Give me a start.”
“I heard ya yip,” said Ma. “Git yourself laced up, now.”
“You suppose it might of hurt?”
“No,” said Ma. “’F you go to greasin’ yourself an’ feelin’ sorry, an’ tuckin’ yourself in a swalla’s nest, it might.
Rise up now, an’ he’p me get Granma comf ’table.
Forget that baby for a minute.
He’ll take care a hisself.”
“Where is Granma?” Rose of Sharon asked.
“I dunno.
She’s aroun’ here somewheres.
Maybe in the outhouse.”
The girl went toward the toilet, and in a moment she came out, helping Granma along.
“She went to sleep in there,” said Rose of Sharon.
Granma grinned.
“It’s nice in there,” she said.
“They got a patent toilet in there an’ the water comes down. I like it in there,” she said contentedly.
“Would of took a good nap if I wasn’t woke up.”
“It ain’t a nice place to sleep,” said Rose of Sharon, and she helped Granma into the car.
Granma settled herself happily. “Maybe it ain’t nice for purty, but it’s nice for nice,” she said.
Tom said,
“Le’s go.
We got to make miles.”
Pa whistled shrilly.
“Now where’d them kids go?” He whistled again, putting his fingers in his mouth.
In a moment they broke from the corn field, Ruthie ahead and Winfield trailing her.
“Eggs!” Ruthie cried. “I got sof’ eggs.” She rushed close, with Winfield close behind. “Look!” A dozen soft, grayish-white eggs were in her grubby hand.
And as she held up her hand, her eyes fell upon the dead dog beside the road.
“Oh!” she said. Ruthie and Winfield walked slowly toward the dog.
They inspected him.
Pa called to them,
“Come on, you, ’less you want to git left.”
They turned solemnly and walked to the truck.
Ruthie looked once more at the gray reptile eggs in her hand, and then she threw them away. They climbed up the side of the truck.
“His eyes was still open,” said Ruthie in a hushed tone.
But Winfield gloried in the scene.
He said boldly,
“His guts was just strowed all over—all over”—he was silent for a moment—“strowed—all—over,” he said, and then he rolled over quickly and vomited down the side of the truck.
When he sat up again his eyes were watery and his nose running. “It ain’t like killin’ pigs,” he said in explanation.
Al had the hood of the Hudson up, and he checked the oil level.
He brought a gallon can from the floor of the front seat and poured a quantity of cheap black oil into the pipe and checked the level again.
Tom came beside him.
“Want I should take her a piece?” he asked.
“I ain’t tired,” said Al.
“Well, you didn’ get no sleep las’ night.
I took a snooze this morning.
Get up there on top.
I’ll take her.” “Awright,” Al said reluctantly. “But watch the oil gauge pretty close.
Take her slow.
An’ I been watchin’ for a short.
Take a look a the needle now an’ then. ’F she jumps to discharge it’s a short.