here on the left. Trailer with a sign out listing all the activities. Lot of people register with them in case of emergency. Whatâd you want her for?â
âShe has a daughter up in Santa Teresa who hasnât heard from her for months. She asked me to find out why her mother hasnât been in touch.â
She squinted at me. âYou some kind of detective?â
âWell, yeah. More or less. Iâm a friend of the family and I was down in this area anyway so I said Iâd check it out.â I took out the two snapshots Irene Gersh had given me. I moved over and held them out so she could see. âThis is her trailer. I donât have a picture of her. Sheâs an old woman, in her eighties.â
The girl tilted her head, looking at the photographs. âOh, yeah, that one. I know her. I never heard her real name. Everybody calls her Old Mama.â
âCan you tell me where to find her?â
âNot really. I can tell you where her trailerâs at, but I havenât seen her for a while.â
âDo you remember when you saw her last?â
She thought about it briefly, screwing up her face. âI never paid much attention so I canât really say. She goes stumping up and down out here when she needs a ride into town. Everybodyâs real good about that, if your carâs broke or something and you gotta have a lift. Sheâs kinda weird though.â
âLike what?â
âUh, well, you know, she has these spells when she talks to herself. You see people like that jabbering away, making gestures like theyâre in the middle of an argument. Eddie took her into Brawley couple times and he said she was all right then. Smelled bad, but she wasnât out of her head or anything like that.â
âYou havenât seen her lately?â
âNo, but sheâs probably still around someplace. I been busy with the baby. You might ask somebody else. I never talked to her myself.â
âWhat about Eddie? When do you expect him back?â
âNot till five, I think he said. If you want to check her trailer, go down this road about a quarter mile? Youâll see this old rusted-out Chevy. Thatâs called Rusted-Out Chevy Road. Turn right and drive till you pass these concrete bunker things on the left. They look like Uâs. I donât know what they are, but her trailerâs in the next lot. Just bang onthe door loud. I donât think she hears good from what Eddie said.â
âThanks. Iâll do that.â
âIf you donât find her, you can come on back here and wait for him, if you like. He might know more.â
I glanced at my watch. It was just 12:25. âI may do that,â I said. âThanks for the help.â
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4
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The trailer on Rusted-Out Chevy Road was a sorry sight, bearing very little resemblance to the snapshot I had in my possession, which showed an old but sturdy-looking travel trailer, painted flat blue, sitting on four blackwall tires. From the picture, I estimated that it was thirty-some years old, built in the days when it might have been hitched to the back of a Buick sedan and hauled halfway across the country. Now, spray paint had been used to emblazon the siding with the sort of words my aunt urged me to hold to a minimum. Some of the louvres on the windows had been broken out and the door was hanging on one hinge. As I drove by, I saw a unisex person, approximately twelve years of age, sitting on the doorsill in ragged cutoffs, hair in dreadlocks, finger up its nose, apparently mining the contents. I passed the place, did a U-turn and doubled back, pulling over to the side of the road in front. By the time I got out, the doorsill was deserted. I knocked on the doorframe.
âHello?â I sang. Nothing. âHeellloo.â
I peered in. The place was empty, at least the portion I could see. The interior, which had probably never been clean, was