"Then why are you taking Jewel?" I say.
"I want him to help me load," he says.
Tull
Anse keeps on rubbing his knees.
His overalls are faded; on one knee a serge patch cut out of a pair of Sunday pants, wore iron-slick.
"No man mislikes it more than me," he says.
"A fellow's got to guess ahead now and then," I say.
"But, come long and short, it wont be no harm done neither way." "She'll want to get started right off," he says. "It's far enough to Jefferson at best."
"But the roads is good now," I say.
It's fixing to rain tonight, too.
His folks buries at New Hope, too, not three miles away.
But it's just like him to marry a woman born a day's hard ride away and have her die on him.
He looks out over the land, rubbing his knees.
"No man so mislikes it," he says.
"They'll get back in plenty of time," I say.
"I wouldn't worry none."
"It means three dollars," he says.
"Might be it wont be no need for them to rush back, noways," I say.
"I hope it."
"She's a-going," he says.
"Her mind is set on it."
It's a hard life on women, for a fact.
Some women.
I mind my mammy lived to be seventy and more.
Worked every day, rain or shine; never a sick day since her last chap was born until one day she kind of looked around her and then she went and taken that lace-trimmed night gown she had had forty-five years and never wore out of the chest and put it on and laid down on the bed and pulled the covers up and shut her eyes.
"You all will have to look out for pa the best you can," she said.
"I'm tired."
Anse rubs his hands on his knees.
"The Lord giveth," he says.
We can hear Cash a-hammering and sawing beyond the corner.
It's true.
Never a truer breath was ever breathed.
"The Lord giveth," I say.
That boy comes up the hill.
He is carrying a fish nigh long as he is.
He slings it to the ground and grunts "Hah" and spits over his shoulder like a man.
Durn nigh long as he is.
"What's that?" I say.
"A hog?
Where'd you get it?"
"Down to the bridge," he says.
He turns it over, the under side caked over with dust where it is wet, the eye coated over, humped under the dirt.
"Are you aiming to leave it laying there?" Anse says.
"I aim to show it to ma," Vardaman says.
He looks toward the door.
We can hear the talking, coming out on the draft.
Cash, too, knocking and hammering at the boards.
"There's company in there," he says.
"Just my folks," I say.
"They'd enjoy to see it too."