“Well, boss, it looks like you’re going to get what you wanted,†the property caretaker said to me this morning. “That guy, he fits all of your requirements for primitivity. And yeah, he’s about your age, but I haven’t seen him for twenty-five years.
“I saw him around lots more times when he was younger.
“His folks were farmers two counties west of here, modest, hard-working people, he was their only kid, and they had him late in life.
“Up until he was in the middle of high school, he was an ideal kid; did as he was told without complaining, got good grades in school, and was quite the eye-candy for girls, but then he started running with the wrong crowd, and started smoking dope.
“He got withdrawn, apathetic, lazy, didn’t care about anything or anybody. Sat around all day, doing nothing.
“He never made it out of high school.
"Just went to pot.
“When his parents died, her sister, your hostess for Thanksgiving, got guardianship of him, but she couldn’t control him. He was deep into hard drugs by then. He spent a lot of time in jail here, and in surrounding counties.
“He was nuts. One time he was picked up while wearing a women’s dress, a pot on his head, and carrying a bird-cage. He told the sheriff he was out hunting for rabbits.
“The sheriff thought he needed put away, at the madhouse in the big city, but his guardian wouldn’t let him.
“But then one day when he was about 23, 24, years old, the sheriff caught him acting funny around a kid.
“Nothing had happened, but it enraged the sheriff, who grabbed him, loaded him into the car, and drove him over to the next county, telling him, ‘I don’t ever want to see you in this town or this county again--I’ve got more than enough to put you away in the looney bin, and if you cross this line ever again, that’s where you’re going.
“’Just stay the Hell out of here.’
“And then he got everything squared away with the guy’s aunt.
“The last I heard of him, about ten years ago, he was living in a half-way house up in Sioux Falls, South Dakota, part of the time, and in a straitjacket the other part of the time.
“His guardian lost track of him, and the guy who was sheriff then is dead.
“I dunno why they invited him here; perhaps because they’re old and looking at the cemetery, and want to see him one more time.â€
“Well, since nobody’s seen him, what do you suppose he’s like now?†I asked.
“I dunno, but he’s probably no improvement over what he’d been before.â€