The Butterfly - James M. Cain [19]
And then she called for Moke, and he never even raised his head. "Moke, I want to talk to you."
"I got nothing to say to you."
"Moke, I'm dying."
"Then die."
"Moke, I've loved you, and there's something I've got to ask of you, and it's my right to do it, and you've got to listen to me."
"I won't."
"Then, Moke, will you sing to me once?"
To that he didn't say anything for a minute, then he came over to her and put his head on her shoulder and let her pat him and whisper in his ear. And if he sang to her I don't know. The last I saw of them, they were together up there, and I ran down to the cabin and watched Danny with Jane while he had his nap. Then Birdie Blue rode up on a mule, and told us Kady sent word to phone the doctor.
Chapter 8
It was late afternoon when I got to Tulip with the doctor, and Kady was there at the church, and she and I waited while he went up to certify the death or whatever it is they do. In a minute a wagon came up the creek with two men in it, and they had a tool chest from the old drift mouth of the mine. They went on up to a cabin, and pretty soon here came the sound of hammering. "You hear that, Jess?"
"What are they up to?"
"They're making a casket."
"Who asked them to?"
"Moke I guess."
"What's he got to do with it?"
"He's burying her."
"Him and who else?"
"These women here, these relations of his, they've already got her washed, and soon as the doctor gets through they're going to lay her out."
"Funny they didn't speak to me about it."
"Is there any reason they should?"
"Before the law, she was my wife."
"Before God, she was his."
"He certainly didn't act much like it."
"They made up their quarrel, whatever it was about. He loved her, even if he is such a poor excuse for a man, and it seems to me you don't have to get up on your ear and be onry just because you don't like him."
"I loved her once."
"This is now."
Three boys came down the hill with bunches of laurel, for the funeral, and Kady took them inside the church and showed them where to put it. I knew them all, Lew Cass, Bobby Hunter, and Luke Blue, but I didn't pay any attention to it till later that not one of them spoke to me.
In the morning Mr. Rivers, that was doing the preaching, stopped by in his car to take us up to the church. Kady got in, and Jane got in with Danny, and I started to get in. "Hold on, Jess. Nothing was said about you."
"Does there have to be?"
"Well now I don't know."
"I don't need any special invitation."
I got in, and he sat there holding the wheel a minute or two, like he was thinking, then he drove on. In the clearing by the church were some cars and that's where he parked. The girls got out with the baby and we all started for the church. "Hold on, not so fast."
Ed Blue came out with three or four others, and they had rifles. "It's all right for Kady and Jane and the baby. But Jess, he stays out."
"Who says so?"
"Moke."
Kady and Jane looked at each other, and after a while Kady said: "Jess, I think it's awful of him, and if I could I'd leave with you, right now. But it's my mother. I can't just turn my back on her."
"That how you feel, Jane?"
"Yes, Jess."
"Then there's nothing I can do but go, but you're not taking Danny in there. That runt stole him once, and maybe he takes some other fool notion now. I'm taking him home."
"Maybe you better."
When I got back to the house with him, walking, Wash was there, in his car, reading the morning paper. "Funeral too much for him hey?"
"It wasn't him, it was me."
When he heard what had happened, he cussed and raved and said we should each take a gun and go up there and clean the place out.
"We can't do it, Wash."
"Why not?"
"In the first place, it's a funeral, and it's entitled not to be busted up by any shooting. And in the second place, if I start anything like that, I got to leave Danny, and they'll find some way to get back at me by getting back on him."
"I'd forgot about that."
He marched up and down by the creek, snapping his fingers,