You done good once.
You can do it again.”
“Yeah, an’ after a while I won’t have no decency lef’.”
“Easy,” she said. “You got to have patience.
Why, Tom—us people will go on livin’ when all them people is gone.
Why, Tom, we’re the people that live.
They ain’t gonna wipe us out.
Why, we’re the people—we go on.”
“We take a beatin’ all the time.”
“I know.” Ma chuckled. “Maybe that makes us tough.
Rich fellas come up an’ they die, an’ their kids ain’t no good, an’ they die out.
But, Tom, we keep a-comin’.
Don’ you fret none, Tom.
A different time’s comin’.”
“How do you know?”
“I don’ know how.”
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.
“Never heard you talk so much in my life,” he said.
“Wasn’t never so much reason,” she said.
He drove through the side streets and cleared the town, and then he crossed back.
At an intersection the sign said
“99.”
He turned south on it.
“Well, anyways they never shoved us north,” he said. “We still go where we want, even if we got to crawl for the right.”
The dim lights felt along the broad black highway ahead.
Chapter 21
The moving, questing people were migrants now.
Those families which had lived on a little piece of land, who had lived and died on forty acres, had eaten or starved on the produce of forty acres, had now the whole West to rove in.
And they scampered about, looking for work; and the highways were streams of people, and the ditch banks were lines of people.
Behind them more were coming.
The great highways streamed with moving people.
There in the Middle-and Southwest had lived a simple agrarian folk who had not changed with industry, who had not formed with machines or known the power and danger of machines in private hands.
They had not grown up in the paradoxes of industry.
Their senses were still sharp to the ridiculousness of the industrial life.
And then suddenly the machines pushed them out and they swarmed on the highways.
The movement changed them; the highways, the camps along the road, the fear of hunger and the hunger itself, changed them.
The children without dinner changed them, the endless moving changed them.
They were migrants.
And the hostility changed them, welded them, united them—hostility that made the little towns group and arm as though to repel an invader, squads with pick handles, clerks and storekeepers with shotguns, guarding the world against their own people.
In the West there was panic when the migrants multiplied on the highways.
Men of property were terrified for their property.
Men who had never been hungry saw the eyes of the hungry.
Men who had never wanted anything very much saw the flare of want in the eyes of the migrants.
And the men of the towns and of the soft suburban country gathered to defend themselves; and they reassured themselves that they were good and the invaders bad, as a man must do before he fights.
They said, These goddamned Okies are dirty and ignorant.