Yeah, they call me “Mud Flap” –
behind my back, mostly, although I’ve hauled in more than one drunk driver
who’s called me that to my face.
Being a cop has its ups and downs
in a mountain community. When I’m on
patrol, I’m pretty much on my own, no supervisor watching my every move and
yammering about “civil rights” and all that drivel. THAT’S the UP side, in case you’re wondering.
The DOWN side is that these
mountain people don’t have the proper respect for law and order. When you stop them for a
traffic violation no one says “yes, sir” or “no, sir”. The men just snap their red logger suspenders
and adjust their baseball caps. The
women won’t flirt to try and get out of a ticket. They just look at you in disgust; all
narrow-eyed and tightlipped like you had something gross in your hair.
I got my nickname because I stop
people who don’t have the proper equipment on their vehicles. They just look at you in disbelief when you
tell them you stopped them because they are missing a mud flap. Shoot, half the time these hillbillies don’t
even have a driver’s license or a current registration! . . .
People around here work in the
timber industry, for the most part, although there’s a fairly busy tourist
season during the summer. Even some of
the women work in the woods. I like
those rough girls, even asked a couple of them out a few times. You’d think they’d be grateful to go out with
a professional man after all those uncouth loggers, but nooo! One witch even spit on my shoes instead of
just saying “No, thank you, officer.”
And they’re all related,
too. St. Regis has maybe ten main family
groups. Bunch of inbred hooligans, you’d
think they’d be deformed and retarded, but a surprising number of them are
pretty intelligent as well as good-looking.
The only ones around who are really trashy or lazy or stupid are “migrators” and “outlanders”. The terms are not used as racial slurs; they
are applied to anyone from “somewheres else”. They tolerate outsiders with suspicion and it
takes a long while to become a real local.
There’s maybe 2,000 people in St. Regis and the
surrounding area. It’s difficult to get
an accurate count because they don’t like census-takers either. . . .
Probably the most interesting
family in the county is the Guilson family.
Big, dark husky bunch who always seem to marry
small, blond women. Jules Guilson is no
exception; he is married to Mae Mikins who is a tiny, mean, mean woman. Her family is also one of the old-time St.
Regis families. Both groups have been
here since about the time that priest, St. Regis DeBorgia, said his first
prayer here.
The Mikins
are mostly blondes, all rough, hard-working people who could outdo Paul
Bunyan. Like I said, Mae is mean. I got a call from a woman who got off the bus
and went home with Mae’s son, Eugene.
The woman said Mae threatened her with a chunk of firewood.
I believed her, of course, but I
wasn’t about to go up against Mae Guilson over a tramp from the Greyhound! I told her to get her trashy self back on the
bus and get the heck out of town.
There was one time, though, that
I had not choice but to go to their place.
Some yahoo named Manuel Evans disappeared without picking up his last
paycheck. He’d been going out with
Esther, the oldest of the three Guilson daughters. I’d heard (not from locals, of course – from
a migrator) that Evans treated her kind of rough sometimes.
The only plus about going to that
house would be the chance that I’d see one, two or maybe even all three of
those gorgeous girls. Esther has curly,
black hair like her father’s family even though she doesn’t look anything like
them. She’s tall and thin and a real
lady. Ruby, the next one, is shorter and
better built and has this wavy auburn hair.
She’s the juicy one! The
youngest, Gemma, is a fox, a blond like her mother and just as mean as her
mother, too. None of the girls really
look alike at first glance, all different hair and eyes and shapes, but somehow
they seem completely the same. It’s
kinda creepy.
Anyway, I went up to the house
and Jules answered the door. Before I
could set up the scene with a proper greeting, he was asking me what I wanted.
“Just a few questions for Esther,
Mr. Guilson,” I told him, trying to look around him to see if I could catch a
glimpse of one of the girls. I’d noticed
that all their beat-up cars were in the driveway, but I saw no sign of the
actual girls themselves. I didn’t hear
anything except the country music on the radio.
Guilson
didn’t invite me in, just stood there with his thumbs hooked in his suspenders,
looking menacing. “Go ahead and ask me
your questions. Esther isn’t here right
now.” He turned his head as his wife
came to stand beside him. He put his arm
around her and she leaned into him, looking all pinched-faced and cranky.
“Do you know a man named Manuel
Evans?”
“Yes.”
“He seems to have
disappeared. Didn’t
pick up his last paycheck.”