Neither of them had had entity or individuality for him for ten years; together they merely symbolised the job in the bank of which he had been deprived before he ever got it.
The air brightened, the running shadow patches were now the obverse, and it seemed to him that the fact that the day was clearing was another cunning stroke on the part of the foe, the fresh battle toward which he was carrying ancient wounds.
From time to time he passed churches, unpainted frame buildings with sheet iron steeples, surrounded by tethered teams and shabby motorcars, and it seemed to him that each of them was a picket-post where the rear guards of Circumstance peeped fleetingly back at him.
"And damn You, too," he said.
"See if You can stop me," thinking of himself, his file of soldiers with the manacled sheriff in the rear, dragging Omnipotence down from his throne, if necessary; of the embattled legions of both hell and heaven through which he tore his way and put his hands at last on his fleeing niece.
The wind was out of the southeast.
It blew steadily upon his cheek.
It seemed that he could feel the prolonged blow of it sinking through his skull, and suddenly with an old premonition he clapped the brakes on and stopped and sat perfectly still.
Then he lifted his hand to his neck and began to curse, and sat there, cursing in a harsh whisper.
When it was necessary for him to drive for any length of time he fortified himself with a handkerchief soaked in camphor, which he would tie about his throat when clear of town, thus inhaling the fumes, and he got out and lifted the seat cushion on the chance that there might be a forgotten one there.
He looked beneath both seats and stood again for a while, cursing, seeing himself mocked by his own triumphing.
He closed his eyes, leaning on the door.
He could return and get the forgotten camphor, or he could go on.
In either case, his head would be splitting, but at home he could be sure of finding camphor on Sunday, while if he went on he could not be sure.
But if he went back, he would be an hour and a half later in reaching Mottson.
"Maybe I can drive slow," he said. "Maybe I can drive slow, thinking of something else…."
He got in and started.
"I'll think of something else," he said, so he thought about Lorraine.
He imagined himself in bed with her, only he was just lying beside her, pleading with her to help him, then he thought of the money again, and that he had been outwitted by a woman, a girl.
If he could just believe it was the man who had robbed him.
But to have been robbed of that which was to have compensated him for the lost job, which he had acquired through so much effort and risk, by the very symbol of the lost job itself, and worst of all, by a bitch of a girl.
He drove on, shielding his face from the steady wind with the corner of his coat.
He could see the opposed forces of his destiny and his will drawing swiftly together now, toward a junction that would be irrevocable; he became cunning.
I cant make a blunder, he told himself.
There would be just one right thing, without alternatives: he must do that.
He believed that both of them would know him on sight, while he'd have to trust to seeing her first, unless the man still wore the red tie.
And the fact that he must depend on that red tie seemed to be the sum of the impending disaster; he could almost smell it, feel it above the throbbing of his head.
He crested the final hill.
Smoke lay in the valley, and roofs, a spire or two above trees.
He drove down the hill and into the town, slowing, telling himself again of the need for caution, to find where the tent was located first.
He could not see very well now, and he knew that it was the disaster which kept telling him to go directly and get something for his head.
At a filling station they told him that the tent was not up yet, but that the show cars were on a siding at the station.
He drove there.
Two gaudily painted pullman cars stood on the track.
He reconnoitred them before he got out. He was trying to breathe shallowly, so that the blood would not beat so in his skull.
He got out and went along the station wall, watching the cars.
A few garments hung out of the windows, limp and crinkled, as though they had been recently laundered.
On the earth beside the steps of one sat three canvas chairs.
But he saw no sign of life at all until a man in a dirty apron came to the door and emptied a pan of dishwater with a broad gesture, the sunlight glinting on the metal belly of the pan, then entered the car again.
Now I'll have to take him by surprise, before he can warn them, he thought.
It never occurred to him that they might not be there, in the car.
That they should not be there, that the whole result should not hinge on whether he saw them first or they saw him first, would be opposed to all nature and contrary to the whole rhythm of events.
And more than that: he must see them first, get the money back, then what they did would be of no importance to him, while otherwise the whole world would know that he, Jason Compson, had been robbed by Quentin, his niece, a bitch.
He reconnoitred again.
Then he went to the car and mounted the steps, swiftly and quietly, and paused at the door.
The galley was dark, rank with stale food.
The man was a white blur, singing in a cracked, shaky tenor.
An old man, he thought, and not as big as I am.
He entered the car as the man looked up. "Hey?" the man said, stopping his song.
"Where are they?" Jason said. "Quick, now.