Authors: T. Jefferson Parker
I kept to the trees, of course, so as not to advertise myself. This is where the camo comes in. We have so many lovely old pines and firs in Mammoth, you can almost always find yourself a cool, fragrant pool of shade in which to rest and observe. That's why we have so many fine bears. So I came upon the Welborn household from behind and found just such a cool place in which to hunker, and so I hunkered.
Their home is an unremarkable wooden structure near downtown, off of Cornice Bowl, with a gambrel roof and dormer windows, painted pale green, very typical 1970s mountain construction. It sits in a little swale and behind it is a slope on which Robbie and Sky would occasionally ski with Wylie, I am told, during their brief détentes when they were all very young. You know how children veer from enmity to affection so quickly. I remember how in prison my body would recoil at the thought of my sons playing with my husband's bastard child. It was a very raw feeling, and a helpless one. There is nothing that takes away hope faster than a cage. I very much enjoy the popular women's prison show on TV now. It gets the crazy energy that cooping up people produces. It gets the fact of contraband and how the COs are not necessarily better than the inmates. They get some of it wrong, too, such as the fact that in a real prison, nobody inside thinks they deserve to be there. Every last one has an excuse or maintains innocence even with reams of evidence against them. The emphasis on sex is exaggerated, for certain, though I do remember three womenâone small and the other two large and mannishâwho were physically/sexually intimidating to the others. I messed up one of the big ones with the heel of my hand once, broke her nose like it wasn't even there, stomped her, too, badly. They never bothered me again. I think they mostly had sex with one another, a deserved punishment, if you ask me. Personally, after I shot Richard, I never wanted to have sex again with anybody.
Today my timing is good, and from my spot here in the trees I see Wylie and his sisters come from the house and get into Wylie's truck. That cute little wooden trailer is hitched to the back. They make the turnaround and swing right past me, but they don't see me. I wear nothing reflective and I close my eyes as the windshield lines up with me, so they can't see even a twinkle of light from my cornea. Watching is a lot like sitting in a cell, so far as your options are concerned. But I know I can stand up and walk away when I'm finished. Belle is pretty, like her mother. Beatrice is tall and still slender and she moves self-consciously. I suspect she lacks a solid view of herself. I know from my investigations that she is a near-regular at Helixon's party house. Any seventeen-year-old girl with wobbly self-assurance entering Helixon's place is marked for trouble. The party mansion where I shot Richard was just like itâsame booze and drugs and reckless abandon you find anywhere there are promising young people and pandering leech-dilettantes living vicariously off them.
You would be right to ask what I'm doing here at the Welborn-Mikkelsen home, what I'm trying to accomplish. I have an answer: I am here because I am related to these people. I feel somewhat responsible for them, too.
Of the three most important things to learn in a life, I have managed only the first two.
I look my deeds straight in the eye.
I see what I have coming.
But that third, most important thing is the hardest by far and I have not learned it.
I have not changed direction.
This, because I have not forgiven Kathleen and Wylie Welborn for what they did. So I watch. And wait, related and responsible, looking for a way to forgive them.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
I move on to Mountain High. I park short of the mansion by a few hundred yards, get out, and hike up to the house by way of the tall stands of conifers lining the road.
There's a good evening lie for me on the southwest side of the house, recessed in the trees but about eye level with the spacious deck. I'm backed into it and pretty much invisible from the house. The partygoers have drinks and appetizers out here, watch the sunset. Tonight, I have jerky and an energy drink waiting in my satchel, along with my 10 X 32 bird-watching glasses. In the warmer months, such as now, Helixon's guests stay on the deck well past nightfall and they're easy for me to glass, illuminated by the fire from a big central pit built of stone and copper right in the middle of the deck.
Peering through the binoculars, I see the Mikkelsen sisters talking with Johnny Maines, and Jacobie Bradford approaching them right now in the orange-black flame shadows. As he draws near them, it's easy to see how strongly the sisters dislike him, how they stiffen, determined not to back away, not back down, not let him push them around. I'm momentarily proud of them, given Gargantua's multinational muscle versus a tiny coffee pub run by the two teenage daughters of an aging Mammoth Lakes party slut. I almost laugh at the symmetry here, slut and slutlings, history repeating. Jacobie hands each of them a drink with an umbrella in it, bows humbly, and gets guarded looks from them. I see this very clearly in the binoculars. Then the Mikkelsen sisters, in unison, hand their umbrella drinks back to Jacobie and walk away. A minute later, I see them and their two friends, way down on the street, getting into an old Chevy.
Sky and Megan come onto the deck from inside. He's got a beer and she a glass of wine and there's a sense of calm about Sky that I like. He's every bit as up and down as I am, always has been, but he's never given in to the meds idea, and I do not blame him. These days, he seems not too high and not too low. He and the girl have a nice thing going. I've never seen him focused so intently on anything as the Mammoth Cup. Ever. More to the point, he's doing all the right things to get ready. Making commitments. Trying to follow through.
It's interesting to watch your own children when they don't know you're there. Sky behaves differently with me than with the rest of the world, of course. He's got more swagger when he's away from me, and, oddly, more humility to go along with it. I like those things in a man. Richard was extreme swagger, but underneath it was a swamp of self-doubt. I knew what that meant, knew what he was asking for. Sky's asking for it, too. They're asking to be loved. And that's how you get them to do what you want.
Later, I see Bart Helixon come out to the deck with a woman dressed as Tinker Bell. She spins off his arm and throws her fists toward the fire. Her hands open and the fire erupts into a swirling mass of bright green flame. When Sky goes inside, I get up and sneak from viewpoint to viewpoint, all around the perimeter of the house, moving higher and lower but always deep in the trees, hitting the good viewing angles through blindless windows and doors left ajar and sliders open to the fresh, cool air. When I can't find Sky anymore, I'm on my way.
*Â Â Â *Â Â Â *
Town is quiet. I place some current issues of
The Woolly
in the stands for free newspapers outside the Do It Center and Let It Bean, then on to Mammoth Liquor and back around to Von's and the Booky Joint, my favorite small bookstore. I note the police station across the street, where I spent some inglorious time after the shooting. I see that Gargantua is busy, even at this hour. They are staying open later and later, with light dinner items on their
P.M.
menu, and all manner of decaffeinated coffee and tea concoctions. They are clearly trying to run Let It Bean out of business and I think they will succeed. Maybe it would be good for the Welborns and Mikkelsens to make a fresh start somewhere else. They could find their own mountain. Quit dwelling on the past. This is a Carson mountain and always will be. And don't get any big ideas: I may have been born a Boyle, but I can out-Carson any Carson. Ask anyone.
I head down Old Mammoth Road to Main and stop at the light. I see a man loading a bicycle into the trunk of a long, older car in the Do It Center lot. He's in overalls and a beanie, bearded, and moves quickly and nervously, like he just can't wait to get that thing into the hole and away. The driver's a bearded guy, too, and he looks straight ahead through the windshield, as if nothing unusual is taking place. I read about these guys in
The Sheet.
They've been spotted stealing bikes around town. I've seen them before, too. I can't make out the license plate number from here. Binoculars are no good in the dark.
Abruptly, their car lurches, makes a 180, cuts across the lot, and bounces onto Main without stopping, heading up toward the village. The cop house is less than half a mile from here, so these guys have some real stones. Or real stupidity. Of course I must follow. I can't run the red light with a Boar's Head delivery truck lumbering down at me. When the light changes, I try to catch up, but by the time I make the signal at Minaret, I can't tell if the bike thieves have gone right, left, or straight.
That's okay, because I have an idea where they're headed. I saw these two malingering behind a big empty house up near Canyon Lodge just three weeks ago. Up to no good, it looked to me. Their old boat of a car stood out in that tony âhood, I can tell you.
So I head up Main, cut through the village on Canyon Boulevard, cruise all the way down to Canyon Lodge, and sure enough, I see the old car pulling around behind the same home as before. Twelve Madrone. It's a big river-rock and wooden Craftsman, two stories. Always one of my favorite styles. It's got a
F
OR
S
ALE
sign out front. A light comes on inside. I drive past and around, and looking through the trees, I see the old car now parked in the garage of that big almost-mansion, and the garage door going down and one of the thieves lifting the trunk lid.
I loop back and park and watch for a few more minutes. Pretty soon the house light goes off and the garage door rises and the old car backs out. As it makes the slow reversing turn to exit, I catch, in the driveway motion-detector lights that suddenly spring on, a glimpse of the thieves. They look so different from the way they did just minutes ago, when they were stealing that bike. I rub my eyes and the old car rumbles back down toward town.
Â
On a Saturday morning in early October, in the fragrant interior of Let It Bean, Wylie knelt behind the counter to clean the inside of a lower refrigerator. It was something to do. The place was almost empty. Not only was presnow autumn the slowest time for tourists but Gargantua had launched Y-Not? Days, which meant half-off prices from 6:00
A.M.
to 8:00
A.M.
“On Any Day That Ends in Y!”
Some of the locals were sticking it out with Let it Bean, but Wylie saw they were doing half the business they'd done in early summer, which was half of what they had done five years ago, when they were the most popular gourmet coffee shop and bakery in town.
With the Little Red Pastry Shed now history, and the fourteen-thousand-dollar roof job looming, and the lease here on Let It Bean soon to be doubled by a new landlord, Wylie felt the same cold undertow of shortage that was part of what had pushed him away five years ago. Again he wondered about his nontriumphant return home. Toil and trouble. Now he wanted to stay and make things right. He wanted to help his sisters, mother, and Steen get a better shot. He knew he had a chance at the cup. After that, the X Games and FIS circuit and the Olympics were higher levels. Could he be good enough? All of that was technically possible, but another part of Wylie wanted just to light out for new territory, get back into the bigger world that lay beyond this mountain.
Now Beatrice was banging around in the kitchen and Belle was tucked into one of the leather chairs by a window, reading her world history textbook.
Wylie, still crouched, heard the bell on the door chime and sensed incoming customers. He kept at the fridge, giving the newly arrived patrons a minute to read the wall menu. It was amazing how much time some people took to figure out what size coffee to buy.
“What's a person have to do for some service around here?”
He recognized the voice and stood. “You have to want it badly.”
“I badly want a pumpkin scone and a double nonfat latte.”
“Welcome back from Portillo.”
“Thank you.”
Wylie watched Belle look up from the book as if surprised, then wave coolly. He knew Belle idolized April Holly by the offhand and often dismissive way that she brought April into conversations over and over.
“Looks like some serious homework there, Wylie's sister,” said April.
“Like I need to know when the First Crusade left Constantinople.”
“One thousand ninety-nine. You should see Rhodes. It's beautiful, and their coffee is Turkishâalmost as good as yours. Wylie, you've lost weight.”
“Been training hard.”
“How's the module?”
“Personal and portable.”
April was tanned from the Andean sun and snow and she wore an Inca-style knit sweater with a band of characters holding hands across a white background. The figures all wore gloves and caps and boots. Wylie watched her curls dangle as she unsnapped a colorful woven coin purse.
“This is on us,” said Wylie.
“Butâ”
“If Gargantua can give away skis, I can give a coffee and a scone.”
“Please accept our gifts!” called out Belle. “Is Portillo, like, the best resort ever?”
Beatrice peered in from the kitchen and April smiled at her. “It's unbelievably fantastic. You should go there sometime. Not to train. But to have
fun.
” She pushed a couple of bills into the tip jar and hooked a bouquet of curls behind one ear.
“And you should come here every morning,” said Wylie. “You'd get great coffee and pastry and you'd bring us more customers. And I could give Gargantua the finger.”