"That's all right."
"No, it ain't all right, dammit. Here I am askin' a
favor of you and hollerin' at the same time. I'm sorry."
"It's okay," I said. "I understand."
"You got any children of your own?"
"No," I said. "I've never even been married."
"Then you don't understand at all. Not even a little
bit."
"All right."
"And don't go around pretending to, either," she
said, hitting me on the knees with her reddened
knuckles.
24
"All right."
"And goddammit, I'm sorry."
"Okay."
"Oh hell, it ain't a bit okay," she complained, then
stood up and rubbed her palms on her dusty slacks.
"God damn it to hell," she muttered, then turned
around and gave Fireball a fierce boot in the butt,
which knocked the sleeping dog off the steps into the
skim of dust on the concrete. "Goddamned useless
dog," she said. "Get outa my sight."
Fireball must have been accustomed to Rosie's
outbursts. He slunk away without glancing back, not
hurrying exactly, but not waiting around either. At the
corner of the building, he stumbled over the black
tomcat, who was curled asleep in the deep grass below
the eaves, and they had a brief but decisive and
probably familiar encounter, then went their separate
ways, the cat beneath the building, and Fireball right
back to his place in the sunshine warming the steps. As
he lay down, he gave Rosie one slow glance, then shut
his eyes, sighing like an old husband saddled with a mad
wife. But Rosie was watching the breeze weave through
the hillside grass.
"How about another beer?" I asked.
"I'd like that just fine," she answered without
turning. Sadness softened her nasal twang, that ubiquitous accent that had drifted out of the Appalachian hills and hollows, across the southern plains, across the
southwestern deserts, insinuating itself all the way to
the golden hills of California. But somewhere along the
way, Rosie had picked up a gentler accent too, a
fragrant voice more suited to whisper throaty, romantic
words like wisteria, or humid phrases like honeysuckle
vine, her voice for gentleman callers. "Just fine," she
repeated. Even little displaced Okie girls grow up
longing to be gone with some far better wind than that
25
hot, cutting, dusty bite that's blowing their daddy's
crops to hell and gone. I went to get her a beer, wishing
it could be something finer.
"It was the damndest thing," she said when I came
back, "when I was looking for Betty Sue over there."
Rosie still stood upright, her wrists cocked on her hips,
still stared southwest across the gently rounded hills
toward the cold, foggy waters of the Bay. "I never had
no idea there'd be so many folks lookin' for their kids.
Musta been a hundred.or more walkin' up and down
too, holding out their pictures to any dirty hippie that
would look at it. Some of the nicest folks you'd ever
hope to meet, too, some of them really well-off. But,
you know, not a single one of them had the slightest
idea how come their kids run off. Not a one. And the
kids we asked why, they didn't seem to know either.
Oh, they had a buncha crap to say, but it sounded like
television to me. They didn't even know what they were
doing there. Damndest mess I ever did see, you know."
"I know," I said.
And in my own way I did, even though I had no
children to run away. In the late '60's, when I came
back from Vietnam in irons, in order to stay out of
Leavenworth I spent the last two years of my enlistment as a domestic spy for the Army, sneaking around the radical meetings in Boulder, Colorado, and when I
got out, after a brief tour as a sports reporter, I headed
for San Francisco to enjoy the dope and the good times
on my own time. But I was too late, too tired to leave,
too lazy to work, too old and mean to be a flower child.
I found a profession, of a sort, though, finding runaways. For a few years, Haight-Ashbury was a gold mine, until I found one I couldn't bear. A fourteenyear-old boy decomposing into the floorboards of a crash pad off Castro Street, forty-seven stab wounds in
his face, hands, and chest. The television crew beat the
26
police to the body, and none of it was any fun at all.
Not anymore. I knew. I had seen Rosie in her best
double-knit slack suit and a pair of scuffed flats
wandering those hills, staring into each dirty face that
came down the street, then back into the photograph in
her hand, just to be sure that it wasn't her baby girl
hiding behind Ian� hair, love beads, a bruised mouth,
and broken eyes.
"It's been so long," I said to Rosie, "so long. Why
start looking again now?"
"She's all I got left, son," she answered softly. "The
last child, the only one I ain't seen in a coffin. Lonnie
got blown up in Vietnam right after she run off,
and Buddy, he got run over by a dune buggy down at
Pismo Beach last summer. Betty Sue's all I got left, you
see."
"Where's their daddy?" I asked, then wished I
hadn't.
"Their daddy? Their wonderful, handsome, talented
daddy?" she said, giving me another hard, accusing
look . "Last I heard he was down in Bakersfield sellin'
aluminum cookware on time to widow-wimmen." She
let that stand for a moment, then added, "I run the
worthless bastard off when Betty Sue was a junior in
high school."
"You mind if I ask why?"
"He thought he was Johnny Cash," she said, and
stopped as if that explained it all. "Damn fool."
"I'm not sure I understand."
"Ever' other year, he'd get drunk and clean out the
bank account and take off for Nashville to find out if he
could make the big time as a singing star. Only thing
the damned fool ever found out was how long my
money would last, then he'd drag-ass home, grinnin'
like an egg-suckin' dog. Last time he done that, he
showed up and found himself divorced and slapped in
jail for nonsupport. That's the last I seen of him," she
27
said with a grin. "He was sure enough a good-lookin'
devil, but like my daddy told me when I married him,
he's as worthless as tits on a boar hog."
"He's never heard from Betty Sue either?"
"Not that I know of," Rosie said. "Betty Sue was
always stuck on her daddy, but Jimmy Joe was stuck on
himself and he did favor the boys too much, so I don't
know if she ever forgave him for that, but I think he'd
told me if he heard from her. He knows I been lookin'
for her, and he's plumb scared I'll dun him for all that
back support, so I think he'd mentioned it." Then she
paused and looked down at me. "So what do you
think?
"You want the truth?"
"Not a bit of it, son. I want you to spend a few days
lookin for my baby girl," she said, then handed me a
wad of bills that had been clutched in her fist all this
time. "Just till the big fella gets out of the hospital,
that's all."
"It's a waste of my time," I said trying to hand the
sodden bills back to her, "and your money."
"It's my money," she said pertly. "Ain't it good
enough to buy your time?"
"What if she doesn't want to be found?"
"Did that big fella ask you to come huntin' for him?"
she asked.
"She might be dead, you know," I said, ignoring the
point she had made. "Have you thought of that?"
"Not a day goes by, son, that I don't think of that,"
she answered. "But I'm her mother, and in my heart I
know she's alive somewhere."
Since I had never found any way to argue with
maternal mysticism, I shook my head and went over to
the El Camino for my note-and receipt books, carrying
the wad of bills carefully, as if the money were a bomb.
Then I went back, asked questions, took notes, and
counted the money-eighty-seven dollars.
l8
Rosie gave me the name of the boy mend, who was a
lawyer over in Petaluma now, Betty Sue's favorite high
school teacher, who still taught drama in Sonoma, and
her best girl friend, who had married a boy from Santa
Rosa, named Whitfield, divorced him and married a
Jewish boy from Los Gatos, named Greenburg or
Goldstein, Rosie wasn't sure, divorced him, and was
supposed to be going to graduate school down at
Stanford. Details, details, details. Then I asked what
sort of girl Betty Sue had been.
"You'll see," she answered cryptically, "when you
talk to folks. I'll let you find out for yourself."
"Fair enough," I said. "Why did she run away?"
After a few moments thought, Rosie said, "For a
long time I blamed myself, but I don't now."
"For what?"
"I live in a trailer house behind here," she said, "and
one time after I divorced Jimmy Joe, Betty Sue found
me in bed with a man. She took it pretty hard, but I
don't think that's why she run off anymore. And
sometimes I used to think she run off because she
thought she was too good to live behind a beer joint."
"Did the two of you have a fight before she left?"
"We didn't have fights," Rosie said proudly. "Nothin' to fight about. Betty Sue did as she pleased, ever since she was a little girl, and I let her 'cause she was
such a good little girl."
"Could she have been pregnant?"
"She could have. But I don't think she would have
run away Jor that," Rosie said. "But then, I don't
know." Then, in a shamed voice, she added, "We
weren't close. Not like I was to my momma. I had to
run the place 'cause Jimmy Joe wouldn't, most of the
time, and when he did, he'd give away more beer than
he sold. Somebody had to make a living, to run things."
Then she paused again. "I guess I still blame myself but
I don't know what for anymore. Maybe I blame her
29
too, still. She always wanted more than we had. She
never said anything-she was a sweet child-but I
could tell she wanted more. I just never knew what it
was she wanted more of. If you find her, maybe she'll
be able to tell me."
"If I find her," I said, then handed her a receipt for
the eighty-seven dollars.
"Is that enough?" Rosie asked. "I didn't get a chance