She said in a whisper at once cunning and tense with fading terror:
“I fooled him.
I told him you would come in the back way this time.
I fooled him.
But now you are here.
You can see to Milly now.
I’ll take care of Joey.”
Then this faded.
While he watched, the life, the vividness, faded, fled suddenly from a face that looked too still, too dull to ever have harbored it; now the eyes questioned him with a gaze dumb, inarticulate, baffled as she crouched. over the child as if he had offered to drag it from her.
Her movement roused it perhaps; it cried once.
Then the bafflement too flowed away.
It fled as smoothly as a shadow; she looked down at the child, musing, wooden faced, ludicrous.
“It’s Joey,” she said. “It’s my Milly’s little boy.”
And Byron, outside the door where he had stopped as the doctor entered, heard that cry and something terrible happened to him.
Mrs. Hines had called him from his tent.
There was something in her voice so that he put on his trousers as he ran almost, and he passed Mrs. Hines, who had not undressed at all, in the cabin door and ran into the room.
Then he saw her and it stopped him dead as a wall.
Mrs. Hines was at his elbow, talking to him; perhaps he answered; talked back.
Anyway he had saddled the mule and was already galloping toward town while he still seemed to be looking at her, at her face as she lay raised on her propped arms on the cot, looking down at the shape of her body beneath the sheet with wailing and hopeless terror.
He saw that all the time he was waking Hightower, all the time he was getting the doctor started, while somewhere in him the clawed thing lurked and waited and thought was going too fast to give him time to think.
That was it.
Thought too swift for thinking, until he and the doctor returned to the cabin.
And then, just outside the cabin door where he had stopped, he heard the child cry once and something terrible happened to him.
He knew now what it was that seemed to lurk clawed and waiting while he crossed the empty square, seeking the doctor whom he had neglected to engage.
He knew now why he neglected to engage a doctor beforehand.
It is because he did not believe until Mrs. Hines called him from his tent that he (she) would need one, would have the need.
It was like for a week now his eyes had accepted her belly without his mind believing.
‘Yet I did know, believe,’ he thought. ‘I must have knowed, to have done what I have done: the running and the lying and the worrying at folks.’
But he saw now that he did not believe until he passed Mrs. Hines and looked into the cabin.
When Mrs. Hines’ voice first came into his sleeping, he knew what it was, what had happened; he rose and put on, like a pair of hurried overalls, the need for haste, knowing why, knowing that for five nights now he had been expecting it.
Yet still he did not believe.
He knew now that when he ran to the cabin and looked in, he expected to see her sitting up; perhaps to be met by her at the door, placid, unchanged, timeless.
But even as he touched the door with his hand he heard something which he had never heard before.
It was a moaning wail, loud, with a quality at once passionate and abject, that seemed to be speaking clearly to something in a tongue which he knew was not his tongue nor that of any man.
Then he passed Mrs. Hines in the door and he saw her lying on the cot.
He had never seen her in bed before and he believed that when or if he ever did, she would be tense, alert, maybe smiling a little, and completely aware of him.
But when he entered she did not even look at him.
She did not even seem to be aware that the door had opened, that there was anyone or anything in the room save herself and whatever it was that she had spoken to with that wailing cry in a tongue unknown to man.
She was covered to the chin, yet her upper body was raised upon her arms and her head was bent.
Her hair was loose and her eyes looked like two holes and her mouth was as bloodless now as the pillow behind her, and as she seemed in that attitude of alarm and surprise to contemplate with a kind of outraged unbelief the shape of her body beneath the covers, she gave again that loud, abject, wailing cry.
Mrs. Hines was now bending over her.
She turned her head, that wooden face, across her purple shoulder.
“Get,” she said. “Get for the doctor.
It’s come now.”
He did not remember going to the stable at all.
Yet there he was, catching his mule, dragging the saddle out and clapping it on.
He was working fast, yet thinking went slow enough.
He knew why now.
He knew now that thinking went slow and smooth with calculation, as oil is spread slowly upon a surface above a brewing storm.
‘If I had known then,’ he thought. ‘If I had known then.