"Couldn't go fer dat," one said.
"What will you go for?"
"Kin you go?" one said.
"I cant git off," the other said. "Whyn't you drive him up dar?
You aint got nothin to do."
"Yes I is."
"Whut you got to do?"
They murmured again, laughing.
"I'll give you two dollars," Jason said. "Either of you."
"I cant git away neither," the first said.
"All right," Jason said. "Go on."
He sat there for some time.
He heard a clock strike the half hour, then people began to pass, in Sunday and easter clothes.
Some looked at him as they passed, at the man sitting quietly behind the wheel of a small car, with his invisible life ravelled out about him like a wornout sock, and went on.
After a while a negro in overalls came up.
"Is you de one wants to go to Jefferson?" he said.
"Yes," Jason said. "What'll you charge me?"
"Fo dollars."
"Give you two."
"Cant go fer no less'n fo." The man in the car sat quietly. He wasn't even looking at him.
The negro said, "You want me er not?"
"All right," Jason said. "Get in.
He moved over and the negro took the wheel.
Jason closed his eyes.
I can get something for it at Jefferson, he told himself, easing himself to the jolting, I can get something there.
They drove on, along the streets where people were turning peacefully into houses and Sunday dinners, and on out of town.
He thought that.
He wasn't thinking of home, where Ben and Luster were eating cold dinner at the kitchen table.
Something--the absence of disaster, threat, in any constant evil--permitted him to forget Jefferson as any place which he had ever seen before, where his life must resume itself.
When Ben and Luster were done Dilsey sent them outdoors.
"And see kin you let him alone swell fo oclock.
T. P. be here den."
"Yessum," Luster said.
They went out.
Dilsey ate her dinner and cleared up the kitchen.
Then she went to the foot of the stairs and listened, but there was no sound.
She returned through the kitchen and out the outer door and stopped on the steps.
Ben and Luster were not in sight, but while she stood there she heard another sluggish twang from the direction of the cellar door and she went to the door and looked down upon a repetition of the morning's scene.
"He done hit jes dat way," Luster said. He contemplated the motionless saw with a kind of hopeful dejection. "I aint got de right thing to hit it wid yit," he said.
"En you aint gwine find hit down here, neither," Dilsey said. "You take him on out in de sun. You bofe get pneumonia down here on dis wet flo."
She waited and watched them cross the yard toward a clump of cedar trees near the fence.
Then she went on to her cabin.
"Now, dont you git started," Luster said. "I had enough trouble wid you today." There was a hammock made of barrel staves slatted into woven wires.
Luster lay down in the swing, but Ben went on vaguely and purposelessly.
He began to whimper again. "Hush, now," Luster said. "I fixin to whup you." He lay back in the swing.
Ben had stopped moving, but Luster could hear him whimpering. "Is you gwine hush, er aint you?" Luster said.
He got up and followed and came upon Ben squatting before a small mound of earth.
At either end of it an empty bottle of blue glass that once contained poison was fixed in the ground.
In one was a withered stalk of jimson weed.
Ben squatted before it, moaning, a slow, inarticulate sound.