eternal victim flooding her eyes.
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"I guess I knew that you'd come," she said. "I guess
I've been waiting. How did Trahearne find out?"
"Find out what?" I said. "Your mother sent me. "
"But I'm her mother," Selma whimpered.
"Didn't you tell her I was dead?" Melinda said.
"She wouldn't believe me," I said. "And then you
sent your daddy a postcard. "
" A postcard?" she said, looking amazed.
"I'm her mother," Selma repeated, trying to draw
herself back together.
"If you didn't, somebody did," I said. "Trahearne,
maybe, or some of your friends in Denver. Somebody
sent a postcard so Rosie would know you're alive, so
I'd come here. I just don't understand why."
"I don't either," she said. "Nobody's looking for me
anymore but my mother. "
"I'm your mother," Selma wailed, then sank to her
knees in the soft dark soil, weeping.
"It's all right," Melinda said, holding Selma's head
against her thigh.
"Tell him I'll pay . . . pay anything for his silence,"
Selma sobbed. "Pay anything."
"Listen," I said, "as far as I'm concerned Betty Sue
Flowers is dead. I only walked up that damned hill to
be sure. If you want your mother to think you're dead,
that's on your conscience, and if you want to act like
Trahearne doesn't know who you are, that's between
the two of you. I'm out of it. I'm going home."
"I'll pay anything," Selma moaned.
"Hush," Melinda said kindly. "It had to happen
sometime. It'll work out." Then she looked at me.
"Wait for me, please," she said. "At the bottom of the
trail. I've got to take Selma inside and calm her down.
But please wait. I have to talk to you."
"You'll just tell me things I don't want to know," I
said.
"I'll pay!" Selma screamed. The dogs in the kennel
184
woke and began to yap, which in turn woke Fireball out
of his sun-dazed stupor. He yawned , sniffed the air,
then trotted over to greet me. As I scratched his head,
Melinda helped Selma to her feet and led her toward
the cabin. When they were inside, I headed down the
hill.
"Please wait for me," Melinda said from the doorway. "Please."
"All right," I said from the edge of the clearing.
Fireball followed me down the trail, plodding steadily through sunlight and shade, his nose lifted in the morning air as if he could smell a beer.
"No drugs on the mountain," I said to him, and he
quickened his step.
At the bottom of the trail, I crossed the highway to
wash my face in the river, to lave the miles away with
cold water. Fireball gave me a dirty look, then lapped
up a quick drink, shaking his head as if the water
horrified him. I took him back across the road and gave
him a beer. We had both earned one.
I woke up with the can warm in my hand in the
middle of the afternoon. Melinda was sitting in the
passenger seat, dressed now in hiking boots, shorts,
and a tank top. It was as if she had shed her baggy
clothes to show me what it was all about-long, shapely
legs rippling with muscle, high, firm breasts, the sort of
body men dream about.
"You were sleeping so hard , it seemed a shame to
wake you up," she said. "Selma doesn't have any
coffee, but I made you some herb tea, " she added,
holding up a thermos.
"I'll have a beer," I said. "I don't want to get too
healthy."
As I rustled up a beer, she said, "Trahearne must
know, then?"
185
"He led me right to your mother's place, and then
after Rosie hired me to find you, he encouraged me.
He must have had it in mind."
"I should have told him the truth about my . . . my
life," she said as she poured herself a cup of the weak
tea.
"You should have told him," I agreed. "In the course
of my search, he had the wonderful chance to see your
acting debut. "
She sighed. "Oh, that poor, poor man. Now he'll
never believe me."
"About what?"
"I have to travel a lot, have to be alone, too," she
said, "and he's convinced that I . . . I sleep with other
men when I'm away from him." When I didn't say
anything, she added, "And it isn't true. He just wants it
to be true. I know he does, and it doesn't matter to me,
but I don't fool around."
"Okay."
"You don't sound convinced," she said.
"I don't care," I said, "and it's none of my business
anyway what either of yeu do or don't do, okay?"
"You don't even care why Betty Sue had to die, do
you?"
"Nope."
"They came looking for me," she said, "and I had to
die to make them leave me alone."
"Randall Jackson and the Denver hoods," I said.
"You know them?" she asked, amazed all over
again.
"Intimately."
"I was in jail," she said defiantly, "and I . . .
"
"I know," I said. "You got busted for soliciting."
" . . . I lost thirty pounds in jail, a pound a day," she
continued as if she hadn't heard me. "Selma came to
the jail when I was in, and I wanted to come up here,
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but I had to go by Jack's place to get some things, some
books and things, and he saw me, you know, with all
the fat gone, and he made me go to work for those
awful people. It wasn't like San Francisco at all-that
time we were just high and having fun and making
money for bread and dope-this was a business, and
they made me go to the hospital to have this scar I
have . . . made me have plastic surgery on this scar,
and they spent a lot of money and they wouldn't let me
leave. You understand, don't you?"
"Right. "
"So I stole a little money from Jack's billfold and ran
up here to hide, qut they came looking for me in a week
or two, and I had to hide in the woods and Selma had to
lie-she hates to lie, she hated lying to you before.
Then later that summer her daughter drowned in the
wreck, and she told the sheriff it was me, you see, and I
could start over again, could act like none of it ever
happened, don't you see?" She sat the plastic thermos
cup very carefully on the dash, then began to weep.
"But you don't care, do you?" She sobbed between her
hands.
I had had a bellyful of weeping women. "Jesus
fucking Christ!" I shouted as I threw my unfinished
beer can out the open door and across the road. "Your
mother paid me eighty-seven dollars to find you," I
said, "and I chased you all over the fucking country,
and I don't know if I did it for Rosie or for myself or for
some idea I had of you, but I know fucking-a well that I
didn't do it for eighty-seven fucking dollars, so don't
tell me I don't fucking care!"
"I'm sorry." She giggled, then moved her hands and
began to wipe away the tears. "I was so involved in my
own problems that I forgot how hard you had worked
trying to find me."
"You didn't know," I said huffily.
187
"I understood without knowing," she said with a
smile.
"Bullshit."
"You're cute when you're mad, C.W. ," she said.
I got out of the pickup and kicked a few rocks
around, raising a cloud of dust that nearly choked me.
"So what now?" I said as I climbed back into my
seat.
"I truly don't know," she said. "I'll have to think
about it for a few days. That was always the trouble
before-! did so many things without thinking about
them first."
"In spite of what I said up there, I've got to tell your
mother something. "
"Will you wait a few days?" she asked. "Just until
I've straightened this out with Trahearne?"
"I've got to call your mother tomorrow," I said.
"All right, I'll call Trahearne tonight," she said. "I'd
rather not do it by telephone, but if he already knows
about me, I can tell what he thinks about it. Come back
tomorrow. I'll meet you down here about ten. I think it
might be best if you didn't come up the hill . . . you
know, for Selma's sake. She's taken this whole thing so
hard. She buried her daughter with my name, and of all
the things I owe her, I owe her most for that. She gave
me my life back, you see, and that's the most one
person can do for another. That's how I feel about
Trahearne sometimes--that I can give him his life back,
take it back from those two awful women who have
held him captive so long. You've seen them-you
understand."
"Maybe I do," I said, "and maybe I don't. It doesn't
matter. I would like to know one thing, though."
"I thought you didn't want to know anything," she
said with a gentle smile. I was amazed that I hadn't
noticed how beautiful her smile was before. "I thought
you had no curiosity at all."
188
"Don't be a smartass," I said. "Just tell me why you
ran away in the first place."
"Well, you don't know everything, do you?"
"Nope."
"I was pregnant," she said, "and my boy friend took
me to San Francisco for an abortion. On the way out of
the hotel where they did it, I started hemorrhagingit's an old story, you know' so old it's almost trite until it happens to you-and he ran off and left me bleeding
to death ·on the emergency room steps of the Franklin
Hospital. He dumped me there and ran away-"
"Albert Griffith?" I interrupted.
"You know some things, don't you?" she said. "They
stopped the bleeding all right, but I came down with a