Jackson lit a cigarette and glanced up at the motel
rooms. "After that she wouldn't have anything to do
with me."
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"Can't blame her, can you?"
"Guess not," he said.
"Where'd she go after that?"
"Up around Fort Collins, I heard," he said. "There's
some rich lady who lives up in Poudre Canyon, and she
does rehab work, you know, pulls girls out of the slam
and takes them home. A real do-gooder, you know,
and I heard that Betty Sue had stayed there for a while.
Then I didn't hear any more."
"Nothing?"
"Nothing at all," he said.
"How come you lied to me?" I asked.
"I thought you might be some of her family," he
said, "the accent and all, you know, come to get even
"
or something."
"Even for what?" I asked.
"You know," he said, "she was just a kid." As if that
explained everything.
"You shouldn't have lied," I said.
"I see that now," he said as he glanced at the .38 in
my hand. "What did you have in mind up in that motel
room, man?"
"Taking you apart," I said.
"That's what I figured," he said. "Hell, I thought you
were going to blow me away on the street, man. You
should've seen the look in your eyes. You were crazy,
man."
"I'm tired," I said.
"What the hell are you looking for Betty Sue for?"
"I don't even remember," I said, then Jackson drove
us back to his car. "No hard feelings," I said as he got
out.
"None at all," he said, then hitched his pants and
walked away.
As I drove back to the airport, it crossed my mind
that it had been too easy, and I thought about going
back, but I had enough trouble as it was. I parked the
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salesman's company car near the spot where I had
taken it, then picked up my own and headed north
toward Fort Collins up I-25. Halfway there, my hands
began to shake so badly that I had to pull into the
nearest exit and off the road. I didn't think it was
nerves, though. Mostly anger working its way to the
surface. Jackson had been right. When I shoved the
piece in his back on the street in front of the topless
place, I had wanted to pull the trigger as badly as I had
ever wanted anything, pull it and pull it until I had
blown him all over the sidewalk. I thought about what
Peggy Bain had said about me being willing to kill just
to stand in line for Betty Sue. I thought about it, but the
line just seemed too damned long. I crawled under the
topper and locked my .38 in the toolbox, then drove on
north, the mountains to the west, the vast empty
stretch of the Great Plains to the east.
One summer when I was a child, after my parents
separated, I had lived with my father out on the plains
east of Fort Collins, north and east of a little town
called Ault, during that summer, stayed with him and a
short widow woman and her three little kids. He was
trying to dry-farm her wheat land, and we all lived in a
basement out on the plains, a basement with no house
over it, where we lived in the ground like moles,
looking up through the skylight, waiting for the rain
that never came.
When I turned off the freeway at the Fort Collins
exit, I thought about driving east to try to find the
basement. I had found it once in the daylight when I
was living in Boulder but I knew I would never find' it in
the dark. 'so I checked into another motel, went into
another bar, had another goddamned drink.
The next day I had some luck. First, a little good luck
that turned bad, then a little bad luck that turned
worse.
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The second probation officer I called told me where
to find the right rich lady. The first one I talked to could
have told me but she just didn't want to.
Selma Hinds lived in a large octagonal cabin of log
and glass set on the spine of a ridge south of the Cache
Ia Poudre River. As I drove up the canyon, I could see
it sitting up there like a medieval fortress. I parked by
her- mailbox at the base of the ridge and changed into
hiking boots, throwing longing glances at the old mine
cable hoist at the side of the road, but it was for
groceries and firewood. I had to trudge up the steep,
winding trail for three quarters of a mile, wondering if
Selma Hinds had many casual visitors or door-to-door
salesmen. She didn't have a telephone, so I also
wondered if she was home. If she wasn't at home, I
would just have to wait, unless I wanted to walk the
trail twice in one day.
Finally, sweating and sucking for air, I broke out of
the scrub pine into a large clearing on the saddle of the
ridge just as half a dozen dogs discovered my presence.
They greeted me happily, though, especially a large
three-legged black lab who stabbed me in the groin
with her single front leg. The others, mostly mediumsized mutts, were content with a gale of barking.
The octagonal cabin sat on the highest point of the
saddle with a large garden in the swale between it and
five smaller cabins and a bank of wire cages set in the
edge of the trees on the other side of the clearing. Two
young girls and a boy were working in the garden
among the spring planting, which was protected by
sawdust and plastic sheeting, and the dry, rocky soil of
the ridge had been mixed with compost until it was as
black as river-bottom land. In the wire cages, small
animals and birds seemed to gaze at me with the dazed
eyes of hospital patients. The young people looked up
from the garden but then went about their work.
A tall, smooth-faced, motherly woman with brown
147
hair streaked with gray stood in the doorway of the
large cabin holding a big yellow cat in her arms. Her
hair was tucked neatly into a bun, and she wore a long,
plain dress. Even from twenty yards away, her gray
eyes stared at me with a calm kindness, the sort you
might expect to see in the face of a pioneer woman
standing outside a soddy on the plains, a woman who
had seen all the cruelty the world had to offer, had seen
it and found forgiveness beyond reason or measure.
She was nothing like my mother, who was a short,
pert Southern woman, bouncy and mildly desperate,
somewhat giddy, slightly sad because rogue circumstance in the guise of my father had left her working below herself as an Avon lady in Moody County,
Texas, but as I walked toward Selma Hinds, I felt
light-headed and joyous, as if I were coming home after
a long and arduous war. She smiled, and I broke into a
childish grin, nearly ran to throw my arms around her,
but as I stopped in front of her, something in her gaze,
perhaps a slight lack of focus in her eyes, lessened the
impression.
We exchanged introductions, and she invited me into
her home. Inside, among the plain wooden furniture in
the open cabin, a number of cats lay sleeping or
walking about, switching their tails as they kept a
weather eye on the dogs standing with drooping
tongues and wistful faces just outside the door. As soon
as Selma Hinds sat down on the couch and waved me to
the opposite chair, the dogs sat too, their dark eyes
watching us calmly, their frantic barking stilled.
"You have the look of a man searching for something," she said quietly, "or someone. "
" A girl," I said. "Betty Sue Flowers. "
" I see," she said, "and as you can see, I take in
strays--the halt, the lame, the sore of foot." She
paused to smooth the fur of the calico that had replaced
the large yellow cat in her lap. "And the spiritually
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damaged too, I take them in, do what I can to restore
them-rebuild the body, replenish the spirit. Those
who have homes they want to return to, I provide for
their trip, and those who don't I help to find a place to
go, and sometimes, those who aren't able to leave, I
keep by my side. "
"Yes, ma'am," I said, thinking that she must b e mad
or way too good for this world.
"Mostly it works out that the human animals go on,
and the others stay . . . " She paused again, just long
enough for me to think that Betty Sue might still be
here. "These are trying times for the young, and I
provide a place away from the world, the violence and
the drugs, a haven with a sexual king' s-ex," she said.
"And Betty Sue came here?''
"Yes, for a time."
"Then she left?" I asked, confused now.
"She left her spirit among us, it walks among us even
now," she said, "and her ashes are mixed with the
garden soil."
"I beg your pardon?"
"She's dead, Mr. Sughrue," she said. When I didn't
say anything, she added, "You seem shocked. We all
must die many times."
"I don't know if I can explain that to her mother," I
said.
"Tell her then that while Betty Sue was among us,
she regained her innocence, restored her youth," she
said. "She was happy here, she grew young again. "
"I've heard it's possible," I said, still stunned, "but
I've never seen it happen. "
"That's a pity, sir, since it is one of life's delights to
watch the young grow young again."
"What happened?" I asked, wanting to know how
she died.
"She blossomed like a flower here," Selma said,
misunderstanding, "she came to value herself again. If
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