OPEN WOUNDS
Between her rounds, Jillian fills me in with more town gossip, then gives me the name of a motel with the lowest number of sheriff department raids.
The Creekside Inn is from a bygone era when color TV was an attraction like Wi-Fi is today. The manager, an older man with a goatee, is leafing through a stack of fly-fishing magazines when I walk in.
He gives my face one look and decides he doesn’t want to know the story behind the bruising.
I get the key and limp to my room. It takes me three trips to get my luggage inside. A futile act, given that I don’t expect to be here more than a day or so, just long enough to feel up to the drive back to Austin.
I make a nest for myself on the bed, using pillows to make it easier for me to sit up. In a moment of absentmindedness, I set my laptop on my stomach and feel a flash of pain.
There’s a nice yellow color surrounding the bruise. It’s a beauty. I’m pretty sure I can make out the brand of boot Amber’s friend was wearing.
Hudson Creek has become one painful dead end for me. The one person I wanted to talk to nearly put me in the hospital.
Determined to not be a complete quitter, I do an Internet search to see if Chelsea might have any less violent friends I can speak to.
An old Instagram photo shows her partying with three “best buds.” One I recognize as Amber with a shorter and lighter haircut. The other two girls are tagged Gennifer and Lisa.
The photo was taken in a kitchen. They’re mugging at the camera dressed in pajamas, holding cans of beer. Just four girls having a fun Friday night.
And now one is missing, probably dead. Another is a hooker frequently involved in felony robbery.
I find Gennifer’s last name: Norris. She pops up in a database of Montana mug shots looking older than she should. She was booked for intent to traffic.
Lisa Cotlin managed to get out of town. I find some wedding photos in Tampa that Chelsea liked. The groom is wearing a marine uniform.
At least one person had a happily ever after.
I can’t find anybody else besides these three who was in regular contact with Chelsea. Gennifer disappears from her social media stream not too long after the party photo.
Chelsea’s updates are mostly photos of landscapes and various cats and dogs from around Hudson Creek.
If I could describe it in one word: lonely.
These are the kind of photos you take when you’re walking back and forth between two forgettable places, texting on your phone, looking for some kind of escape, when a random dog pokes his nose up above a fence and gives you an unconditional smile.
I don’t know anything about Chelsea, but these photos are how she looked at the world, or at the very least, the parts of it she thought worth remembering or sharing.
Her last photo before she went missing is an antique metal headboard.
Always wanted one.
Underneath is a comment from Amber.
Bitch, you know I’m going to tie you up to that!
It’s the kind of playful innuendo I overhear all the time in the classroom. I don’t read anything more into it.
Although it’s a little odd that she’d buy a new piece of furniture before deciding to leave town. Not as unlikely as signing a new lease, but still, an indication that if she did move on, it was a last-minute decision.
I’m startled by a knock at the door. I wince getting up but take some satisfaction that I only audibly groan once.
Cautious, I glance through the peephole and see the motel manager standing there holding a bag.
I open the door. “Did I forget something?”
He raises the bag. “Jillian brought us some dinner.” He motions toward a picnic table at the front of the property. “If you can make your way there, we can enjoy one of the last nice evenings before it starts getting cold.”
I put on my shoes and meet him. A beer is waiting for me when I sit down.
“Gus Wheeler,” he says, holding out his hand for me to shake.
I return the gesture. “Still, Theo Cray.”
He pulls out two foam containers along with some napkins and condiments. “Hope you’re not a vegetarian.”
I open my container and get a whiff of the bacon cheeseburger inside. “I’ve given it up several times. This would make me do that again.”
Gus doesn’t make much conversation at first. I’m too focused on chewing my food without opening up the cut in my mouth.
It’s a beautiful evening. He stops eating to look at the colors of the sky as the sun sets behind the mountains.
“Every night, it’s like a brand-new painting. It’s always different, but nothing changes.” He nods toward town. “Some things do.”
“How long have you lived here?” I ask between french fries.
“I was born in Helena. I moved out here to teach at the middle school in Quiet Lake. Eventually I started teaching at Hudson Creek High and became principal.”
“You’re an educator?”
“I started off that way. Then, when things got worse, I felt more like a warden.”
I had gotten some of the story from Jillian, but I want to hear his version. “Worse? In what way?”
“Where do you want to start?”
“How far back does it go?”
“How much time do you have?”
“All night.”
CHAPTER THIRTY
LOST GIRLS
Gus opens up a second beer and continues. “People try to figure out the cause of things. They want simple explanations. Hudson was wounded long before it became infected. Used to be a trading post. It was called Swanson’s Creek back then. Trappers and Indians would come through here and more than likely get themselves swindled.
“That went on for a while before someone burned the trading post down. A while later silver was found in the hills.” He jerks a thumb toward a distant range. “There used to be a mine there a hundred years ago. Hudson was where you’d go to get drunk and go to the whorehouse. Loggers would come in from the camps. The two biggest businesses were silver and vice.
“As the town grew, men started having families. The vice never really went away, but the rest of the town grew big enough to hide it.
“When things get bad, the trouble comes to the surface. Now”—he shakes his head—“trouble is all we have.”
“Jillian mentioned the police officers who were arrested.”
Gus leans in closer. “Notice how many shiny cars there were in front of shitty houses? Hudson has two industries: pumping gas into the long-haul trucks and methamphetamine. The two aren’t unrelated. I don’t blame the young people with any sense for leaving.”
“Why didn’t you leave after you retired?”
“I didn’t retire as much as have my school close under me. We fell below the required attendance and the state shut us down. As far as why I’m here? Lots of people homeschool their kids now. Lots of people not qualified to do that. I tutor and try to help out.” He locks eyes with me. “You know what it’s like to be a teacher. You can’t give up on them.”
I wish I had his determination. I feel guilty for taking a compliment that doesn’t apply to me.
“Do you remember Chelsea Buchorn?”
“Oh, yeah.” He gives me a sideways look. “I heard you had a run-in with some of her former friends.”
“Yeah. That was . . . a mistake.”
“I’m going to tell you this, and you have every right to not believe me, but they’re not bad kids. They do bad things, but if circumstances were different, I don’t think they’d be pulling that kind of thing. Probably dumb stuff, but not to that degree.”
The kicks to my stomach felt pretty bad. “Why doesn’t anyone stop them?”
“Was there another young man there? Kind of a nerdy-looking one?”
I remember Amber’s boyfriend’s crony jumping out of the truck. “Yeah.”
“That’s Devon’s friend Charlie York. His father is the chief of police.”
“I see.”
“Actually, it’s a bit more complicated. Chief York is in Colorado getting cancer treatment. Or that’s the story. Rumor has it that he’s trying to dodge a federal indictment. The two they arrested were just the tip of the iceberg.