Ruthie said, "Wouldn' leave you set up there, huh?"
"I didn' want to. It wasn't so nice as here. Couldn' lie down."
"Well, don' you bother me, a-squawkin' an' a-talkin'," Ruthie said, "'cause I'm goin' to sleep, an' when I wake up, we gonna be there! 'Cause Tom said so! Gonna seem funny to see pretty country."
The sun went down and left a great halo in the sky. And it grew very dark under the tarpaulin, a long cave with light at each end—a flat triangle of light.
Connie and Rose of Sharon leaned back against the cab, and the hot wind tumbling through the tent struck the backs of their heads, and the tarpaulin whipped and drummed above them. They spoke together in low tones, pitched to the drumming canvas, so that no one could hear them. When Connie spoke he turned his head and spoke into her ear, and she did the same to him. She said, "Seems like we wasn't never gonna do nothin' but move. I'm so tar'd." He turned his head to her ear. "Maybe in the mornin'. How'd you like to be alone now?" In the dusk his hand moved out and stroked her hip.
She said, "Don't. You'll make me crazy as a loon. Don't do that." And she turned her head to hear his response.
"Maybe—when ever'body's asleep."
"Maybe," she said. "But wait till they get to sleep. You'll make me crazy, an' maybe they won't get to sleep."
"I can't hardly stop," he said.
"I know. Me neither. Le's talk about when we get there; an' you move away 'fore I get crazy."
He shifted away a little. "Well, I'll get to studyin' nights right off," he said. She sighed deeply. "Gonna get one a them books that tells about it an' cut the coupon, right off."
"How long, you think?" she asked.
"How long what?"
"How long 'fore you'll be makin' big money an' we got ice?"
"Can't tell," he said importantly. "Can't really rightly tell. Fella oughta be studied up pretty good 'fore Christmus."
"Soon's you get studied up we could get ice an' stuff, I guess."
He chuckled. "It's this here heat," he said. "What you gonna need ice roun' Christmus for?"
She giggled. "Tha's right. But I'd like ice any time. Now don't. You'll get me crazy!"
The dusk passed into dark and the desert stars came out in the soft sky, stars stabbing and sharp, with few points and rays to them, and the sky was velvet. And the heat changed. While the sun was up, it was a beating, flailing heat, but now the heat came from below, from the earth itself, and the heat was thick and muffling. The lights of the truck came on, and they illuminated a little blur of highway ahead, and a strip of desert on either side of the road. And sometimes eyes gleamed in the lights far ahead, but no animal showed in the lights. It was pitch dark under the canvas now. Uncle John and the preacher were curled in the middle of the truck, resting on their elbows, and staring out the back triangle. They could see the two bumps that were Ma and Granma against the outside. They could see Ma move occasionally, and her dark arm moving against the outside.
Uncle John talked to the preacher. "Casy," he said, "you're a fella oughta know what to do."
"What to do about what?"
"I dunno," said Uncle John.
Casy said, "Well, that's gonna make it easy for me!"
"Well, you been a preacher."
"Look, John, ever'body takes a crack at me 'cause I been a preacher. A preacher ain't nothin' but a man."
"Yeah, but—he's—a
"I dunno," said Casy. "I dunno."
"Well—see—I was married—fine, good girl. An' one night she got a pain in her stomach. An' she says, 'You better get a doctor.' An' I says, 'Hell, you jus' et too much.'" Uncle John put his hand on Casy's knee and he peered through the darkness at him. "She gave me a
"Ever'body goes wild," said Casy. "I do too."
"Yeah, but you ain't got a sin on your soul like me."
Casy said gently, "Sure I got sins. Ever'body got sins. A sin is somepin you ain't sure about. Them people that's sure about ever'thing an' ain't got no sin—well, with that kind of a son-of-a-bitch, if I was God I'd kick their ass right outa heaven! I couldn' stand 'em!"
Uncle John said, "I got a feelin' I'm bringin' bad luck to my own folks.
I got a feelin' I oughta go away an' let 'em be. I ain't comf'table bein' like this."
Casy said quickly, "I know this—a man got to do what he got to do. I can't tell you. I can't tell you. I don't think they's luck or bad luck. On'y one thing in this worl' I'm sure of, an' that's I'm sure nobody got a right to mess with a fella's life. He got to do it all hisself. Help him, maybe, but not tell him what to do." Uncle John said disappointedly, "Then you don' know?"
"I don' know."
"You think it was a sin to let my wife die like that?"