The Grapes of Wrath - John Steinbeck [168]
“Well, you ain’t settlin’ down no place for a while. Might’s well make up your mind to that.’’
“We better go,’’ Al said.
Tom asked, “When is they gonna be work aroun’ here?’’
“Well, in a month the cotton’ll start. If you got plenty money you can wait for the cotton.’’
Tom said, “Ma ain’t a-gonna wanta move. She’s all tar’d out.’’
Floyd shrugged his shoulders. “I ain’t a-tryin’ to push ya north. Suit yaself. I jus’ tol’ ya what I heard.’’ He picked the oily gasket from the running board and fitted it carefully on the block and pressed it down.
“Now,’’ he said to Al, “ ’f you want to give me a han’ with that engine head.’’
Tom watched while they set the heavy head gently down over the head bolts and dropped it evenly. “Have to talk about it,’’ he said.
Floyd said, “I don’t want nobody but your folks to know about it. Jus’ you. An’ I wouldn’t of tol’ you if ya brother didn’ he’p me out here.’’
Tom said, “Well, I sure thank ya for tellin’ us. We got to figger it out. Maybe we’ll go.’’
Al said, “By God, I think I’ll go if the res’ goes or not. I’ll hitch there.’’
“An’ leave the fambly?’’ Tom asked.
“Sure. I’d come back with my jeans plumb fulla jack. Why not?’’
“Ma ain’t gonna like no such thing,’’ Tom said. “An’ Pa, he ain’t gonna like it neither.’’
Floyd set the nuts and screwed them down as far as he could with his fingers. “Me an’ my wife come out with our folks,’’ he said. “Back home we wouldn’ of thought of goin’ away. Wouldn’ of thought of it. But, hell, we was all up north a piece and I come down here, an’ they moved on, an’ now God knows where they are. Been lookin’ an’ askin’ about ’em ever since.’’ He fitted his wrench to the engine-head bolts and turned them down evenly, one turn to each nut, around and around the series.
Tom squatted down beside the car and squinted his eyes up the line of tents. A little stubble was beaten into the earth between the tents. “No, sir,’’ he said, “Ma ain’t gonna like you goin’ off.’’
“Well, seems to me a lone fella got more chance of work.’’
“Maybe, but Ma ain’t gonna like it at all.’’
Two cars loaded with disconsolate men drove down into the camp. Floyd lifted his eyes, but he didn’t ask them about their luck. Their dusty faces were sad and resistant. The sun was sinking now, and the yellow sunlight fell on the Hooverville and on the willows behind it. The children began to come out of the tents, to wander about the camp. And from the tents the women came and built their little fires. The men gathered in squatting groups and talked together.
A new Chevrolet coupé turned off the highway and headed down into the camp. It pulled to the center of the camp. Tom said, “Who’s this? They don’t belong here.’’
Floyd said, “I dunno—cops, maybe.’’
The car door opened and a man got out and stood beside the car. His companion remained seated. Now all the squatting men looked at the newcomers and the conversation was still. And the women building their fires looked secretly at the shiny car. The children moved closer with elaborate circuitousness, edging inward in long curves.
Floyd put down his wrench. Tom stood up. Al wiped his hands on his trousers. The three strolled toward the Chevrolet. The man who had got out of the car was dressed in khaki trousers and a flannel shirt. He wore a flat-brimmed Stetson hat. A sheaf of papers was held in his shirt pocket by a little fence of fountain pens and yellow pencils; and from his hip pocket protruded a notebook with metal covers. He moved to one of the groups of squatting men, and they looked up at him, suspicious and quiet. They watched him and did not move; the whites of their eyes showed beneath the irises, for they did not raise their heads to look. Tom and Al and Floyd strolled casually near.
The man said, “You men want to work?’’ Still they looked quietly, suspiciously. And men from all over the camp moved near.
One of the squatting men spoke at last. “Sure we wanta work. Where’s at’s work?’’
“Tulare County. Fruit’s opening up. Need a lot of pickers.’’
Floyd spoke up. “You doin’ the hiring?’’
“Well, I