"But they are not my daughters," she says. "It's not myself," she says. "I'd gladly take her back, sins and all, because she is my flesh and blood.
It's for Quentin's sake."
Well, I could have said it wasn't much chance of anybody hurting Quentin much, but like I say I dont expect much but I do want to eat and sleep without a couple of women squabbling and crying in the house.
"And yours," she says. "I know how you feel toward her."
"Let her come back," I says, "far as I'm concerned."
"No," she says. "I owe that to your father's memory."
"When he was trying all the time to persuade you to let her come home when Herbert threw her out?" I says.
"You dont understand," she says. "I know you dont intend to make it more difficult for me.
But it's my place to suffer for my children," she says. "I can bear it."
"Seems to me you go to a lot of unnecessary trouble doing it," I says.
The paper burned out.
I carried it to the grate and put it in. "It just seems a shame to me to burn up good money," I says.
"Let me never see the day when my children will have to accept that, the wages of sin," she says. "I'd rather see even you dead in your coffin first."
"Have it your way," I says. "Are we going to have dinner soon?" I says. "Because if we're not, I'll have to go on back.
We're pretty busy today." She got up. "I've told her once," I says. "It seems she's waiting on Quentin or Luster or somebody.
Here, I'll call her. Wait."
But she went to the head of the stairs and called.
"Quentin aint come yit," Dilsey says.
"Well, I'll have to get on back," I says. "I can get a sandwich downtown.
I dont want to interfere with Dilsey's arrangements," I says.
Well, that got her started again, with Dilsey hobbling and mumbling back and forth, saying,
"All right, all right, Ise puttin hit on fast as I kin."
"I try to please you all," Mother says. "I try to make things as easy for you as I can."
"I'm not complaining, am I?" I says. "Have I said a word except I had to go back to work?"
"I know," she says. "I know you haven't had the chance the others had, that you've had to bury yourself in a little country store.
I wanted you to get ahead.
I knew your father would never realise that you were the only one who had any business sense, and then when everything else failed I believed that when she married, and Herbert … after his promise--"
"Well, he was probably lying too," I says. "He may not have even had a bank.
And if he had, I dont reckon he'd have to come all the way to Mississippi to get a man for it."
We ate a while.
I could hear Ben in the kitchen, where Luster was feeding him.
Like I say, if we've got to feed another mouth and she wont take that money, why not send him down to Jackson.
He'll be happier there, with people like him.
I says God knows there's little enough room for pride in this family, but it dont take much pride to not like to see a thirty year old man playing around the yard with a nigger boy, running up and down the fence and lowing like a cow whenever they play golf over there.
I says if they'd sent him to Jackson at first we'd all be better off today.
I says, you've done your duty by him; you've done all anybody can expect of you and more than most folks would do, so why not send him there and get that much benefit out of the taxes we pay.
Then she says,
"I'll be gone soon.
I know I'm just a burden to you" and I says
"You've been saying that so long that I'm beginning to believe you" only I says you'd better be sure and not let me know you're gone because I'll sure have him on number seventeen that night and I says I think I know a place where they'll take her too and the name of it's not Milk street and Honey avenue either.
Then she begun to cry and I says All right all right I have as much pride about my kinfolks as anybody even if I dont always know where they come from.
We ate for a while.
Mother sent Dilsey to the front to look for Quentin again.
"I keep telling you she's not coming to dinner," I says.
"She knows better than that," Mother says. "She knows I dont permit her to run about the streets and not come home at meal time.
Did you look good, Dilsey?"
"Dont let her, then," I says.
"What can I do," she says. "You have all of you flouted me.
Always."
"If you wouldn't come interfering, I'd make her mind," I says. "It wouldn't take me but about one day to straighten her out."