If He'd just swapped them, there wouldn't ever be a worry about this country being deforested someday.
Or any other country.
"What do you aim for me to do?" I say.
"Stay here and get blowed clean out .of the county when that cloud breaks?"
Even with the horse it would take me fifteen minutes to ride up across the pasture to the top of the ridge and reach the house.
The path looks like a crooked limb blown against the bluff.
Anse has not been in town in twelve years.
And how his mother ever got up there to bear him, he being his mother's son.
"Vardaman's gittin the rope," he says.
After a while Vardaman appears with the plowline.
He gives the end of it to Anse and comes down the path, uncoiling it.
"You hold it tight," I say.
"I done already wrote this visit onto my books, so I'm going to charge you just the same, whether I get there or not."
"I got hit," Anse says.
"You kin come on up."
I'll be damned if I can see why I dont quit.
A man seventy years old, weighing two hundred and odd pounds, being hauled up and down a damn mountain on a rope.
I reckon it's because I must reach the fifty thousand dollar mark of dead accounts on my books before I can quit.
"What the hell does your wife mean," I say, "taking sick on top of a durn mountain?"
"I'm right sorry," he says.
He let the rope go, just dropped it, and he has turned toward the house.
There is a little daylight up here still, of the color of sulphur matches.
The boards look like strips of sulphur.
Cash does not look back.
Vernon Tull says he brings each , board up to the window for her to see it and say it is all right.
The boy overtakes us.
Anse looks back at him.
"Where's the rope?" he says.
"It's where you left it," I say.
"But never you mind that rope.
I got to get back down that bluff.
I dont aim for that storm to catch me up here.
I’d blow too durn far once I got started."
The girl is standing by the bed, fanning her.
When we enter she turns her head and looks at us.
She has been dead these ten days.
I suppose it's having been a part of Anse for so long that she cannot even make that change, if change it be.
I can remember how when I was young I believed death to be a phenomenon of the body; now I know it to be merely a function of the mind and that of the minds of the ones who suffer the bereavement.
The nihilists say it is the end; the fundamentalists, the beginning; when in reality it is no more than a single tenant or family moving out of a tenement or a town.
She looks at us.
Only her eyes seem to move.
It's like they touch us, not with sight or sense, but like the stream from a hose touches you, the stream at the instant of impact as dissociated from the nozzle as though it had never been there.
She does not look at Anse at all.
She looks at me, then at the boy.
Beneath the quilt she is no more than a bundle of rotten sticks.
"Well, Miss Addie," I say.
The girl does not stop the fan.
"How are you, sister?" I say.
Her head lies gaunt on the pillow, looking at the boy.
"You picked out a fine time to get me out here and bring up a storm."