He entered shuffling, beating his hands together. How’s that big boy? he said.
He’s crazy as ever, she said, headed for the sofa and her magazine.
Ballard squatted before the stained and drooling cretin and tousled its near bald head. Why that boy’s got good sense, he said. Ain’t ye?
Shoot, said the girl.
Ballard eyed her. She was wearing pink slacks of cheap cotton and she sat in the sofa with her legs crossed under her and a pillow in her lap. He rose and went to the stove and stood with his back to it. The stove was enclosed waisthigh in a chickenwire fence. The posts were toenailed to the floor and the fencing was nailed down as well. I bet he could push this over if he wanted to, said Ballard.
I’d smack the fire out of him too, said the girl.
Ballard was watching her. He narrowed his eyes cunningly and smiled. He’s yourn, ain’t he? he said.
The girl’s face snapped up. You’re crazy as shit, she said.
Ballard leered. Steam sifted up from his dark trouserlegs. You cain’t fool me, he said.
You’re a liar, the girl said.
You wisht I was.
You better hush.
Ballard turned to warm his front side. A car passed in the road. They both craned their necks to follow the lights along. She turned back and saw him and made a chickennecked grimace to mock him. The child in the floor sat drooling nor had it moved.
Wouldn’t be that old crazy Thomas boy, would it? said Ballard.
The girl glared at him. Her face was flushed and her eyes red.
You ain’t slipped off in the bushes with that old crazy thing have ye?
You better shut your mouth, Lester Ballard. I’ll tell Daddy on you.
I’ll tell Daddy on you, whined Ballard.
You just wait and see if I don’t.
Shoot, said Ballard. I was just teasin ye.
Why don’t you go on.
I guess you too young to know when a man’s teasin ye.
You ain’t even a man. You’re just a crazy thing.
I might be more than you think, said Ballard. How come you wear them britches?
What’s it to you?
Ballard’s mouth was dry. You cain’t see nothin, he said.
She looked at him blankly, then she reddened. I ain’t got nothin for you to see, she said.
Ballard took a few wooden steps toward the sofa and then stopped in the middle of the floor. Why don’t you show me them nice titties, he said hoarsely.
She stood up and pointed at the door. You get out of here, she said. Right now.
Come on, Ballard wheezed. I won’t ast ye nothin else.
Lester Ballard, when Daddy comes home he’s goin to kill you. Now I said get out of here and I mean it. She stamped her foot.
Ballard looked at her. All right, he said. If that’s the way you want it. He went to the door and opened it and went out and shut the door behind him. He heard her latch it. The night out there was clear and cold and the moon sat in a great ring in the sky. Ballard’s breath rose whitely toward the dark of the heavens. He turned and looked back at the house. She was watching from the corner of the window. He went on down the broken driveway to the road and crossed the ditch and went along the edge of the yard and crossed back up to the house. He picked up the rifle where he’d left it leaning against a crabapple tree and he went along the side of the house and stepped up onto a low wall of cinderblock and went along it past the clothesline and the coalpile to where he could see in the window there. He could see the back of her head above the sofa. He watched her for a while and then he raised the rifle and cocked it and laid the sights on her head. He had just done this when suddenly she rose from the sofa and turned facing the window. Ballard fired.
The crack of the rifle was outrageously loud in the cold silence. Through the spidered glass he saw her slouch and stand again. He levered another shell into the chamber and raised the rifle and then she fell. He reached down and scrabbled about in the frozen mud for the empty shell but he could not find it. He raced around the house to the front and mounted the spindly steps and came up short against the door. You dumb son of a bitch, he said. You heard her lock it. He leaped to the ground and ran to the back of the house and entered a low screened porch and pushed open the kitchen door and went through and into the front room. She was lying in the floor but she was not dead. She was moving. She seemed to be trying to get up. A thin stream of blood ran across the yellow linoleum rug and seeped away darkly in the wood of the floor. Ballard gripped the rifle and watched her. Die, goddamn you, he said. She did.
When she had ceased moving he went about the room gathering up newspapers and magazines and shredding them. The idiot watched mutely. Ballard ripped away the chickenwire from around the stove and pushed the stove over with his foot. The pipe crashed into the room in a cloud of coalsoot. He snatched open the stove door and hot embers rolled out. He piled on papers. Soon a fire going in the middle of the room. Ballard raised up the dead girl. She was slick with blood. He got her onto his shoulder and looked around. The rifle. It was leaning against the sofa. He got it and looked about wildly. Already the ceiling of the room was packed with seething tiers of smoke and small fires licked along the bare wood floor at the edge of the linoleum. As he whirled about there in the kitchen door the last thing he saw through the smoke was the idiot child. It sat watching him, berryeyed filthy and frightless among the painted flames.
BALLARD WAS WALKING THE road near the top of the mountain when the sheriff pulled up behind him in the car. The sheriff told Ballard to put the rifle down but Ballard didn’t move. He stood there by the side of the road straight up and down with the rifle in one hand and he didn’t even turn around to see who’d spoke. The sheriff reached his pistol out the window and cocked it. You could hear very clearly in the cold air the click of the hammer and the click of the hand dropping into the cylinder locking notch. Boy, you better stick it in the ground, the sheriff said.
Ballard stood the butt of the rifle in the road and let go of it. It fell into the roadside bushes.
Turn around.
Now come over here.
Now just stand there a minute.
Now get in here.
Now hold your hands out.
If you leave my rifle there somebody’s goin to get it.
I’ll worry about your goddamned rifle.
THE MAN BEHIND THE DESK had folded his hands in front of him as if about to pray. He gazed at Ballard across the tips of his fingers. Well, he said, if you hadn’t done anything wrong what were you scoutin the bushes for that nobody could find you?
I know how they do ye, Ballard muttered. Thow ye in jail and beat the shit out of ye.
This man ever been mistreated down here, Sheriff?
He knows better than that.
They tell me you cussed deputy Walker.
Well did you?
What are you lookin over there for?
I was just lookin.
Mr Walker’s not goin to tell you what to say.
He might tell me what not to.
Is it true that you burned down Mr Waldrop’s house?
No.
You were living in it at the time that it burned.
That’s a … I wasn’t done it. I’d left out of there a long time fore that.
It was quiet in the room. After a while the man behind the desk lowered his hands and folded them in his lap. Mr Ballard, he said. You are either going to have to find some other way to live or some other place in the world to do it in.
BALLARD ENTERED THE store and slammed the iron barred door behind him. The store was empty save for Mr Fox who nodded to this small and harried looking customer. The customer did not nod back. He went along the shelves picking and choosing among the goods, the cans all marshaled with their labels to the front, wrenching holes in their ordered rows and stacking them on the counter in front of the storekeeper. Finally he fetched up in front of the meatcase. Mr Fox rose and donned a white apron, old bloodstains bleached light pink, tied it in the back and approached the meatcase and switched on a light that illuminated rolls of baloney and rounds of cheese and a tray of thin sliced pork chops among the sausages and sousemeat.