I drove us back to my truck.
Gus said, “Let’s put David in the cab. He can’t ride in the back. It’s just too cold.”
We gingerly moved David from the bed of the dually and over to the seat of my truck.
“Do you want to get in on this side or through the driver’s door?” I asked Gus and realized I was shaking.
Gus gave me a hard look and I felt the differences in our years and experiences. He put his hand on my shoulder and said, “Take David to the hospital. Tell the cops you found David anywhere but here or near here.”
“What are you talking about?”
“Just do it. We don’t have time to argue.”
I got into the truck and looked at David, slumped over, his head almost to my thigh. He looked so bad I couldn’t believe it. I started the truck and made my way out of the canyon, holding him as still as possible with my right hand. I pulled the truck out onto the highway and picked up some speed. The blood matted in David’s hair was dark and angry.
At the emergency room, David was taken away from me and I called home and then the sheriff. I sat in a stiff plastic chair and waited. Bucky arrived within minutes, sat beside me.
“How is he?” the sheriff asked, pressing his back into the chair. I was actually impressed that that was his first question. I was expecting him to immediately want to know where I had found him.
“He’s in bad shape, Bucky.”
We sat for a few seconds.
“Want to tell me where you found him?”
I’d been constructing my lie all the way to the hospital. “Believe it or not he was lying in a ditch about ten miles west of town. Between here and my place. I wasn’t even looking yet and there he was.”
The sheriff blew out a breath, then bit at his thumbnail.
“He’s been beaten really badly.”
“Is he conscious?”
“He wasn’t,” I said. “I don’t know about now.”
There was a haze between us, but I sensed that he didn’t believe I was lying or somehow didn’t care. The latter made little sense to me.
We sat and waited.
“How is your uncle?” he asked.
“Okay, I guess.”
“I guess McCormack will be glad to hear David turned up,” Bucky said.
“David’s parents are driving here with Morgan,” I said.
He nodded.
We waded through some more silence.
“I hope he’s okay,” Bucky said.
“Me, too.”
“Alongside the road,” he said.
“In the ditch.”
Morgan, Sylvia, and Howard came through the doors just as the doctor came out to talk to me.
“The young man suffered massive internal injuries,” the doctor said.
“How is he?” Howard asked.
“The beating he took about his head.” The doctor paused. “There was a lot of trauma to the brain.”
I could see how upset the doctor was. She was not used to this sort of thing and I thought as I watched her that no one should be.
“He’s gone,” she said.
Sylvia crumpled and I caught her. Bucky backed away from the scene. I reached out and took Howard’s hand. Morgan was crying and we locked eyes. She whispered that she loved me, then looked away.
“I want to see him,” Sylvia said.
“I don’t think that’s a good idea,” the doctor said.
“She’s right,” I said.
“Who could do this?” Sylvia cried.
Sylvia and Howard sat in the plastic chairs and shared their grief.
“Where’s Gus?” Morgan asked.
“He’s around,” I said.
We all drove back to my house in Morgan’s car. Morgan put Sylvia to bed and Howard sat in the kitchen staring at a bottle of wine he refused to open. I kept wanting to leave and go back to find Gus, but I didn’t say anything. Morgan came into my study and closed the door.
“Where’s Gus?” she asked.
“Over by the reservation,” I said. “That’s where we found David. Gus killed a man today. I think he’s up there killing all of them.” I found it odd how easily those words came from my mouth.
“Oh, my god.”
“He told me to lie to the sheriff, but what sense does that make? I’ve got to go back up there. I should have gone from the hospital.”
Morgan was stunned. She didn’t know what to say and I didn’t know how to have it make any more sense for her. It made no sense to me.
A truck slid to a stop outside. Morgan and I got up and stepped out onto the porch. Gus was getting out of Elvis Monday’s pickup. Gus was unsteady and I ran over to support him. I glanced into the truck at Elvis, asking with my eyes just what was going on.
“How is the boy?” Elvis asked.
“He died,” I said.
Elvis looked straight ahead out his windshield. “I am sorry to hear that.”
“Yeah.”
“What’s going on?” I asked, directly.
“Talking is over,” Gus said.
“This is the frontier, cowboy,” Elvis said. “Everyplace is the frontier. Take care of your uncle.”
I nodded and stepped away.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
PERCIVAL EVERETT is a Distinguished Professor of English at the University of Southern California and the author of nineteen books, including Erasure, God’s Country, and Glyph. He lives in Los Angeles.