A 1926 Nash sedan pulled wearily off the highway.
The back seat was piled nearly to the ceiling with sacks, with pots and pans, and on the very top, right up against the ceiling, two boys rode.
On the top of the car, a mattress and a folded tent; tent poles tied along the running board.
The car pulled up to the gas pumps.
A dark-haired, hatchet-faced man got slowly out.
And the two boys slid down from the load and hit the ground.
Mae walked around the counter and stood in the door.
The man was dressed in gray wool trousers and a blue shirt, dark blue with sweat on the back and under the arms.
The boys in overalls and nothing else, ragged patched overalls.
Their hair was light, and it stood up evenly all over their heads, for it had been roached. Their faces were streaked with dust.
They went directly to the mud puddle under the hose and dug their toes into the mud.
The man asked,
“Can we git some water, ma’am?”
A look of annoyance crossed Mae’s face.
“Sure, go ahead.” She said softly over her shoulder, “I’ll keep my eye on the hose.” She watched while the man slowly unscrewed the radiator cap and ran the hose in.
A woman in the car, a flaxen-haired woman, said,
“See if you can’t git it here.”
The man turned off the hose and screwed on the cap again.
The little boys took the hose from him and they upended it and drank thirstily.
The man took off his dark, stained hat and stood with a curious humility in front of the screen.
“Could you see your way to sell us a loaf of bread, ma’am?”
Mae said,
“This ain’t a grocery store.
We got bread to make san’widges.”
“I know, ma’am.” His humility was insistent. “We need bread and there ain’t nothin’ for quite a piece, they say.”
“’F we sell bread we gonna run out.” Mae’s tone was faltering.
“We’re hungry,” the man said.
“Whyn’t you buy a san’widge?
We got nice san’widges, hamburgs.”
“We’d sure admire to do that, ma’am.
But we can’t.
We got to make a dime do all of us.” And he said embarrassedly, “We ain’t got but a little.”
Mae said,
“You can’t get no loaf a bread for a dime.
We only got fifteen-cent loafs.”
From behind her Al growled,
“God Almighty, Mae, give ’em bread.”
“We’ll run out ’fore the bread truck comes.”
“Run out, then, goddamn it,” said Al. And he looked sullenly down at the potato salad he was mixing.
Mae shrugged her plump shoulders and looked to the truck drivers to show them what she was up against.
She held the screen door open and the man came in, bringing a smell of sweat with him.
The boys edged in behind him and they went immediately to the candy case and stared in—not with craving or with hope or even with desire, but just with a kind of wonder that such things could be.
They were alike in size and their faces were alike.
One scratched his dusty ankle with the toe nails of his other foot.
The other whispered some soft message and then they straightened their arms so that their clenched fists in the overall pockets showed through the thin blue cloth.
Mae opened a drawer and took out a long waxpaper-wrapped loaf.
“This here is a fifteen-cent loaf.”
The man put his hat back on his head. He answered with inflexible humility,
“Won’t you—can’t you see your way to cut off ten cents’ worth?”
Al said snarlingly,