Chapter Twenty
The family, on top of the load, the children and Connie and Rose of Sharon and the preacher were stiff and cramped. They had sat in the heat in front of the coronerโs office in Bakersfield while Pa and Ma and Uncle John went in. Then a basket was brought out and the long bundle lifted down from the truck. And they sat in the sun while the examination went on, while the cause of death was found and the certificate signed.
Al and Tom strolled along the street and looked in store windows and watched the strange people on the sidewalks.
And at last Pa and Ma and Uncle John came out, and they were subdued and quiet.
Uncle John climbed up on the load. Pa and Ma got in the seat. Tom and Al strolled back and Tom got under the steering wheel. He sat there silently, waiting for some instruction.
Pa looked straight ahead, his dark hat pulled low. Ma rubbed the sides of her mouth with her fingers, and her eyes were far away and lost, dead with weariness.
Pa sighed deeply. โThey wasnโt nothinโ else to do,โ he said.
โI know,โ said Ma. โShe would a liked a nice funeral, though. She always wanted one.โ
Tom looked sideways at them. โCounty?โ he asked.
โYeah,โ Pa shook his head quickly, as though to get back to some reality. โWe didnโ have enough. We couldnโ of done it.โ He turned to Ma. โYou ainโt to feel bad. We couldnโ no matter how hard we tried, no matter what we done. We jusโ didnโ have it; embalming, anโ a coffin anโ a preacher, anโ a plot in a graveyard. It would of took ten times what we got. We done the besโ we could.โ
โI know,โ Ma said. โI jusโ canโt get it outa my head what store she set by a nice funeral. Got to forget it.โ She sighed deeply and rubbed the side of her mouth. โThat was a purty nice fella in there. Awful bossy, but he was purty nice.โ
โYeah,โ Pa said. โHe give us the straight talk, awright.โ
Ma brushed her hair back with her hand. Her jaw tightened. โWe got to git,โ she said.
โWe got to find a place to stay. We got to get work anโ settle down. No use a-lettinโ the little fellas go hungry. That wasnโt never Granmaโs way. She always et a good meal at a
funeral.โ
โWhere we goinโ?โ Tom asked.
Pa raised his hat and scratched among his hair. โCamp,โ he said. โWe ainโt gonna spenโ what littleโs lefโ till we get work. Drive out in the country.โ
Tom started the car and they rolled through the streets and out toward the country.
And by a bridge they saw a collection of tents and shacks. Tom said, โMightโs well stop here. Find out whatโs doinโ, anโ where at the work is.โ He drove down a steep dirt incline and parked on the edge of the encampment.
There was no order in the camp; little gray tents, shacks, cars were scattered about at random. The first house was nondescript. The south wall was made of three sheets of rusty corrugated iron, the east wall a square of moldy carpet tacked between two boards, the north wall a strip of roofing paper and a strip of tattered canvas, and the west wall six pieces of gunny sacking. Over the square frame, on untrimmed willow limbs, grass had been piled, not thatched, but heaped up in a low mound. The entrance, on the gunny-sack side, was cluttered with equipment. A five-gallon kerosene can served for a stove. It was laid on its side, with a section of rusty stovepipe thrust in one end. A wash boiler rested on its side against the wall; and a collection of boxes lay about, boxes to sit on, to eat on.
A Model T Ford sedan and a two-wheel trailer were parked beside the shack, and about the camp there hung a slovenly despair.
Next to the shack there was a little tent, gray with weathering, but neatly, properly set up; and the boxes in front of it were placed against the tent wall. A stovepipe stuck out of the door flap, and the dirt in front of the tent had been swept and sprinkled. A bucketful of soaking clothes stood on a box. The camp was neat and sturdy. A Model A roadster and a little home-made bed trailer stood beside the tent.
And next there was a huge tent, ragged, torn in strips and the tears mended with pieces of wire. The flaps were up, and inside four wide mattresses lay on the ground. A clothes line strung along the side bore pink cotton dresses and several pairs of overalls.
There were forty tents and shacks, and beside each habitation some kind of automobile.
Far down the line a few children stood and stared at the newly arrived truck, and they moved toward it, little boys in overalls and bare feet, their hair gray with dust.
Tom stopped the truck and looked at Pa. โShe ainโt very purty,โ he said. โWant to go somewheres else?โ
โCanโt go nowheres else till we know where weโre at,โ Pa said. โWe got to ast about work.โ
Tom opened the door and stepped out. The family climbed down from the load and looked curiously at the camp. Ruthie and Winfield, from the habit of the road, took down the bucket and walked toward the willows, where there would be water; and the line of children parted for them and closed after them.
The flaps of the first shack parted and a woman looked out. Her gray hair was braided, and she wore a dirty, flowered Mother Hubbard. Her face was wizened and dull, deep gray pouches under blank eyes, and a mouth slack and loose.
Pa said, โCan we jusโ pull up anywheres anโ camp?โ
The head was withdrawn inside the shack. For a moment there was quiet and then the flaps were pushed aside and a bearded man in shirt sleeves stepped out. The woman looked out after him, but she did not come into the open.
The bearded man said, โHowdy, folks,โ and his restless dark eyes jumped to each member of the family, and from them to the truck to the equipment.
Pa said, โI jusโ ast your woman if itโs all right to set our stuff anywheres.โ
The bearded man looked at Pa intently, as though he had said something very wise that needed thought. โSet down anywheres, here in this place?โ he asked.
โSure. Anybody own this place, that we got to see โfore we can camp?โ
The bearded man squinted one eye nearly closed and studied Pa. โYou wanta camp here?โ
Paโs irritation arose. The gray woman peered out of the burlap shack. โWhat you think Iโm a-sayinโ?โ Pa said.
โWell, if you wanta camp here, why donโt ya? I ainโt a-stoppinโ you.โ
Tom laughed. โHe got it.โ
Pa gathered his temper. โI jusโ wanted to know does anybody own it? Do we got to pay?โ
The bearded man thrust out his jaw. โWho owns it?โ he demanded.
Pa turned away. โThe hell with it,โ he said. The womanโs head popped back in the tent.
The bearded man stepped forward menacingly. โWho owns it?โ he demanded.
โWhoโs gonna kick us outa here? You tell me.โ
Tom stepped in front of Pa. โYou better go take a good long sleep,โ he said. The bearded man dropped his mouth open and put a dirty finger against his lower gums. For a moment he continued to look wisely, speculatively at Tom, and then he turned on his heel and popped into the shack after the gray woman.
Tom turned on Pa. โWhat the hell was that?โ he asked.
Pa shrugged his shoulders. He was looking across the camp. In front of a tent stood an old Buick, and the head was off. A young man was grinding the valves, and as he twisted back and forth, back and forth, on the tool, he looked up at the Joad truck. They could see that he was laughing to himself. When the bearded man had gone, the young man left his work and sauntered over.
โHโare ya?โ he said, and his blue eyes were shiny with amusement. โI seen you just met the Mayor.โ
โWhat the hellโs the matter with โim?โ Tom demanded.
The young man chuckled. โHeโs jusโ nuts like you anโ me. Maybe heโs a little nutserโn me, I donโ know.โ
Pa said, โI jusโ ast him if we could camp here.โ
The young man wiped his greasy hands on his trousers. โSure. Why not? You folks jusโ come acrost?โ
โYeah,โ said Tom. โJusโ got in this morninโ.โ
โNever been in Hooverville before?โ
โWhereโs Hooverville?โ
โThis hereโs her.โ
โOh!โ said Tom. โWe jusโ got in.โ
Winfield and Ruthie came back, carrying a bucket of water between them.
Ma said, โLeโs get the camp up. Iโm tuckered out. Maybe we can all rest.โ Pa and Uncle John climbed up on the truck to unload the canvas and the beds.
Tom sauntered to the young man, and walked beside him back to the car he had been working on. The valve-grinding brace lay on the exposed block, and a little yellow can of valve-grinding compound was wedged on top of the vacuum tank. Tom asked, โWhat the hell was the matterโth that olโ fella with the beard?โ
The young man picked up his brace and went to work, twisting back and forth, grinding valve against valve seat. โThe Mayor? Chrisโ knows. I guess maybe heโs bull-
simple.โ
โWhatโs โbull-simpleโ?โ
โI guess cops push โim arounโ so much heโs still spinning.โ
Tom asked, โWhy would they push a fella like that arounโ?โ
The young man stopped his work and looked in Tomโs eyes. โChrisโ knows,โ he said.
โYou jusโ come. Maybe you can figger her out. Some fellas says one thing, anโ some says another thing. But you jusโ camp in one place a little while, anโ you see how quick a deputy sheriff shoves you along.โ He lifted a valve and smeared compound on the seat.
โBut what the hell for?โ
โI tell ya I donโ know. Some says they donโ want us to vote; keep us movinโ so we canโt vote. Anโ some says so we canโt get on relief. Anโ some says if we set in one place weโd get organized. I donโ know why. I onโy know we get rode all the time. You wait, youโll see.โ
โWe ainโt no bums,โ Tom insisted. โWeโre lookinโ for work. Weโll take any kind a work.โ
The young man paused in fitting the brace to the valve slot. He looked in amazement at Tom. โLookinโ for work?โ he said. โSo youโre lookinโ for work. What ya think everโbody else is lookinโ for? Diโmonds? What you think I wore my ass down to a nub lookinโ for?โ He twisted the brace back and forth.
Tom looked about at the grimy tents, the junk equipment, at the old cars, the lumpy mattresses out in the sun, at the blackened cans on fire-blackened holes where the people cooked. He asked quietly, โAinโt they no work?โ
โI donโ know. Musโ be. Ainโt no crop right here now. Grapes to pick later, anโ cotton to pick later. Weโre a-movinโ on, soonโs I get these here valves grounโ. Me anโ my wife anโ my kids. We heard they was work up north. Weโre shovinโ north, up arounโ Salinas.โ
Tom saw Uncle John and Pa and the preacher hoisting the tarpaulin on the tent poles and Ma on her knees inside, brushing off the mattresses on the ground. A circle of quiet children stood to watch the new family get settled, quiet children with bare feet and dirty
faces. Tom said, โBack home some fellas come through with hanโbillsโorange ones.
Says they need lots a people out here to work the crops.โ
The young man laughed. โThey say theyโs three hunderd thousanโ us folks here, anโ I bet everโ damโ famโly seen them hanโbills.โ
โYeah, but if they donโ need folks, whatโd they go to the trouble puttinโ them things
out for?โ
โUse your head, why donโcha?โ
โYeah, but I wanta know.โ
โLook,โ the young man said. โSโpose you got a job a work, anโ thereโs jusโ one fella wants the job. You got to pay โim what he asts. But sโpose theyโs a hunderd men.โ He put down his tool. His eyes hardened and his voice sharpened. โSโpose theyโs a hunderd men wants that job. Sโpose them men got kids, anโ them kids is hungry. Sโpose a lousy dimeโll buy a box a mush for them kids. Sโpose a nickelโll buy at leasโ somepin for them kids.
Anโ you got a hunderd men. Jusโ offer โem a nickelโwhy, theyโll kill each other fightinโ for that nickel. Know what they was payinโ, lasโ job I had? Fifteen cents an hour. Ten hours for a dollar anโ a half, anโ ya canโt stay on the place. Got to burn gasoline gettinโ there.โ He was panting with anger, and his eyes blazed with hate. โThatโs why them hanโbills was out. You can print a hell of a lot of hanโbills with what ya save payinโ
fifteen cents an hour for fielโ work.โ
Tom said, โThatโs stinkinโ.โ
The young man laughed harshly. โYou stay out here a little while, anโ if you smell any roses, you come let me smell, too.โ
โBut they is work,โ Tom insisted. โChrist Almighty, with all this stuff a-growinโ: orchards, grapes, vegetablesโI seen it. They got to have men. I seen all that stuff.โ
A child cried in the tent beside the car. The young man went into the tent and his voice came softly through the canvas. Tom picked up the brace, fitted it in the slot of the valve, and ground away, his hand whipping back and forth. The childโs crying stopped.
The young man came out and watched Tom. โYou can do her,โ he said. โDamn good thing. Youโll need to.โ
โHow โbout what I said?โ Tom resumed. โI seen all the stuff growinโ.โ
The young man squatted on his heels. โIโll tell ya,โ he said quietly. โTheyโs a big son- of-a-bitch of a peach orchard I worked in. Takes nine men all the year rounโ.โ He paused impressively. โTakes three thousanโ men for two weeks when them peaches is ripe. Got to have โem or them peachesโll rot. So what do they do? They send out hanโbills all over hell. They need three thousanโ, anโ they get six thousanโ. They get them men for what they wanta pay. If ya donโ wanta take what they pay, goddamn it, theyโs a thousanโ men waitinโ for your job. So ya pick, anโ ya pick, anโ then sheโs done. Whole part a the countryโs peaches. All ripe together. When ya get โem picked, everโ goddamn one is picked. There ainโt another damn thing in that part a the country to do. Anโ then them owners donโ want you there no more. Three thousanโ of you. The workโs done. You might steal, you might get drunk, you might jusโ raise hell. Anโ besides, you donโ look
nice, livinโ in olโ tents; anโ itโs a pretty country, but you stink it up. They donโ want you arounโ. So they kick you out, they move you along. Thatโs how it is.โ
Tom, looking down toward the Joad tent, saw his mother, heavy and slow with weariness, build a little trash fire and put the cooking pots over the flame. The circle of children drew closer, and the calm wide eyes of the children watched every move of Maโs hands. An old, old man with a bent back came like a badger out of a tent and snooped near, sniffing the air as he came. He laced his arms behind him and joined the children to watch Ma. Ruthie and Winfield stood near to Ma and eyed the strangers belligerently.
Tom said angrily, โThem peaches got to be picked right now, donโt they? Jusโ when
theyโre ripe?โ
โ โCourse they do.โ
โWell, sโpose them people got together anโ says, โLet โem rot.โ Wouldnโ be long โfore the price went up, by God!โ
The young man looked up from the valves, looked sardonically at Tom. โWell, you figgered out somepin, didnโ you. Come right outa your own head.โ
โIโm tarโd,โ said Tom. โDrove all night. I donโt wanta start no argument. Anโ Iโm so goddamn tarโd Iโd argue easy. Donโ be smart with me. Iโm askinโ you.โ
The young man grinned. โI didnโ mean it. You ainโt been here. Folks figgered that out. Anโ the folks with the peach orchard figgered her out too. Look, if the folks gets together, theyโs a leaderโgot to beโfella that does the talkinโ. Well, first time this fella opens his mouth they grab โim anโ stick โim in jail. Anโ if theyโs another leader pops up, why, they stick โim in jail.โ
Tom said, โWell, a fella eats in jail anyways.โ
โHis kids donโt. Howโd you like to be in anโ your kids starvinโ to death?โ
โYeah,โ said Tom slowly. โYeah.โ
โAnโ hereโs another thing. Ever hear aโ the blacklist?โ
โWhatโs that?โ
โWell, you jusโ open your trap about us folks gettinโ together, anโ youโll see. They take your pitcher anโ send it all over. Then you canโt get work nowhere. Anโ if you got kidsโโโ
Tom took off his cap and twisted it in his hands. โSo we take what we can get, huh, or we starve; anโ if we yelp we starve.โ
The young man made a sweeping circle with his hand, and his hand took in the ragged tents and the rusty cars.
Tom looked down at his mother again, where she sat scraping potatoes. And the children had drawn closer. He said, โI ainโt gonna take it. Goddamn it, I anโ my folks ainโt no sheep. Iโll kick the hell outa somebody.โ
โLike a cop?โ
โLike anybody.โ
โYouโre nuts,โ said the young man. โTheyโll pick you right off. You got no name, no property. Theyโll find you in a ditch, with the blood dried on your mouth anโ your nose.
Be one little line in the paperโknow what itโll say? โVagrant founโ dead.โ Anโ thatโs all.
Youโll see a lot of them little lines, โVagrant founโ dead.โ โ
Tom said, โTheyโll be somebody else founโ dead right โlongside of this here vagrant.โ
โYouโre nuts,โ said the young man. โWonโt be no good in that.โ
โWell, what you doinโ about it?โ He looked into the grease-streaked face. And a veil drew down over the eyes of the young man.
โNothinโ. Where you from?โ
โUs? Right near Sallisaw, Oklahoma.โ
โJusโ get in?โ
โJusโ today.โ
โGonna be arounโ here long?โ
โDonโt know. Weโll stay wherever we can get work. Why?โ
โNothinโ.โ And the veil came down again.
โGot to sleep up,โ said Tom. โTomorra weโll go out lookinโ for work.โ
โYou kin try.โ
Tom turned away and moved toward the Joad tent.
The young man took up the can of valve compound and dug his finger into it. โHi!โ
he called.
Tom turned. โWhat you want?โ
โI want ta tell ya.โ He motioned with his finger, on which a blob of compound stuck.
โI jusโ want ta tell ya. Donโ go lookinโ for no trouble. โMember how that bull-simple guy
looked?โ
โFella in the tent up there?โ
โYeahโlooked dumbโno sense?โ
โWhat about him?โ
โWell, when the cops come in, anโ they come in all a time, thatโs how you want ta be.
Dumbโdonโt know nothinโ. Donโt understanโ nothinโ. Thatโs how the cops like us.
Donโt hit no cops. Thatโs jusโ suicide. Be bull-simple.โ
โLet them goddamn cops run over me, anโ me do nothinโ?โ
โNo, looka here. Iโll come for ya tonight. Maybe Iโm wrong. Thereโs stools arounโ all a time. Iโm takinโ a chancet, anโ I got a kid, too. But Iโll come for ya. Anโ if ya see a cop, why, youโre a goddamn dumb Okie, see?โ
โThaโs awright if weโre doinโ anythinโ,โ said Tom.
โDonโ you worry. Weโre doinโ somepin, onโy we ainโt stickinโ our necks out. A kid starves quick. Two-three days for a kid.โ He went back to his job, spread the compound on a valve seat, and his hand jerked rapidly back and forth on the brace, and his face was dull and dumb.
Tom strolled slowly back to his camp. โBull-simple,โ he said under his breath.
Pa and Uncle John came toward the camp, their arms loaded with dry willow sticks, and they threw them down by the fire and squatted on their hams. โGot her picked over pretty good,โ said Pa. โHad ta go a long ways for wood.โ He looked up at the circle of staring children. โLord God Almighty!โ he said. โWhereโd you come from?โ All of the children looked self-consciously at their feet.
โGuess they smelled the cookinโ,โ said Ma. โWinfielโ, get out from under foot.โ She pushed him out of her way. โGot ta make us up a little stew,โ she said. โWe ainโt et nothinโ cooked right sence we come from home. Pa, you go up to the store there anโ get me some neck meat. Make a nice stew here.โ Pa stood up and sauntered away.
Al had the hood of the car up, and he looked down at the greasy engine. He looked up when Tom approached. โYou sure look happy as a buzzard,โ Al said.
โIโm jusโ gay as a toad in spring rain,โ said Tom.
โLooka the engine,โ Al pointed. โPurty good, huh?โ
Tom peered in. โLooks awright to me.โ
โAwright? Jesus, sheโs wonderful. She ainโt shot no oil nor nothinโ.โ He unscrewed a spark plug and stuck his forefinger in the hole. โCrusted up some, but sheโs dry.โ
Tom said, โYou done a nice job a pickinโ. That what ya want me to say?โ
โWell, I sure was scairt the whole way, figgerinโ sheโd bust down anโ itโd be my fault.โ
โNo, you done good. Better get her in shape, โcause tomorra weโre goinโ out lookinโ for work.โ
โSheโll roll,โ said Al. โDonโt you worry none about that.โ He took out a pocket knife and scraped the points of the spark plug.
Tom walked around the side of the tent, and he found Casy sitting on the earth, wisely regarding one bare foot. Tom sat down heavily beside him. โThink sheโs gonna
work?โ
โWhat?โ asked Casy.
โThem toes of yourn.โ
โOh! Jusโ settinโ here a-thinkinโ.โ
โYou always get good anโ comfโtable for it,โ said Tom.
Casy waggled his big toe up and his second toe down, and he smiled quietly. โHard enough for a fella to think โthout kinkinโ hisself up to do it.โ
โAinโt heard a peep outa you for days,โ said Tom. โThinkinโ all the time?โ
โYeah, thinkinโ all the time.โ
Tom took off his cloth cap, dirty now, and ruinous, the visor pointed as a birdโs beak.
He turned the sweat band out and removed a long strip of folded newspaper. โSweat so much sheโs shrank,โ he said. He looked at Casyโs waving toes. โCould ya come down from your thinkinโ anโ listen a minute?โ
Casy turned his head on the stalk-like neck. โListen all the time. Thatโs why I been thinkinโ. Listen to people a-talkinโ, anโ purty soon I hear the way folks are feelinโ. Goinโ on all the time. I hear โem anโ feel โem; anโ theyโre beating their wings like a bird in a attic. Gonna bust their wings on a dusty winda tryinโ ta get out.โ
Tom regarded him with widened eyes, and then he turned and looked at a gray tent twenty feet away. Washed jeans and shirts and a dress hung to dry on the tent guys. He said softly, โThat was about what I was gonna tell ya. Anโ you seen awready.โ
โI seen,โ Casy agreed. โTheyโs a army of us without no harness.โ He bowed his head and ran his extended hand slowly up his forehead and into his hair. โAll along I seen it,โ he said. โEverโ place we stopped I seen it. Folks hungry for side-meat, anโ when they get it, they ainโt fed. Anโ when theyโd get so hungry they couldnโ stanโ it no more, why, theyโd ast me to pray for โem, anโ sometimes I done it.โ He clasped his hands around drawn-up knees and pulled his legs in. โI use ta think thatโd cut โer,โ he said. โUse ta rip off a prayer anโ all the troublesโd stick to that prayer like flies on flypaper, anโ the prayerโd go a-sailinโ off, a-takinโ them troubles along. But it donโ work no more.โ
Tom said, โPrayer never brought in no side-meat. Takes a shoat to bring in pork.โ
โYeah,โ Casy said. โAnโ Almighty God never raised no wages. These here folks want to live decent and bring up their kids decent. Anโ when theyโre old they wanta set in the door anโ watch the downing sun. Anโ when theyโre young they wanta dance anโ sing anโ lay together. They wanta eat anโ get drunk and work. Anโ thatโs itโthey wanta jusโ fling their goddamn muscles arounโ anโ get tired. Christ! Whatโm I talkinโ about?โ
โI dunno,โ said Tom. โSounds kinda nice. When ya think you can get ta work anโ quit thinkinโ a spell? We got to get work. Moneyโs โbout gone. Pa give five dollars to get a painted piece of board stuck up over Granma. We ainโt got much lefโ.โ
A lean brown mongrel dog came sniffing around the side of the tent. He was nervous and flexed to run. He sniffed close before he was aware of the two men, and then looking up he saw them, leaped sideways, and fled, ears back, bony tail clamped protectively.
Casy watched him go, dodging around a tent to get out of sight. Casy sighed. โI ainโt doinโ nobody no good,โ he said. โMe or nobody else. I was thinkinโ Iโd go off alone by myself. Iโm a-eatinโ your food anโ a-takinโ up room. Anโ I ainโt give you nothinโ. Maybe I could get a steady job anโ maybe pay back some a the stuff youโve give me.โ
Tom opened his mouth and thrust his lower jaw forward, and he tapped his lower teeth with a dried piece of mustard stalk. His eyes stared over the camp, over the gray tents and the shacks of weed and tin and paper. โWisht I had a sack a Durham,โ he said.
โI ainโt had a smoke in a hell of a time. Use ta get tobacco in McAlester. Almost wisht I was back.โ He tapped his teeth again and suddenly he turned on the preacher. โEver been
in a jail house?โ
โNo,โ said Casy. โNever been.โ
โDonโt go away right yet,โ said Tom. โNot right yet.โ
โQuicker I get lookinโ for workโquicker Iโm gonna find some.โ
Tom studied him with half-shut eyes and he put on his cap again. โLook,โ he said, โthis ainโt no lanโ of milk anโ honey like the preachers say. Theyโs a mean thing here.
The folks here is scared of us people cominโ west; anโ so they got cops out tryinโ to scare us back.โ
โYeah,โ said Casy. โI know. What you ask about me beinโ in jail for?โ
Tom said slowly, โWhen youโre in jailโyou get to kindaโsensinโ stuff. Guys ainโt let to talk a hell of a lot togetherโtwo maybe, but not a crowd. Anโ so you get kinda sensy. If somepinโs gonna bustโif say a fellaโs goinโ stir-bugs anโ take a crack at a guard with a mop handleโwhy, you know it โfore it happens. Anโ if theyโs gonna be a break or a riot, nobody donโt have to tell ya. Youโre sensy about it. You know.โ
โYeah?โ
โStick arounโ,โ said Tom. โStick arounโ till tomorra anyways. Somepinโs gonna come up. I was talkinโ to a kid up the road. Anโ heโs beinโ jusโ as sneaky anโ wise as a dog coyote, but heโs too wise. Dog coyote a-mindinโ his own business anโ innocent anโ sweet, jusโ havinโ fun anโ no harmโwell, theyโs a hen roost clost by.โ
Casy watched him intently, started to ask a question, and then shut his mouth tightly.
He waggled his toes slowly and, releasing his knees, pushed out his foot so he could see it. โYeah,โ he said, โI wonโt go right yet.โ
Tom said, โWhen a bunch a folks, nice quiet folks, donโt know nothinโ about
nothinโโsomepinโs goinโ on.โ
โIโll stay,โ said Casy.
โAnโ tomorra weโll go out in the truck anโ look for work.โ
โYeah!โ said Casy, and he waved his toes up and down and studied them gravely.
Tom settled back on his elbow and closed his eyes. Inside the tent he could hear the murmur of Rose of Sharonโs voice and Connieโs answering.
The tarpaulin made a dark shadow and the wedge-shaped light at each end was hard and sharp. Rose of Sharon lay on a mattress and Connie squatted beside her. โI oughta help Ma,โ Rose of Sharon said. โI tried, but everโ time I stirred about I throwed up.โ
Connieโs eyes were sullen. โIf Iโd of knowed it would be like this I wouldnโ of came.
Iโd a studied nights โbout tractors back home anโ got me a three-dollar job. Fella can live awful nice on three dollars a day, anโ go to the pitcher show everโ night, too.โ
Rose of Sharon looked apprehensive. โYouโre gonna study nights โbout radios,โ she said. He was long in answering. โAinโt you?โ she demanded.
โYeah, sure. Soonโs I get on my feet. Get a little money.โ
She rolled up on her elbow. โYou ainโt givinโ it up!โ
โNoโnoโโcourse not. ButโI didnโ know they was places like this we got to live in.โ
The girlโs eyes hardened. โYou got to,โ she said quietly.
โSure. Sure, I know. Got to get on my feet. Get a little money. Would a been better maybe to stay home anโ study โbout tractors. Three dollars a day they get, anโ pick up extra money, too.โ Rose of Sharonโs eyes were calculating. When he looked down at her he saw in her eyes a measuring of him, a calculation of him. โBut Iโm gonna study,โ he said. โSoonโs I get on my feet.โ
She said fiercely, โWe got to have a house โfore the baby comes. We ainโt gonna have this baby in no tent.โ
โSure,โ he said. โSoonโs I get on my feet.โ He went out of the tent and looked down at Ma, crouched over the brush fire. Rose of Sharon rolled on her back and stared at the top of the tent. And then she put her thumb in her mouth for a gag and she cried silently.
Ma knelt beside the fire, breaking twigs to keep the flame up under the stew kettle.
The fire flared and dropped and flared and dropped. The children, fifteen of them, stood silently and watched. And when the smell of the cooking stew came to their noses, their noses crinkled slightly. The sunlight glistened on hair tawny with dust. The children were embarrassed to be there, but they did not go. Ma talked quietly to a little girl who stood inside the lusting circle. She was older than the rest. She stood on one foot, caressing the back of her leg with a bare instep. Her arms were clasped behind her. She watched Ma with steady small gray eyes. She suggested, โI could break up some bresh if you want me, maโam.โ
Ma looked up from her work. โYou want ta get ast to eat, huh?โ
โYes, maโam,โ the girl said steadily.
Ma slipped the twigs under the pot and the flame made a puttering sound. โDidnโ you have no breakfast?โ
โNo, maโam. They ainโt no work hereabouts. Paโs in tryinโ to sell some stuff to git gas soโs we can git โlong.โ
Ma looked up. โDidnโ none of these here have no breakfast?โ
The circle of children shifted nervously and looked away from the boiling kettle. One small boy said boastfully, โI didโme anโ my brother didโanโ them two did, โcause I seen โem. We et good. Weโre a-goinโ south tonight.โ
Ma smiled. โThen you ainโt hungry. They ainโt enough here to go around.โ
The small boyโs lip stuck out. โWe et good,โ he said, and he turned and ran and dived into a tent. Ma looked after him so long that the oldest girl reminded her.
โThe fireโs down, maโam. I can keep it up if you want.โ
Ruthie and Winfield stood inside the circle, comporting themselves with proper frigidity and dignity. They were aloof, and at the same time possessive. Ruthie turned cold and angry eyes on the little girl. Ruthie squatted down to break up the twigs for Ma.
Ma lifted the kettle lid and stirred the stew with a stick. โIโm sure glad some of you ainโt hungry. That little fella ainโt, anyways.โ
The girl sneered. โOh, him! He was a-bragginโ. High anโ mighty. If he donโt have no supperโknow what he done? Lasโ night, come out anโ say they got chicken to eat. Well, sir, I looked in whilst they was a-eatinโ anโ it was fried dough jusโ like everโbody else.โ
โOh!โ And Ma looked down toward the tent where the small boy had gone. She looked back at the little girl. โHow long you been in California?โ she asked.
โOh, โbout six months. We lived in a govโment camp a while, anโ then we went north, anโ when we come back it was full up. Thatโs a nice place to live, you bet.โ
โWhereโs that?โ Ma asked. And she took the sticks from Ruthieโs hand and fed the fire. Ruthie glared with hatred at the older girl.
โOver by Weedpatch. Got nice toilets anโ baths, anโ you kin wash clothes in a tub, anโ theyโs water right handy, good drinkinโ water; anโ nights the folks plays music anโ Satโdy night they give a dance. Oh, you never seen anything so nice. Got a place for kids to play, anโ them toilets with paper. Pull down a little jigger anโ the water comes right in the toilet; anโ they ainโt no cops let to come look in your tent any time they want, anโ the fella runs the camp is so polite, comes a-visitinโ anโ talks anโ ainโt high anโ mighty. I wisht we could go live there again.โ
Ma said, โI never heard about it. I sure could use a wash tub, I tell you.โ
The girl went on excitedly, โWhy, God Awmighty, they got hot water right in pipes, anโ you get in under a shower bath anโ itโs warm. You never seen such a place.โ
Ma said, โAll full now, ya say?โ
โYeah. Lasโ time we ast it was.โ
โMusโ cost a lot,โ said Ma.
โWell, it costs, but if you ainโt got the money, they let you work it outโcouple hours a week, cleaninโ up, anโ garbage cans. Stuff like that. Anโ nights theyโs music anโ folks talks together anโ hot water right in the pipes. You never seen nothinโ so nice.โ
Ma said, โI sure wisht we could go there.โ
Ruthie had stood all she could. She blurted fiercely, โGranma died right on top a the truck.โ The girl looked questioningly at her. โWell, she did,โ Ruthie said. โAnโ the corโner got her.โ She closed her lips tightly and broke up a little pile of sticks.
Winfield blinked at the boldness of the attack. โRight on the truck,โ he echoed.
โCorโner stuck her in a big basket.โ
Ma said, โYou shush now, both of you, or you got to go away.โ And she fed twigs into the fire.
Down the line Al had strolled to watch the valve-grinding job. โLooks like youโre
โbout through,โ he said.
โTwo more.โ
โIs they any girls in this here camp?โ
โI got a wife,โ said the young man. โI got no time for girls.โ
โI always got time for girls,โ said Al. โI got no time for nothinโ else.โ
โYou get a little hungry anโ youโll change.โ
Al laughed. โMaybe. But I ainโt never changed that notion yet.โ
โFella I talked to while ago, heโs with you, ainโt he?โ
โYeah! My brother Tom. Better not fool with him. He killed a fella.โ
โDid? What for?โ
โFight. Fella got a knife in Tom. Tom busted โim with a shovel.โ
โDid, huh? Whatโd the law do?โ
โLet โim off โcause it was a fight,โ said Al.
โHe donโt look like a quarreler.โ
โOh, he ainโt. But Tom donโt take nothinโ from nobody.โ Alโs voice was very proud.
โTom, heโs quiet. Butโlook out!โ
โWellโI talked to โim. He didnโ sounโ mean.โ
โHe ainโt. Jusโ as nice as pie till heโs roused, anโ thenโlook out.โ The young man ground at the last valve. โLike me to heโp you get them valves set anโ the head on?โ
โSure, if you got nothinโ else to do.โ
โOughta get some sleep,โ said Al. โBut, hell, I canโt keep my hanโs out of a tore- down car. Jusโ got to git in.โ
โWell, Iโd admire to git a hand,โ said the young man. โMy nameโs Floyd Knowles.โ
โIโm Al Joad.โ
โProud to meet ya.โ
โMe too,โ said Al. โGonna use the same gasket?โ
โGot to,โ said Floyd.
Al took out his pocket knife and scraped at the block. โJesus!โ he said. โThey ainโt nothinโ I love like the guts of a engine.โ
โHow โbout girls?โ
โYeah, girls too! Wisht I could tear down a Rolls anโ put her back. I looked under the hood of a Cadโ 16 one time anโ, God Awmighty, you never seen nothinโ so sweet in your life! In Sallisawโanโ hereโs this 16 a-standinโ in front of a restaurant, so I lifts the hood.
Anโ a guy comes out anโ says, โWhat the hell you doinโ?โ I says, โJusโ lookinโ. Ainโt she swell?โ Anโ he jusโ stands there. I donโt think he ever looked in her before. Jusโ stands there. Rich fella in a straw hat. Got a stripeโ shirt on, anโ eye glasses. We donโ say nothinโ. Jusโ look. Anโ purty soon he says, โHowโd you like to drive her?โ โ
Floyd said, โThe hell!โ
โSureโโHowโd you like to drive her?โ Well, hell, I got on jeansโall dirty. I says, โIโd get her dirty.โ โCome on!โ he says. โJusโ take her rounโ the block.โ Well, sir, I set in that seat anโ I took her rounโ the block eight times, anโ, oh, my God Almighty!โ
โNice?โ Floyd asked.
โOh, Jesus!โ said Al. โIf I could of tore her down whyโIโd a giveโanythinโ.โ
Floyd slowed his jerking arm. He lifted the last valve from its seat and looked at it.
โYou better git useโ ta a jalopy,โ he said, โ โcause you ainโt goinโ a drive no 16.โ He put his brace down on the running board and took up a chisel to scrape the crust from the block. Two stocky women, bare-headed and bare-footed, went by carrying a bucket of milky water between them. They limped against the weight of the bucket, and neither one looked up from the ground. The sun was half down in afternoon.
Al said, โYou donโt like nothinโ much.โ
Floyd scraped harder with the chisel. โI been here six months,โ he said. โI been scrabblinโ over this here State tryinโ to work hard enough and move fast enough to get meat anโ potatoes for me anโ my wife anโ my kids. Iโve run myself like a jackrabbit anโโI canโt quite make her. There just ainโt quite enough to eat no matter what I do. Iโm gettinโ tired, thatโs all. Iโm gettinโ tired way past where sleep rests me. Anโ I jusโ donโ know what to do.โ
โAinโt there no steady work for a fella?โ Al asked.
โNo, they ainโt no steady work.โ With his chisel he pushed the crust off the block, and he wiped the dull metal with a greasy rag.
A rusty touring car drove down into the camp and there were four men in it, men with brown hard faces. The car drove slowly through the camp. Floyd called to them, โAny luck?โ
The car stopped. The driver said, โWe covered a hell of a lot a ground. They ainโt a handโs work in this here country. We gotta move.โ
โWhere to?โ Al called.
โGod knows. We worked this here place over.โ He let in his clutch and moved slowly down the camp.
Al looked after them. โWouldnโ it be better if one fella went alone? Then if they was one piece a work, a fellaโd get it.โ
Floyd put down the chisel and smiled sourly. โYou ainโt learned,โ he said. โTakes gas to get rounโ the country. Gas costs fifteen cents a gallon. Them four fellas canโt take four cars. So each of โem puts in a dime anโ they get gas. You got to learn.โ
โAl!โ
Al looked down at Winfield standing importantly beside him. โAl, Maโs dishinโ up stew. She says come git it.โ
Al wiped his hands on his trousers. โWe ainโt et today,โ he said to Floyd. โIโll come
give you a hanโ when I eat.โ
โNo need โless you want ta.โ
โSure, Iโll do it.โ He followed Winfield toward the Joad camp.
It was crowded now. The strange children stood close to the stew pot, so close that Ma brushed them with her elbows as she worked. Tom and Uncle John stood beside her.
Ma said helplessly, โI dunno what to do. I got to feed the fambly. Whatโm I gonna do with these here?โ The children stood stiffly and looked at her. Their faces were blank, rigid, and their eyes went mechanically from the pot to the tin plate she held. Their eyes followed the spoon from pot to plate, and when she passed the steaming plate up to Uncle John, their eyes followed it up. Uncle John dug his spoon into the stew, and the banked eyes rose up with the spoon. A piece of potato went into Johnโs mouth and the banked eyes were on his face, watching to see how he would react. Would it be good?
Would he like it?
And then Uncle John seemed to see them for the first time. He chewed slowly. โYou take this here,โ he said to Tom. โI ainโt hungry.โ
โYou ainโt et today,โ Tom said.
โI know, but I got a stomickache. I ainโt hungry.โ
Tom said quietly, โYou take that plate inside the tent anโ you eat it.โ
โI ainโt hungry,โ John insisted. โIโd still see โem inside the tent.โ
Tom turned on the children. โYou git,โ he said. โGo on now, git.โ The bank of eyes left the stew and rested wondering on his face. โGo on now, git. You ainโt doinโ no good.
There ainโt enough for you.โ
Ma ladled stew into the tin plates, very little stew, and she laid the plates on the ground. โI canโt send โem away,โ she said. โI donโ know what to do. Take your plates anโ go inside. Iโll let โem have whatโs lefโ. Here, take a plate in to Rosasharn.โ She smiled up at the children. โLook,โ she said, โyou little fellas go anโ get you each a flat stick anโ Iโll put whatโs lefโ for you. But they ainโt to be no fightinโ.โ The group broke up with a deadly, silent swiftness. Children ran to find sticks, they ran to their own tents and brought spoons. Before Ma had finished with the plates they were back, silent and wolfish. Ma shook her head. โI dunno what to do. I canโt rob the fambly. I got to feed the fambly. Ruthie, Winfielโ, Al,โ she cried fiercely. โTake your plates. Hurry up. Git in the tent quick.โ She looked apologetically at the waiting children. โThere ainโt enough,โ she said humbly. โIโm a-gonna set this here kettle out, anโ youโll all get a little tasโ, but it ainโt gonna do you no good.โ She faltered, โI canโt heโp it. Canโt keep it from you.โ She lifted the pot and set it down on the ground. โNow wait. Itโs too hot,โ she said, and she went into the tent quickly so she would not see. Her family sat on the ground, each with his plate; and outside they could hear the children digging into the pot with their sticks and their spoons and their pieces of rusty tin. A mound of children smothered the pot from sight. They did not talk, did not fight or argue; but there was a quiet intentness in all of them, a wooden fierceness. Ma turned her back so she couldnโt see. โWe canโt do that no more,โ she said. โWe got to eat alone.โ There was the sound of scraping at the kettle, and then the mound of children broke and the children walked away and left the scraped kettle on the ground. Ma looked at the empty plates. โDidnโ none of you get nowhere near enough.โ
Pa got up and left the tent without answering. The preacher smiled to himself and lay back on the ground, hands clasped behind his head. Al got to his feet. โGot to help a fella
with a car.โ
Ma gathered the plates and took them outside to wash. โRuthie,โ she called, โWinfielโ. Go get me a bucket a water right off.โ She handed them the bucket and they trudged off toward the river.
A strong broad woman walked near. Her dress was streaked with dust and splotched with car oil. Her chin was held high with pride. She stood a short distance away and regarded Ma belligerently. At last she approached. โAfternoon,โ she said coldly.
โAfternoon,โ said Ma, and she got up from her knees and pushed a box forward.
โWonโt you set down?โ
The woman walked near. โNo, I wonโt set down.โ
Ma looked questioningly at her. โCan I heโp you in any way?โ
The woman set her hands on her hips. โYou kin heโp me by mindinโ your own childern anโ lettinโ mine alone.โ
Maโs eyes opened wide. โI ainโt done nothinโโโ she began.
The woman scowled at her. โMy little fella come back smellinโ of stew. You give it to โim. He tolโ me. Donโ you go a-boastinโ anโ a-bragginโ โbout havinโ stew. Donโ you do it.
I got โnuf troubles โthout that. Come in ta me, he did, anโ says, โWhynโt we have stew?โ โ
Her voice shook with fury.
Ma moved close. โSet down,โ she said. โSet down anโ talk a piece.โ
โNo, I ainโt gonna set down. Iโm tryinโ to feed my folks, anโ you come along with your stew.โ
โSet down,โ Ma said. โThat was โbout the lasโ stew weโre gonna have till we get work. Sโpose you was cookinโ a stew anโ a bunch a little fellas stood arounโ mooninโ, whatโd you do? We didnโt have enough, but you canโt keep it when they look at ya like that.โ
The womanโs hands dropped from her hips. For a moment her eyes questioned Ma, and then she turned and walked quickly away, and she went into a tent and pulled the flaps down behind her. Ma stared after her, and then she dropped to her knees again beside the stack of tin dishes.
Al hurried near. โTom,โ he called. โMa, is Tom inside?โ
Tom stuck his head out. โWhat you want?โ
โCome on with me,โ Al said excitedly.
They walked away together. โWhatโs a matter with you?โ Tom asked.
โYouโll find out. Jusโ wait.โ He led Tom to the torn-down car. โThis hereโs Floyd
Knowles,โ he said.
โYeah, I talked to him. How ya?โ
โJusโ gettinโ her in shape,โ Floyd said.
Tom ran his finger over the top of the block. โWhat kinda bugs is crawlinโ on you,
Al?โ
โFloyd jusโ tolโ me. Tell โem, Floyd.โ
Floyd said, โMaybe I shouldnโ, butโyeah, Iโll tell ya. Fella come through anโ he says
theyโs gonna be work up north.โ
โUp north?โ
โYeahโplace called Santa Clara Valley, way to hell anโ gone up north.โ
โYeah? Kinda work?โ
โPrune pickinโ, anโ pears anโ cannery work. Says itโs purty near ready.โ
โHow far?โ Tom demanded.
โOh, Christ knows. Maybe two hundred miles.โ
โThatโs a hell of a long ways,โ said Tom. โHow we know theyโs gonna be work when we get there?โ
โWell, we donโ know,โ said Floyd. โBut they ainโt nothinโ here, anโ this fella says he got a letter from his brother, anโ heโs on his way. He says not to tell nobody, theyโll be too many. We oughta get out in the night. Oughta get there anโ get some work lined up.โ
Tom studied him. โWhy we gotta sneak away?โ
โWell, if everโbody gets there, ainโt gonna be work for nobody.โ
โItโs a hell of a long ways,โ Tom said.
Floyd sounded hurt. โIโm jusโ givinโ you the tip. You donโ have to take it. Your brother here heโped me, anโ Iโm givinโ you the tip.โ
โYou sure there ainโt no work here?โ
โLook, I been scourinโ arounโ for three weeks all over hell, anโ I ainโt had a bit a work, not a single hanโ-holt. โF you wanta look arounโ anโ burn up gas lookinโ, why, go ahead. I ainโt begginโ you. More that goes, the less chance I got.โ
Tom said, โI ainโt findinโ fault. Itโs jusโ such a hell of a long ways. Anโ we kinda hoped we could get work here anโ rent a house to live in.โ
Floyd said patiently, โI know ya jusโ got here. Theyโs stuff ya got to learn. If youโd let me tell ya, itโd save ya somepin. If ya donโ let me tell ya, then ya got to learn the hard way. You ainโt gonna settle down โcause they ainโt no work to settle ya. Anโ your belly ainโt gonna let ya settle down. Nowโthatโs straight.โ
โWisht I could look arounโ first,โ Tom said uneasily.
A sedan drove through the camp and pulled up at the next tent. A man in overalls and a blue shirt climbed out. Floyd called to him, โAny luck?โ
โThere ainโt a hanโ-turn of work in the whole darn country, not till cotton pickinโ.โ
And he went into the ragged tent.
โSee?โ said Floyd.
โYeah, I see. But two hunderd miles, Jesus!โ
โWell, you ainโt settlinโ down no place for a while. Mightโs well make up your mind
to that.โ
โWe better go,โ Al said.
Tom asked, โWhen is they gonna be work arounโ here?โ
โWell, in a month the cottonโll start. If you got plenty money you can wait for the cotton.โ
Tom said, โMa ainโt a-gonna wanta move. Sheโs all tarโd out.โ
Floyd shrugged his shoulders. โI ainโt a-tryinโ to push ya north. Suit yaself. I jusโ tolโ ya what I heard.โ He picked the oily gasket from the running board and fitted it carefully on the block and pressed it down. โNow,โ he said to Al, โ โf you want to give me a hanโ with that engine head.โ
Tom watched while they set the heavy head gently down over the head bolts and dropped it evenly. โHave to talk about it,โ he said.
Floyd said, โI donโt want nobody but your folks to know about it. Jusโ you. Anโ I wouldnโt of tolโ you if ya brother didnโ heโp me out here.โ
Tom said, โWell, I sure thank ya for tellinโ us. We got to figger it out. Maybe weโll go.โ
Al said, โBy God, I think Iโll go if the resโ goes or not. Iโll hitch there.โ
โAnโ leave the fambly?โ Tom asked.
โSure. Iโd come back with my jeans plumb fulla jack. Why not?โ
โMa ainโt gonna like no such thing,โ Tom said. โAnโ Pa, he ainโt gonna like it neither.โ
Floyd set the nuts and screwed them down as far as he could with his fingers. โMe anโ my wife come out with our folks,โ he said. โBack home we wouldnโ of thought of goinโ away. Wouldnโ of thought of it. But, hell, we was all up north a piece and I come down here, anโ they moved on, anโ now God knows where they are. Been lookinโ anโ askinโ about โem ever since.โ He fitted his wrench to the engine-head bolts and turned them down evenly, one turn to each nut, around and around the series.
Tom squatted down beside the car and squinted his eyes up the line of tents. A little stubble was beaten into the earth between the tents. โNo, sir,โ he said, โMa ainโt gonna like you goinโ off.โ
โWell, seems to me a lone fella got more chance of work.โ
โMaybe, but Ma ainโt gonna like it at all.โ
Two cars loaded with disconsolate men drove down into the camp. Floyd lifted his eyes, but he didnโt ask them about their luck. Their dusty faces were sad and resistant.
The sun was sinking now, and the yellow sunlight fell on the Hooverville and on the willows behind it. The children began to come out of the tents, to wander about the
camp. And from the tents the women came and built their little fires. The men gathered in squatting groups and talked together.
A new Chevrolet coupรฉ turned off the highway and headed down into the camp. It pulled to the center of the camp. Tom said, โWhoโs this? They donโt belong here.โ
Floyd said, โI dunnoโcops, maybe.โ
The car door opened and a man got out and stood beside the car. His companion remained seated. Now all the squatting men looked at the newcomers and the conversation was still. And the women building their fires looked secretly at the shiny car. The children moved closer with elaborate circuitousness, edging inward in long curves.
Floyd put down his wrench. Tom stood up. Al wiped his hands on his trousers. The three strolled toward the Chevrolet. The man who had got out of the car was dressed in khaki trousers and a flannel shirt. He wore a flat-brimmed Stetson hat. A sheaf of papers was held in his shirt pocket by a little fence of fountain pens and yellow pencils; and from his hip pocket protruded a notebook with metal covers. He moved to one of the groups of squatting men, and they looked up at him, suspicious and quiet. They watched him and did not move; the whites of their eyes showed beneath the irises, for they did not raise their heads to look. Tom and Al and Floyd strolled casually near.
The man said, โYou men want to work?โ Still they looked quietly, suspiciously. And men from all over the camp moved near.
One of the squatting men spoke at last. โSure we wanta work. Whereโs atโs work?โ
โTulare County. Fruitโs opening up. Need a lot of pickers.โ
Floyd spoke up. โYou doinโ the hiring?โ
โWell, Iโm contracting the land.โ
The men were in a compact group now. An overalled man took off his black hat and combed back his long black hair with his fingers. โWhat you payinโ?โ he asked.
โWell, canโt tell exactly, yet. โBout thirty cents, I guess.โ
โWhy canโt you tell? You took the contract, didnโ you?โ
โThatโs true,โ the khaki man said. โBut itโs keyed to the price. Might be a little more, might be a little less.โ
Floyd stepped out ahead. He said quietly, โIโll go, mister. Youโre a contractor, anโ you got a license. You jusโ show your license, anโ then you give us an order to go to work, anโ where, anโ when, anโ how much weโll get, anโ you sign that, anโ weโll all go.โ
The contractor turned, scowling. โYou telling me how to run my own business?โ
Floyd said, โ โF weโre workinโ for you, itโs our business too.โ
โWell, you ainโt telling me what to do. I told you I need men.โ
Floyd said angrily, โYou didnโ say how many men, anโ you didnโ say what youโd
pay.โ
โGoddamn it, I donโt know yet.โ
โIf you donโ know, you got no right to hire men.โ
โI got a right to run my business my own way. If you men want to sit here on your ass, O.K. Iโm out getting men for Tulare County. Going to need a lot of men.โ
Floyd turned to the crowd of men. They were standing up now, looking quietly from one speaker to the other. Floyd said, โTwicet now Iโve fell for that. Maybe he needs a thousanโ men. Heโll get five thousanโ there, anโ heโll pay fifteen cents an hour. Anโ you poor bastardsโll have to take it โcause youโll be hungry. โF he wants to hire men, let him hire โem anโ write it out anโ say what heโs gonna pay. Ast ta see his license. He ainโt allowed to contract men without a license.โ
The contractor turned to the Chevrolet and called, โJoe!โ His companion looked out and then swung the car door open and stepped out. He wore riding breeches and laced boots. A heavy pistol holster hung on a cartridge belt around his waist. On his brown shirt a deputy sheriffโs star was pinned. He walked heavily over. His face was set to a thin smile. โWhat you want?โ The holster slid back and forth on his hip.
โEver see this guy before, Joe?โ
The deputy asked, โWhich one?โ
โThis fella.โ The contractor pointed to Floyd.
โWhatโd he do?โ The deputy smiled at Floyd.
โHeโs talkinโ red, agitating trouble.โ
โHm-m-m.โ The deputy moved slowly around to see Floydโs profile, and the color slowly flowed up Floydโs face.
โYou see?โ Floyd cried. โIf this guyโs on the level, would he bring a cop along?โ
โEver see โim before?โ the contractor insisted.
โHmm, seems like I have. Lasโ week when that used-car lot was busted into. Seems like I seen this fella hanginโ arounโ. Yep! Iโd swear itโs the same fella.โ Suddenly the smile left his face. โGet in that car,โ he said, and he unhooked the strap that covered the
butt of his automatic.
Tom said, โYou got nothinโ on him.โ
The deputy swung around. โ โF youโd like to go in too, you jusโ open your trap once more. They was two fellas hanginโ around that lot.โ
โI wasnโt even in the State lasโ week,โ Tom said.
โWell, maybe youโre wanted someplace else. You keep your trap shut.โ
The contractor turned back to the men. โYou fellas donโt want ta listen to these goddamn reds. Troublemakersโtheyโll get you in trouble. Now I can use all of you in
Tulare County.โ
The men didnโt answer.
The deputy turned back to them. โMight be a good idear to go,โ he said. The thin smile was back on his face. โBoard of Health says we got to clean out this camp. Anโ if it gets around that you got reds out hereโwhy, somebody might git hurt. Be a good idear if
all you fellas moved on to Tulare. They isnโt a thing to do arounโ here. Thatโs jusโ a friendly way a telling you. Be a bunch a guys down here, maybe with pick handles, if you ainโt gone.โ
The contractor said, โI told you I need men. If you donโt want to workโwell, thatโs your business.โ
The deputy smiled. โIf they donโt want to work, they ainโt a place for โem in this county. Weโll float โem quick.โ
Floyd stood stiffly beside the deputy, and Floydโs thumbs were hooked over his belt.
Tom stole a look at him, and then stared at the ground.
โThatโs all,โ the contractor said. โThereโs men needed in Tulare County; plenty of work.โ
Tom looked slowly up at Floydโs hands, and he saw the strings at the wrists standing out under the skin. Tomโs own hands came up, and his thumbs hooked over his belt.
โYeah, thatโs all. I donโt want one of you here by tomorra morning.โ
The contractor stepped into the Chevrolet.
โNow, you,โ the deputy said to Floyd, โyou get in that car.โ He reached a large hand up and took hold of Floydโs left arm. Floyd spun and swung with one movement. His fist splashed into the large face, and in the same motion he was away, dodging down the line of tents. The deputy staggered and Tom put out his foot for him to trip over. The deputy fell heavily and rolled, reaching for his gun. Floyd dodged in and out of sight down the line. The deputy fired from the ground. A woman in front of a tent screamed and then looked at a hand which had no knuckles. The fingers hung on strings against her palm, and the torn flesh was white and bloodless. Far down the line Floyd came in sight, sprinting for the willows. The deputy, sitting on the ground, raised his gun again and then, suddenly, from the group of men, the Reverend Casy stepped. He kicked the deputy in the neck and then stood back as the heavy man crumpled into unconsciousness.
The motor of the Chevrolet roared and it streaked away, churning the dust. It mounted to the highway and shot away. In front of her tent, the woman still looked at her shattered hand. Little droplets of blood began to ooze from the wound. And a chuckling hysteria began in her throat, a whining laugh that grew louder and higher with each breath.
The deputy lay on his side, his mouth open against the dust.
Tom picked up his automatic, pulled out the magazine and threw it into the brush, and he ejected the live shell from the chamber. โFella like that ainโt got no right to a gun,โ he said; and he dropped the automatic to the ground.
A crowd had collected around the woman with the broken hand, and her hysteria increased, a screaming quality came into her laughter.
Casy moved close to Tom. โYou got to git out,โ he said. โYou go down in the willas anโ wait. He didnโ see me kick โim, but he seen you stick out your foot.โ
โI donโ want ta go,โ Tom said.
Casy put his head close. He whispered, โTheyโll fingerprint you. You broke parole.
Theyโll send you back.โ
Tom drew in his breath quietly. โJesus! I forgot.โ
โGo quick,โ Casy said. โ โFore he comes to.โ
โLike to have his gun,โ Tom said.
โNo. Leave it. If itโs awright to come back, Iโll give ya four high whistles.โ
Tom strolled away casually, but as soon as he was away from the group he hurried his steps, and he disappeared among the willows that lined the river.
Al stepped over to the fallen deputy. โJesus,โ he said admiringly, โyou sure flagged โim down!โ
The crowd of men had continued to stare at the unconscious man. And now in the great distance a siren screamed up the scale and dropped, and it screamed again, nearer this time. Instantly the men were nervous. They shifted their feet for a moment and then they moved away, each one to his own tent. Only Al and the preacher remained.
Casy turned to Al. โGet out,โ he said. โGo on, get outโto the tent. You donโt know
nothinโ.โ
โYeah? How โbout you?โ
Casy grinned at him. โSomebody got to take the blame. I got no kids. Theyโll jusโ put me in jail, anโ I ainโt doinโ nothinโ but set arounโ.โ
Al said, โAinโt no reason forโโ
โGo on now,โ Casy said sharply. โYou get outa this.โ
Al bristled. โI ainโt takinโ orders.โ
Casy said softly, โIf you mess in this your whole fambly, all your folks, gonna get in trouble. I donโ care about you. But your ma and your pa, theyโll get in trouble. Maybe theyโll send Tom back to McAlester.โ
Al considered it for a moment. โO.K.,โ he said. โI think youโre a damn fool, though.โ
โSure,โ said Casy. โWhy not?โ
The siren screamed again and again, and always it came closer. Casy knelt beside the deputy and turned him over. The man groaned and fluttered his eyes, and he tried to see.
Casy wiped the dust off his lips. The families were in the tents now, and the flaps were down, and the setting sun made the air red and the gray tents bronze.
Tires squealed on the highway and an open car came swiftly into the camp. Four men, armed with rifles, piled out. Casy stood up and walked to them.
โWhat the hellโs goinโ on here?โ
Casy said, โI knocked out your man there.โ
One of the armed men went to the deputy. He was conscious now, trying weakly to
sit up.
โNow what happened here?โ
โWell,โ Casy said, โhe got tough anโ I hit โim, and he started shootinโโhit a woman down the line. So I hit โim again.โ
โWell, whatโd you do in the first place?โ
โI talked back,โ said Casy.
โGet in that car.โ
โSure,โ said Casy, and he climbed into the back seat and sat down. Two men helped the hurt deputy to his feet. He felt his neck gingerly. Casy said, โTheyโs a woman down the row like to bleed to death from his bad shootinโ.โ
โWeโll see about that later. Mike is this the fella that hit you?โ
The dazed man stared sickly at Casy. โDonโt look like him.โ
โIt was me, all right,โ Casy said. โYou got smart with the wrong fella.โ
Mike shook his head slowly. โYou donโt look like the right fella to me. By God, Iโm gonna be sick!โ
Casy said, โIโll go โthout no trouble. You better see how bad that womanโs hurt.โ
โWhereโs she?โ
โThat tent over there.โ
The leader of the deputies walked to the tent, rifle in hand. He spoke through the tent walls, and then went inside. In a moment he came out and walked back. And he said, a little proudly, โJesus, what a mess a .45 does make! They got a tourniquet on. Weโll send a doctor out.โ
Two deputies sat on either side of Casy. The leader sounded his horn. There was no movement in the camp. The flaps were down tight, and the people in their tents. The engine started and the car swung around and pulled out of the camp. Between his guards Casy sat proudly, his head up and the stringy muscles of his neck prominent. On his lips there was a faint smile and on his face a curious look of conquest.
When the deputies had gone, the people came out of the tents. The sun was down now, and the gentle blue evening light was in the camp. To the east the mountains were still yellow with sunlight. The women went back to the fires that had died. The men collected to squat together and to talk softly.
Al crawled from under the Joad tarpaulin and walked toward the willows to whistle for Tom. Ma came out and built her little fire of twigs.
โPa,โ she said, โwe ainโt goinโ to have much. We et so late.โ
Pa and Uncle John stuck close to the camp, watching Ma peeling potatoes and slicing them raw into a frying pan of deep grease. Pa said, โNow what the hell made the preacher do that?โ
Ruthie and Winfield crept close and crouched down to hear the talk.
Uncle John scratched the earth deeply with a long rusty nail. โHe knowed about sin. I ast him about sin, anโ he tolโ me; but I donโ know if heโs right. He says a fellaโs sinned if he thinks heโs sinned.โ Uncle Johnโs eyes were tired and sad. โI been secret all my days,โ he said. โI done things I never tolโ about.โ
Ma turned from the fire. โDonโ go tellinโ, John,โ she said. โTell โem to God. Donโ go burdeninโ other people with your sins. That ainโt decent.โ
โTheyโre a-eatinโ on me,โ said John.
โWell, donโ tell โem. Go down the river anโ stick your head under anโ whisper โem in the stream.โ
Pa nodded his head slowly at Maโs words. โSheโs right,โ he said. โIt gives a fella relief to tell, but it jusโ spreads out his sin.โ
Uncle John looked up to the sun-gold mountains, and the mountains were reflected in his eyes. โI wisht I could run it down,โ he said. โBut I canโt. Sheโs a-bitinโ in my guts.โ
Behind him Rose of Sharon moved dizzily out of the tent. โWhereโs Connie?โ she asked irritably. โI ainโt seen Connie for a long time. Whereโd he go?โ
โI ainโt seen him,โ said Ma. โIf I see โim, Iโll tell โim you want โim.โ
โI ainโt feelinโ good,โ said Rose of Sharon. โConnie shouldnโ of left me.โ
Ma looked up to the girlโs swollen face. โYou been a-cryinโ,โ she said.
The tears started freshly in Rose of Sharonโs eyes.
Ma went on firmly, โYou git aholt on yaself. Theyโs a lot of us here. You git aholt on yaself. Come here now anโ peel some potatoes. Youโre feelinโ sorry for yaself.โ
The girl started to go back in the tent. She tried to avoid Maโs stern eyes, but they compelled her and she came slowly toward the fire. โHe shouldnโ of went away,โ she said, but the tears were gone.
โYou got to work,โ Ma said. โSet in the tent anโ youโll get feelinโ sorry about yaself. I ainโt had time to take you in hanโ. I will now. You take this here knife anโ get to them potatoes.โ
The girl knelt down and obeyed. She said fiercely, โWaitโll I see โim. Iโll tell โim.โ
Ma smiled slowly. โHe might smack you. You got it cominโ with whininโ arounโ anโ candyinโ yaself. If he smacks some sense in you Iโll bless โim.โ The girlโs eyes blazed with resentment, but she was silent.
Uncle John pushed his rusty nail deep into the ground with his broad thumb. โI got to tell,โ he said.
Pa said, โWell, tell then, goddamn it! Whoโd ya kill?โ
Uncle John dug with his thumb into the watch pocket of his blue jeans and scooped out a folded dirty bill. He spread it out and showed it. โFiโ dollars,โ he said.
โSteal her?โ Pa asked.
โNo, I had her. Kept her out.โ
โShe was yourn, wasnโt she?โ
โYeah, but I didnโt have no right to keep her out.โ
โI donโt see much sin in that,โ Ma said. โItโs yourn.โ
Uncle John said slowly, โIt ainโt only the keepinโ her out. I kepโ her out to get drunk.
I knowed they was gonna come a time when I got to get drunk, when Iโd get to hurtinโ inside so I got to get drunk. Figgered time wasnโ yet, anโ thenโthe preacher went anโ give โimself up to save Tom.โ
Pa nodded his head up and down and cocked his head to hear. Ruthie moved closer, like a puppy, crawling on her elbows, and Winfield followed her. Rose of Sharon dug at a deep eye in a potato with the point of her knife. The evening light deepened and became more blue.
Ma said, in a sharp matter-of-fact tone, โI donโ see why him savinโ Tom got to get you drunk.โ
John said sadly, โCanโt say her. I feel awful. He done her so easy. Jusโ stepped up there anโ says, โI done her.โ Anโ they took โim away. Anโ Iโm a-gonna get drunk.โ
Pa still nodded his head. โI donโt see why you got to tell,โ he said. โIf it was me, Iโd jusโ go off anโ get drunk if I had to.โ
โCome a time when I could a did somepin anโ took the big sin off my soul,โ Uncle John said sadly. โAnโ I slipped up. I didnโ jump on her, anโโanโ she got away. Lookie!โ he said. โYou got the money. Gimme two dollars.โ
Pa reached reluctantly into his pocket and brought out the leather pouch. โYou ainโt gonna need no seven dollars to get drunk. You donโt need to drink champagny water.โ
Uncle John held out his bill. โYou take this here anโ gimme two dollars. I can get good anโ drunk for two dollars. I donโ want no sin of waste on me. Iโll spend whatever I got. Always do.โ
Pa took the dirty bill and gave Uncle John two silver dollars. โThere ya are,โ he said.
โA fella got to do what he got to do. Nobody donโ know enough to tell โim.โ
Uncle John took the coins. โYou ainโt gonna be mad? You know I got to?โ
โChrist, yes,โ said Pa. โYou know what you got to do.โ
โI wouldnโ be able to get through this night no other way,โ he said. He turned to Ma.
โYou ainโt gonna hold her over me?โ
Ma didnโt look up. โNo,โ she said softly. โNoโyou go โlong.โ
He stood up and walked forlornly away in the evening. He walked up to the concrete highway and across the pavement to the grocery store. In front of the screen door he took off his hat, dropped it into the dust, and ground it with his heel in self-abasement. And he left his black hat there, broken and dirty. He entered the store and walked to the shelves where the whisky bottles stood behind wire netting.
Pa and Ma and the children watched Uncle John move away. Rose of Sharon kept her eyes resentfully on the potatoes.
โPoor John,โ Ma said. โI wondered if it would a done any good ifโnoโI guess not. I never seen a man so drove.โ
Ruthie turned on her side in the dust. She put her head close to Winfieldโs head and pulled his ear against her mouth. She whispered, โIโm gonna get drunk.โ Winfield snorted and pinched his mouth tight. The two children crawled away, holding their breath, their faces purple with the pressure of their giggles. They crawled around the tent and leaped up and ran squealing away from the tent. They ran to the willows, and once concealed, they shrieked with laughter. Ruthie crossed her eyes and loosened her joints; she staggered about, tripping loosely, with her tongue hanging out. โIโm drunk,โ she said.
โLook,โ Winfield cried. โLooka me, hereโs me, anโ Iโm Uncle John.โ He flapped his arms and puffed, he whirled until he was dizzy.
โNo,โ said Ruthie. โHereโs the way. Hereโs the way. Iโm Uncle John. Iโm awful drunk.โ
Al and Tom walked quietly through the willows, and they came on the children staggering crazily about. The dusk was thick now. Tom stopped and peered. โAinโt that Ruthie anโ Winfielโ? What the hellโs the matter with โem?โ They walked nearer. โYou crazy?โ Tom asked.
The children stopped, embarrassed. โWe wasโjusโ playinโ,โ Ruthie said.
โItโs a crazy way to play,โ said Al.
Ruthie said pertly, โIt ainโt no crazierโn a lot of things.โ
Al walked on. He said to Tom, โRuthieโs workinโ up a kick in the pants. She been workinโ it up a long time. โBout due for it.โ
Ruthie mushed her face at his back, pulled out her mouth with her forefingers, slobbered her tongue at him, outraged him in every way she knew, but Al did not turn back to look at her. She looked at Winfield again to start the game, but it had been spoiled. They both knew it.
โLeโs go down the water anโ duck our heads,โ Winfield suggested. They walked down through the willows, and they were angry at Al.
Al and Tom went quietly in the dusk. Tom said, โCasy shouldnโ of did it. I might of knew, though. He was talkinโ how he ainโt done nothinโ for us. Heโs a funny fella, Al. All the time thinkinโ.โ
โComes from beinโ a preacher,โ Al said. โThey get all messed up with stuff.โ
โWhere ya sโpose Connie was a-goinโ?โ
โGoinโ to take a crap, I guess.โ
โWell, he was goinโ a hell of a long way.โ
They walked among the tents, keeping close to the walls. At Floydโs tent a soft hail stopped them. They came near to the tent flap and squatted down. Floyd raised the canvas a little. โYou gettinโ out?โ
Tom said, โI donโ know. Think we better?โ
Floyd laughed sourly. โYou heard what that bull said. Theyโll burn ya out if ya donโt.
โF you think that guyโs gonna take a beatinโ โthout gettinโ back, youโre nuts. The pool- room boysโll be down here tonight to burn us out.โ
โGuess we better git, then,โ Tom said. โWhere you a-goinโ?โ
โWhy, up north, like I said.โ
Al said, โLook, a fella tolโ me โbout a govโment camp near here. Whereโs it at?โ
โOh, I think thatโs full up.โ
โWell, whereโs it at?โ
โGo south on 99 โbout twelve-fourteen miles, anโ turn east to Weedpatch. Itโs right
near there. But I think sheโs full up.โ
โFella says itโs nice,โ Al said.
โSure, sheโs nice. Treat ya like a man โstead of a dog. Ainโt no cops there. But sheโs full up.โ
Tom said, โWhat I canโt understanโs why that cop was so mean. Seemed like he was aiminโ for trouble; seemed like heโs pokinโ a fella to make trouble.โ
Floyd said, โI donโ know about here, but up north I knowed one a them fellas, anโ he was a nice fella. He tolโ me up there the deputies got to take guys in. Sheriff gets seventy-five cents a day for each prisoner, anโ he feeds โem for a quarter. If he ainโt got prisoners, he donโt make no profit. This fella says he didnโ pick up nobody for a week, anโ the sheriff tolโ โim he better bring in guys or give up his button. This fella today sure looks like heโs out to make a pinch one way or another.โ
โWe got to get on,โ said Tom. โSo long, Floyd.โ
โSo long. Probโly see you. Hope so.โ
โGood-by,โ said Al. They walked through the dark gray camp to the Joad tent.
The frying pan of potatoes was hissing and spitting over the fire. Ma moved the thick slices about with a spoon. Pa sat near by, hugging his knees. Rose of Sharon was sitting
under the tarpaulin.
โItโs Tom!โ Ma cried. โThank God.โ
โWe got to get outa here,โ said Tom.
โWhatโs the matter now?โ
โWell, Floyd says theyโll burn the camp tonight.โ
โWhat the hell for?โ Pa asked. โWe ainโt done nothinโ.โ
โNothinโ โcept beat up a cop,โ said Tom.
โWell, we never done it.โ
โFrom what that cop said, they wanta push us along.โ
Rose of Sharon demanded, โYou seen Connie?โ
โYeah,โ said Al. โWay to hell anโ gone up the river. Heโs goinโ south.โ
โWasโwas he goinโ away?โ
โI donโ know.โ
Ma turned on the girl. โRosasharn, you been talkinโ anโ actinโ funny. Whatโd Connie say to you?โ
Rose of Sharon said sullenly, โSaid it would a been a good thing if he stayed home anโ studied up tractors.โ
They were very quiet. Rose of Sharon looked at the fire and her eyes glistened in the firelight. The potatoes hissed sharply in the frying pan. The girl sniffled and wiped her nose with the back of her hand.
Pa said, โConnie wasnโ no good. I seen that a long time. Didnโ have no guts, jusโ too big for his overhalls.โ
Rose of Sharon got up and went into the tent. She lay down on the mattress and rolled over on her stomach and buried her head in her crossed arms.
โWouldnโ do no good to catch โim, I guess,โ Al said.
Pa replied, โNo. If he ainโt no good, we donโ want him.โ
Ma looked into the tent, where Rose of Sharon lay on her mattress. Ma said, โSh.
Donโ say that.โ
โWell, he ainโt no good,โ Pa insisted. โAll the time a-sayinโ what heโs a-gonna do.
Never doinโ nothinโ. I didnโ want ta say nothinโ while heโs here. But now heโs run out
โโโ
โSh!โ Ma said softly.
โWhy, for Christโs sake? Why do I got to shh? He run out, didnโ he?โ
Ma turned over the potatoes with her spoon, and the grease boiled and spat. She fed twigs to the fire, and the flames laced up and lighted the tent. Ma said, โRosasharn gonna have a little fella anโ that baby is half Connie. It ainโt good for a baby to grow up with
folks a-sayinโ his pa ainโt no good.โ
โBetterโn lyinโ about it,โ said Pa.
โNo, it ainโt,โ Ma interrupted. โMake out like heโs dead. You wouldnโ say no bad things about Connie if heโs dead.โ
Tom broke in, โHey, what is this? We ainโt sure Connieโs gone for good. We got no time for talkinโ. We got to eat anโ get on our way.โ
โOn our way? We jusโ come here.โ Ma peered at him through the firelighted darkness.
He explained carefully, โThey gonna burn the camp tonight, Ma. Now you know I ainโt got it in me to stanโ by anโ see our stuff burn up, nor Pa ainโt got it in him, nor Uncle John. Weโd come up a-fightinโ, anโ I jusโ canโt afford to be took in anโ mugged. I nearly got it today, if the preacher hadnโ jumped in.โ
Ma had been turning the frying potatoes in the hot grease. Now she took her decision.
โCome on!โ she cried. โLeโs eat this stuff. We got to go quick.โ She set out the tin plates.
Pa said, โHow โbout John?โ
โWhere is Uncle John?โ Tom asked.
Pa and Ma were silent for a moment, and then Pa said, โHe went to get drunk.โ
โJesus!โ Tom said. โWhat a time he picked out! Whereโd he go?โ
โI donโ know,โ said Pa.
Tom stood up. โLook,โ he said, โyou all eat anโ get the stuff loaded. Iโll go look for Uncle John. Heโd of went to the store โcrost the road.โ
Tom walked quickly away. The little cooking fires burned in front of the tents and the shacks, and the light fell on the faces of ragged men and women, on crouched children.
In a few tents the light of kerosene lamps shone through the canvas and placed shadows of people hugely on the cloth.
Tom walked up the dusty road and crossed the concrete highway to the little grocery store. He stood in front of the screen door and looked in. The proprietor, a little gray man with an unkempt mustache and watery eyes, leaned on the counter reading a newspaper.
His thin arms were bare and he wore a long white apron. Heaped around and in back of him were mounds, pyramids, walls of canned goods. He looked up when Tom came in, and his eyes narrowed as though he aimed a shotgun.
โGood evening,โ he said. โRun out of something?โ
โRun out of my uncle,โ said Tom. โOr he run out, or something.โ
The gray man looked puzzled and worried at the same time. He touched the tip of his nose tenderly and waggled it around to stop an itch. โSeems like you people always lost somebody,โ he said. โTen times a day or more somebody comes in here anโ says, โIf you see a man named so anโ so, anโ looks like so anโ so, will you tell โim we went up north?โ Somepin like that all the time.โ
Tom laughed. โWell, if you see a young snot-nose nameโ Connie, looks a little bit like a coyote, tell โim to go to hell. Weโve went south. But he ainโt the fella Iโm lookinโ for.
Did a fella โbout sixty years olโ, black pants, sort of grayish hair, come in here anโ get some whisky?โ
The eyes of the gray man brightened. โNow he sure did. I never seen anything like it.
He stood out front anโ he dropped his hat anโ stepped on it. Here, I got his hat here.โ He brought the dusty broken hat from under the counter.
Tom took it from him. โThatโs him, all right.โ
โWell, sir, he got couple pints of whisky anโ he didnโ say a thing. He pulled the cork anโ tipped up the bottle. I ainโt got a license to drink here. I says, โLook, you canโt drink here. You got to go outside.โ Well, sir! He jusโ stepped outside the door, anโ I bet he didnโt tilt up that pint moreโn four times till it was empty. He throwed it away anโ he leaned in the door. Eyes kinda dull. He says, โThank you, sir,โ anโ he went on. I never seen no drinkinโ like that in my life.โ
โWent on? Which way? I got to get him.โ
โWell, it so happens I can tell you. I never seen such drinkinโ, so I looked out after him. He went north; anโ then a car come along anโ lighted him up, anโ he went down the bank. Legs was beginninโ to buckle a little. He got the other pint open awready. He wonโt be farโnot the way he was goinโ.โ
Tom said, โThank ya. I got to find him.โ
โYou want ta take his hat?โ
โYeah! Yeah! Heโll need it. Well, thank ya.โ
โWhatโs the matter with him?โ the gray man asked. โHe wasnโt takinโ pleasure in his drink.โ
โOh, heโs kindaโmoody. Well, good night. Anโ if you see that squirt Connie, tell โim weโve went south.โ
โI got so many people to look out for anโ tell stuff to, I canโt ever remember โem all.โ
โDonโt put yourself out too much,โ Tom said. He went out the screen door carrying Uncle Johnโs dusty black hat. He crossed the concrete road and walked along the edge of it. Below him in the sunken field, the Hooverville lay; and the little fires flickered and the lanterns shone through the tents. Somewhere in the camp a guitar sounded, slow chords, struck without any sequence, practice chords. Tom stopped and listened, and then he moved slowly along the side of the road, and every few steps he stopped to listen again. He had gone a quarter of a mile before he heard what he listened for. Down below the embankment the sound of a thick, tuneless voice, singing drably. Tom cocked his head, the better to hear.
And the dull voice sang, โIโve give my heart to Jesus, so Jesus take me home. Iโve give my soul to Jesus, so Jesus is my home.โ The song trailed off to a murmur, and then stopped. Tom hurried down from the embankment, toward the song. After a while he stopped and listened again. And the voice was close this time, the same slow, tuneless singing, โOh, the night that Maggie died, she called me to her side, anโ give to me them olโ red flannel drawers that Maggie wore. They was baggy at the kneesโโโ
Tom moved cautiously forward. He saw the black form sitting on the ground, and he stole near and sat down. Uncle John tilted the pint and the liquor gurgled out of the neck of the bottle.
Tom said quietly, โHey, wait! Where do I come in?โ
Uncle John turned his head. โWho you?โ
โYou forgot me awready? You had four drinks to my one.โ
โNo, Tom. Donโ try fool me. Iโm all alone here. You ainโt been here.โ
โWell, Iโm sure here now. How โbout givinโ me a snort?โ
Uncle John raised the pint again and the whisky gurgled. He shook the bottle. It was empty. โNo more,โ he said. โWanta die so bad. Wanta die awful. Die a little bit. Got to.
Like sleepinโ. Die a little bit. So tarโd. Tarโd. Maybeโdonโ wake up no more.โ His voice crooned off. โGonna wear a crownโa golden crown.โ
Tom said, โListen here to me, Uncle John. Weโre gonna move on. You come along, anโ you can go right to sleep up on the load.โ
John shook his head. โNo. Go on. Ainโt goinโ. Gonna resโ here. No good goinโ back.
No good to nobodyโjusโ a-dragginโ my sins like dirty drawers โmongst nice folks. No.
Ainโt goinโ.โ
โCome on. We canโt go โless you go.โ
โGo riโ โlong. I ainโt no good. I ainโt no good. Jusโ a-dragginโ my sins, a-dirtyinโ
everโbody.โ
โYou got no more sinโn anybody else.โ
John put his head close, and he winked one eye wisely. Tom could see his face dimly in the starlight. โNobody donโ know my sins, nobody but Jesus. He knows.โ
Tom got down on his knees. He put his hand on Uncle Johnโs forehead, and it was hot and dry. John brushed his hand away clumsily.
โCome on,โ Tom pleaded. โCome on now, Uncle John.โ
โAinโt goinโ go. Jusโ tarโd. Gonโ resโ riโ here. Riโ here.โ
Tom was very close. He put his fist against the point of Uncle Johnโs chin. He made a small practice arc twice, for distance; and then, with his shoulder in the swing, he hit the chin a delicate perfect blow. Johnโs chin snapped up and he fell backwards and tried to sit up again. But Tom was kneeling over him and as John got one elbow up Tom hit him again. Uncle John lay still on the ground.
Tom stood up and, bending, he lifted the loose sagging body and boosted it over his shoulder. He staggered under the loose weight. Johnโs hanging hands tapped him on the back as he went, slowly, puffing up the bank to the highway. Once a car came by and lighted him with the limp man over his shoulder. The car slowed for a moment and then roared away.
Tom was panting when he came back to the Hooverville, down from the road and to the Joad truck. John was coming to; he struggled weakly. Tom set him gently down on the ground.
Camp had been broken while he was gone. Al passed the bundles up on the truck.
The tarpaulin lay ready to bind over the load.
Al said, โHe sure got a quick start.โ
Tom apologized. โI had to hit โim a little to make โim come. Poor fella.โ
โDidnโ hurt โim?โ Ma asked.
โDonโ think so. Heโs a-cominโ out of it.โ
Uncle John was weakly sick on the ground. His spasms of vomiting came in little gasps.
Ma said, โI lefโ a plate a potatoes for you, Tom.โ
Tom chuckled. โI ainโt just in the mood right now.โ
Pa called, โAwright, Al. Sling up the tarp.โ
The truck was loaded and ready. Uncle John had gone to sleep. Tom and Al boosted and pulled him up on the load while Winfield made a vomiting noise behind the truck and Ruthie plugged her mouth with her hand to keep from squealing.
โAwready,โ Pa said.
Tom asked, โWhereโs Rosasharn?โ
โOver there,โ said Ma. โCome on, Rosasharn. Weโre a-goinโ.โ
The girl sat still, her chin sunk on her breast. Tom walked over to her. โCome on,โ he said.
โI ainโt a-goinโ.โ She did not raise her head.
โYou got to go.โ
โI want Connie. I ainโt a-goinโ till he comes back.โ
Three cars pulled out of the camp, up the road to the highway, old cars loaded with the camps and the people. They clanked up to the highway and rolled away, their dim lights glancing along the road.
Tom said, โConnieโll find us. I lefโ word up at the store where weโd be. Heโll find us.โ
Ma came up and stood beside him. โCome on, Rosasharn. Come on, honey,โ she said
gently.
โI wanta wait.โ
โWe canโt wait.โ Ma leaned down and took the girl by the arm and helped her to her feet.
โHeโll find us,โ Tom said. โDonโ you worry. Heโll find us.โ They walked on either side of the girl.
โMaybe he went to get them books to study up,โ said Rose of Sharon. โMaybe he was a-gonna surprise us.โ
Ma said, โMaybe thatโs jusโ what he done.โ They led her to the truck and helped her up on top of the load, and she crawled under the tarpaulin and disappeared into the dark cave.
Now the bearded man from the weed shack came timidly to the truck. He waited about, his hands clutched behind his back. โYou gonna leave any stuff a fella could use?โ he asked at last.
Pa said, โCanโt think of nothinโ. We ainโt got nothinโ to leave.โ
Tom asked, โAinโt ya gettinโ out?โ
For a long time the bearded man stared at him. โNo,โ he said at last.
โBut theyโll burn ya out.โ
The unsteady eyes dropped to the ground. โI know. They done it before.โ
โWell, why the hell donโt ya get out?โ
The bewildered eyes looked up for a moment, and then down again, and the dying firelight was reflected redly. โI donโ know. Takes so long to git stuff together.โ
โYou wonโt have nothinโ if they burn ya out.โ
โI know. You ainโt leavinโ nothinโ a fella could use?โ
โCleaned out, slick,โ said Pa. The bearded man vaguely wandered away. โWhatโs a matter with him?โ Pa demanded.
โCop-happy,โ said Tom. โFella was sayinโโheโs bull-simple. Been beat over the head too much.โ
A second little caravan drove past the camp and climbed to the road and moved away.
โCome on, Pa. Letโs go. Look here, Pa. You anโ me anโ Al ride in the seat. Ma can get on the load. No. Ma, you ride in the middle. AlโโTom reached under the seat and brought out a big monkey wrenchโโAl, you get up behind. Take this here. Jusโ in case.
If anybody tries to climb upโlet โim have it.โ
Al took the wrench and climbed up the back board, and he settled himself cross- legged, the wrench in his hand. Tom pulled the iron jack handle from under the seat and laid it on the floor, under the brake pedal. โAwright,โ he said. โGet in the middle, Ma.โ
Pa said, โI ainโt got nothinโ in my hanโ.โ
โYou can reach over anโ get the jack handle,โ said Tom. โI hope to Jesus you donโ need it.โ He stepped on the starter and the clanking flywheel turned over, the engine caught and died, and caught again. Tom turned on the lights and moved out of the camp in low gear. The dim lights fingered the road nervously. They climbed up to the highway and turned south. Tom said, โThey comes a time when a man gets mad.โ
Ma broke in, โTomโyou tolโ meโyou promised me you wasnโt like that. You promised.โ
โI know, Ma. Iโm a-tryinโ. But them deputiesโ Did you ever see a deputy that didnโ have a fat ass? Anโ they waggle their ass anโ flop their gun arounโ. Ma,โ he said, โif it was the law they was workinโ with, why, we could take it. But it ainโt the law. Theyโre a- workinโ away at our spirits. Theyโre a-tryinโ to make us cringe anโ crawl like a whipped bitch. They tryinโ to break us. Why, Jesus Christ, Ma, they comes a time when the onโy way a fella can keep his decency is by takinโ a sock at a cop. Theyโre workinโ on our decency.โ
Ma said, โYou promised, Tom. Thatโs how Pretty Boy Floyd done. I knowed his ma.
They hurt him.โ
โIโm a-tryinโ, Ma. Honest to God, I am. You donโ want me to crawl like a beat bitch, with my belly on the grounโ, do you?โ
โIโm a-prayinโ. You got to keep clear, Tom. The famblyโs breakinโ up. You got to keep clear.โ
โIโll try, Ma. But when one a them fat asses gets to workinโ me over, I got a big job tryinโ. If it was the law, itโd be different. But burninโ the camp ainโt the law.โ
The car jolted along. Ahead, a little row of red lanterns stretched across the highway.
โDetour, I guess,โ Tom said. He slowed the car and stopped it, and immediately a crowd of men swarmed about the truck. They were armed with pick handles and shotguns. They wore trench helmets and some American Legion caps. One man leaned in the window, and the warm smell of whisky preceded him.
โWhere you think youโre goinโ?โ He thrust a red face near to Tomโs face.
Tom stiffened. His hand crept down to the floor and felt for the jack handle. Ma caught his arm and held it powerfully. Tom said, โWellโโ and then his voice took on a servile whine. โWeโre strangers here,โ he said. โWe heard about theyโs work in a place called Tulare.โ
โWell, goddamn it, youโre goinโ the wrong way. We ainโt gonna have no goddamn Okies in this town.โ
Tomโs shoulders and arms were rigid, and a shiver went through him. Ma clung to his arm. The front of the truck was surrounded by the armed men. Some of them, to make a military appearance, wore tunics and Sam Browne belts.
Tom whined, โWhich way is it at, mister?โ
โYou turn right around anโ head north. Anโ donโt come back till the cottonโs ready.โ
Tom shivered all over. โYes, sir,โ he said. He put the car in reverse, backed around and turned. He headed back the way he had come. Ma released his arm and patted him softly. And Tom tried to restrain his hard smothered sobbing.
โDonโ you mind,โ Ma said. โDonโ you mind.โ
Tom blew his nose out the window and wiped his eyes on his sleeve. โThe sons-of- bitchesโโโ
โYou done good,โ Ma said tenderly. โYou done jusโ good.โ
Tom swerved into a side dirt road, ran a hundred yards, and turned off his lights and motor. He got out of the car, carrying the jack handle.
โWhere you goinโ?โ Ma demanded.
โJusโ gonna look. We ainโt goinโ north.โ The red lanterns moved up the highway.
Tom watched them cross the entrance of the dirt road and continue on. In a few moments there came the sounds of shouts and screams, and then a flaring light arose from the direction of the Hooverville. The light grew and spread, and from the distance came a crackling sound. Tom got in the truck again. He turned around and ran up the dirt road without lights. At the highway he turned south again, and he turned on his lights.
Ma asked timidly, โWhere we goinโ, Tom?โ
โGoinโ south,โ he said. โWe couldnโ let them bastards push us arounโ. We couldnโ.
Try to get arounโ the town โthout goinโ through it.โ
โYeah, but where we goinโ?โ Pa spoke for the first time. โThatโs what I want ta know.โ
โGonna look for that govโment camp,โ Tom said. โA fella said they donโ let no deputies in there. MaโI got to get away from โem. Iโm scairt Iโll kill one.โ
โEasy, Tom.โ Ma soothed him. โEasy, Tommy. You done good once. You can do it again.โ
โYeah, anโ after a while I wonโt have no decency lefโ.โ
โEasy,โ she said. โYou got to have patience. Why, Tomโus people will go on livinโ when all them people is gone. Why, Tom, weโre the people that live. They ainโt gonna wipe us out. Why, weโre the peopleโwe go on.โ
โWe take a beatinโ all the time.โ
โI know.โ Ma chuckled. โMaybe that makes us tough. Rich fellas come up anโ they die, anโ their kids ainโt no good, anโ they die out. But, Tom, we keep a-cominโ. Donโ you fret none, Tom. A different timeโs cominโ.โ
โHow do you know?โ
โI donโ know how.โ
They entered the town and Tom turned down a side street to avoid the center. By the street lights he looked at his mother. Her face was quiet and a curious look was in her eyes, eyes like the timeless eyes of a statue. Tom put out his right hand and touched her on the shoulder. He had to. And then he withdrew his hand. โNever heard you talk so much in my life,โ he said.
โWasnโt never so much reason,โ she said.
He drove through the side streets and cleared the town, and then he crossed back. At an intersection the sign said โ99.โ He turned south on it.
โWell, anyways they never shoved us north,โ he said. โWe still go where we want, even if we got to crawl for the right.โ
The dim lights felt along the broad black highway ahead.