Chapter Twenty-Two
It was late when Tom Joad drove along a country road looking for the Weedpatch camp. There were few lights in the countryside. Only a sky glare behind showed the direction of Bakersfield. The truck jiggled slowly along and hunting cats left the road ahead of it. At a crossroad there was a little cluster of white wooden buildings.
Ma was sleeping in the seat and Pa had been silent and withdrawn for a long time.
Tom said, โI donโ know where she is. Maybe weโll wait till daylight anโ ast somebody.โ He stopped at a boulevard signal and another car stopped at the crossing.
Tom leaned out. โHey, mister. Know where the big camp is at?โ
โStraight ahead.โ
Tom pulled across into the opposite road. A few hundred yards, and then he stopped.
A high wire fence faced the road, and a wide-gated driveway turned in. A little way inside the gate there was a small house with a light in the window. Tom turned in. The whole truck leaped into the air and crashed down again.
โJesus!โ Tom said. โI didnโ even see that hump.โ
A watchman stood up from the porch and walked to the car. He leaned on the side.
โYou hit her too fast,โ he said. โNext time youโll take it easy.โ
โWhat is it, for Godโs sake?โ
The watchman laughed. โWell, a lot of kids play in here. You tell folks to go slow and theyโre liable to forget. But let โem hit that hump once and they donโt forget.โ
โOh! Yeah. Hope I didnโ break nothinโ. Sayโyou got any room here for us?โ
โGot one camp. How many of you?โ
Tom counted on his fingers. โMe anโ Pa anโ Ma, Al anโ Rosasharn anโ Uncle John anโ Ruthie anโ Winfielโ. Them last is kids.โ
โWell, I guess we can fix you. Got any camping stuff?โ
โGot a big tarp anโ beds.โ
The watchman stepped up on the running board. โDrive down the end of that line anโ turn right. Youโll be in Number Four Sanitary Unit.โ
โWhatโs that?โ
โToilets and showers and wash tubs.โ
Ma demanded, โYou got wash tubsโrunning water?โ
โSure.โ
โOh! Praise God,โ said Ma.
Tom drove down the long dark row of tents. In the sanitary building a low light burned. โPull in here,โ the watchman said. โItโs a nice place. Folks that had it just moved
out.โ
Tom stopped the car. โRight there?โ
โYeah. Now you let the others unload while I sign you up. Get to sleep. The camp committeeโll call on you in the morning and get you fixed up.โ
Tomโs eyes drew down. โCops?โ he asked.
The watchman laughed. โNo cops. We got our own cops. Folks here elect their own cops. Come along.โ
Al dropped off the truck and walked around. โGonna stay here?โ
โYeah,โ said Tom. โYou anโ Pa unload while I go to the office.โ
โBe kinda quiet,โ the watchman said. โTheyโs a lot of folks sleeping.โ
Tom followed through the dark and climbed the office steps and entered a tiny room containing an old desk and a chair. The guard sat down at the desk and took out a form.
โName?โ
โTom Joad.โ
โThat your father?โ
โYeah.โ
โHis name?โ
โTom Joad, too.โ
The questions went on. Where from, how long in the State, what work done. The watchman looked up. โIโm not nosy. We got to have this stuff.โ
โSure,โ said Tom.
โNowโgot any money?โ
โLittle bit.โ
โYou ainโt destitute?โ
โGot a little. Why?โ
โWell, the camp site costs a dollar a week, but you can work it out, carrying garbage, keeping the camp cleanโstuff like that.โ
โWeโll work it out,โ said Tom.
โYouโll see the committee tomorrow. Theyโll show you how to use the camp and tell you the rules.โ
Tom said, โSayโwhat is this? What committee is this, anyways?โ
The watchman settled himself back. โWorks pretty nice. Thereโs five sanitary units.
Each one elects a Central Committee man. Now that committee makes the laws. What
they say goes.โ
โSโpose they get tough,โ Tom said.
โWell, you can vote โem out jusโ as quick as you vote โem in. Theyโve done a fine job. Tell you what they didโyou know the Holy Roller preachers all the time follow the people around, preachinโ anโ takinโ up collections? Well, they wanted to preach in this camp. And a lot of the older folks wanted them. So it was up to the Central Committee.
They went into meeting and hereโs how they fixed it. They say, โAny preacher can preach in this camp. Nobody can take up a collection in this camp.โ And it was kinda sad for the old folks, โcause there hasnโt been a preacher in since.โ
Tom laughed and then he asked, โYou mean to say the fellas that runs the camp is
jusโ fellasโcampinโ here?โ
โSure. And it works.โ
โYou said about copsโโโ
โCentral Committee keeps order anโ makes rules. Then thereโs the ladies. Theyโll call on your ma. They keep care of kids anโ look after the sanitary units. If your ma isnโt working, sheโll look after kids for the ones that is working, anโ when she gets a jobโ why, thereโll be others. They sew, and a nurse comes out anโ teaches โem. All kinds of
things like that.โ
โYou mean to say they ainโt no cops?โ
โNo, sir. No cop can come in here without a warrant.โ
โWell, sโpose a fella is jusโ mean, or drunk anโ quarrelsome. What then?โ
The watchman stabbed the blotter with a pencil. โWell, the first time the Central Committee warns him. And the second time they really warn him. The third time they kick him out of the camp.โ
โGod Almighty, I canโt hardly believe it! Tonight the deputies anโ them fellas with the little caps, they burned the camp out by the river.โ
โThey donโt get in here,โ the watchman said. โSome nights the boys patrol the fences,
โspecially dance nights.โ
โDance nights? Jesus Christ!โ
โWe got the best dances in the county every Saturday night.โ
โWell, for Christโs sake! Why ainโt they more places like this?โ
The watchman looked sullen. โYouโll have to find that out yourself. Go get some sleep.โ
โGood night,โ said Tom. โMaโs gonna like this place. She ainโt been treated decent for a long time.โ
โGood night,โ the watchman said. โGet some sleep. This camp wakes up early.โ
Tom walked down the street between the rows of tents. His eyes grew used to the starlight. He saw that the rows were straight and that there was no litter about the tents.
The ground of the street had been swept and sprinkled. From the tents came the snores of
sleeping people. The whole camp buzzed and snorted. Tom walked slowly. He neared Number Four Sanitary Unit and he looked at it curiously, an unpainted building, low and rough. Under a roof, but open at the sides, the rows of wash trays. He saw the Joad truck standing near by, and went quietly toward it. The tarpaulin was pitched and the camp was quiet. As he drew near a figure moved from the shadow of the truck and came toward
him.
Ma said softly, โThat you, Tom?โ
โYeah.โ
โSh!โ she said. โTheyโre all asleep. They was tarโd out.โ
โYou ought to be asleep too,โ Tom said.
โWell, I wanted to see ya. Is it awright?โ
โItโs nice,โ Tom said. โI ainโt gonna tell ya. Theyโll tell ya in the morninโ. Ya gonna like it.โ
She whispered, โI heard they got hot water.โ
โYeah. Now you get to sleep. I donโ know when you slepโ lasโ.โ
She begged, โWhat ainโt you a-gonna tell me?โ
โI ainโt. You get to sleep.โ
Suddenly she seemed girlish. โHow can I sleep if I got to think about what you ainโt gonna tell me?โ
โNo, you donโt,โ Tom said. โFirst thing in the morninโ you get on your other dress anโ thenโyouโll find out.โ
โI canโt sleep with nothinโ like that hanginโ over me.โ
โYou got to,โ Tom chuckled happily. โYou jusโ got to.โ
โGood night,โ she said softly; and she bent down and slipped under the dark tarpaulin.
Tom climbed up over the tail-board of the truck. He lay down on his back on the wooden floor and he pillowed his head on his crossed hands, and his forearms pressed against his ears. The night grew cooler. Tom buttoned his coat over his chest and settled back again. The stars were clear and sharp over his head.
I
t was still dark when he awakened. A small clashing noise brought him up
from sleep. Tom listened and heard again the squeak of iron on iron. He moved
stiffly and shivered in the morning air. The camp still slept. Tom stood up and
looked over the side of the truck. The eastern mountains were blue-black, and as he watched, the light stood up faintly behind them, colored at the mountain rims with a washed red, then growing colder, grayer, darker, as it went up overhead, until at a place near the western horizon it merged with pure night. Down in the valley the earth was the lavender-gray of dawn.
The clash of iron sounded again. Tom looked down the line of tents, only a little lighter gray than the ground. Beside a tent he saw a flash of orange fire seeping from the cracks in an old iron stove. Gray smoke spurted up from a stubby smoke-pipe.
Tom climbed over the truck side and dropped to the ground. He moved slowly toward the stove. He saw a girl working about the stove, saw that she carried a baby on her crooked arm, and that the baby was nursing, its head up under the girlโs shirtwaist. And the girl moved about, poking the fire, shifting the rusty stove lids to make a better draft, opening the oven door; and all the time the baby sucked, and the mother shifted it deftly from arm to arm. The baby didnโt interfere with her work or with the quick gracefulness of her movements. And the orange fire licked out of the stove cracks and threw flickering reflections on the tent.
Tom moved closer. He smelled frying bacon and baking bread. From the east the light grew swiftly. Tom came near to the stove and stretched out his hands to it. The girl looked at him and nodded, so that her two braids jerked.
โGood morninโ,โ she said, and she turned the bacon in the pan.
The tent flap jerked up and a young man came out and an older man followed him.
They were dressed in new blue dungarees and in dungaree coats, stiff with filler, the brass buttons shining. They were sharp-faced men, and they looked much alike. The younger man had a dark stubble beard and the older man a white stubble beard. Their heads and faces were wet, their hair dripped, water stood in drops on their stiff beards.
Their cheeks shone with dampness. Together they stood looking quietly into the lightening east. They yawned together and watched the light on the hill rims. And then they turned and saw Tom.
โMorninโ,โ the older man said, and his face was neither friendly nor unfriendly.
โMorninโ,โ said Tom.
And, โMorninโ,โ said the younger man.
The water slowly dried on their faces. They came to the stove and warmed their hands at it.
The girl kept to her work. Once she set the baby down and tied her braids together in back with a string, and the two braids jerked and swung as she worked. She set tin cups on a big packing box, set tin plates and knives and forks out. Then she scooped bacon from the deep grease and laid it on a tin platter, and the bacon cricked and rustled as it grew crisp. She opened the rusty oven door and took out a square pan full of big high biscuits.
When the smell of the biscuits struck the air both of the men inhaled deeply. The younger said, โKee-rist!โ softly.
Now the older man said to Tom, โHad your breakfast?โ
โWell, no, I ainโt. But my folks is over there. They ainโt up. Need the sleep.โ
โWell, set down with us, then. We got plentyโthank God!โ
โWhy, thank ya,โ Tom said. โSmells so dam good I couldnโ say no.โ
โDonโt she?โ the younger man asked. โEver smell anything so good in ya life?โ They marched to the packing box and squatted around it.
โWorkinโ around here?โ the young man asked.
โAim to,โ said Tom. โWe jusโ got in lasโ night. Ainโt had no chance to look arounโ.โ
โWe had twelve daysโ work,โ the young man said.
The girl, working by the stove, said, โThey even got new clothes.โ Both men looked down at their stiff blue clothes, and they smiled a little shyly. The girl set out the platter of bacon and the brown, high biscuits and a bowl of bacon gravy and a pot of coffee, and then she squatted down by the box too. The baby still nursed, its head up under the girlโs shirtwaist.
They filled their plates, poured bacon gravy over the biscuits, and sugared their coffee.
The older man filled his mouth full, and he chewed and chewed and gulped and swallowed. โGod Almighty, itโs good!โ he said, and he filled his mouth again.
The younger man said, โWe been eatinโ good for twelve days now. Never missed a meal in twelve daysโnone of us. Workinโ anโ gettinโ our pay anโ eatinโ.โ He fell to again, almost frantically, and refilled his plate. They drank the scalding coffee and threw the grounds to the earth and filled their cups again.
There was color in the light now, a reddish gleam. The father and son stopped eating.
They were facing to the east and their faces were lighted by the dawn. The image of the mountain and the light coming over it were reflected in their eyes. And then they threw the grounds from their cups to the earth, and they stood up together.
โGot to git goinโ,โ the older man said.
The younger turned to Tom. โLookie,โ he said. โWeโre layinโ some pipe. โF you want to walk over with us, maybe we could get you on.โ
Tom said, โWell, thatโs mighty nice of you. Anโ I sure thank ya for the breakfast.โ
โGlad to have you,โ the older man said. โWeโll try to git you workinโ if you want.โ
โYa goddamn right I want,โ Tom said. โJusโ wait a minute. Iโll tell my folks.โ He hurried to the Joad tent and bent over and looked inside. In the gloom under the tarpaulin he saw the lumps of sleeping figures. But a little movement started among the bedclothes. Ruthie came wriggling out like a snake, her hair down over her eyes and her dress wrinkled and twisted. She crawled carefully out and stood up. Her gray eyes were clear and calm from sleep, and mischief was not in them. Tom moved off from the tent and beckoned her to follow, and when he turned, she looked up at him.
โLord God, youโre growinโ up,โ he said.
She looked away in sudden embarrassment. โListen here,โ Tom said. โDonโt you wake nobody up, but when they get up, you tell โem I got a chancet at a job, anโ Iโm a- goinโ for it. Tell Ma I et breakfasโ with some neighbors. You hear that?โ
Ruthie nodded and turned her head away, and her eyes were little girlโs eyes. โDonโt you wake โem up,โ Tom cautioned. He hurried back to his new friends. And Ruthie
cautiously approached the sanitary unit and peeked in the open doorway.
The two men were waiting when Tom came back. The young woman had dragged a mattress out and put the baby on it while she cleaned up the dishes.
Tom said, โI wanted to tell my folks where-at I was. They wasnโt awake.โ The three walked down the street between the tents.
The camp had begun to come to life. At the new fires the women worked, slicing meat, kneading the dough for the morningโs bread. And the men were stirring about the tents and about the automobiles. The sky was rosy now. In front of the office a lean old man raked the ground carefully. He so dragged his rake that the tine marks were straight and deep.
โYouโre out early, Pa,โ the young man said as they went by.
โYep, yep. Got to make up my rent.โ
โRent, hell!โ the young man said. โHe was drunk last Satโdy night. Sung in his tent all night. Committee give him work for it.โ They walked along the edge of the oiled road; a row of walnut trees grew beside the way. The sun shoved its edge over the mountains.
Tom said, โSeems funny. Iโve et your food, anโ I ainโt tolโ you my nameโnor you ainโt mentioned yours. Iโm Tom Joad.โ
The older man looked at him, and then he smiled a little. โYou ainโt been out here
long?โ
โHell, no! Jusโ a couple days.โ
โI knowed it. Funny, you git outa the habit a mentioninโ your name. Theyโs so goddamn many. Jist fellas. Well, sirโIโm Timothy Wallace, anโ this hereโs my boy Wilkie.โ
โProud to know ya,โ Tom said. โYou been out here long?โ
โTen months,โ Wilkie said. โGot here right on the tail a the floods lasโ year. Jesus!
We had a time, a time! Goddamn near starveโ to death.โ Their feet rattled on the oiled road. A truckload of men went by, and each man was sunk into himself. Each man braced himself in the truck bed and scowled down.
โGoinโ out for the Gas Company,โ Timothy said. โThey got a nice job of it.โ
โI could of took our truck,โ Tom suggested.
โNo.โ Timothy leaned down and picked up a green walnut. He tested it with his thumb and then shied it at a blackbird sitting on a fence wire. The bird flew up, let the nut sail under it, and then settled back on the wire and smoothed its shining black
feathers with its beak.
Tom asked, โAinโt you got no car?โ
Both Wallaces were silent, and Tom, looking at their faces, saw that they were ashamed.
Wilkie said, โPlace we work at is onโy a mile up the road.โ
Timothy said angrily, โNo, we ainโt got no car. We solโ our car. Had to. Run outa food, run outa everโthing. Couldnโ git no job. Fellas come arounโ everโ week, buyinโ cars. Come arounโ, anโ if youโre hungry, why, theyโll buy your car. Anโ if youโre hungry enough, they donโt hafta pay nothinโ for it. Anโโwe was hungry enough. Give us ten dollars for her.โ He spat into the road.
Wilkie said quietly, โI was in Bakersfielโ lasโ week. I seen herโa-settinโ in a useโ-car lotโsettinโ right there, anโ seventy-five dollars was the sign on her.โ
โWe had to,โ Timothy said. โIt was either us let โem steal our car or us steal somepin from them. We ainโt had to steal yet, but, goddamn it, we been close!โ
Tom said, โYou know, โfore we lefโ home, we heard they was plenty work out here.
Seen hanโbills askinโ folks to come out.โ
โYeah,โ Timothy said. โWe seen โem too. Anโ they ainโt much work. Anโ wages is cominโ down all a time. I git so goddamn tired jusโ figgerinโ how to eat.โ
โYou got work now,โ Tom suggested.
โYeah, but it ainโt gonna lasโ long. Workinโ for a nice fella. Got a little place. Works โlongside of us. But, hellโit ainโt gonna lasโ no time.โ
Tom said, โWhy in hell you gonna git me on? Iโll make it shorter. What you cuttinโ your own throat for?โ
Timothy shook his head slowly. โI dunno. Got no sense, I guess. We figgered to get us each a hat. Canโt do it, I guess. Thereโs the place, off to the right there. Nice job, too.
Gettinโ thirty cents an hour. Nice frienโly fella to work for.โ
They turned off the highway and walked down a graveled road, through a small kitchen orchard; and behind the trees they came to a small white farm house, a few shade trees, and a barn; behind the barn a vineyard and a field of cotton. As the three men walked past the house a screen door banged, and a stocky sunburned man came down the back steps. He wore a paper sun helmet, and he rolled up his sleeves as he came across the yard. His heavy sunburned eyebrows were drawn down in a scowl. His cheeks were
sunburned a beef red.
โMorninโ, Mr. Thomas,โ Timothy said.
โMorning.โ The man spoke irritably.
Timothy said, โThis hereโs Tom Joad. We wondered if you could see your way to put him on?โ
Thomas scowled at Tom. And then he laughed shortly, and his brows still scowled.
โOh, sure! Iโll put him on. Iโll put everybody on. Maybe Iโll get a hundred men on.โ
โWe jusโ thoughtโโ Timothy began apologetically.
Thomas interrupted him. โYes, I been thinkinโ too.โ He swung around and faced them. โIโve got some things to tell you. I been paying you thirty cents an hourโthat
right?โ
โWhy, sure, Mr. Thomasโbutโโโ
โAnd I been getting thirty centsโ worth of work.โ His heavy hard hands clasped each
other.
โWe try to give a good day of work.โ
โWell, goddamn it, this morning youโre getting twenty-five cents an hour, and you take it or leave it.โ The redness of his face deepened with anger.
Timothy said, โWeโve give you good work. You said so yourself.โ
โI know it. But it seems like I ainโt hiring my own men any more.โ He swallowed.
โLook,โ he said. โI got sixty-five acres here. Did you ever hear of the Farmersโ
Association?โ
โWhy, sure.โ
โWell, I belong to it. We had a meeting last night. Now, do you know who runs the Farmersโ Association? Iโll tell you. The Bank of the West. That bank owns most of this valley, and itโs got paper on everything it donโt own. So last night the member from the bank told me, he said, โYouโre paying thirty cents an hour. Youโd better cut it down to twenty-five.โ I said, โIโve got good men. Theyโre worth thirty.โ And he says, โIt isnโt that,โ he says. โThe wage is twenty-five now. If you pay thirty, itโll only cause unrest.
And by the way,โ he says, โyou going to need the usual amount for a crop loan next year?โ โ Thomas stopped. His breath was panting through his lips. โYou see? The rate is twenty-five centsโand like it.โ
โWe done good work,โ Timothy said helplessly.
โAinโt you got it yet? Mr. Bank hires two thousand men anโ I hire three. Iโve got paper to meet. Now if you can figure some way out, by Christ, Iโll take it! They got me.โ
Timothy shook his head. โI donโ know what to say.โ
โYou wait here.โ Thomas walked quickly to the house. The door slammed after him.
In a moment he was back, and he carried a newspaper in his hand. โDid you see this?
Here, Iโll read it: โCitizens, angered at red agitators, burn squattersโ camp. Last night a band of citizens, infuriated at the agitation going on in a local squattersโ camp, burned the tents to the ground and warned agitators to get out of the county.โ โ
Tom began, โWhy, Iโโ and then he closed his mouth and was silent.
Thomas folded the paper carefully and put it in his pocket. He had himself in control again. He said quietly, โThose men were sent out by the Association. Now Iโm giving โem away. And if they ever find out I told, I wonโt have a farm next year.โ
โI jusโ donโt know what to say,โ Timothy said. โIf they was agitators, I can see why they was mad.โ
Thomas said, โI watched it a long time. Thereโs always red agitators just before a pay cut. Always. Goddamn it, they got me trapped. Now, what are you going to do? Twenty- five cents?โ
Timothy looked at the ground. โIโll work,โ he said.
โMe too,โ said Wilkie.
Tom said, โSeems like I walked into somepin. Sure, Iโll work. I got to work.โ
Thomas pulled a bandanna out of his hip pocket and wiped his mouth and chin. โI donโt know how long it can go on. I donโt know how you men can feed a family on what you get now.โ
โWe can while we work,โ Wilkie said. โItโs when we donโt git work.โ
Thomas looked at his watch. โWell, letโs go out and dig some ditch. By God,โ he said, โIโm a-gonna tell you. You fellas live in that government camp, donโt you?โ
Timothy stiffened. โYes, sir.โ
โAnd you have dances every Saturday night?โ
Wilkie smiled. โWe sure do.โ
โWell, look out next Saturday night.โ
Suddenly Timothy straightened. He stepped close. โWhat you mean? I belong to the Central Committee. I got to know.โ
Thomas looked apprehensive. โDonโt you ever tell I told.โ
โWhat is it?โ Timothy demanded.
โWell, the Association donโt like the government camps. Canโt get a deputy in there.
The people make their own laws, I hear, and you canโt arrest a man without a warrant.
Now if there was a big fight and maybe shootingโa bunch of deputies could go in and clean out the camp.โ
Timothy had changed. His shoulders were straight and his eyes cold. โWhat you mean?โ
โDonโt you ever tell where you heard,โ Thomas said uneasily. โThereโs going to be a fight in the camp Saturday night. And thereโs going to be deputies ready to go in.โ
Tom demanded, โWhy, for Godโs sake? Those folks ainโt bothering nobody.โ
โIโll tell you why,โ Thomas said. โThose folks in the camp are getting used to being treated like humans. When they go back to the squattersโ camps theyโll be hard to handle.โ He wiped his face again. โGo on out to work now. Jesus, I hope I havenโt talked myself out of my farm. But I like you people.โ
Timothy stepped in front of him and put out a hard lean hand, and Thomas took it.
โNobody wonโt know who tolโ. We thank you. They wonโt be no fight.โ
โGo on to work,โ Thomas said. โAnd itโs twenty-five cents an hour.โ
โWeโll take it,โ Wilkie said, โfrom you.โ
Thomas walked away toward the house. โIโll be out in a piece,โ he said. โYou men get to work.โ The screen door slammed behind him.
The three men walked out past the little white-washed barn, and along a field edge.
They came to a long narrow ditch with sections of concrete pipe lying beside it.
โHereโs where weโre a-workinโ,โ Wilkie said.
His father opened the barn and passed out two picks and three shovels. And he said to Tom, โHereโs your beauty.โ
Tom hefted the pick. โJumping Jesus! If she donโt feel good!โ
โWaitโll about โleven oโclock,โ Wilkie suggested. โSee how good she feels then.โ
They walked to the end of the ditch. Tom took off his coat and dropped it on the dirt pile. He pushed up his cap and stepped into the ditch. Then he spat on his hands. The pick arose into the air and flashed down. Tom grunted softly. The pick rose and fell, and the grunt came at the moment it sank into the ground and loosened the soil.
Wilkie said, โYes, sir, Pa, we got here a first-grade muck-stick man. This here boy been married to that there little digger.โ
Tom said, โI put in time (umph). Yes, sir, I sure did (umph). Put in my years (umph!).
Kinda like the feel (umph!).โ The soil loosened ahead of him. The sun cleared the fruit trees now and the grape leaves were golden green on the vines. Six feet along and Tom stepped aside and wiped his forehead. Wilkie came behind him. The shovel rose and fell and the dirt flew out to the pile beside the lengthening ditch.
โI heard about this here Central Committee,โ said Tom. โSo youโre one of โem.โ
โYes, sir,โ Timothy replied. โAnd itโs a responsibility. All them people. Weโre doinโ our best. Anโ the people in the camp a-doinโ their best. I wisht them big farmers wouldnโ plague us so. I wisht they wouldnโ.โ
Tom climbed back into the ditch and Wilkie stood aside. Tom said, โHow โbout this fight (umph!) at the dance, he tolโ about (umph)? What they wanta do that for?โ
Timothy followed behind Wilkie, and Timothyโs shovel beveled the bottom of the ditch and smoothed it ready for the pipe. โSeems like they got to drive us,โ Timothy said.
โTheyโre scairt weโll organize, I guess. Anโ maybe theyโre right. This here camp is a organization. People there look out for theirselves. Got the nicest strang band in these parts. Got a little charge account in the store for folks thatโs hungry. Fiโ dollarsโyou can git that much food anโ the campโll stanโ good. We ainโt never had no trouble with the law.
I guess the big farmers is scairt of that. Canโt throw us in jailโwhy, it scares โem. Figger maybe if we can goveโn ourselves, maybe weโll do other things.โ
Tom stepped clear of the ditch and wiped the sweat out of his eyes. โYou hear what that paper said โbout agitators up north a Bakersfielโ?โ
โSure,โ said Wilkie. โThey do that all a time.โ
โWell, I was there. They wasnโt no agitators. What they call reds. What the hell is these reds anyways?โ
Timothy scraped a little hill level in the bottom of the ditch. The sun made his white bristle beard shine. โTheyโs a lot a fellas wanta know what reds is.โ He laughed. โOne of our boys founโ out.โ He patted the piled earth gently with his shovel. โFella named Hines โgot โbout thirty thousanโ acres, peaches and grapesโgot a cannery anโ a winery. Well, heโs all a time talkinโ about โthem goddamn reds.โ โGoddamn reds is drivinโ the country to ruin,โ he says, anโ โWe got to drive these here red bastards out.โ Well, they were a young fella jusโ come out west here, anโ heโs listeninโ one day. He kinda scratched his head anโ he says, โMr. Hines, I ainโt been here long. What is these goddamn reds?โ Well, sir, Hines says, โA red is any son-of-a-bitch that wants thirty cents an hour when weโre payinโ twenty-five!โ Well, this young fella he thinks about her, anโ he scratches his head,
anโ he says, โWell, Jesus, Mr. Hines. I ainโt a son-of-a-bitch, but if thatโs what a red isโ why, I want thirty cents an hour. Everโbody does. Hell, Mr. Hines, weโre all reds.โ โ
Timothy drove his shovel along the ditch bottom, and the solid earth shone where the shovel cut it.
Tom laughed. โMe too, I guess.โ His pick arced up and drove down, and the earth cracked under it. The sweat rolled down his forehead and down the sides of his nose, and it glistened on his neck. โDamn it,โ he said, โa pick is a nice tool (umph), if you donโ fight it (umph). You anโ the pick (umph) workinโ together (umph).โ
In line, the three men worked, and the ditch inched along, and the sun shone hotly down on them in the growing morning.
W
hen Tom left her, Ruthie gazed in at the door of the sanitary unit for a
while. Her courage was not strong without Winfield to boast for. She put a
bare foot in on the concrete floor, and then withdrew it. Down the line a
woman came out of a tent and started a fire in a tin camp stove. Ruthie took a few steps in that direction, but she could not leave. She crept to the entrance of the Joad tent and looked in. On one side, lying on the ground, lay Uncle John, his mouth open and his snores bubbling spittily in his throat. Ma and Pa were covered with a comfort, their heads in, away from the light. Al was on the far side from Uncle John, and his arm was flung over his eyes. Near the front of the tent Rose of Sharon and Winfield lay, and there was the space where Ruthie had been, beside Winfield. She squatted down and peered in. Her eyes remained on Winfieldโs tow head; and as she looked, the little boy opened his eyes and stared out at her, and his eyes were solemn. Ruthie put her finger to her lips and beckoned with her other hand. Winfield rolled his eyes over to Rose of Sharon. Her pink flushed face was near to him, and her mouth was open a little.
Winfield carefully loosened the blanket and slipped out. He crept out of the tent cautiously and joined Ruthie. โHow long you been up?โ he whispered.
She led him away with elaborate caution, and when they were safe, she said, โI never been to bed. I was up all night.โ
โYou was not,โ Winfield said. โYouโre a dirty liar.โ
โAwright,โ she said. โIf Iโm a liar I ainโt gonna tell you nothinโ that happened. I ainโt gonna tell how the fella got killed with a stab knife anโ how they was a bear come in anโ took off a little chile.โ
โThey wasnโt no bear,โ Winfield said uneasily. He brushed up his hair with his fingers and he pulled down his overalls at the crotch.
โAll rightโthey wasnโt no bear,โ she said sarcastically. โAnโ they ainโt no white things made outa dish-stuff, like in the catalogues.โ
Winfield regarded her gravely. He pointed to the sanitary unit. โIn there?โ he asked.
โIโm a dirty liar,โ Ruthie said. โIt ainโt gonna do me no good to tell stuff to you.โ
โLeโs go look,โ Winfield said.
โI already been,โ Ruthie said. โI already set on โem. I even peeโd in one.โ
โYou never neither,โ said Winfield.
They went to the unit building, and that time Ruthie was not afraid. Boldly she led the way into the building. The toilets lined one side of the large room, and each toilet had its compartment with a door in front of it. The porcelain was gleaming white. Hand basins lined another wall, while on the third wall were four shower compartments.
โThere,โ said Ruthie. โThemโs the toilets. I seen โem in the catalogue.โ The children drew near to one of the toilets. Ruthie, in a burst of bravado, boosted her skirt and sat down. โI tolโ you I been here,โ she said. And to prove it, there was a tinkle of water in the bowl.
Winfield was embarrassed. His hand twisted the flushing lever. There was a roar of water. Ruthie leaped into the air and jumped away. She and Winfield stood in the middle of the room and looked at the toilet. The hiss of water continued in it.
โYou done it,โ Ruthie said. โYou went anโ broke it. I seen you.โ
โI never. Honest I never.โ
โI seen you,โ Ruthie said. โYou jusโ ainโt to be trusted with no nice stuff.โ
Winfield sunk his chin. He looked up at Ruthie and his eyes filled with tears. His chin quivered. And Ruthie was instantly contrite.
โNever you mind,โ she said. โI wonโt tell on you. Weโll pretend like she was already broke. Weโll pretend we ainโt even been in here.โ She led him out of the building.
The sun lipped over the mountain by now, shone on the corrugated-iron roofs of the five sanitary units, shone on the gray tents and on the swept ground of the streets between the tents. And the camp was waking up. The fires were burning in camp stoves, in the stoves made of kerosene cans and of sheets of metal. The smell of smoke was in the air. Tent flaps were thrown back and people moved about in the streets. In front of the Joad tent Ma stood looking up and down the street. She saw the children and came over to them.
โI was worryinโ,โ Ma said. โI didnโ know where you was.โ
โWe was jusโ lookinโ,โ Ruthie said.
โWell, whereโs Tom? You seen him?โ
Ruthie became important. โYes, maโam. Tom, he got me up anโ he tolโ me what to tell you.โ She paused to let her importance be apparent.
โWellโwhat?โ Ma demanded.
โHe said tell youโโ She paused again and looked to see that Winfield appreciated her position.
Ma raised her hand, the back of it toward Ruthie. โWhat?โ
โHe got work,โ said Ruthie quickly. โWent out to work.โ She looked apprehensively at Maโs raised hand. The hand sank down again, and then it reached out for Ruthie. Ma embraced Ruthieโs shoulders in a quick convulsive hug, and then released her.
Ruthie stared at the ground in embarrassment, and changed the subject. โThey got toilets over there,โ she said. โWhite ones.โ
โYou been in there?โ Ma demanded.
โMe anโ Winfielโ,โ she said; and then, treacherously, โWinfielโ, he bust a toilet.โ
Winfield turned red. He glared at Ruthie. โShe peeโd in one,โ he said viciously.
Ma was apprehensive. โNow what did you do? You show me.โ She forced them to the door and inside. โNow whatโd you do?โ
Ruthie pointed. โIt was a-hissinโ and a-swishinโ. Stopped now.โ
โShow me what you done,โ Ma demanded.
Winfield went reluctantly to the toilet. โI didnโ push it hard,โ he said. โI jusโ had aholt of this here, anโโโ The swish of water came again. He leaped away.
Ma threw back her head and laughed, while Ruthie and Winfield regarded her resentfully. โThaโs the way she works,โ Ma said. โI seen them before. When you finish, you push that.โ
The shame of their ignorance was too great for the children. They went out the door, and they walked down the street to stare at a large family eating breakfast.
Ma watched them out of the door. And then she looked about the room. She went to the shower closets and looked in. She walked to the wash basins and ran her finger over the white porcelain. She turned the water on a little and held her finger in the stream, and jerked her hand away when the water came hot. For a moment she regarded the basin, and then, setting the plug, she filled the bowl a little from the hot faucet, a little from the cold. And then she washed her hands in the warm water, and she washed her face. She was brushing water through her hair with her fingers when a step sounded on the concrete floor behind her. Ma swung around. An elderly man stood looking at her with an expression of righteous shock.
He said harshly, โHow you come in here?โ
Ma gulped, and she felt the water dripping from her chin and soaking through her dress. โI didnโ know,โ she said apologetically. โI thought this here was for folks to use.โ
The elderly man frowned on her. โFor men folks,โ he said sternly. He walked to the door and pointed to a sign on it: MEN. โThere,โ he said. โThat proves it. Didnโ you see that?โ
โNo,โ Ma said in shame, โI never seen it. Ainโt they a place where I can go?โ
The manโs anger departed. โYou jusโ come?โ he asked more kindly.
โMiddle of the night,โ said Ma.
โThen you ainโt talked to the Committee?โ
โWhat committee?โ
โWhy, the Ladiesโ Committee.โ
โNo, I ainโt.โ
He said proudly, โThe Committeeโll call on you purty soon anโ fix you up. We take care of folks that jusโ come in. Now, if you want a ladiesโ toilet, you jusโ go on the other side of the building. That sideโs yourn.โ
Ma said uneasily, โYa say a ladiesโ committeeโcominโ to my tent?โ
He nodded his head. โPurty soon, I guess.โ
โThank ya,โ said Ma. She hurried out, and half ran to the tent.
โPa,โ she called. โJohn, git up! You, Al. Git up anโ git washed.โ Startled sleepy eyes looked out at her. โAll of you,โ Ma cried. โYou git up anโ git your face washed. Anโ comb your hair.โ
Uncle John looked pale and sick. There was a red bruised place on his chin.
Pa demanded, โWhatโs the matter?โ
โThe Committee,โ Ma cried. โTheyโs a committeeโa ladiesโ committee a-cominโ to visit. Git up now, anโ git washed. Anโ while we was a-sleepinโ anโ a-snorinโ, Tomโs went out anโ got work. Git up, now.โ
They came sleepily out of the tent. Uncle John staggered a little, and his face was pained.
โGit over to that house and wash up,โ Ma ordered. โWe got to get breakfusโ anโ be ready for the Committee.โ She went to a little pile of split wood in the camp lot. She started a fire and put up her cooking irons. โPone,โ she said to herself. โPone anโ gravy.
Thatโs quick. Got to be quick.โ She talked on to herself, and Ruthie and Winfield stood by, wondering.
The smoke of the morning fires arose all over the camp, and the mutter of talk came from all sides.
Rose of Sharon, unkempt and sleepy-eyed, crawled out of the tent. Ma turned from the cornmeal she was measuring in fistfuls. She looked at the girlโs wrinkled dirty dress, at her frizzled uncombed hair. โYou got to clean up,โ she said briskly. โGo right over and clean up. You got a clean dress. I washed it. Git your hair combed. Git the seeds out a your eyes.โ Ma was excited.
Rose of Sharon said sullenly, โI donโ feel good. I wisht Connie would come. I donโt feel like doinโ nothinโ โthout Connie.โ
Ma turned full around on her. The yellow cornmeal clung to her hands and wrists.
โRosasharn,โ she said sternly, โyou git upright. You jusโ been mopinโ enough. Theyโs a ladiesโ committee a-cominโ, anโ the fambly ainโt gonna be frawny when they get here.โ
โBut I donโ feel good.โ
Ma advanced on her, mealy hands held out. โGit,โ Ma said. โTheyโs times when how you feel got to be kepโ to yourself.โ
โIโm a-goinโ to vomit,โ Rose of Sharon whined.
โWell, go anโ vomit. โCourse youโre gonna vomit. Everโbody does. Git it over anโ then you clean up, anโ you wash your legs anโ put on them shoes of yourn.โ She turned back to her work. โAnโ braid your hair,โ she said.
A frying pan of grease sputtered over the fire, and it splashed and hissed when Ma dropped the pone in with a spoon. She mixed flour with grease in a kettle and added water and salt and stirred the gravy. The coffee began to turn over in the gallon can, and the smell of coffee rose from it.
Pa wandered back from the sanitary unit, and Ma looked critically up. Pa said, โYa say Tomโs got work?โ
โYes, sir. Went out โfore we was awake. Now look in that box anโ get you some clean overhalls anโ a shirt. Anโ, Pa, Iโm awful busy. You git in Ruthie anโ Winfielโs ears.
Theyโs hot water. Will you do that? Scrounge arounโ in their ears good, anโ their necks.
Get โem red anโ shininโ.โ
โNever seen you so bubbly,โ Pa said.
Ma cried, โThis hereโs the time the fambly got to get decent. Cominโ acrost they wasnโt no chancet. But now we can. Thโow your dirty overhalls in the tent anโ Iโll wash โem out.โ
Pa went inside the tent, and in a moment he came out with pale blue, washed overalls and shirt on. And he led the sad and startled children toward the sanitary unit.
Ma called after him, โScrounge arounโ good in their ears.โ
Uncle John came to the door of the menโs side and looked out, and then he went back and sat on the toilet a long time and held his aching head in his hands.
Ma had taken up a panload of brown pone and was dropping spoons of dough in the grease for a second pan when a shadow fell on the ground beside her. She looked over her shoulder. A little man dressed all in white stood behind herโa man with a thin, brown, lined face and merry eyes. He was lean as a picket. His white clean clothes were frayed at the seams. He smiled at Ma. โGood morning,โ he said.
Ma looked at his white clothes and her face hardened with suspicion. โMorninโ,โ she
said.
โAre you Mrs. Joad?โ
โYes.โ
โWell, Iโm Jim Rawley. Iโm camp manager. Just dropped by to see if everythingโs all right. Got everything you need?โ
Ma studied him suspiciously. โYes,โ she said.
Rawley said, โI was asleep when you came last night. Lucky we had a place for you.โ
His voice was warm.
Ma said simply, โItโs nice. โSpecially them wash tubs.โ
โYou wait till the women get to washing. Pretty soon now. You never heard such a fuss. Like a meeting. Know what they did yesterday, Mrs. Joad? They had a chorus.
Singing a hymn tune and rubbing the clothes all in time. That was something to hear, I tell you.โ
The suspicion was going out of Maโs face. โMust a been nice. Youโre the boss?โ
โNo,โ he said. โThe people here worked me out of a job. They keep the camp clean, they keep order, they do everything. I never saw such people. Theyโre making clothes in the meeting hall. And theyโre making toys. Never saw such people.โ
Ma looked down at her dirty dress. โWe ainโt clean yet,โ she said. โYou jusโ canโt keep clean a-travelinโ.โ
โDonโt I know it,โ he said. He sniffed the air. โSayโis that your coffee smells so good?โ
Ma smiled. โDoes smell nice, donโt it? Outside it always smells nice.โ And she said proudly, โWeโd take it in honor โf youโd have some breakfusโ with us.โ
He came to the fire and squatted on his hams, and the last of Maโs resistance went down. โWeโd be proud to have ya,โ she said. โWe ainโt got much thatโs nice, but youโre welcome.โ
The little man grinned at her. โI had my breakfast. But Iโd sure like a cup of that
coffee. Smells so good.โ
โWhyโwhy, sure.โ
โDonโt hurry yourself.โ
Ma poured a tin cup of coffee from the gallon can. She said, โWe ainโt got sugar yet.
Maybe weโll get some today. If you need sugar, it wonโt taste good.โ
โNever use sugar,โ he said. โSpoils the taste of good coffee.โ
โWell, I like a little sugar,โ said Ma. She looked at him suddenly and closely, to see how he had come so close so quickly. She looked for motive on his face, and found nothing but friendliness. Then she looked at the frayed seams on his white coat, and she was reassured.
He sipped the coffee. โI guess the ladiesโll be here to see you this morning.โ
โWe ainโt clean,โ Ma said. โThey shouldnโt be cominโ till we get cleaned up a little.โ
โBut they know how it is,โ the manager said. โThey came in the same way. No, sir.
The committees are good in this camp because they do know.โ He finished his coffee and stood up. โWell, I got to go on. Anything you want, why, come over to the office. Iโm there all the time. Grand coffee. Thank you.โ He put the cup on the box with the others, waved his hand, and walked down the line of tents. And Ma heard him speaking to the people as he went.
Ma put down her head and she fought with a desire to cry.
Pa came back leading the children, their eyes still wet with pain at the ear- scrounging. They were subdued and shining. The sunburned skin on Winfieldโs nose was scrubbed off. โThere,โ Pa said. โGot dirt anโ two layers a skin. Had to almost lick โem to make โem stanโ still.โ
Ma appraised them. โThey look nice,โ she said. โHeโp yaself to pone anโ gravy. We got to get stuff outa the way anโ the tent in order.โ
Pa served plates for the children and for himself. โWonder where Tom got work?โ
โI dunno.โ
โWell, if he can, we can.โ
Al came excitedly to the tent. โWhat a place!โ he said. He helped himself and poured coffee. โKnow what a fellaโs doinโ? Heโs buildinโ a house trailer. Right over there, back a them tents. Got beds anโ a stoveโeverโthing. Jusโ live in her. By God, thatโs the way to live! Right where you stopโthaโs where you live.โ
Ma said, โI ruther have a little house. Soonโs we can, I want a little house.โ
Pa said, โAlโafter weโve et, you anโ me anโ Uncle Johnโll take the truck anโ go out lookinโ for work.โ
โSure,โ said Al. โI like to get a job in a garage if theyโs any jobs. Thaโs what I really like. Anโ get me a little olโ cut-down Ford. Paint her yella anโ go a-kyoodlinโ arounโ.
Seen a purty girl down the road. Give her a big wink, too. Purty as hell, too.โ
Pa said sternly, โYou better get you some work โfore you go a-tom-cattinโ.โ
Uncle John came out of the toilet and moved slowly near. Ma frowned at him.
โYou ainโt washedโโ she began, and then she saw how sick and weak and sad he looked. โYou go on in the tent anโ lay down,โ she said. โYou ainโt well.โ
He shook his head. โNo,โ he said. โI sinned, anโ I got to take my punishment.โ He squatted down disconsolately and poured himself a cup of coffee.
Ma took the last pones from the pan. She said casually, โThe manager of the camp come anโ set anโ had a cup a coffee.โ
Pa looked over slowly. โYeah? Whatโs he want awready?โ
โJusโ come to pass the time,โ Ma said daintily. โJusโ set down anโ had coffee. Said he didnโ get good coffee so often, anโ smelt ourโn.โ
โWhatโd he want?โ Pa demanded again.
โDidnโ want nothinโ. Come to see how we was gettinโ on.โ
โI donโ believe it,โ Pa said. โHeโs probably a-snootinโ anโ a-smellinโ arounโ.โ
โHe was not!โ Ma cried angrily. โI can tell a fella thatโs snootinโ arounโ quick as the nexโ person.โ
Pa tossed his coffee grounds out of his cup.
โYou got to quit that,โ Ma said. โThis hereโs a clean place.โ
โYou see she donโt get so goddamn clean a fella canโt live in her,โ Pa said jealously.
โHurry up, Al. Weโre goinโ out lookinโ for a job.โ
Al wiped his mouth with his hand. โIโm ready,โ he said.
Pa turned to Uncle John. โYou a-cominโ?โ
โYes, Iโm a-cominโ.โ
โYou donโt look so good.โ
โI ainโt so good, but Iโm cominโ.โ
Al got in the truck. โHave to get gas,โ he said. He started the engine. Pa and Uncle John climbed in beside him and the truck moved away down the street.
Ma watched them go. And then she took a bucket and went to the wash trays under the open part of the sanitary unit. She filled her bucket with hot water and carried it back to her camp. And she was washing the dishes in the bucket when Rose of Sharon came back.
โI put your stuff on a plate,โ Ma said. And then she looked closely at the girl. Her hair was dripping and combed, and her skin was bright and pink. She had put on the blue dress printed with little white flowers. On her feet she wore the heeled slippers of her wedding. She blushed under Maโs gaze. โYou had a bath,โ Ma said.
Rose of Sharon spoke huskily. โI was in there when a lady come in anโ done it. Know what you do? You get in a little stall-like, anโ you turn handles, anโ water comes a- floodinโ down on youโhot water or colโ water, jusโ like you want itโanโ I done it!โ
โIโm a-goinโ to myself,โ Ma cried. โJusโ soon as I get finishโ here. You show me how.โ
โIโm a-gonna do it everโ day,โ the girl said. โAnโ that ladyโshe seen me, anโ she seen about the baby, anโโknow what she said? Said theyโs a nurse comes everโ week.
Anโ Iโm to go see that nurse anโ sheโll tell me jusโ what to do soโs the babyโll be strong.
Says all the ladies here do that. Anโ Iโm a-gonna do it.โ The words bubbled out. โAnโโ know whatโ? Lasโ week they was a baby borned anโ the whole camp give a party, anโ they give clothes, anโ they give stuff for the babyโeven give a baby buggyโwicker one.
Wasnโt new, but they give it a coat a pink paint, anโ it was jusโ like new. Anโ they give the baby a name, anโ had a cake. Oh, Lord!โ She subsided, breathing heavily.
Ma said, โPraise God, we come home to our own people. Iโm a-gonna have a bath.โ
โOh, itโs nice,โ the girl said.
Ma wiped the tin dishes and stacked them. She said, โWeโre Joads. We donโt look up to nobody. Grampaโs grampa, he fit in the Revolution. We was farm people till the debt.
And thenโthem people. They done somepin to us. Everโ time they come seemed like they was a-whippinโ meโall of us. Anโ in Needles, that police. He done somepin to me, made me feel mean. Made me feel ashamed. Anโ now I ainโt ashamed. These folks is our folksโis our folks. Anโ that manager, he come anโ set anโ drank coffee, anโ he says, โMrs. Joadโ this, anโ โMrs. Joadโ thatโanโ โHow you gettinโ on, Mrs. Joad?โ โ She stopped and sighed. โWhy, I feel like people again.โ She stacked the last dish. She went into the tent and dug through the clothes box for her shoes and a clean dress. And she found a little paper package with her earrings in it. As she went past Rose of Sharon, she said, โIf them ladies comes, you tell โem Iโll be right back.โ She disappeared around the side of the sanitary unit.
Rose of Sharon sat down heavily on a box and regarded her wedding shoes, black patent leather and tailored black bows. She wiped the toes with her finger and wiped her finger on the inside of her skirt. Leaning down put a pressure on her growing abdomen.
She sat up straight and touched herself with exploring fingers, and she smiled a little as she did it.
Along the road a stocky woman walked, carrying an apple box of dirty clothes toward the wash tubs. Her face was brown with sun, and her eyes were black and intense.
She wore a great apron, made from a cotton bag, over her gingham dress, and menโs brown oxfords were on her feet. She saw that Rose of Sharon caressed herself, and she saw the little smile on the girlโs face.
โSo!โ she cried, and she laughed with pleasure. โWhat you think itโs gonna be?โ
Rose of Sharon blushed and looked down at the ground, and then peeked up, and the little shiny black eyes of the woman took her in. โI donโ know,โ she mumbled.
The woman plopped the apple box on the ground. โGot a live tumor,โ she said, and she cackled like a happy hen. โWhichโd you ruther?โ she demanded.
โI dunnoโboy, I guess. Sureโboy.โ
โYou jusโ come in, didnโ ya?โ
โLasโ nightโlate.โ
โGonna stay?โ
โI donโ know. โF we can get work, guess we will.โ
A shadow crossed the womanโs face, and the little black eyes grew fierce. โ โF you can git work. Thatโs what we all say.โ
โMy brother got a job already this morninโ.โ
โDid, huh? Maybe youโre lucky. Look out for luck. You canโt trusโ luck.โ She stepped close. โYou can only git one kind a luck. Cainโt have more. You be a good girl,โ she said fiercely. โYou be good. If you got sin on youโyou better watch out for that there baby.โ She squatted down in front of Rose of Sharon. โTheyโs scandalous things goes on in this here camp,โ she said darkly. โEverโ Satโdy night theyโs dancinโ, anโ not only squarโ dancinโ, neither. Theyโs some does clutch-anโ-hug dancinโ! I seen โem.โ
Rose of Sharon said guardedly, โI like dancinโ, squarโ dancinโ.โ And she added virtuously, โI never done that other kind.โ
The brown woman nodded her head dismally. โWell, some does. Anโ the Lord ainโt lettinโ it get by, neither; anโ donโ you think He is.โ
โNo, maโam,โ the girl said softly.
The woman put one brown wrinkled hand on Rose of Sharonโs knee, and the girl flinched under the touch. โYou let me warn you now. They ainโt but a few deep down Jesus-lovers lefโ. Everโ Satโdy night when that there strang banโ starts up anโ should be a-playinโ hymnody, theyโre a-reelinโโyes, sir, a-reelinโ. I seen โem. Wonโ go near, myself, nor I donโ let my kin go near. Theyโs clutch-anโ-hug, I tell ya.โ She paused for emphasis and then said, in a hoarse whisper, โThey do more. They give a stage play.โ
She backed away and cocked her head to see how Rose of Sharon would take such a
revelation.
โActors?โ the girl said in awe.
โNo, sir!โ the woman exploded. โNot actors, not them already damnโ people. Our own kinda folks. Our own people. Anโ they was little children didnโ know no better, in it,
anโ they was pertendinโ to be stuff they wasnโt. I didnโ go near. But I hearn โem talkinโ what they was a-doinโ. The devil was jusโ a-struttinโ through this here camp.โ
Rose of Sharon listened, her eyes and mouth open. โOncet in school we give a Chrisโ chile playโChristmus.โ
โWellโI ainโ sayinโ thaโs bad or good. Theyโs good folks thinks a Chrisโ chile is awright. Butโwell, I wouldnโ care to come right out flat anโ say so. But this here wasnโ no Chrisโ chile. This here was sin anโ delusion anโ devil stuff. Struttinโ anโ paradinโ anโ speakinโ like theyโre somebody they ainโt. Anโ dancinโ anโ clutchinโ anโ a-hugginโ.โ
Rose of Sharon sighed.
โAnโ not jusโ a few, neither,โ the brown woman went on. โGettinโ soโs you can almosโ count the deep-down lamb-blood folks on your toes. Anโ donโ you think them sinners is puttinโ nothinโ over on God, neither. No, sir, Heโs a-chalkinโ โem up sin by sin, anโ Heโs drawinโ His line anโ addinโ โem up sin by sin. Godโs a-watchinโ, anโ Iโm a- watchinโ. Heโs awready smoked two of โem out.โ
Rose of Sharon panted, โHas?โ
The brown womanโs voice was rising in intensity. โI seen it. Girl a-carryinโ a little one, jesโ like you. Anโ she play-acted, anโ she hug-danced. Andโโthe voice grew bleak and ominousโโshe thinned out and she skinnied out, anโโshe dropped that baby, dead.โ
โOh, my!โ The girl was pale.
โDead and bloody. โCourse nobody wouldnโ speak to her no more. She had a go away. Canโt tech sin โthout catchinโ it. No, sir. Anโ they was another, done the same thing. Anโ she skinnied out, anโโknow what? One night she was gone. Anโ two days, sheโs back. Says she was visitinโ. Butโshe ainโt got no baby. Know what I think? I think the manager, he took her away to drop her baby. He donโ believe in sin. Tolโ me hisself.
Says the sin is beinโ hungry. Says the sin is beinโ cold. SaysโI tell ya, he tolโ me hisself โcanโt see God in them things. Says them girls skinnied out โcause they didnโ git โnough food. Well, I fixed him up.โ She rose to her feet and stepped back. Her eyes were sharp.
She pointed a rigid forefinger in Rose of Sharonโs face. โI says, โGit back!โ I says. I says, โI knowed the devil was rampaginโ in this here camp. Now I know who the devil is. Git back, Satan,โ I says. Anโ, by Chrisโ, he got back! Tremblinโ he was, anโ sneaky. Says, โPlease!โ Says, โPlease donโ make the folks unhappy.โ I says, โUnhappy? How โbout their soul? How โbout them dead babies anโ them poor sinners ruint โcount of play-actinโ?โ He jesโ looked, anโ he give a sick grin anโ went away. He knowed when he met a real testifier to the Lord. I says, โIโm a-helpinโ Jesus watch the goinโs-on. Anโ you anโ them other sinners ainโt gittinโ away with it.โ She picked up her box of dirty clothes. โYou take heed. I warned you. You take heed a that pore chile in your belly anโ keep outa sin.โ And she strode away titanically, and her eyes shone with virtue.
Rose of Sharon watched her go, and then she put her head down on her hands and whimpered into her palms. A soft voice sounded beside her. She looked up, ashamed. It was the little white-clad manager. โDonโt worry,โ he said. โDonโt you worry.โ
Her eyes blinded with tears. โBut I done it,โ she cried. โI hug-danced. I didnโ tell her.
I done it in Sallisaw. Me anโ Connie.โ
โDonโt worry,โ he said.
โShe says Iโll drop the baby.โ
โI know she does. I kind of keep my eye on her. Sheโs a good woman, but she makes people unhappy.โ
Rose of Sharon sniffled wetly. โShe knowed two girls losโ their baby right in this here camp.โ
The manager squatted down in front of her. โLook!โ he said. โListen to me. I know them too. They were too hungry and too tired. And they worked too hard. And they rode on a truck over bumps. They were sick. It wasnโt their fault.โ
โBut she saidโโโ
โDonโt worry. That woman likes to make trouble.โ
โBut she says you was the devil.โ
โI know she does. Thatโs because I wonโt let her make people miserable.โ He patted her shoulder. โDonโt you worry. She doesnโt know.โ And he walked quickly away.
Rose of Sharon looked after him; his lean shoulders jerked as he walked. She was still watching his slight figure when Ma came back, clean and pink, her hair combed and wet, and gathered in a knot. She wore her figured dress and the old cracked shoes; and the little earrings hung in her ears.
โI done it,โ she said. โI stood in there anโ let warm water come a-floodinโ anโ a- flowinโ down over me. Anโ they was a lady says you can do it everโ day if you want.
Anโโthem ladiesโ committee come yet?โ
โUh-uh!โ said the girl.
โAnโ you jusโ set there anโ didnโ redd up the camp none!โ Ma gathered up the tin dishes as she spoke. โWe got to get in shape,โ she said. โCome on, stir! Get that sack and kinda sweep along the grounโ.โ She picked up the equipment, put the pans in their box and the box in the tent. โGet them beds neat,โ she ordered. โI tell ya I ainโt never felt nothinโ so nice as that water.โ
Rose of Sharon listlessly followed orders. โYa think Connieโll be back today?โ
โMaybeโmaybe not. Canโt tell.โ
โYou sure he knows where-at to come?โ
โSure.โ
โMaโya donโ thinkโthey could a killed him when they burnedโ?โ
โNot him,โ Ma said confidently. โHe can travel when he wantsโjackrabbit-quick anโ
fox-sneaky.โ
โI wisht heโd come.โ
โHeโll come when he comes.โ
โMaโโโ
โI wisht youโd get to work.โ
โWell, do you think dancinโ anโ play-actinโ is sins anโll make me drop the baby?โ
Ma stopped her work and put her hands on her hips. โNow what you talkinโ about?
You ainโt done no play-actinโ.โ
โWell, some folks here done it, anโ one girl, she dropped her babyโdeadโanโ
bloody, like it was a judgment.โ
Ma stared at her. โWho tolโ you?โ
โLady that come by. Anโ that little fella in white clothes, he come by anโ he says that ainโt what done it.โ
Ma frowned. โRosasharn,โ she said, โyou stop pickinโ at yourself. Youโre jest a- teasinโ yourself up to cry. I donโ know whatโs come at you. Our folks ainโt never did that.
They took what come to โem dry-eyed. I bet itโs that Connie give you all them notions.
He was jesโ too big for his overhalls.โ And she said sternly, โRosasharn, youโre jest one person, anโ theyโs a lot of other folks. You git to your proper place. I knowed people built theirself up with sin till they figgered they was big mean shucks in the sight a the Lord.โ
โBut, Maโโโ
โNo. Jesโ shut up anโ git to work. You ainโt big enough or mean enough to worry God much. Anโ Iโm gonna give you the back a my hanโ if you donโ stop this pickinโ at yourself.โ She swept the ashes into the fire hole and brushed the stones on its edge. She saw the committee coming along the road. โGit workinโ,โ she said. โHereโs the ladies cominโ. Git a-workinโ now, soโs I can be proud.โ She didnโt look again, but she was conscious of the approach of the committee.
There could be no doubt that it was the committee; three ladies, washed, dressed in their best clothes: a lean woman with stringy hair and steel-rimmed glasses, a small stout lady with curly gray hair and a small sweet mouth, and a mammoth lady, big of hock and buttock, big of breast, muscled like a dray-horse, powerful and sure. And the committee walked down the road with dignity.
Ma managed to have her back turned when they arrived. They stopped, wheeled, stood in a line. And the great woman boomed, โMorninโ, Misโ Joad, ainโt it?โ
Ma whirled around as though she had been caught off guard. โWhy, yesโyes. Howโd you know my name?โ
โWeโre the committee,โ the big woman said. โLadiesโ Committee of Sanitary Unit Number Four. We got your name in the office.โ
Ma flustered, โWe ainโt in very good shape yet. Iโd be proud to have you ladies come anโ set while I make up some coffee.โ
The plump committee woman said, โGive our names, Jessie. Mention our names to Misโ Joad. Jessieโs the Chair,โ she explained.
Jessie said formally, โMisโ Joad, this hereโs Annie Littlefield anโ Ella Summers, anโ Iโm Jessie Bullitt.โ
โIโm proud to make your acquaintance,โ Ma said. โWonโt you set down? They ainโt nothinโ to set on yet,โ she added. โBut Iโll make up some coffee.โ
โOh, no,โ said Annie formally. โDonโt put yaself out. We jesโ come to call anโ see how you was, anโ try to make you feel at home.โ
Jessie Bullitt said sternly, โAnnie, Iโll thank you to remember Iโm Chair.โ
โOh! Sure, sure. But next week I am.โ
โWell, you waitโll next week then. We change everโ week,โ she explained to Ma.
โSure you wouldnโ like a little coffee?โ Ma asked helplessly.
โNo, thank you.โ Jessie took charge. โWe gonna show you โbout the sanitary unit fust, anโ then if you wanta, weโll sign you up in the Ladiesโ Club anโ give you duty.
โCourse you donโ have to join.โ
โDoesโdoes it cost much?โ
โDonโt cost nothing but work. Anโ when youโre knowed, maybe you can be โlected to this committee,โ Annie interrupted. โJessie, here, is on the committee for the whole camp. Sheโs a big committee lady.โ
Jessie smiled with pride. โ โLected unanimous,โ she said. โWell, Misโ Joad, I guess itโs time we tolโ you โbout how the camp runs.โ
Ma said, โThis hereโs my girl, Rosasharn.โ
โHow do,โ they said.
โBetter come โlong too.โ
The huge Jessie spoke, and her manner was full of dignity and kindness, and her speech was rehearsed.
โYou shouldnโ think weโre a-buttinโ into your business, Misโ Joad. This here camp got a lot of stuff everโbody uses. Anโ we got rules we made ourself. Now weโre a-goinโ to the unit. That there, everโbody uses, anโ everโbody got to take care of it.โ They strolled to the unroofed section where the wash trays were, twenty of them. Eight were in use, the women bending over, scrubbing the clothes, and the piles of wrung-out clothes were heaped on the clean concrete floor. โNow you can use these here any time you want,โ
Jessie said. โThe onโy thing is, you got to leave โem clean.โ
The women who were washing looked up with interest. Jessie said loudly, โThis hereโs Misโ Joad anโ Rosasharn, come to live.โ They greeted Ma in a chorus, and Ma made a dumpy little bow at them and said, โProud to meet ya.โ
Jessie led the committee into the toilet and shower room.
โI been here awready,โ Ma said. โI even took a bath.โ
โThatโs what theyโre for,โ Jessie said. โAnโ theyโs the same rule. You got to leave โem clean. Everโ week theyโs a new committee to swab out oncet a day. Maybe youโll git on that committee. You got to bring your own soap.โ
โWe got to get some soap,โ Ma said. โWeโre all out.โ
Jessieโs voice became almost reverential. โYou ever used this here kind?โ she asked,
and pointed to the toilets.
โYes, maโam. Right this morninโ.โ
Jessie sighed. โThaโs good.โ
Ella Summers said, โJesโ lasโ weekโโโ
Jessie interrupted sternly, โMisโ SummersโIโll tell.โ
Ella gave ground. โOh, awright.โ
Jessie said, โLasโ week, when you was Chair, you done it all. Iโll thank you to keep out this week.โ
โWell, tell what that lady done,โ Ella said.
โWell,โ said Jessie, โit ainโt this committeeโs business to go a-blabbinโ, but I wonโt pass no names. Lady come in lasโ week, anโ she got in here โfore the committee got to her, anโ she had her olโ manโs pants in the toilet, anโ she says, โItโs too low, anโ it ainโt big enough. Bust your back over her,โ she says. โWhy couldnโ they stick her higher?โ โ The committee smiled superior smiles.
Ella broke in, โSays, โCanโt put โnough in at oncet.โ โ And Ella weathered Jessieโs stern glance.
Jessie said, โWe got our troubles with toilet paper. Rule says you canโt take none away from here.โ She clicked her tongue sharply. โWhole camp chips in for toilet paper.โ
For a moment she was silent, and then she confessed. โNumber Four is usinโ more than any other. Somebodyโs a-stealinโ it. Come up in general ladiesโ meetinโ. โLadiesโ side, Unit Number Four is usinโ too much.โ Come right up in meetinโ!โ
Ma was following the conversation breathlessly. โStealinโ itโwhat for?โ
โWell,โ said Jessie, โwe had trouble before. Lasโ time they was three little girls cuttinโ paper dolls out of it. Well, we caught them. But this time we donโt know. Hardly put a roll out โfore itโs gone. Come right up in meetinโ. One lady says we oughta have a little bell that rings everโ time the roll turns oncet. Then we could count how many everโbody takes.โ She shook her head. โI jesโ donโ know,โ she said. โI been worried all week. Somebodyโs a-stealinโ toilet paper from Unit Four.โ
From the doorway came a whining voice, โMisโ Bullitt.โ The committee turned.
โMisโ Bullitt, I hearn what you says.โ A flushed, perspiring woman stood in the doorway.
โI couldnโ git up in meetinโ, Misโ Bullitt. I jesโ couldnโ. Theyโd a-laughed or somepin.โ
โWhat you talkinโ about?โ Jessie advanced.
โWell, we-allโmaybeโitโs us. But we ainโt a-stealinโ, Misโ Bullitt.โ
Jessie advanced on her, and the perspiration beaded out on the flustery confessor.
โWe canโt heโp it, Misโ Bullitt.โ
โNow you tell what youโre tellinโ,โ Jessie said. โThis here unitโs suffered a shame โbout that toilet paper.โ
โAll week, Misโ Bullitt. We couldnโ heโp it. You know I got five girls.โ
โWhat they been a-doinโ with it?โ Jessie demanded ominously.
โJesโ usinโ it. Honesโ, jesโ usinโ it.โ
โThey ainโt got the right! Four-five sheets is enough. Whatโs the matterโth โem?โ
The confessor bleated, โSkitters. All five of โem. We been low on money. They et green grapes. They all five got the howlinโ skitters. Run out everโ ten minutes.โ She defended them, โBut they ainโt stealinโ it.โ
Jessie sighed. โYou should a tolโ,โ she said. โYou got to tell. Hereโs Unit Four sufferinโ shame โcause you never tolโ. Anybody can git the skitters.โ
The meek voice whined, โI jesโ canโt keep โem from eatinโ them green grapes. Anโ theyโre a-gettinโ worse all a time.โ
Ella Summers burst out, โThe Aid. She oughta git the Aid.โ
โElla Summers,โ Jessie said, โIโm a-tellinโ you for the lasโ time, you ainโt the Chair.โ
She turned back to the raddled little woman. โAinโt you got no money, Misโ Joyce?โ
She looked ashamedly down. โNo, but we might git work any time.โ
โNow you holโ up your head,โ Jessie said. โThat ainโt no crime. You jesโ waltz right over tโ the Weedpatch store anโ git you some grocteries. The camp got twenty dollarsโ credit there. You git yourself fiโ dollarsโ worth. Anโ you kin pay it back to the Central Committee when you git work. Misโ Joyce, you knowed that,โ she said sternly. โHow come you let your girls git hungry?โ
โWe ainโt never took no charity,โ Mrs. Joyce said.
โThis ainโt charity, anโ you know it,โ Jessie raged. โWe had all that out. They ainโt no charity in this here camp. We wonโt have no charity. Now you waltz right over anโ git you some grocteries, anโ you bring the slip to me.โ
Mrs. Joyce said timidly, โSโpose we canโt never pay? We ainโt had work for a long time.โ
โYouโll pay if you can. If you canโt, that ainโt none of our business, anโ it ainโt your business. One fella went away, anโ two months later he sent back the money. You ainโt got the right to let your girls git hungry in this here camp.โ
Mrs. Joyce was cowed. โYes, maโam,โ she said.
โGit you some cheese for them girls,โ Jessie ordered. โThatโll take care a them skitters.โ
โYes, maโam.โ And Mrs. Joyce scuttled out of the door.
Jessie turned in anger on the committee. โShe got no right to be stiff-necked. She got no right, not with our own people.โ
Annie Littlefield said, โShe ainโt been here long. Maybe she donโt know. Maybe sheโs took charity one time-another. Nor,โ Annie said, โdonโt you try to shut me up, Jessie. I got a right to pass speech.โ She turned half to Ma. โIf a bodyโs ever took charity, it makes a burn that donโt come out. This ainโt charity, but if you ever took it, you donโt forget it. I
bet Jessie ainโt ever done it.โ
โNo, I ainโt,โ said Jessie.
โWell, I did,โ Annie said. โLasโ winter; anโ we was a-starvinโโme anโ Pa anโ the little fellas. Anโ it was a-raininโ. Fella tolโ us to go to the Salvation Army.โ Her eyes grew fierce. โWe was hungryโthey made us crawl for our dinner. They took our dignity.
TheyโI hate โem! Anโโmaybe Misโ Joyce took charity. Maybe she didnโ know this ainโt charity. Misโ Joad, we donโt allow nobody in this camp to build theirself up that-a- way. We donโt allow nobody to give nothing to another person. They can give it to the camp, anโ the camp can pass it out. We wonโt have no charity!โ Her voice was fierce and hoarse. โI hate โem,โ she said. โI ainโt never seen my man beat before, but themโthem Salvation Army done it to โim.โ
Jessie nodded. โI heard,โ she said softly, โI heard. We got to take Misโ Joad arounโ.โ
Ma said, โIt sure is nice.โ
โLeโs go to the sewinโ room,โ Annie suggested. โGot two machines. Theyโs a- quiltinโ, anโ theyโre makinโ dresses. You might like ta work over there.โ
W
hen the committee called on Ma, Ruthie and Winfield faded
imperceptibly back out of reach.
โWhynโt we go along anโ listen?โ Winfield asked.
Ruthie gripped his arm. โNo,โ she said. โWe got washed for them sons-a-bitches. I ainโt goinโ with โem.โ
Winfield said, โYou tolโ on me โbout the toilet. Iโm a-gonna tell what you called them ladies.โ
A shadow of fear crossed Ruthieโs face. โDonโ do it. I tolโ โcause I knowed you didnโ
really break it.โ
โYou did not,โ said Winfield.
Ruthie said, โLeโs look arounโ.โ They strolled down the line of tents, peering into each one, gawking self-consciously. At the end of the unit there was a level place on which a croquet court had been set up. Half a dozen children played seriously. In front of a tent an elderly lady sat on a bench and watched. Ruthie and Winfield broke into a trot.
โLeave us play,โ Ruthie cried. โLeave us get in.โ
The children looked up. A pig-tailed little girl said, โNexโ game you kin.โ
โI wanta play now,โ Ruthie cried.
โWell, you canโt. Not till nexโ game.โ
Ruthie moved menacingly out on the court. โIโm a-gonna play.โ The pig-tails gripped her mallet tightly. Ruthie sprang at her, slapped her, pushed her, and wrested the mallet from her hands. โI says I was gonna play,โ she said triumphantly.
The elderly lady stood up and walked onto the court. Ruthie scowled fiercely and her hands tightened on the mallet. The lady said, โLet her playโlike you done with Ralph lasโ week.โ
The children laid their mallets on the ground and trooped silently off the court. They stood at a distance and looked on with expressionless eyes. Ruthie watched them go.
Then she hit a ball and ran after it. โCome on, Winfielโ. Get a stick,โ she called. And then she looked in amazement. Winfield had joined the watching children, and he too looked at her with expressionless eyes. Defiantly she hit the ball again. She kicked up a great dust. She pretended to have a good time. And the children stood and watched. Ruthie lined up two balls and hit both of them, and she turned her back on the watching eyes, and then turned back. Suddenly she advanced on them, mallet in hand. โYou come anโ play,โ she demanded. They moved silently back at her approach. For a moment she stared at them, and then she flung down the mallet and ran crying for home. The children walked back on the court.
Pigtails said to Winfield, โYou can git in the nexโ game.โ
The watching lady warned them, โWhen she comes back anโ wants to be decent, you let her. You was mean yourself, Amy.โ The game went on, while in the Joad tent Ruthie wept miserably.
T
he truck moved along the beautiful roads, past orchards where the peaches
were beginning to color, past vineyards with the clusters pale and green, under
lines of walnut trees whose branches spread half across the road. At each
entrance-gate Al slowed; and at each gate there was a sign: โNo help wanted.
No trespassing.โ
Al said, โPa, theyโs bounโ to be work when them fruits gets ready. Funny placeโthey tell ya they ainโt no work โfore you ask โem.โ He drove slowly on.
Pa said, โMaybe we could go in anyways anโ ask if they know where theyโs any work. Might do that.โ
A man in blue overalls and a blue shirt walked along the edge of the road. Al pulled up beside him. โHey, mister,โ Al said. โKnow where theyโs any work?โ
The man stopped and grinned, and his mouth was vacant of front teeth. โNo,โ he said.
โDo you? I been walkinโ all week, anโ I canโt tree none.โ
โLive in that govโment camp?โ Al asked.
โYeah!โ
โCome on, then. Git up back, anโ weโll all look.โ The man climbed over the side- boards and dropped in the bed.
Pa said, โI ainโt got no hunch weโll find work. Guess we got to look, though. We donโt even know where-at to look.โ
โShoulda talked to the fellas in the camp,โ Al said. โHow you feelinโ, Uncle John?โ
โI ache,โ said Uncle John. โI ache all over, anโ I got it cominโ. I oughta go away where I wonโt bring down punishment on my own folks.โ
Pa put his hand on Johnโs knee. โLook here,โ he said, โdonโ you go away. Weโre droppinโ folks all the timeโGrampa anโ Granma dead, Noah anโ Connieโrun out, anโ
the preacherโin jail.โ
โI got a hunch weโll see that preacher agin,โ John said.
Al fingered the ball on the gear-shift lever. โYou donโ feel good enough to have no hunches,โ he said. โThe hell with it. Leโs go back anโ talk, anโ find out where theyโs some work. Weโre jusโ huntinโ skunks under water.โ He stopped the truck and leaned out the window and called back, โHey! Lookie! Weโre a-goinโ back to the camp anโ try anโ see where theyโs work. They ainโt no use burninโ gas like this.โ
The man leaned over the truck side. โSuits me,โ he said. โMy dogs is wore clean up to the ankle. Anโ I ainโt even got a nibble.โ
Al turned around in the middle of the road and headed back.
Pa said, โMaโs gonna be purty hurt, โspecially when Tom got work so easy.โ
โMaybe he never got none,โ Al said. โMaybe he jusโ went lookinโ, too. I wisht I could get work in a garage. Iโd learn that stuff quick, anโ Iโd like it.โ
Pa grunted, and they drove back toward the camp in silence.
W
hen the committee left, Ma sat down on a box in front of the Joad tent,
and she looked helplessly at Rose of Sharon. โWellโโ she said, โwellโI
ainโt been so perked up in years. Wasnโt them ladies nice?โ
โI get to work in the nursery,โ Rose of Sharon said. โThey tolโ me. I can find out all how to do for babies, anโ then Iโll know.โ
Ma nodded in wonder. โWouldnโ it be nice if the menfolks all got work?โ she asked.
โThem a-workinโ, anโ a little money cominโ in?โ Her eyes wandered into space. โThem a-workinโ, anโ us a-workinโ here, anโ all them nice people. Fust thing we get a little ahead Iโd get me a little stoveโnice one. They donโ cost much. Anโ then weโd get a tent, big enough, anโ maybe seconโ-hanโ springs for the beds. Anโ weโd use this here tent jusโ to eat under. Anโ Satโdy night weโll go to the dancinโ. They says you can invite folks if you want. I wisht we had some frienโs to invite. Maybe the menโll know somebody to invite.โ
Rose of Sharon peered down the road, โThat lady that says Iโll lose the babyโโ she
began.
โNow you stop that,โ Ma warned her.
Rose of Sharon said softly, โI seen her. Sheโs a-cominโ here, I think. Yeah! Here she comes. Ma, donโt let herโโโ
Ma turned and looked at the approaching figure.
โHowdy,โ the woman said. โIโm Misโ SandryโLisbeth Sandry. I seen your girl this
morninโ.โ
โHowdy do,โ said Ma.
โAre you happy in the Lord?โ
โPretty happy,โ said Ma.
โAre you saved?โ
โI been saved.โ Maโs face was closed and waiting.
โWell, Iโm glad,โ Lisbeth said. โThe sinners is awful strong arounโ here. You come to a awful place. Theyโs wicketness all around about. Wicket people, wicket goinโs-on that a lambโ-blood Christian jesโ canโt hardly stanโ. Theyโs sinners all around us.โ
Ma colored a little, and shut her mouth tightly. โSeems to me theyโs nice people here,โ she said shortly.
Mrs. Sandryโs eyes stared. โNice!โ she cried. โYou think theyโre nice when theyโs dancinโ anโ hugginโ? I tell ya, ya eternal soul ainโt got a chancet in this here camp. Went out to a meetinโ in Weedpatch lasโ night. Know what the preacher says? He says, โTheyโs wicketness in that camp.โ He says, โThe poor is tryinโ to be rich.โ He says, โTheyโs dancinโ anโ hugginโ when they should be wailinโ anโ moaninโ in sin.โ Thatโs what he says. โEverโbody that ainโt here is a black sinner,โ he says. I tell you it made a person feel purty good to hear โim. Anโ we knowed we was safe. We ainโt danced.โ
Maโs face was red. She stood up slowly and faced Mrs. Sandry. โGit!โ she said. โGit out now, โfore I git to be a sinner a-tellinโ you where to go. Git to your wailinโ anโ moaninโ.โ
Mrs. Sandryโs mouth dropped open. She stepped back. And then she became fierce.
โI thought you was Christians.โ
โSo we are,โ Ma said.
โNo, you ainโt. Youโre hell-burninโ sinners, all of you! Anโ Iโll mention it in meetinโ, too. I can see your black soul a-burninโ. I can see that innocent child in that there girlโs belly a-burninโ.โ
A low wailing cry escaped from Rose of Sharonโs lips. Ma stooped down and picked up a stick of wood.
โGit!โ she said coldly. โDonโ you never come back. I seen your kind before. Youโd take the little pleasure, wouldnโ you?โ Ma advanced on Mrs. Sandry.
For a moment the woman backed away and then suddenly she threw back her head and howled. Her eyes rolled up, her shoulders and arms flopped loosely at her side, and a string of thick ropy saliva ran from the corner of her mouth. She howled again and again, long deep animal howls. Men and women ran up from the other tents, and they stood nearโfrightened and quiet. Slowly the woman sank to her knees and the howls sank to a shuddering, bubbling moan. She fell sideways and her arms and legs twitched. The white eyeballs showed under the open eyelids.
A man said softly, โThe sperit. She got the sperit.โ Ma stood looking down at the twitching form.
The little manager strolled up casually. โTrouble?โ he asked. The crowd parted to let him through. He looked down at the woman. โToo bad,โ he said. โWill some of you help get her back to her tent?โ The silent people shuffled their feet. Two men bent over and lifted the woman, one held her under the arms and the other took her feet. They carried
her away, and the people moved slowly after them. Rose of Sharon went under the tarpaulin and lay down and covered her face with a blanket.
The manager looked at Ma, looked down at the stick in her hand. He smiled tiredly.
โDid you clout her?โ he asked.
Ma continued to stare after the retreating people. She shook her head slowly. โNoโ but I would a. Twicet today she worked my girl up.โ
The manager said, โTry not to hit her. She isnโt well. She just isnโt well.โ And he added softly, โI wish sheโd go away, and all her family. She brings more trouble on the camp than all the rest together.โ
Ma got herself in hand again. โIf she comes back, I might hit her. I ainโt sure. I wonโt let her worry my girl no more.โ
โDonโt worry about it, Mrs. Joad,โ he said. โYou wonโt ever see her again. She works over the newcomers. She wonโt ever come back. She thinks youโre a sinner.โ
โWell, I am,โ said Ma.
โSure. Everbody is, but not the way she means. She isnโt well, Mrs. Joad.โ
Ma looked at him gratefully, and she called, โYou hear that, Rosasharn? She ainโt well. Sheโs crazy.โ But the girl did not raise her head. Ma said, โIโm warninโ you, mister.
If she comes back, I ainโt to be trusted. Iโll hit her.โ
He smiled wryly. โI know how you feel,โ he said. โBut just try not to. Thatโs all I ask โjust try not to.โ He walked slowly away toward the tent where Mrs. Sandry had been carried.
Ma went into the tent and sat down beside Rose of Sharon. โLook up,โ she said. The girl lay still. Ma gently lifted the blanket from her daughterโs face. โThat womanโs kinda crazy,โ she said. โDonโt you believe none of them things.โ
Rose of Sharon whispered in terror, โWhen she said about burninโ, Iโfelt burninโ.โ
โThat ainโt true,โ said Ma.
โIโm tarโd out,โ the girl whispered. โIโm tarโd a things happeninโ. I wanta sleep. I wanta sleep.โ
โWell, you sleep, then. This hereโs a nice place. You can sleep.โ
โBut she might come back.โ
โShe wonโt,โ said Ma. โIโm a-gonna set right outside, anโ I wonโt let her come back.
Resโ up now, โcause you got to get to work in the nuโsery purty soon.โ
Ma struggled to her feet and went to sit in the entrance to the tent. She sat on a box and put her elbows on her knees and her chin in her cupped hands. She saw the movement in the camp, heard the voices of the children, the hammering of an iron rim; but her eyes were staring ahead of her.
Pa, coming back along the road, found her there, and he squatted near her. She looked slowly over at him. โGit work?โ she asked.
โNo,โ he said, ashamed. โWe looked.โ
โWhereโs Al and John and the truck?โ
โAlโs fixinโ somepin. Had ta borry some tools. Fella says Al got to fix her there.โ
Ma said sadly, โThis hereโs a nice place. We could be happy here awhile.โ
โIf we could get work.โ
โYeah! If you could get work.โ
He felt her sadness, and studied her face. โWhat you a-mopinโ about? If itโs sech a nice place why have you got to mope?โ
She gazed at him, and she closed her eyes slowly. โFunny, ainโt it. All the time we was a-movinโ anโ shovinโ, I never thought none. Anโ now these here folks been nice to me, been awful nice; anโ whatโs the first thing I do? I go right back over the sad thingsโ that night Grampa died anโ we buried him. I was all full up of the road, and bumpinโ and movinโ, anโ it wasnโt so bad. But now I come out here, anโ itโs worse now. Anโ Granma โanโ Noah walkinโ away like that! Walkinโ away jusโ down the river. Them things was part of all, anโ now they come a-flockinโ back. Granma a pauper, anโ buried a pauper.
Thatโs sharp now. Thatโs awful sharp. Anโ Noah walkinโ away down the river. He donโ know whatโs there. He jusโ donโ know. Anโ we donโ know. We ainโt never gonna know if heโs alive or dead. Never gonna know. Anโ Connie sneakinโ away. I didnโ give โem brain room before, but now theyโre a-flockinโ back. Anโ I oughta be glad โcause weโre in a nice place.โ Pa watched her mouth while she talked. Her eyes were closed. โI can remember how them mountains was, sharp as olโ teeth beside the river where Noah walked. I can remember how the stubble was on the grounโ where Grampa lies. I can remember the choppinโ block back home with a feather caught on it, all criss-crossed with cuts, anโ black with chicken blood.โ
Paโs voice took on her tone. โI seen the ducks today,โ he said. โWedginโ southโhigh up. Seems like theyโre awful dinky. Anโ I seen the blackbirds a-settinโ on the wires, anโ the doves was on the fences.โ Ma opened her eyes and looked at him. He went on, โI seen a little whirlwinโ, like a man a-spinninโ acrost a fielโ. Anโ the ducks drivinโ on down, wedginโ on down to the southward.โ
Ma smiled. โRemember?โ she said. โRemember what weโd always say at home?
โWinterโs a-cominโ early,โ we said, when the ducks flew. Always said that, anโ winter come when it was ready to come. But we always said, โSheโs a-cominโ early.โ I wonder what we meant.โ
โI seen the blackbirds on the wires,โ said Pa. โSettinโ so close together. Anโ the doves. Nothinโ sets so still as a doveโon the fence wiresโmaybe two, side by side. Anโ this little whirlwinโโbig as a man, anโ dancinโ off acrost a fielโ. Always did like the little fellas, big as a man.โ
โWisht I wouldnโt think how it is home,โ said Ma. โIt ainโt our home no more. Wisht Iโd forget it. Anโ Noah.โ
โHe wasnโt ever rightโI meanโwell, it was my fault.โ
โI tolโ you never to say that. Woudnโ a lived at all, maybe.โ
โBut I should a knowed more.โ
โNow stop,โ said Ma. โNoah was strange. Maybe heโll have a nice time by the river.
Maybe itโs better so. We canโt do no worryinโ. This here is a nice place, anโ maybe youโll get work right off.โ
Pa pointed at the sky. โLookโmore ducks. Big bunch. Anโ Ma, โWinterโs a-cominโ early.โ โ
She chuckled. โTheyโs things you do, anโ you donโ know why.โ
โHereโs John,โ said Pa. โCome on anโ set, John.โ
Uncle John joined them. He squatted down in front of Ma. โWe didnโ get nowheres,โ he said. โJusโ run arounโ. Say, Al wants to see ya. Says he got to git a tire. Only one layer a cloth lefโ, he says.โ
Pa stood up. โI hope he can git her cheap. We ainโt got much lefโ. Where is Al?โ
โDown there, to the nexโ cross-street anโ turn right. Says gonna blow out anโ spoil a tube if we donโ get a new one.โ Pa strolled away, and his eyes followed the giant V of ducks down the sky.
Uncle John picked a stone from the ground and dropped it from his palm and picked it up again. He did not look at Ma. โThey ainโt no work,โ he said.
โYou didnโ look all over,โ Ma said.
โNo, but theyโs signs out.โ
โWell, Tom musta got work. He ainโt been back.โ
Uncle John suggested, โMaybe he went awayโlike Connie, or like Noah.โ
Ma glanced sharply at him, and then her eyes softened. โTheyโs things you know,โ she said. โTheyโs stuff youโre sure of. Tomโs got work, anโ heโll come in this eveninโ.
Thatโs true.โ She smiled in satisfaction. โAinโt he a fine boy!โ she said. โAinโt he a good boy!โ
The cars and trucks began to come into the camp, and the men trooped by toward the sanitary unit. And each man carried clean overalls and shirt in his hand.
Ma pulled herself together. โJohn, you go find Pa. Get to the store. I want beans anโ sugar anโโa piece of fryinโ meat anโ carrots anโโtell Pa to get somepin niceโanything โbut niceโfor tonight. Tonightโweโll haveโsomepin nice.โ