Set down, the squire said. What are you doin with your boots off of such a cold mornin?
Holme took the chair the other man had vacated and sat and pulled on the boots laboriously. He stamped his numb feet on the floor but he could feel nothing. He looked up.
He told me to just tote em. I reckon he figured a feller barefoot be less likely to cut and run.
The squire shook his head sadly. I believe he’s slipped a cog somewheres, he said.
I never bothered nothin in his old house, Holme said.
Don’t make no difference, the squire said. You done been sentenced. I give ye pretty light for a stranger anyways.
Holme nodded.
We’ll get you started here directly you get your breakfast.
Thank ye, Holme said.
Don’t thank me. I’m just a public servant.
Yessir, he said. Grease was frying violently in a skillet behind him and the woman was putting biscuits to warm in the oven. His stomach felt like it was chewing.
The old lady’ll fix ye a bed here in the kitchen. You ain’t no desperate outlaw are ye? Ain’t murdered nobody?
No sir. I don’t reckon.
Don’t reckon eh? The squire smiled.
Holme wasn’t smiling. He was looking at the floor.
Get ye fattened up a little here on the old woman’s cookin you’ll be all right, the squire said. Might get some work out of ye then. You reckon?
Yessir. I ain’t scared to work.
The squire had tilted back in his chair, regarding him. I don’t believe you’re no bad feller Holme, he said. I don’t believe you’re no lucky feller neither. My daddy always claimed a man made his own luck. But that’s disputable, I reckon.
I believe my daddy would of disputed it. He always claimed he was the unluckiest man he knowed of.
That right? Where’s he at now? Home I reckon, where you …
He’s dead.
The squire had propped one foot on the chair before him and was rubbing his paunch abstractedly, watching nothing. His hand stopped and he looked at Holme and looked away again. Well, he said. I guess that’s about as unlucky as a feller would be likely to get.
Yessir.
You got ary family a-tall?
I ain’t got sign one of kin on this earth, Holme said.
Here, the woman said.
Holme looked vacantly at the steaming plate of eggs before him.
Holler when you get done eatin, the squire said, rising. I’ll be out in the back.
All right, Holme said. How long can I stay?
The squire stopped at the door. What? he said.
I said how long can I stay.
The squire shrugged his coat over his shoulders. It’s ten days at fifty cents a day. That’s all.
What about after that?
What about it.
I mean can I stay on longer?
What for?
Well, just to stay. To work.
At fifty cents a day?
I don’t care.
Don’t care?
I’ll stay on just for board if you can use me.
It was very quiet in the kitchen. The squire was standing with one hand on the door. The woman had stopped her puttering with dishes and pots. They were watching him.
I don’t believe I can use ye, Holme, the squire said. Holler when ye get done.
SHE CAME from the house onto the porch and stood there taking the soft evening air and smelling the rich ground beyond the road where he followed the mule down the creek and back and down again through a deepening haze, he and the mule alike beset by plovers who pass and wheel and repass and at length give up the long blue dusk to bats. The flowers in the dooryard have curled and drawn as if poisoned by dark and there is a mockingbird to tell what he knows of night.
She sat quietly in the rocker. It was full dark when he came up from the bottoms, stooped under the small japanese plow, the mule coming behind him in the gloom and the two passing like shades but for the paced hollow clop of the mule’s shoeless feet in the road and then the softer sound in the wet grass and the slight chink of harness until they went beyond hearing into the barnlot. She was not even rocking. After a while she heard him in the house and he lit a lamp and came to the porch door and called her. She rose and went in, past him wordlessly and her slippers like mice along the dark hallway until he caught up behind her and lit her way into the kitchen where she began to fix his supper.
He sat at the table watching her, his hands cupped uselessly in his lap and his face red in the lamplight. Watching her move from the stove to the safe and back, mute, shuffling, wooden. When she set the greens and cold pork and milk before him he looked at them dumbly for a long time before he took up his fork and he ate listlessly like a man in sorrow.
She started past him toward the door and he took her by the elbow. Hold up a minute, he said.
She stopped and came about slowly, doll-like, one arm poised. She was not looking at him.
Look here at me. Rinthy.
She swung her eyes vaguely toward him.
You ain’t even civil, he said. It ain’t civil to come and go thataway and not say nothin never.
I ain’t got nothin to say.
Well damn it you could say somethin. Hello or goodbye or kiss my ass. Somethin. Couldn’t ye?
I’ve not took up cussin yet, she said.
Just hello or goodbye then. Couldn’t ye?
I reckon.
Well?
Goodnight, she said.
He watched her go, his jaw let down to speak again but not speaking, watched her fade from the reach of the powdery lamplight and heard her steps soft on the moaning stairboards and the wooden clap of the door closing. Goodnight, he said. He drank the last of the milk from the glass and wiped his mouth on his shoulder in a curious birdlike gesture. He’d see all night again tonight the mule’s hasped hoofs wristing up before him and the cool earth passing and passing, canting dark and moldy with humus across the coulter with that dull and watery sound interspersed with the click of bedded creekstones.
A moth had got in and floundered at the lamp chimney with great eyed wings, lay prostrate and quivering on the greasy oilcloth tablecover. He crushed it with his fist and flicked it from sight and sat before the empty plate drumming his fingers in the mothshaped swatch of glinting dust it left.
She did not know that she was leaving. She woke in the night and rose half tranced from the bed and began to dress, all in darkness and with gravity. Perhaps some dream had moved her so. She took her few things from the chifforobe and bundled them and went to the landing beyond her door. She listened for his breathing in the room opposite but she could hear nothing. She crouched in the dark long and long for fear he was awake and when she did descend the stairs in her bare feet she paused again at the bottom in the dead black foyer and listened up the stairwell. And she waited again at the front door with it open, poised between the maw of the dead and loveless house and the outer dark like a frail thief. It was damp and cool and she could hear roosters beginning. She closed the door and went down the path to the gate and into the road, shivering in the cold starlight, under vega and the waterserpent.
She went west on the road while the sky grew pale and the waking world of shapes accrued about her. Hurrying along with the sunrise at her back she had the look of some deranged refugee from its occurrence. Before she had gone far she heard a horse on the road behind her and she fled into the wood with her heart at her throat. It came out of the sun at a slow canter, in a silhouette agonized to shapelessness. She crouched in the bushes and watched it, a huge horse emerging seared and whole from the sun’s eye and passing like a wrecked caravel gaunt-ribbed and black and mad with tattered saddle and dangling stirrups and hoofs clopping softly in the dust and passing enormous and emaciate and inflamed and the sound of it dying down the road to a distant echo of applause in a hall forever empty.