right hand.
"Nothing personal," I agreed, then took it as best I
could.
They didn't seem to have their hearts in it, and I
didn't resist a bit, didn't give them the slightest reason
for any emotional involvement. Maybe it worked or
maybe they didn't plan to hurt me too badly from the
beginning. Whatever, they didn't do any permanent
damage. No broken bones, no missing teeth, no
ruptured spleen. I had forgotten, though, how much a
professional beating hurts, and I was very glad when
they stripped me, strapped me with tape, and sat me in
the bathtub. I didn't know why they did it, I was just
glad the hard part was over. Maybe they knew what I
had planned for Jackson in the motel room in Aurora.
Before they gagged me and turned oil the cold
shower, the one in charge said, "Hey, buddy, you've
154
got discipline, and I like a man with discipline. You
ought to come to work for me."
"Leave your name with the desk clerk," I muttered.
"Your only problem is that you think you're both
tough and smart," he said as he patted me on the
cheek, "and the truth is that you're only tough because
you're dumb."
"What the hell," I grunted. "I don't take orders
worth a damn, either."
"Maybe you should take up another line of work,"
he crooned, as he held up the photostat of my license.
"Is that an order?"
"You never quit, do you?" he said laughing. "I hope
this was worth it, you know, hope you found the chick
you were hassling Jackson about."
"She's dead," I said. "She's been dead for nearly five
years. It was a waste of time."
"Too bad," he said, then laughed again. "Just be
thankful that you didn't hurt my friend and be thankful
that I'm in a good mood."
"I am," I said.
Then his associates gagged me with a sock. I was