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You think she’s lost her mind now? Is that it? Gone over the hill?

I guess that’s what it is. Or just pure old age.

You don’t think she’s going to pay.

I don’t think she can pay. It don’t look likely to me, Dad.

Well. We don’t want it back. We don’t ever want to have to take anything back.

She’s just all alone over there, is mostly what it is.

Nobody to take care of her? Nobody to talk to?

No sir. Not that I know of.

Well. We can’t take back her freezer. It’s like she had some idea but whatever it was she forgot it. Let her go. It’ll be laid onto bad debts, that’s all.

Yes. That’s the best way.

What else? Anything happening around town or out in the country?

You heard they started cutting wheat, Bob said.

They should. It’s almost the start of July.

You heard about that custom combiner from Texas.

I don’t know. I guess. You mean that fellow that claims when you cross into Oklahoma it makes you want to steal?

You heard his story about old Floyd.

I don’t guess I heard that.

Well, as he says, last year they come into this little town down in Oklahoma just before the Fourth of July and the hands, they all wanted a day off. He said he didn’t trust them but they’d been working pretty hard and deserved some vacation. All of them was pretty much a bunch of alkies, he said. Anyway so they was down there in this little place and he let them go for the one day like they asked. Then the next day when they come back one of the men isn’t with them. What happened to Floyd? he says.

Well, one of them says, he’s sort of scratching his foot in the dirt, I guess we lost old Floyd.

What do you mean you lost old Floyd?

Well. We went out fishing in a boat on this lake and I guess we had a little bit to drink and then old Floyd, he falls in. He never rises back up.

Goddamn. Didn’t you look for him?

Yeah. We looked for him. But we couldn’t find him.

So finally this Texas guy telling the story he says he had to call Floyd’s mama to tell her they’d lost old Floyd. His mama tells him, Well, just give his things to the hands.

Dad shook his head, grinning. Hell of a deal. I guess it’s funny, in a sort of way. He stared for a moment at the two men sitting on the couch. They say drowning is the way to go, isn’t that right? But how anybody would know that I don’t know.

That’s right, Bob said. How would they know?

But you boys now, you could take me over to Bonny Dam and tip me in, couldn’t you.

Hell now, Dad, Rudy said. That ain’t no way to talk.

It ain’t no way to talk maybe, but it would settle things. It wouldn’t be a lot of trouble for you.

They looked down at their coffee cups. It ain’t that it would be any trouble, Rudy said. That ain’t at all the point, Dad.

All right then. I suppose not. He studied them for a while longer. I guess we’re done here. You boys want some more coffee before you go?

We wouldn’t care to bother you.

You don’t bother me. I just appreciate you coming. It’s good to see you.

It’s good to see you too, Dad.

You know I’m going to have Lorraine sit in with us next time.

Oh? How’s that now?

In case she takes over for me.

They stared at him, not speaking.

Afterward, he said. When I’m gone.

I don’t know as we get what you’re talking about here, Dad.

You will. Nothing’s definite yet.

14

THE ONLY REASON Dad Lewis was home midweek on a winter’s day thirty-seven years ago was that he had contracted some form of intestinal flu. And the only reason he saw Frank and the Seegers kid out in the corral with the horse in the afternoon was that he’d had to get up from bed to go into the bathroom when he thought he was going to be sick again as he had once in the night and twice already that morning, and it was then, when he looked out through the bedroom window toward the barn out across the backyard, that he saw the two boys. They were wearing winter coats and stocking caps, Frank a good head taller than the Seegers kid. The wind was blowing hard and they looked cold.

Dad was alone in the house. Mary was gone, working at the bazaar, selling chokecherry jam and homemade quilts and crocheted dishcloths in the basement of the Community Church for an African fund-raiser. And Lorraine hadn’t come home from school yet.

He went to the bathroom and was sick for a while and afterward returned to bed, looking again out the window, but didn’t see the boys this time and didn’t think anything of it, but when he got up from bed an hour later and looked once more and didn’t see them in the corral this time either, he wondered what was wrong. He thought they might have gotten hurt. Or were having trouble with the mare. He stood looking out the bedroom window for some time.

Finally he went out across the kitchen to the back porch and watched out the window. He pushed open the door and stepped out into the howling raw day and cupped his hands and hollered toward the barn. The wind tore his voice away. He could barely hear it himself. He hollered again. He looked left and right and saw nothing but Berta May’s yellow house to the south and the empty windblown weed-grown undeveloped lots to the north and the raised bed of the railroad tracks. He stepped back into the house and shut the door. Weak and sick, he stood shivering on the back porch in his pajamas, shaking steadily, looking out the window.

He put on his winter coat and boots and work cap and scarf and gloves and crossed the bare winter lawn in the backyard and went on into the corral. The wispy dirt was swept up by the wind into little drifts across the bare ground. The wind cried and whistled in the leafless trees. He came around the south end of the barn out of the weather and opened the door and peered in at the dim and shadowy center bay. Shafts of sunlight from the cracks in the high plank barn walls fell across the dirt floor. Dust motes and chaff drifted in the air. There was the rich smell of hay and the good smell of horse. He stood for a moment to allow his eyes to adjust. Then he could see Frank and the Seegers kid.

They were mounted on the mare, riding her around in a circle in the closed area of the dirt-floored barn, Frank behind the other boy, their heads close together, and each of them was dressed in one of Lorraine’s frilly summer dresses, trotting in and out of the shafts of sunlight. Riding the horse bareback, bouncing, their thin bare legs clutching the mare’s shaggy winter-coated barrel. Frank held the reins in one hand and his other hand was wrapped around the Seegers kid.

Then Frank saw Dad standing in the barn doorway. He reined the mare in sharply. Dad stepped inside and moved over to them. The Seegers boy was a redheaded twelve-year-old kid, skinny, his neck scrawny above the square-cut yoke of the pink dress. He looked cold and scared. He and Frank both had lipstick on their mouths.

Get down from that horse, Dad said.

Dad, Frank said. It’s all right.

Get down from there.

Frank slid down, then the other boy slipped off. They stood waiting, watching Dad.

What in the goddamn hell do you think you’re doing? he said.

We weren’t hurting anything, Frank said.

You weren’t.

No.

Let me have the goddamn horse. And get the hell out of those goddamn dresses.