Читать книгу The Lonesome Quarter - Richard Wormser - Страница 10

CHAPTER V

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IT WASN’T EXACTLY a pickup, but they always called it that. Lon was glad Vera Mae hadn’t laughed when she’d seen it. He went over all the things in his mind that he’d told her about the homestead, and decided she couldn’t have expected him to have a real Ford or Chevvie pickup. Those trucks cost a couple of thousand dollars . . . A thirty-six Ford does fine, and if you saw down the rear end and build a good, hardwood body, you got as good a pickup as Henry ever made.

Sure, she knew he was poor, knew the ranch and the allotment together only ran a truckload of beef, knew the house—well, the cabin—had running water but no bathroom. Just a faucet in the kitchen . . . She’d understand about the grease stain in front of the porch where he’d drained the car last time, in order to get in the shade, and how the oil’d disappear in a little while.

Thank goodness, the kids were along and would insist on hopping out to open the gate. There wasn’t any reason in the world he hadn’t put the new catch on, except he never remembered to throw it in the car until he was almost to the gate, and it never seemed worthwhile to make a trip all the way down there when you had to go exactly there to get in and out.

Of course, with a forge standing right beside the house, he should have welded the leg for the stove, but it cooked just as well with two bricks under it, and for a man who’d bragged so about having running water, he should have put a washer in the faucet. And it was plain slovenly to have left the dishes in the sink yesterday morning, but they had had to get an early start or sleep two nights at the hotel.

Yeah, and before Duke brought Brownie up, he’d have to get the stall fixed where Belle and Betsy had kicked at each other and broken the partition down. But after all, the horses weren’t in except when it rained, and the rain was over for the year. But if that was so, why was his slicker still hanging in the kitchen so you had to go sideways to get in and out, either that or get slapped in the face?

He wouldn’t blame her if she turned right around and went back.

Vera Mae snapped him out of what was beginning to make the sunlight fade off this pretty piece of road under the Douglas firs, with a big stream running alongside. He said, “When these trees begin to give way to the pines, we’ll be getting into our country.”

Vera Mae said, “I’m looking forward to it,” and he knew she meant it. She got up on her knees and peered through the window. “Both of them asleep,” she said. “With their spurs on. Mike’s left one has slipped down till it’s on the bottom of his sneaker.”

“Duke was sure nice,” he said. “I’d never a thought of giving the kids wedding presents. Good of him to offer to bring Brownie up, too. Nicest thing he did was give you away, though. I had a market for you.”

“You ole sweet thing,” Vera Mae said. Her voice sounded so absent-minded he glanced over at her. She was still looking through the back glass, and he thought a cop must be following them until she said, “They’re getting too much sun back there; they’ll have headaches when they wake up. No, don’t stop.” She bent over and slipped off her boots. “If you stop, they’ll wake up. Just slow down.”

He had a hard time driving and watching her at the same time as she opened the door and slipped out. He cut his speed as low as it would go without bucking, or having to be shifted, and she worked back along the running board and jerked the tarp up on the bows with one hand, hanging on with the other. The wind caught the tarp and tried to take Vera Mae and tarp both off the car, but she was a lot stronger than you’d think, looking at her.

She tied enough of the tarp down to keep it from leaving, and started walking back to the door. He reached out to open it for her.

A car passed, the people in it—three of them, two women and a man—all wearing eyeglasses. The three sets of glasses looked foolish, turning to stare at Vera Mae; and when Lonnie looked back at her, she was obliging the tourists by standing on one leg, holding on to the door handle, the other leg straight up in the air, the tight hem of her saddle pants ending in a silk-stockinged foot.

Lon got to laughing, and the pickup wobbled back and forth a little, making the effect even better. The car disappeared around a bend, its out-of-state license bright and shiny in the sun.

Vera Mae collapsed on the seat, giggling. “The wild, wild West,” she said. “I can stand on my hands on horseback, too. Both hands. Only I got to have a special saddle and a trained horse.”

“Well, now,” Lonnie said, “that ought to come in right handy around a ranch.”

The creek went off at right angles to the highway, which began to fall. “We’re on the east side now,” Lonnie said. “See how the firs are thinning out, and the ponderosas startin’ up.” When she didn’t answer, he said, “The ones with the red bark. Them and cedars and a few black oaks are all we have around our country.

“The underbrush,” he said, “is mostly salal and some jack pine and white fir. It’s not as thick as on this side. Boy, one time they took me to a fire over on the coast, and the brush was something! Grew right up under the trees and—”

“What are you nervous about, Lonnie?”

He didn’t answer while they passed a big lumber truck bringing three ponderosa logs uphill. “Can’t fool you, can I? Just going over in my mind all the things wrong with the ranch. A sagebrush quarter-section is kind of a mean thing; it don’t make you enough money to live good, and it makes just enough to keep you there. You ever lived in a place didn’t have plumbing?”

“You keep taking on about the plumbing,” she said. “How often do you think I go to the can? I have fine kidneys.”

Lonnie chuckled, but it made him uneasy to hear her talk that way. Joan had made him clean up his English, and he guessed Dot had done the same thing to Tommy, though maybe a man who went to college like Tommy had done didn’t talk dirty in the first place. He hadn’t, lately, known enough other girls to know how they talked when they knew you a little . . .

A lake appeared alongside the road, through the pines. He nodded at it. “Gettin’ towards the desert,” he said. “If we had a fast car, now, we’d be in our own hills in an hour.”

They went through a lumber town, company-owned, company-built, out of company boards. The railroad tracks came up from the south and ran alongside them, and then a grain elevator, a cattle-loading yard, a big Quonset hut selling war surplus, a second-hand yard, and they were in town. Lonnie pulled into a gas station and stopped, and the kids woke up and hopped out, all in motion, Mike almost breaking his neck when he stepped on one of the spurs Duke had given the kids for “wedding presents.”

Vera Mae got out, too, as Lonnie raised the hood of the car and put water in it. He told the man to fill it up with gas. Vera Mae gave each of the kids a nickel for the coke machine, and said to Lonnie, “I might as well use that thing. Might be my last experience.”

Busy checking his tires, he looked up at her. “Aw, lay off, Vera Mae.” But she winked at him with what looked like good humor, and took June around the filling station. He couldn’t help thinking that he probably had the wife with the best figure within a couple of hundred miles; which was no reason for a man with two kids to get married. But he was sure glad he had.

They rolled out of town, and now it was tough rolling; ninety-seven miles of straight desert, with only a couple of houses in between, a roadside store, a state highway maintenance station. When he passed the latter, he said to Vera Mae, “Joe Howard told me once I can always get a job on the maintenance crew with the state. If we get short of cash.”

She didn’t seem to hear him, or didn’t think he was worth answering. She said, “Is this the desert that’s close to our place?”

He told her it was. And he got such a kick out of hearing her call it “ours” that the car clicked up ten miles before he remembered to worry about the radiator which he should have flushed out before starting on this trip . . .

“It’s not so hot, today,” he said. “You ought to cross here about the end of July. We try and wait for dark.”

Vera Mae didn’t answer at once. He looked over at her, and she was staring out the window the way he sometimes caught himself staring at her. He felt uneasy; try as hard as he could, there wasn’t anything to hang onto, anything that would tell him what she was thinking about. Maybe she and her other husband lived on a desert once. Maybe she’d taken a trip on one of those fancy deserts down in Southern California, like Palm Springs or Twenty-nine Palms with her husband. Or with some other fellow. She was from Los Angeles . . .

That’s what he mustn’t ever do. Think about her with other men. She hadn’t tried to fool him about what he was getting, just like she was getting a man with a cheap homestead and two kids.

Vera Mae must have felt him looking at her—it didn’t take much looking to watch this straight road across the alkali flats—because she gave a little shiver, like she was cold, and turned around in the seat. “Is it all like this, Lonnie?”

He shook his head. “Road goes across the alkali flats,” he said. “Where there used to be a lake. Still is, flood years. Get off ten, twelve miles, and there’s buttes and peaks. Can’t see them from the road; the high mountains kind of overshadow them . . . Look!”

He pointed, and then banged on the back window so the kids would look. A herd of antelope had gotten too close to the road, and now were retreating, frightened by the car. They turned and wheeled, like they had been practicing up, and then settled down to their steady, bounding run, alkali dust rising like smoke off a grass fire. The wind carried the dust ahead of them, and they disappeared as it settled.

“Ain’t that something?” he asked. In the truck body Mike and June were jumping up and down and yelling.

But Vera Mae didn’t seem to care much about antelopes. She had put on that faraway look again and was staring out at the cloud of dust into which the pronghorns had disappeared, but they didn’t seem to pleasure her. Finally, still looking dreamy, she said, “Lonnie?”

His hands were wet on the wheel. “Yeah?”

“Lonnie—that’s where you found Mulemouth, isn’t it? He nodded, and she went on, “And tracked him down, after your jerky’d given out, and on alkali water?”

He didn’t know what all this meant. “Sure. Picked his tracks up just about this far south and stayed with him to the north rim.”

“What a guy,” Vera Mae said. Then she sat up, and her eyes focused on where she was. “Jesus Christ, what a guy you are!”

He felt fine. He stepped on the gas, and the old bus found another two, three miles of speed from some place. He felt wonderful. All the time she’d been daydreaming, she’d been thinking about him.

The Lonesome Quarter

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