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_Title:_ Of Mice and Men
_Date of first publication:_ 1937
_Author:_ John Steinbeck (1902-1968)
_Date first posted:_ Jan. 20, 2021
_Date last updated:_ Jan. 20, 2021
Faded Page eBook #20210154
This eBook was produced by: Mardi Desjardins, Jen Haines & the online
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[Cover Illustration]
O F M I C E A N D M E N
[Illustration]
Of Mice and Men
J O H N S T E I N B E C K
PUBLISHED BY THE VIKING PRESS
NEW YORK
Copyright 1937 by John Steinbeck. All rights reserved
Compass Books Edition
Issued in 1963 by The Viking Press, Inc.
625 Madison Avenue, New York 22, New York
Distributed in Canada by The Macmillan Company of Canada Limited
M B G
Set in Janson and Times Roman types and
Printed in the United States of America by The Murray Printing Co.
O F M I C E A N D M E N
1
A few miles south of Soledad, the Salinas River drops in close to the
hillside bank and runs deep and green. The water is warm too, for it has
slipped twinkling over the yellow sands in the sunlight before reaching
the narrow pool. On one side of the river the golden foothill slopes
curve up to the strong and rocky Gabilan mountains, but on the valley
side the water is lined with trees—willows fresh and green with every
spring, carrying in their lower leaf junctures the debris of the
winter’s flooding; and sycamores with mottled, white, recumbent limbs
and branches that arch over the pool. On the sandy bank under the trees
the leaves lie deep and so crisp that a lizard makes a great skittering
if he runs among them. Rabbits come out of the brush to sit on the sand
in the evening, and the damp flats are covered with the night tracks of
’coons, and with the spread pads of dogs from the ranches, and with the
split-wedge tracks of deer that come to drink in the dark.
There is a path through the willows and among the sycamores, a path
beaten hard by boys coming down from the ranches to swim in the deep
pool, and beaten hard by tramps who come wearily down from the highway
in the evening to jungle-up near water. In front of the low horizontal
limb of a giant sycamore there is an ash pile made by many fires; the
limb is worn smooth by men who have sat on it.
* * * * *
Evening of a hot day started the little wind to moving among the leaves.
The shade climbed up the hills toward the top. On the sand banks the
rabbits sat as quietly as little gray, sculptured stones. And then from
the direction of the state highway came the sound of footsteps on crisp
sycamore leaves. The rabbits hurried noiselessly for cover. A stilted
heron labored up into the air and pounded down river. For a moment the
place was lifeless, and then two men emerged from the path and came into
the opening by the green pool.
They had walked in single file down the path, and even in the open one
stayed behind the other. Both were dressed in denim trousers and in
denim coats with brass buttons. Both wore black, shapeless hats and both
carried tight blanket rolls slung over their shoulders. The first man
was small and quick, dark of face, with restless eyes and sharp, strong
features. Every part of him was defined: small, strong hands, slender
arms, a thin and bony nose. Behind him walked his opposite, a huge man,
shapeless of face, with large, pale eyes, with wide, sloping shoulders;
and he walked heavily, dragging his feet a little, the way a bear drags
his paws. His arms did not swing at his sides, but hung loosely.
The first man stopped short in the clearing, and the follower nearly ran
over him. He took off his hat and wiped the sweat-band with his
forefinger and snapped the moisture off. His huge companion dropped his
blankets and flung himself down and drank from the surface of the green
pool; drank with long gulps, snorting into the water like a horse. The
small man stepped nervously beside him.
“Lennie!” he said sharply. “Lennie, for God’ sakes don’t drink so much.”
Lennie continued to snort into the pool. The small man leaned over and
shook him by the shoulder. “Lennie. You gonna be sick like you was last
night.”
Lennie dipped his whole head under, hat and all, and then he sat up on
the bank and his hat dripped down on his blue coat and ran down his
back. “Tha’s good,” he said. “You drink some, George. You take a good
big drink.” He smiled happily.
George unslung his bindle and dropped it gently on the bank. “I ain’t
sure it’s good water,” he said. “Looks kinda scummy.”
Lennie dabbled his big paw in the water and wiggled his fingers so the
water arose in little splashes; rings widened across the pool to the
other side and came back again. Lennie watched them go. “Look, George.
Look what I done.”
George knelt beside the pool and drank from his hand with quick scoops.
“Tastes all right,” he admitted. “Don’t really seem to be running,
though. You never oughta drink water when it ain’t running, Lennie,” he
said hopelessly. “You’d drink out of a gutter if you was thirsty.” He
threw a scoop of water into his face and rubbed it about with his hand,
under his chin and around the back of his neck. Then he replaced his
hat, pushed himself back from the river, drew up his knees and embraced
them. Lennie, who had been watching, imitated George exactly. He pushed
himself back, drew up his knees, embraced them, looked over to George to
see whether he had it just right. He pulled his hat down a little more
over his eyes, the way George’s hat was.
George stared morosely at the water. The rims of his eyes were red with
sun glare. He said angrily, “We could just as well of rode clear to the
ranch if that bastard bus driver knew what he was talkin’ about. ‘Jes’ a
little stretch down the highway,’ he says. ‘Jes’ a little stretch.’ God
damn near four miles, that’s what it was! Didn’t wanta stop at the ranch
gate, that’s what. Too God damn lazy to pull up. Wonder he isn’t too
damn good to stop in Soledad at all. Kicks us out and says, ‘Jes’ a
little stretch down the road.’ I bet it was _more_ than four miles. Damn
hot day.”
Lennie looked timidly over to him. “George?”
“Yeah, what ya want?”
“Where we goin’, George?”
The little man jerked down the brim of his hat and scowled over at
Lennie. “So you forgot that awready, did you? I gotta tell you again, do
I? Jesus Christ, you’re a crazy bastard!”
“I forgot,” Lennie said softly. “I tried not to forget. Honest to God I
did, George.”
“O.K.—O.K. I’ll tell ya again. I ain’t got nothing to do. Might jus’ as
well spen’ all my time tellin’ you things and then you forget ’em, and I
tell you again.” “Tried and tried,” said Lennie, “but it didn’t do no
good. I remember about the rabbits, George.”
“The hell with the rabbits. That’s all you ever can remember is them
rabbits. O.K.! Now you listen and this time you got to remember so we
don’t get in no trouble. You remember settin’ in that gutter on Howard
street and watchin’ that blackboard?”
Lennie’s face broke into a delighted smile. “Why sure, George, I
remember that . . . but . . . what’d we do then? I remember some girls
come by and you says . . . you say . . .”
“The hell with what I says. You remember about us goin’ into Murray and
Ready’s, and they give us work cards and bus tickets?”
“Oh, sure, George. I remember that now.” His hands went quickly into his
side coat pockets. He said gently, “George . . . I ain’t got mine. I
musta lost it.” He looked down at the ground in despair.
“You never had none, you crazy bastard. I got both of ’em here. Think
I’d let you carry your own work card?”
Lennie grinned with relief. “I . . . I thought I put it in my side
pocket.” His hand went into the pocket again.
George looked sharply at him. “What’d you take outa that pocket?”
“Ain’t a thing in my pocket,” Lennie said cleverly.
“I know there ain’t. You got it in your hand. What you got in your
hand—hidin’ it?”
“I ain’t got nothin’, George. Honest.”
“Come on, give it here.”
Lennie held his closed hand away from George’s direction. “It’s on’y a
mouse, George.”
“A mouse? A live mouse?”
“Uh-uh. Jus’ a dead mouse, George. I didn’ kill it. Honest! I found it.
I found it dead.”
“Give it here!” said George.
“Aw, leave me have it, George.”
“_Give it here!_”
Lennie’s closed hand slowly obeyed. George took the mouse and threw it
across the pool to the other side, among the brush. “What you want of a
dead mouse, anyways?”
“I could pet it with my thumb while we walked along,” said Lennie.
“Well, you ain’t petting no mice while you walk with me. You remember
where we’re goin’ now?”
Lennie looked startled and then in embarrassment hid his face against
his knees. “I forgot again.”
“Jesus Christ,” George said resignedly. “Well—look, we’re gonna work on
a ranch like the one we come from up north.”
“Up north?”
“In Weed.”
“Oh, sure. I remember. In Weed.”
“That ranch we’re goin’ to is right down there about a quarter mile.
We’re gonna go in an’ see the boss. Now, look—I’ll give him the work
tickets, but you ain’t gonna say a word. You jus’ stand there and don’t
say nothing. If he finds out what a crazy bastard you are, we won’t get
no job, but if he sees ya work before he hears ya talk, we’re set. Ya
got that?”
“Sure, George. Sure I got it.”
“O.K. Now when we go in to see the boss, what you gonna do?”
“I . . . I,” Lennie thought. His face grew tight with thought. “I . . .
ain’t gonna say nothin’. Jus’ gonna stan’ there.”
“Good boy. That’s swell. You say that over two, three times so you sure
won’t forget it.”
Lennie droned to himself softly, “I ain’t gonna say nothin’ . . . I
ain’t gonna say nothin’ . . . I ain’t gonna say nothin’.”
“O.K.,” said George. “An’ you ain’t gonna do no bad things like you done
in Weed, neither.”
Lennie looked puzzled. “Like I done in Weed?”
“Oh, so ya forgot that too, did ya? Well, I ain’t gonna remind ya, fear
ya do it again.”
A light of understanding broke on Lennie’s face. “They run us outa
Weed,” he exploded triumphantly.
“Run us out, hell,” said George disgustedly. “We run. They was lookin’
for us, but they didn’t catch us.”
Lennie giggled happily. “I didn’t forget that, you bet.”
George lay back on the sand and crossed his hands under his head, and
Lennie imitated him, raising his head to see whether he were doing it
right. “God, you’re a lot of trouble,” said George. “I could get along
so easy and so nice if I didn’t have you on my tail. I could live so
easy and maybe have a girl.”
For a moment Lennie lay quiet, and then he said hopefully, “We gonna
work on a ranch, George.”
“Awright. You got that. But we’re gonna sleep here because I got a
reason.”
The day was going fast now. Only the tops of the Gabilan mountains
flamed with the light of the sun that had gone from the valley. A water
snake slipped along on the pool, its head held up like a little
periscope. The reeds jerked slightly in the current. Far off toward the
highway a man shouted something, and another man shouted back. The
sycamore limbs rustled under a little wind that died immediately.
“George—why ain’t we goin’ on to the ranch and get some supper? They
got supper at the ranch.”
George rolled on his side. “No reason at all for you. I like it here.
Tomorra we’re gonna go to work. I seen thrashin’ machines on the way
down. That means we’ll be bucking grain bags, bustin’ a gut. Tonight I’m
gonna lay right here and look up. I like it.”
Lennie got up on his knees and looked down at George. “Ain’t we gonna
have no supper?”
“Sure we are, if you gather up some dead willow sticks. I got three can
of beans in my bindle. You get a fire ready. I’ll give you a match when
you get the sticks together. Then we’ll heat the beans and have supper.”
Lennie said, “I like beans with ketchup.”
“Well, we ain’t got no ketchup. You go get wood. An’ don’t you fool
around. It’ll be dark before long.”
Lennie lumbered to his feet and disappeared in the brush. George lay
where he was and whistled softly to himself. There were sounds of
splashings down the river in the direction Lennie had taken. George
stopped whistling and listened. “Poor bastard,” he said softly, and then
went on whistling again.
In a moment Lennie came crashing back through the brush. He carried one
small willow stick in his hand. George sat up. “Awright,” he said
brusquely. “Gi’me that mouse!”
But Lennie made an elaborate pantomime of innocence. “What mouse,
George? I ain’t got no mouse.”
George held out his hand. “Come on. Give it to me. You ain’t puttin’
nothing over.”
Lennie hesitated, backed away, looked wildly at the brush line as though
he contemplated running for his freedom. George said coldly, “You gonna
give me that mouse or do I have to sock you?”
“Give you what, George?”
“You know God damn well what. I want that mouse.”
Lennie reluctantly reached into his pocket. His voice broke a little. “I
don’t know why I can’t keep it. It ain’t nobody’s mouse. I didn’t steal
it. I found it lyin’ right beside the road.”
George’s hand remained outstretched imperiously. Slowly, like a terrier
who doesn’t want to bring a ball to its master, Lennie approached, drew
back, approached again. George snapped his fingers sharply, and at the
sound Lennie laid the mouse in his hand.
“I wasn’t doin’ nothing bad with it, George. Jus’ strokin’ it.”
George stood up and threw the mouse as far as he could into the
darkening brush, and then he stepped to the pool and washed his hands.
“You crazy fool. Don’t you think I could see your feet was wet where you
went acrost the river to get it?” He heard Lennie’s whimpering cry and
wheeled about. “Blubberin’ like a baby! Jesus Christ! A big guy like
you.” Lennie’s lip quivered and tears started in his eyes. “Aw, Lennie!”
George put his hand on Lennie’s shoulder. “I ain’t takin’ it away jus’
for meanness. That mouse ain’t fresh, Lennie; and besides, you’ve broke
it pettin’ it. You get another mouse that’s fresh and I’ll let you keep
it a little while.”
Lennie sat down on the ground and hung his head dejectedly. “I don’t
know where there is no other mouse. I remember a lady used to give ’em
to me—ever’ one she got. But that lady ain’t here.”
George scoffed. “Lady, huh? Don’t even remember who that lady was. That
was your own Aunt Clara. An’ she stopped givin’ ’em to ya. You always
killed em.”
Lennie looked sadly up at him. “They was so little,” he said,
apologetically. “I’d pet ’em, and pretty soon they bit my fingers and I
pinched their heads a little and then they was dead—because they was so
little.”
“I wish’t we’d get the rabbits pretty soon, George. They ain’t so
little.”
“The hell with the rabbits. An’ you ain’t to be trusted with no live
mice. Your Aunt Clara give you a rubber mouse and you wouldn’t have
nothing to do with it.”
“It wasn’t no good to pet,” said Lennie.
The flame of the sunset lifted from the mountain-tops and dusk came into
the valley, and a half darkness came in among the willows and the
sycamores. A big carp rose to the surface of the pool, gulped air and
then sank mysteriously into the dark water again, leaving widening rings
on the water. Overhead the leaves whisked again and little puffs of
willow cotton blew down and landed on the pool’s surface.
“You gonna get that wood?” George demanded. “There’s plenty right up
against the back of that sycamore. Floodwater wood. Now you get it.”
Lennie went behind the tree and brought out a litter of dried leaves and
twigs. He threw them in a heap on the old ash pile and went back for
more and more. It was almost night now. A dove’s wings whistled over the
water. George walked to the fire pile and lighted the dry leaves. The
flame cracked up among the twigs and fell to work. George undid his
bindle and brought out three cans of beans. He stood them about the
fire, close in against the blaze, but not quite touching the flame.
“There’s enough beans for four men,” George said.
Lennie watched him from over the fire. He said patiently, “I like ’em
with ketchup.”
“Well, we ain’t got any,” George exploded. “Whatever we ain’t got,
that’s what you want. God a’mighty, if I was alone I could live so easy.
I could go get a job an’ work, an’ no trouble. No mess at all, and when
the end of the month come I could take my fifty bucks and go into town
and get whatever I want. Why, I could stay in a cat house all night. I
could eat any place I want, hotel or any place, and order any damn thing
I could think of. An’ I could do all that every damn month. Get a gallon
of whisky, or set in a pool room and play cards or shoot pool.” Lennie
knelt and looked over the fire at the angry George. And Lennie’s face
was drawn with terror. “An’ whatta I got,” George went on furiously. “I
got you! You can’t keep a job and you lose me ever’ job I get. Jus’ keep
me shovin’ all over the country all the time. An’ that ain’t the worst.
You get in trouble. You do bad things and I got to get you out.” His
voice rose nearly to a shout. “You crazy son-of-a-bitch. You keep me in
hot water all the time.” He took on the elaborate manner of little girls
when they are mimicking one another. “Jus’ wanted to feel that girl’s
dress—jus’ wanted to pet it like it was a mouse—— Well, how the hell
did she know you jus’ wanted to feel her dress? She jerks back and you
hold on like it was a mouse. She yells and we got to hide in a
irrigation ditch all day with guys lookin’ for us, and we got to sneak
out in the dark and get outta the country. All the time somethin’ like
that—all the time. I wisht I could put you in a cage with about a
million mice an’ let you have fun.” His anger left him suddenly. He
looked across the fire at Lennie’s anguished face, and then he looked
ashamedly at the flames.
It was quite dark now, but the fire lighted the trunks of the trees and
the curving branches overhead. Lennie crawled slowly and cautiously
around the fire until he was close to George. He sat back on his heels.
George turned the bean cans so that another side faced the fire. He
pretended to be unaware of Lennie so close beside him.
“George,” very softly. No answer. “George!”
“Whatta you want?”
“I was only foolin’, George. I don’t want no ketchup. I wouldn’t eat no
ketchup if it was right here beside me.”
“If it was here, you could have some.”
“But I wouldn’t eat none, George. I’d leave it all for you. You could
cover your beans with it and I wouldn’t touch none of it.”
George still stared morosely at the fire. “When I think of the swell
time I could have without you, I go nuts. I never get no peace.”
Lennie still knelt. He looked off into the darkness across the river.
“George, you want I should go away and leave you alone?”
“Where the hell could you go?”
“Well, I could. I could go off in the hills there. Some place I’d find a
cave.”
“Yeah? How’d you eat. You ain’t got sense enough to find nothing to
eat.”
“I’d find things, George. I don’t need no nice food with ketchup. I’d
lay out in the sun and nobody’d hurt me. An’ if I foun’ a mouse, I could
keep it. Nobody’d take it away from me.”
George looked quickly and searchingly at him. “I been mean, ain’t I?”
“If you don’ want me I can go off in the hills an’ find a cave. I can go
away any time.”
“No—look! I was jus’ foolin’, Lennie. ’Cause I want you to stay with
me. Trouble with mice is you always kill ’em.” He paused. “Tell you what
I’ll do, Lennie. First chance I get I’ll give you a pup. Maybe you
wouldn’t kill it. That’d be better than mice. And you could pet it
harder.”
Lennie avoided the bait. He had sensed his advantage. “If you don’t want
me, you only jus’ got to say so, and I’ll go off in those hills right
there—right up in those hills and live by myself. An’ I won’t get no
mice stole from me.”
George said, “I want you to stay with me, Lennie. Jesus Christ,
somebody’d shoot you for a coyote if you was by yourself. No, you stay
with me. Your Aunt Clara wouldn’t like you running off by yourself, even
if she is dead.”
Lennie spoke craftily, “Tell me—like you done before.”
“Tell you what?”
“About the rabbits.”
George snapped, “You ain’t gonna put nothing over on me.”
Lennie pleaded, “Come on, George. Tell me. Please, George. Like you done
before.”
“You get a kick outta that, don’t you? Awright, I’ll tell you, and then
we’ll eat our supper. . . .”
George’s voice became deeper. He repeated his words rhythmically as
though he had said them many times before. “Guys like us, that work on
ranches, are the loneliest guys in the world. They got no family. They
don’t belong no place. They come to a ranch an’ work up a stake and then
they go inta town and blow their stake, and the first thing you know
they’re poundin’ their tail on some other ranch. They ain’t got nothing
to look ahead to.”
Lennie was delighted. “That’s it—that’s it. Now tell how it is with
us.”
George went on. “With us it ain’t like that. We got a future. We got
somebody to talk to that gives a damn about us. We don’t have to sit in
no bar room blowin’ in our jack jus’ because we got no place else to go.
If them other guys gets in jail they can rot for all anybody gives a
damn. But not us.”
Lennie broke in. “_But not us! An’ why? Because . . . because I got you
to look after me, and you got me to look after you, and that’s why._” He
laughed delightedly. “Go on now, George!”
“You got it by heart. You can do it yourself.”
“No, you. I forget some a’ the things. Tell about how it’s gonna be.”
“O.K. Someday—we’re gonna get the jack together and we’re gonna have a
little house and a couple of acres an’ a cow and some pigs and——”
“_An’ live off the fatta the lan’_,” Lennie shouted. “An’ have
_rabbits_. Go on, George! Tell about what we’re gonna have in the garden
and about the rabbits in the cages and about the rain in the winter and
the stove, and how thick the cream is on the milk like you can hardly
cut it. Tell about that, George.”
“Why’n’t you do it yourself? You know all of it.”
“No . . . you tell it. It ain’t the same if I tell it. Go on . . .
George. How I get to tend the rabbits.”
“Well,” said George, “we’ll have a big vegetable patch and a rabbit
hutch and chickens. And when it rains in the winter, we’ll just say the
hell with goin’ to work, and we’ll build up a fire in the stove and set
around it an’ listen to the rain comin’ down on the roof—Nuts!” He took
out his pocket knife. “I ain’t got time for no more.” He drove his knife
through the top of one of the bean cans, sawed out the top and passed
the can to Lennie. Then he opened a second can. From his side pocket he
brought out two spoons and passed one of them to Lennie.
They sat by the fire and filled their mouths with beans and chewed
mightily. A few beans slipped out of the side of Lennie’s mouth. George
gestured with his spoon. “What you gonna say tomorrow when the boss asks
you questions?”
Lennie stopped chewing and swallowed. His face was concentrated. “I
. . . I ain’t gonna . . . say a word.”
“Good boy! That’s fine, Lennie! Maybe you’re gettin’ better. When we get
the coupla acres I can let you tend the rabbits all right. ’Specially if
you remember as good as that.”
Lennie choked with pride. “I can remember,” he said.
George motioned with his spoon again. “Look, Lennie. I want you to look
around here. You can remember this place, can’t you? The ranch is about
a quarter mile up that way. Just follow the river?”
“Sure,” said Lennie. “I can remember this. Di’n’t I remember about not
gonna say a word?”
“’Course you did. Well, look. Lennie—if you jus’ happen to get in
trouble like you always done before, I want you to come right here an’
hide in the brush.”
“Hide in the brush,” said Lennie slowly.
“Hide in the brush till I come for you. Can you remember that?”
“Sure I can, George. Hide in the brush till you come.”
“But you ain’t gonna get in no trouble, because if you do, I won’t let
you tend the rabbits.” He threw his empty bean can off into the brush.
“I won’t get in no trouble, George. I ain’t gonna say a word.”
“O.K. Bring your bindle over here by the fire. It’s gonna be nice
sleepin’ here. Lookin’ up, and the leaves. Don’t build up no more fire.
We’ll let her die down.”
They made their beds on the sand, and as the blaze dropped from the fire
the sphere of light grew smaller; the curling branches disappeared and
only a faint glimmer showed where the tree trunks were. From the
darkness Lennie called, “George—you asleep?”
“No. Whatta you want?”
“Let’s have different color rabbits, George.”
“Sure we will,” George said sleepily. “Red and blue and green rabbits,
Lennie. Millions of ’em.”
“Furry ones, George, like I seen in the fair in Sacramento.”
“Sure, furry ones.”
“’Cause I can jus’ as well go away, George, an’ live in a cave.”
“You can jus’ as well go to hell,” said George. “Shut up now.”
The red light dimmed on the coals. Up the hill from the river a coyote
yammered, and a dog answered from the other side of the stream. The
sycamore leaves whispered in a little night breeze.
2
The bunk house was a long, rectangular building. Inside, the walls were
whitewashed and the floor unpainted. In three walls there were small,
square windows, and in the fourth, a solid door with a wooden latch.
Against the walls were eight bunks, five of them made up with blankets
and the other three showing their burlap ticking. Over each bunk there
was nailed an apple box with the opening forward so that it made two
shelves for the personal belongings of the occupant of the bunk. And
these shelves were loaded with little articles, soap and talcum powder,
razors and those Western magazines ranch men love to read and scoff at
and secretly believe. And there were medicines on the shelves, and
little vials, combs; and from nails on the box sides, a few neckties.
Near one wall there was a black cast-iron stove, its stovepipe going
straight up through the ceiling. In the middle of the room stood a big
square table littered with playing cards, and around it were grouped
boxes for the players to sit on.
At about ten o’clock in the morning the sun threw a bright dust-laden
bar through one of the side windows, and in and out of the beam flies
shot like rushing stars.
The wooden latch raised. The door opened and a tall, stoop-shouldered
old man came in. He was dressed in blue jeans and he carried a big
push-broom in his left hand. Behind him came George, and behind George,
Lennie.
“The boss was expectin’ you last night,” the old man said. “He was sore
as hell when you wasn’t here to go out this morning.” He pointed with
his right arm, and out of the sleeve came a round stick-like wrist, but
no hand. “You can have them two beds there,” he said, indicating two
bunks near the stove.
George stepped over and threw his blankets down on the burlap sack of
straw that was a mattress. He looked into his box shelf and then picked
a small yellow can from it. “Say. What the hell’s this?”
“I don’t know,” said the old man.
“Says ‘positively kills lice, roaches and other scourges.’ What the hell
kind of bed you giving us, anyways. We don’t want no pants rabbits.”
The old swamper shifted his broom and held it between his elbow and his
side while he held out his hand for the can. He studied the label
carefully. “Tell you what—” he said finally, “last guy that had this
bed was a blacksmith—hell of a nice fella and as clean a guy as you
want to meet. Used to wash his hands even _after_ he ate.”
“Then how come he got graybacks?” George was working up a slow anger.
Lennie put his bindle on the neighboring bunk and sat down. He watched
George with open mouth.
“Tell you what,” said the old swamper. “This here blacksmith—name of
Whitey—was the kind of guy that would put that stuff around even if
there wasn’t no bugs—just to make sure, see? Tell you what he used to
do—At meals he’d peel his boil’ potatoes, an’ he’d take out ever’
little spot, no matter what kind, before he’d eat it. And if there was a
red splotch on an egg, he’d scrape it off. Finally quit about the food.
That’s the kinda guy he was—clean. Used ta dress up Sundays even when
he wasn’t going no place, put on a necktie even, and then set in the
bunk house.”
“I ain’t so sure,” said George skeptically. “What did you say he quit
for?”
The old man put the yellow can in his pocket, and he rubbed his bristly
white whiskers with his knuckles. “Why . . . he . . . just quit, the way
a guy will. Says it was the food. Just wanted to move. Didn’t give no
other reason but the food. Just says ‘gimme my time’ one night, the way
any guy would.”
George lifted his tick and looked underneath it. He leaned over and
inspected the sacking closely. Immediately Lennie got up and did the
same with his bed. Finally George seemed satisfied. He unrolled his
bindle and put things on the shelf, his razor and bar of soap, his comb
and bottle of pills, his liniment and leather wristband. Then he made
his bed up neatly with blankets. The old man said, “I guess the boss’ll
be out here in a minute. He was sure burned when you wasn’t here this
morning. Come right in when we was eatin’ breakfast and says, ‘Where the
hell’s them new men?’ An’ he give the stable buck hell, too.”
George patted a wrinkle out of his bed, and sat down. “Give the stable
buck hell?” he asked.
“Sure. Ya see the stable buck’s a nigger.”
“Nigger, huh?”
“Yeah. Nice fella too. Got a crooked back where a horse kicked him. The
boss gives him hell when he’s mad. But the stable buck don’t give a damn
about that. He reads a lot. Got books in his room.”
“What kind of a guy is the boss?” George asked.
“Well, he’s a pretty nice fella. Gets pretty mad sometimes, but he’s
pretty nice. Tell ya what—know what he done Christmas? Brang a gallon
of whisky right in here and says, ‘Drink hearty boys. Christmas comes
but once a year.’”
“The hell he did! Whole gallon?”
“Yes sir. Jesus, we had fun. They let the nigger come in that night.
Little skinner name of Smitty took after the nigger. Done pretty good,
too. The guys wouldn’t let him use his feet, so the nigger got him. If
he coulda used his feet, Smitty says he woulda kilted the nigger. The
guys said on account of the nigger’s got a crooked back, Smitty can’t
use his feet.” He paused in relish of the memory. “After that the guys
went into Soledad and raised hell. I didn’t go in there. I ain’t got the
poop no more.”
Lennie was just finishing making his bed. The wooden latch raised again
and the door opened. A little stocky man stood in the open doorway. He
wore blue jean trousers, a flannel shirt, a black, unbuttoned vest and a
black coat. His thumbs were stuck in his belt, on each side of a square
steel buckle. On his head was a soiled brown Stetson hat, and he wore
high-heeled boots and spurs to prove he was not a laboring man.
The old swamper looked quickly at him, and then shuffled to the door
rubbing his whiskers with his knuckles as he went, “Them guys just
come,” he said, and shuffled past the boss and out the door.
The boss stepped into the room with the short, quick steps of a
fat-legged man. “I wrote Murray and Ready I wanted two men this morning.
You got your work slips?” George reached into his pocket and produced
the slips and handed them to the boss. “It wasn’t Murray and Ready’s
fault. Says right here on the slip that you was to be here for work this
morning.”
George looked down at his feet. “Bus driver give us a bum steer,” he
said. “We hadda walk ten miles. Says we was here when we wasn’t. We
couldn’t get no rides in the morning.”
The boss squinted his eyes. “Well, I had to send out the grain teams
short two buckers. Won’t do any good to go out now till after dinner.”
He pulled his time book out of his pocket and opened it where a pencil
was stuck between the leaves. George scowled meaningfully at Lennie, and
Lennie nodded to show that he understood. The boss licked his pencil.
“What’s your name?”
“George Milton.”
“And what’s yours?”
George said, “His name’s Lennie Small.”
The names were entered in the book. “Le’s see, this is the twentieth,
noon the twentieth.” He closed the book. “Where you boys been working?”
“Up around Weed,” said George.
“You, too?” to Lennie.
“Yeah, him too,” said George.
The boss pointed a playful finger at Lennie. “He ain’t much of a talker,
is he?”
“No, he ain’t, but he’s sure a hell of a good worker. Strong as a bull.”
Lennie smiled to himself. “Strong as a bull,” he repeated.
George scowled at him, and Lennie dropped his head in shame at having
forgotten.
The boss said suddenly, “Listen, Small!” Lennie raised his head. “What
can you do?”
In a panic, Lennie looked at George for help. “He can do anything you
tell him,” said George. “He’s a good skinner. He can rassel grain bags,
drive a cultivator. He can do anything. Just give him a try.”
The boss turned on George. “Then why don’t you let him answer? What you
trying to put over?”
George broke in loudly, “Oh! I ain’t saying he’s bright. He ain’t. But I
say he’s a God damn good worker. He can put up a four hundred pound
bale.”
The boss deliberately put the little book in his pocket. He hooked his
thumbs in his belt and squinted one eye nearly closed. “Say—what you
sellin’?”
“Huh?”
“I said what stake you got in this guy? You takin’ his pay away from
him?”
“No, ’course I ain’t. Why ya think I’m sellin’ him out?”
“Well, I never seen one guy take so much trouble for another guy. I just
like to know what your interest is.”
George said, “He’s my . . . cousin. I told his old lady I’d take care of
him. He got kicked in the head by a horse when he was a kid. He’s
awright. Just ain’t bright. But he can do anything you tell him.”
The boss turned half away. “Well, God knows he don’t need any brains to
buck barley bags. But don’t you try to put nothing over, Milton. I got
my eye on you. Why’d you quit in Weed?”
“Job was done,” said George promptly.
“What kinda job?”
“We . . . we was diggin’ a cesspool.”
“All right. But don’t try to put nothing over, ’cause you can’t get away
with nothing. I seen wise guys before. Go on out with the grain teams
after dinner. They’re pickin’ up barley at the threshing machine. Go out
with Slim’s team.”
“Slim?”
“Yeah. Big tall skinner. You’ll see him at dinner.” He turned abruptly
and went to the door, but before he went out he turned and looked for a
long moment at the two men.
When the sound of his footsteps had died away, George turned on Lennie.
“So you wasn’t gonna say a word. You was gonna leave your big flapper
shut and leave me do the talkin’. Damn near lost us the job.”
Lennie stared hopelessly at his hands. “I forgot, George.”
“Yeah, you forgot. You always forget, an’ I got to talk you out of it.”
He sat down heavily on the bunk. “Now he’s got his eye on us. Now we got
to be careful and not make no slips. You keep your big flapper shut
after this.” He fell morosely silent.
“George.”
“What you want now?”
“I wasn’t kicked in the head with no horse, was I, George?”
“Be a damn good thing if you was,” George said viciously. “Save
ever’body a hell of a lot of trouble.”
“You said I was your cousin, George.”
“Well, that was a lie. An’ I’m damn glad it was. If I was a relative of
yours I’d shoot myself.” He stopped suddenly, stepped to the open front
door and peered out. “Say, what the hell you doin’ listenin’?”
The old man came slowly into the room. He had his broom in his hand. And
at his heels there walked a dragfooted sheep dog, gray of muzzle, and
with pale, blind old eyes. The dog struggled lamely to the side of the
room and lay down, grunting softly to himself and licking his grizzled,
moth-eaten coat. The swamper watched him until he was settled. “I wasn’t
listenin’. I was jus’ standin’ in the shade a minute scratchin’ my dog.
I jus’ now finished swampin’ our the wash house.”
“You was pokin’ your big ears into our business,” George said. “I don’t
like nobody to get nosey.”
The old man looked uneasily from George to Lennie, and then back. “I
jus’ come there,” he said. “I didn’t hear nothing you guys was sayin’. I
ain’t interested in nothing you was sayin’. A guy on a ranch don’t never
listen nor he don’t ast no questions.”
“Damn right he don’t,” said George, slightly mollified, “not if he wants
to stay workin’ long.” But he was reassured by the swamper’s defense.
“Come on in and set down a minute,” he said. “That’s a hell of an old
dog.”
“Yeah. I had ’im ever since he was a pup. God, he was a good sheep dog
when he was younger.” He stood his broom against the wall and he rubbed
his white bristled cheek with his knuckles. “How’d you like the boss?”
he asked.
“Pretty good. Seemed awright.”
“He’s a nice fella,” the swamper agreed. “You got to take him right.”
At that moment a young man came into the bunk house; a thin young man
with a brown face, with brown eyes and a head of tightly curled hair. He
wore a work glove on his left hand, and, like the boss, he wore
high-heeled boots. “Seen my old man?” he asked.
The swamper said, “He was here jus’ a minute ago, Curley. Went over to
the cook house, I think.”
“I’ll try to catch him,” said Curley. His eyes passed over the new men
and he stopped. He glanced coldly at George and then at Lennie. His arms
gradually bent at the elbows and his hands closed into fists. He
stiffened and went into a slight crouch. His glance was at once
calculating and pugnacious. Lennie squirmed under the look and shifted
his feet nervously. Curley stepped gingerly close to him. “You the new
guys the old man was waitin’ for?”
“We just come in,” said George.
“Let the big guy talk.”
Lennie twisted with embarrassment.
George said, “S’pose he don’t want to talk?”
Curley lashed his body around. “By Christ, he’s gotta talk when he’s
spoke to. What the hell are you gettin’ into it for?”
“We travel together,” said George coldly.
“Oh, so it’s that way.”
George was tense, and motionless. “Yeah, it’s that way.”
Lennie was looking helplessly to George for instruction.
“An’ you won’t let the big guy talk, is that it?”
“He can talk if he wants to tell you anything.” He nodded slightly to
Lennie.
“We jus’ come in,” said Lennie softly.
Curley stared levelly at him. “Well, nex’ time you answer when you’re
spoke to.” He turned toward the door and walked out, and his elbows were
still bent out a little.
George watched him out, and then he turned back to the swamper. “Say,
what the hell’s he got on his shoulder? Lennie didn’t do nothing to
him.”
The old man looked cautiously at the door to make sure no one was
listening. “That’s the boss’s son,” he said quietly. “Curley’s pretty
handy. He done quite a bit in the ring. He’s a lightweight, and he’s
handy.”
“Well, let him be handy,” said George. “He don’t have to take after
Lennie. Lennie didn’t do nothing to him. What’s he got against Lennie?”
The swamper considered. . . . “Well . . . tell you what. Curley’s like a
lot of little guys. He hates big guys. He’s alla time picking scraps
with big guys. Kind of like he’s mad at ’em because he ain’t a big guy.
You seen little guys like that, ain’t you? Always scrappy?”
“Sure,” said George. “I seen plenty tough little guys. But this Curley
better not make no mistakes about Lennie. Lennie ain’t handy, but this
Curley punk is gonna get hurt if he messes around with Lennie.”
“Well, Curley’s pretty handy,” the swamper said skeptically. “Never did
seem right to me. S’pose Curley jumps a big guy an’ licks him. Ever’body
says what a game guy Curley is. And s’pose he does the same thing and
gets licked. Then ever’body says the big guy oughtta pick somebody his
own size, and maybe they gang up on the big guy. Never did seem right to
me. Seems like Curley ain’t givin’ nobody a chance.”
George was watching the door. He said ominously, “Well, he better watch
out for Lennie. Lennie ain’t no fighter, but Lennie’s strong and quick
and Lennie don’t know no rules.” He walked to the square table and sat
down on one of the boxes. He gathered some of the cards together and
shuffled them.
The old man sat down on another box. “Don’t tell Curley I said none of
this. He’d slough me. He just don’t give a damn. Won’t ever get canned
’cause his old man’s the boss.”
George cut the cards and began turning them over, looking at each one
and throwing it down on a pile. He said, “This guy Curley sounds like a
son-of-a-bitch to me. I don’t like mean little guys.”
“Seems to me like he’s worse lately,” said the swamper. “He got married
a couple of weeks ago. Wife lives over in the boss’s house. Seems like
Curley is cockier’n ever since he got married.”
George grunted, “Maybe he’s showin’ off for his wife.”
The swamper warmed to his gossip. “You seen that glove on his left
hand?”
“Yeah. I seen it.”
“Well, that glove’s fulla vaseline.”
“Vaseline? What the hell for?”
“Well, I tell ya what—Curley says he’s keepin’ that hand soft for his
wife.”
George studied the cards absorbedly. “That’s a dirty thing to tell
around,” he said.
The old man was reassured. He had drawn a derogatory statement from
George. He felt safe now, and he spoke more confidently. “Wait’ll you
see Curley’s wife.”
George cut the cards again and put out a solitaire lay, slowly and
deliberately. “Purty?” he asked casually.
“Yeah. Purty . . . but——”
George studied his cards. “But what?”
“Well—she got the eye.”
“Yeah? Married two weeks and got the eye? Maybe that’s why Curley’s
pants is full of ants.”
“I seen her give Slim the eye. Slim’s a jerkline skinner. Hell of a nice
fella. Slim don’t need to wear no high-heeled boots on a grain team. I
seen her give Slim the eye. Curley never seen it. An’ I seen her give
Carlson the eye.”
George pretended a lack of interest. “Looks like we was gonna have fun.”
The swamper stood up from his box. “Know what I think?” George did not
answer. “Well, I think Curley’s married . . . a tart.”
“He ain’t the first,” said George. “There’s plenty done that.”
The old man moved toward the door, and his ancient dog lifted his head
and peered about, and then got painfully to his feet to follow. “I gotta
be settin’ out the wash basins for the guys. The teams’ll be in before
long. You guys gonna buck barley?”
“Yeah.”
“You won’t tell Curley nothing I said?”
“Hell no.”
“Well, you look her over, mister. You see if she ain’t a tart.” He
stepped out the door into the brilliant sunshine.
George laid down his cards thoughtfully, turned his piles of three. He
built four clubs on his ace pile. The sun square was on the floor now,
and the flies whipped through it like sparks. A sound of jingling
harness and the croak of heavy-laden axles sounded from outside. From
the distance came a clear call. “Stable Buck—ooh, sta-able Buck!” And
then, “Where the hell is that God damn nigger?”
George stared at his solitaire lay, and then he flounced the cards
together and turned around to Lennie. Lennie was lying down on the bunk
watching him.
“Look, Lennie! This here ain’t no set up. I’m scared. You gonna have
trouble with that Curley guy. I seen that kind before. He was kinda
feelin’ you out. He figures he’s got you scared and he’s gonna take a
sock at you the first chance he gets.”
Lennie’s eyes were frightened. “I don’t want no trouble,” he said
plaintively. “Don’t let him sock me, George.”
George got up and went over to Lennie’s bunk and sat down on it. “I hate
that kinda bastard,” he said. “I seen plenty of ’em. Like the old guy
says, Curley don’t take no chances. He always wins.” He thought for a
moment. “If he tangles with you, Lennie, we’re gonna get the can. Don’t
make no mistake about that. He’s the boss’s son. Look, Lennie. You try
to keep away from him, will you? Don’t never speak to him. If he comes
in here you move clear to the other side of the room. Will you do that,
Lennie?”
“I don’t want no trouble,” Lennie mourned. “I never done nothing to
him.”
“Well, that won’t do you no good if Curley wants to plug himself up for
a fighter. Just don’t have nothing to do with him. Will you remember?”
“Sure, George. I ain’t gonna say a word.”
The sound of the approaching grain teams was louder, thud of big hooves
on hard ground, drag of brakes and the jingle of trace chains. Men were
calling back and forth from the teams. George, sitting on the bunk
beside Lennie, frowned as he thought. Lennie asked timidly, “You ain’t
mad, George?”
“I ain’t mad at you. I’m mad at this here Curley bastard. I hoped we was
gonna get a little stake together—maybe a hundred dollars.” His tone
grew decisive. “You keep away from Curley, Lennie.”
“Sure I will, George. I won’t say a word.”
“Don’t let him pull you in—but—if the son-of-a-bitch socks you—let
’im have it.”
“Let ’im have what, George?”
“Never mind, never mind. I’ll tell you when. I hate that kind of a guy.
Look, Lennie, if you get in any kind of trouble, you remember what I
told you to do?”
Lennie raised up on his elbow. His face contorted with thought. Then his
eyes moved sadly to George’s face. “If I get in any trouble, you ain’t
gonna let me tend the rabbits.”
“That’s not what I meant. You remember where we slep’ last night? Down
by the river?”
“Yeah, I remember. Oh, sure I remember! I go there an’ hide in the
brush.”
“Hide till I come for you. Don’t let nobody see you. Hide in the brush
by the river. Say that over.”
“Hide in the brush by the river, down in the brush by the river.”
“If you get in trouble.”
“If I get in trouble.”
A brake screeched outside. A call came, “Stable—Buck. Oh! Sta-able
Buck.”
George said, “Say it over to yourself, Lennie, so you won’t forget it.”
Both men glanced up, for the rectangle of sunshine in the doorway was
cut off. A girl was standing there looking in. She had full, rouged lips
and wide-spaced eyes, heavily made up. Her fingernails were red. Her
hair hung in little rolled clusters, like sausages. She wore a cotton
house dress and red mules, on the insteps of which were little bouquets
of red ostrich feathers. “I’m lookin’ for Curley,” she said. Her voice
had a nasal, brittle quality.
George looked away from her and then back. “He was in here a minute ago,
but he went.”
“Oh!” She put her hands behind her back and leaned against the door
frame so that her body was thrown forward. “You’re the new fellas that
just come, ain’t ya?”
“Yeah.”
Lennie’s eyes moved down over her body, and though she did not seem to
be looking at Lennie she bridled a little. She looked at her
fingernails. “Sometimes Curley’s in here,” she explained.
George said brusquely, “Well he ain’t now.”
“If he ain’t, I guess I better look some place else,” she said
playfully.
Lennie watched her, fascinated. George said, “If I see him, I’ll pass
the word you was looking for him.”
She smiled archly and twitched her body. “Nobody can’t blame a person
for lookin’.” she said. There were footsteps behind her, going by. She
turned her head. “Hi, Slim,” she said.
Slim’s voice came through the door. “Hi, Good-lookin’.”
“I’m tryin’ to find Curley, Slim.”
“Well, you ain’t tryin’ very hard. I seen him goin’ in your house.”
She was suddenly apprehensive. “’Bye, boys,” she called into the bunk
house, and she hurried away.
George looked around at Lennie. “Jesus, what a tramp,” he said. “So
that’s what Curley picks for a wife.”
“She’s purty,” said Lennie defensively.
“Yeah, and she’s sure hidin’ it. Curley got his work ahead of him. Bet
she’d clear out for twenty bucks.”
Lennie still stared at the doorway where she had been. “Gosh, she was
purty.” He smiled admiringly. George looked quickly down at him and then
he took him by an ear and shook him.
“Listen to me, you crazy bastard,” he said fiercely. “Don’t you even
take a look at that bitch. I don’t care what she says and what she does.
I seen ’em poison before, but I never seen no piece of jail bait worse
than her. You leave her be.”
Lennie tried to disengage his ear. “I never done nothing, George.”
“No, you never. But when she was standin’ in the doorway showin’ her
legs, you wasn’t lookin’ the other way, neither.”
“I never meant no harm, George. Honest I never.”
“Well, you keep away from her, ’cause she’s a rat-trap if I ever seen
one. You let Curley take the rap. He let himself in for it. Glove fulla
vaseline,” George said disgustedly. “An’ I bet he’s eatin’ raw eggs and
writin’ to the patent medicine houses.”
Lennie cried out suddenly—“I don’ like this place, George. This ain’t
no good place. I wanna get outa here.”
“We gotta keep it till we get a stake. We can’t help it, Lennie. We’ll
get out jus’ as soon as we can. I don’t like it no better than you do.”
He went back to the table and set out a new solitaire hand. “No, I don’t
like it,” he said. “For two bits I’d shove out of here. If we can get
jus’ a few dollars in the poke we’ll shove off and go up the American
River and pan gold. We can make maybe a couple of dollars a day there,
and we might hit a pocket.”
Lennie leaned eagerly toward him. “Le’s go, George. Le’s get outta here.
It’s mean here.”
“We gotta stay,” George said shortly. “Shut up now. The guys’ll be
comin’ in.”
From the washroom nearby came the sound of running water and rattling
basins. George studied the cards. “Maybe we oughtta wash up,” he said.
“But we ain’t done nothing to get dirty.”
A tall man stood in the doorway. He held a crushed Stetson hat under his
arm while he combed his long, black, damp hair straight back. Like the
others he wore blue jeans and a short denim jacket. When he had finished
combing his hair he moved into the room, and he moved with a majesty
only achieved by royalty and master craftsmen. He was a jerkline
skinner, the prince of the ranch, capable of driving ten, sixteen, even
twenty mules with a single line to the leaders. He was capable of
killing a fly on the wheeler’s butt with a bull whip without touching
the mule. There was a gravity in his manner and a quiet so profound that
all talk stopped when he spoke. His authority was so great that his word
was taken on any subject, be it politics or love. This was Slim, the
jerkline skinner. His hatchet face was ageless. He might have been
thirty-five or fifty. His ear heard more than was said to him, and his
slow speech had overtones not of thought, but of understanding beyond
thought. His hands, large and lean, were as delicate in their action as
those of a temple dancer.
He smoothed out his crushed hat, creased it in the middle and put it on.
He looked kindly at the two in the bunk house. “It’s brighter’n a bitch
outside,” he said gently. “Can’t hardly see nothing in here. You the new
guys?”
“Just come,” said George.
“Gonna buck barley?”
“That’s what the boss says.”
Slim sat down on a box across the table from George. He studied the
solitaire hand that was upside down to him. “Hope you get on my team,”
he said. His voice was very gentle. “I gotta pair of punks on my team
that don’t know a barley bag from a blue ball. You guys ever bucked any
barley?”
“Hell, yes,” said George. “I ain’t nothing to scream about, but that big
bastard there can put up more grain alone than most pairs can.”
Lennie, who had been following the conversation back and forth with his
eyes, smiled complacently at the compliment. Slim looked approvingly at
George for having given the compliment. He leaned over the table and
snapped the corner of a loose card. “You guys travel around together?”
His tone was friendly. It invited confidence without demanding it.
“Sure,” said George. “We kinda look after each other.” He indicated
Lennie with his thumb. “He ain’t bright. Hell of a good worker, though.
Hell of a nice fella, but he ain’t bright. I’ve knew him for a long
time.”
Slim looked through George and beyond him. “Ain’t many guys travel
around together,” he mused. “I don’t know why. Maybe ever’body in the
whole damn world is scared of each other.”
“It’s a lot nicer to go around with a guy you know,” said George.
A powerful, big-stomached man came into the bunk house. His head still
dripped water from the scrubbing and dousing. “Hi, Slim,” he said, and
then stopped and stared at George and Lennie.
“These guys jus’ come,” said Slim by way of introduction.
“Glad ta meet ya,” the big man said. “My name’s Carlson.”
“I’m George Milton. This here’s Lennie Small.”
“Glad ta meet ya,” Carlson said again. “He ain’t very small.” He
chuckled softly at his joke. “Ain’t small at all,” he repeated. “Meant
to ask you, Slim—how’s your bitch? I seen she wasn’t under your wagon
this morning.”
“She slang her pups last night,” said Slim. “Nine of ’em. I drowned four
of ’em right off. She couldn’t feed that many.”
“Got five left, huh?”
“Yeah, five. I kept the biggest.”
“What kinda dogs you think they’re gonna be?”
“I dunno,” said Slim. “Some kinda shepherds, I guess. That’s the most
kind I seen around here when she was in heat.”
Carlson went on, “Got five pups, huh. Gonna keep all of ’em?”
“I dunno. Have to keep ’em a while so they can drink Lulu’s milk.”
Carlson said thoughtfully, “Well, looka here, Slim. I been thinkin’.
That dog of Candy’s is so God damn old he can’t hardly walk. Stinks like
hell, too. Ever’ time he comes into the bunk house I can smell him for
two, three days. Why’n’t you get Candy to shoot his old dog and give him
one of the pups to raise up? I can smell that dog a mile away. Got no
teeth, damn near blind, can’t eat. Candy feeds him milk. He can’t chew
nothing else.”
George had been staring intently at Slim. Suddenly a triangle began to
ring outside, slowly at first, and then faster and faster until the beat
of it disappeared into one ringing sound. It stopped as suddenly as it
had started.
“There she goes,” said Carlson.
Outside, there was a burst of voices as a group of men went by.
Slim stood up slowly and with dignity. “You guys better come on while
they’s still something to eat. Won’t be nothing left in a couple of
minutes.”
Carlson stepped back to let Slim precede him, and then the two of them
went out the door.
Lennie was watching George excitedly. George rumpled his cards into a
messy pile. “Yeah!” George said, “I heard him, Lennie. I’ll ask him.”
“A brown and white one,” Lennie cried excitedly.
“Come on. Le’s get dinner. I don’t know whether he got a brown and white
one.”
Lennie didn’t move from his bunk. “You ask him right away, George, so he
won’t kill no more of ’em.”
“Sure. Come on now, get up on your feet.”
Lennie rolled off his bunk and stood up, and the two of them started for
the door. Just as they reached it, Curley bounced in.
“You seen a girl around here?” he demanded angrily.
George said coldly. “’Bout half an hour ago maybe.”
“Well what the hell was she doin’?”
George stood still, watching the angry little man. He said insultingly,
“She said—she was lookin’ for you.”
Curley seemed really to see George for the first time. His eyes flashed
over George, took in his height, measured his reach, looked at his trim
middle. “Well, which way’d she go?” he demanded at last.
“I dunno,” said George. “I didn’t watch her go.”
Curley scowled at him, and turning, hurried out the door.
George said, “Ya know, Lennie, I’m scared I’m gonna tangle with that
bastard myself. I hate his guts. Jesus Christ! Come on. They won’t be a
damn thing left to eat.”
They went out the door. The sunshine lay in a thin line under the
window. From a distance there could be heard a rattle of dishes.
After a moment the ancient dog walked lamely in through the open door.
He gazed about with mild, half-blind eyes. He sniffed, and then lay down
and put his head between his paws. Curley popped into the doorway again
and stood looking into the room. The dog raised his head, but when
Curley jerked out, the grizzled head sank to the floor again.
3
Although there was evening brightness showing through the windows of the
bunk house, inside it was dusk. Through the open door came the thuds and
occasional clangs of a horseshoe game, and now and then the sound of
voices raised in approval or derision.
Slim and George came into the darkening bunk house together. Slim
reached up over the card table and turned on the tin-shaded electric
light. Instantly the table was brilliant with light, and the cone of the
shade threw its brightness straight downward, leaving the corners of the
bunk house still in dusk. Slim sat down on a box and George took his
place opposite.
“It wasn’t nothing,” said Slim. “I would of had to drowned most of ’em
anyways. No need to thank me about that.”
George said, “It wasn’t much to you, maybe, but it was a hell of a lot
to him. Jesus Christ, I don’t know how we’re gonna get him to sleep in
here. He’ll want to sleep right out in the barn with ’em. We’ll have
trouble keepin’ him from getting right in the box with them pups.”
“It wasn’t nothing,” Slim repeated. “Say, you sure was right about him.
Maybe he ain’t bright, but I never seen such a worker. He damn near
killed his partner buckin’ barley. There ain’t nobody can keep up with
him. God awmighty I never seen such a strong guy.”
George spoke proudly. “Jus’ tell Lennie what to do an’ he’ll do it if it
don’t take no figuring. He can’t think of nothing to do himself, but he
sure can take orders.”
There was a clang of horseshoe on iron stake outside and a little cheer
of voices.
Slim moved back slightly so the light was not on his face. “Funny how
you an’ him string along together.” It was Slim’s calm invitation to
confidence.
“What’s funny about it?” George demanded defensively.
“Oh, I dunno. Hardly none of the guys ever travel together. I hardly
never seen two guys travel together. You know how the hands are, they
just come in and get their bunk and work a month, and then they quit and
go out alone. Never seem to give a damn about nobody. It jus’ seems
kinda funny a cuckoo like him and a smart little guy like you travelin’
together.”
“He ain’t no cuckoo,” said George. “He’s dumb as hell, but he ain’t
crazy. An’ I ain’t so bright neither, or I wouldn’t be buckin’ barley
for my fifty and found. If I was bright, if I was even a little bit
smart, I’d have my own little place, an’ I’d be bringin’ in my own
crops, ’stead of doin’ all the work and not getting what comes up outa
the ground.” George fell silent. He wanted to talk. Slim neither
encouraged nor discouraged him. He just sat back quiet and receptive.
“It ain’t so funny, him an’ me goin’ aroun’ together,” George said at
last. “Him and me was both born in Auburn. I knowed his Aunt Clara. She
took him when he was a baby and raised him up. When his Aunt Clara died,
Lennie just come along with me out workin’. Got kinda used to each other
after a little while.”
“Umm,” said Slim.
George looked over at Slim and saw the calm, God-like eyes fastened on
him. “Funny,” said George. “I used to have a hell of a lot of fun with
’im. Used to play jokes on ’im ’cause he was too dumb to take care of
’imself. But he was too dumb even to know he had a joke played on him. I
had fun. Made me seem God damn smart alongside of him. Why he’d do any
damn thing I tol’ him. If I tol’ him to walk over a cliff, over he’d go.
That wasn’t so damn much fun after a while. He never got mad about it,
neither. I’ve beat the hell outa him, and he coulda bust every bone in
my body jus’ with his han’s, but he never lifted a finger against me.”
George’s voice was taking on the tone of confession. “Tell you what made
me stop that. One day a bunch of guys was standin’ around up on the
Sacramento River. I was feelin’ pretty smart. I turns to Lennie and
says, ‘Jump in.’ An’ he jumps. Couldn’t swim a stroke. He damn near
drowned before we could get him. An’ he was so damn nice to me for
pullin’ him out. Clean forgot I told him to jump in. Well, I ain’t done
nothing like that no more.”
“He’s a nice fella,” said Slim. “Guy don’t need no sense to be a nice
fella. Seems to me sometimes it jus’ works the other way around. Take a
real smart guy and he ain’t hardly ever a nice fella.”
George stacked the scattered cards and began to lay out his solitaire
hand. The shoes thudded on the ground outside. At the windows the light
of the evening still made the window squares bright.
“I ain’t got no people,” George said. “I seen the guys that go around on
the ranches alone. That ain’t no good. They don’t have no fun. After a
long time they get mean. They get wantin’ to fight all the time.”
“Yeah, they get mean,” Slim agreed. “They get so they don’t want to talk
to nobody.”
“’Course Lennie’s a God damn nuisance most of the time,” said George.
“But you get used to goin’ around with a guy an’ you can’t get rid of
him.”
“He ain’t mean,” said Slim. “I can see Lennie ain’t a bit mean.”
“’Course he ain’t mean. But he gets in trouble alla time because he’s so
God damn dumb. Like what happened in Weed——” He stopped, stopped in
the middle of turning over a card. He looked alarmed and peered over at
Slim. “You wouldn’t tell nobody?”
“What’d he do in Weed?” Slim asked calmly.
“You wouldn’ tell? . . . No, ’course you wouldn’.”
“What’d he do in Weed?” Slim asked again.
“Well, he seen this girl in a red dress. Dumb bastard like he is, he
wants to touch ever’thing he likes. Just wants to feel it. So he reaches
out to feel this red dress an’ the girl lets out a squawk, and that gets
Lennie all mixed up, and he holds on ’cause that’s the only thing he can
think to do. Well, this girl squawks and squawks. I was jus’ a little
bit off, and I heard all the yellin’, so I comes running, an’ by that
time Lennie’s so scared all he can think to do is jus’ hold on. I socked
him over the head with a fence picket to make him let go. He was so
scairt he couldn’t let go of that dress. And he’s so God damn strong,
you know.”
Slim’s eyes were level and unwinking. He nodded very slowly. “So what
happens?”
George carefully built his line of solitaire cards. “Well, that girl
rabbits in an’ tells the law she been raped. The guys in Weed start a
party out to lynch Lennie. So we sit in a irrigation ditch under water
all the rest of that day. Got on’y our heads sticking out from the side
of the ditch. An’ that night we scrammed outa there.”
Slim sat in silence for a moment. “Didn’t hurt the girl none, huh?” he
asked finally.
“Hell, no. He just scared her. I’d be scared too if he grabbed me. But
he never hurt her. He jus’ wanted to touch that red dress, like he wants
to pet them pups all the time.”
“He ain’t mean,” said Slim. “I can tell a mean guy a mile off.”
“’Course he ain’t, and he’ll do any damn thing I——”
Lennie came in through the door. He wore his blue denim coat over his
shoulders like a cape, and he walked hunched way over.
“Hi, Lennie,” said George. “How do you like the pup now?”
Lennie said breathlessly, “He’s brown an’ white jus’ like I wanted.” He
went directly to his bunk and lay down and turned his face to the wall
and drew up his knees.
George put down his cards very deliberately. “Lennie,” he said sharply.
Lennie twisted his neck and looked over his shoulder. “Huh? What you
want, George?”
“I tol’ you you couldn’t bring that pup in here.”
“What pup, George? I ain’t got no pup.”
George went quickly to him, grabbed him by the shoulder and rolled him
over. He reached down and picked the tiny puppy from where Lennie had
been concealing it against his stomach.
Lennie sat up quickly. “Give ’um to me, George.”
George said, “You get right up an’ take this pup back to the nest. He’s
gotta sleep with his mother. You want to kill him? Just born last night
an’ you take him out of the nest. You take him back or I’ll tell Slim
not to let you have him.”
Lennie held out his hands pleadingly. “Give ’um to me, George. I’ll take
’um back. I didn’t mean no harm, George. Honest I didn’t. I jus’ wanted
to pet ’um a little.”
George handed the pup to him. “Awright. You get him back there quick,
and don’ you take him out no more. You’ll kill him, the first thing you
know.” Lennie fairly scuttled out of the room.
Slim had not moved. His calm eyes followed Lennie out the door. “Jesus,”
he said. “He’s jes’ like a kid, ain’t he.”
“Sure he’s jes’ like a kid. There ain’t no more harm in him than a kid
neither, except he’s so strong. I bet he won’t come in here to sleep
tonight. He’d sleep right alongside that box in the barn. Well—let ’im.
He ain’t doin’ no harm out there.”
It was almost dark outside now. Old Candy, the swamper, came in and went
to his bunk, and behind him struggled his old dog. “Hello, Slim. Hello,
George. Didn’t neither of you play horseshoes?”
“I don’t like to play ever’ night,” said Slim.
Candy went on, “Either you guys got a slug of whisky? I gotta gut ache.”
“I ain’t,” said Slim. “I’d drink it myself if I had, an’ I ain’t got a
gut ache neither.”
“Gotta bad gut ache,” said Candy. “Them God damn turnips give it to me.
I knowed they was going to before I ever eat ’em.”
The thick-bodied Carlson came in out of the darkening yard. He walked to
the other end of the bunk house and turned on the second shaded light.
“Darker’n hell in here,” he said. “Jesus, how that nigger can pitch
shoes.”
“He’s plenty good,” said Slim.
“Damn right he is,” said Carlson. “He don’t give nobody else a chance to
win——” He stopped and sniffed the air, and still sniffing, looked down
at the old dog. “God awmighty, that dog stinks. Get him outa here,
Candy! I don’t know nothing that stinks as bad as an old dog. You gotta
get him out.”
Candy rolled to the edge of his bunk. He reached over and patted the
ancient dog, and he apologized, “I been around him so much I never
notice how he stinks.”
“Well, I can’t stand him in here,” said Carlson. “That stink hangs
around even after he’s gone.” He walked over with his heavy-legged
stride and looked down at the dog. “Got no teeth,” he said. “He’s all
stiff with rheumatism. He ain’t no good to you, Candy. An’ he ain’t no
good to himself. Why’n’t you shoot him, Candy?”
The old man squirmed uncomfortably. “Well—hell! I had him so long. Had
him since he was a pup, I herded sheep with him.” He said proudly, “You
wouldn’t think it to look at him now, but he was the best damn sheep dog
I ever seen.”
George said, “I seen a guy in Weed that had an Airedale could herd
sheep. Learned it from the other dogs.”
Carlson was not to be put off. “Look, Candy. This ol’ dog jus’ suffers
hisself all the time. If you was to take him out and shoot him right in
the back of the head—” he leaned over and pointed, “—right there, why
he’d never know what hit him.”
Candy looked about unhappily. “No,” he said softly. “No, I couldn’ do
that. I had ’im too long.”
“He don’t have no fun,” Carlson insisted. “And he stinks to beat hell.
Tell you what. I’ll shoot him for you. Then it won’t be you that does
it.”
Candy threw his legs off his bunk. He scratched the white stubble
whiskers on his cheek nervously. “I’m so used to him,” he said softly.
“I had him from a pup.”
“Well, you ain’t bein’ kind to him keepin’ him alive,” said Carlson.
“Look, Slim’s bitch got a litter right now. I bet Slim would give you
one of them pups to raise up, wouldn’t you, Slim?”
The skinner had been studying the old dog with his calm eyes. “Yeah,” he
said. “You can have a pup if you want to.” He seemed to shake himself
free for speech. “Carl’s right, Candy. That dog ain’t no good to
himself. I wisht somebody’d shoot me if I got old an’ a cripple.”
Candy looked helplessly at him, for Slim’s opinions were law. “Maybe
it’d hurt him,” he suggested. “I don’t mind takin’ care of him.”
Carlson said, “The way I’d shoot him, he wouldn’t feel nothing. I’d put
the gun right there.” He pointed with his toe. “Right back of the head.
He wouldn’t even quiver.”
Candy looked for help from face to face. It was quite dark outside by
now. A young laboring man came in. His sloping shoulders were bent
forward and he walked heavily on his heels, as though he carried the
invisible grain bag. He went to his bunk and put his hat on his shelf.
Then he picked a pulp magazine from his shelf and brought it to the
light over the table. “Did I show you this, Slim?” he asked.
“Show me what?”
The young man turned to the back of the magazine, put it down on the
table and pointed with his finger. “Right there, read that.” Slim bent
over it. “Go on,” said the young man. “Read it out loud.”
“‘Dear Editor:’” Slim read slowly. “‘I read your mag for six years and I
think it is the best on the market. I like stories by Peter Rand. I
think he is a whing-ding. Give us more like the Dark Rider. I don’t
write many letters. Just thought I would tell you I think your mag is
the best dime’s worth I ever spent.’”
Slim looked up questioningly. “What you want me to read that for?”
Whit said, “Go on. Read the name at the bottom.”
Slim read, “‘Yours for success, William Tenner.’” He glanced up at Whit
again. “What you want me to read that for?”
Whit closed the magazine impressively. “Don’t you remember Bill Tenner?
Worked here about three months ago?”
Slim thought. . . . “Little guy?” he asked. “Drove a cultivator?”
“That’s him,” Whit cried. “That’s the guy!”
“You think he’s the guy wrote this letter?”
“I know it. Bill and me was in here one day. Bill had one of them books
that just come. He was lookin’ in it and he says, ‘I wrote a letter.
Wonder if they put it in the book!’ But it wasn’t there. Bill says,
‘Maybe they’re savin’ it for later.’ An’ that’s just what they done.
There it is.”
“Guess you’re right,” said Slim. “Got it right in the book.”
George held out his hand for the magazine. “Let’s look at it?”
Whit found the place again, but he did not surrender his hold on it. He
pointed out the letter with his forefinger. And then he went to his box
shelf and laid the magazine carefully in. “I wonder if Bill seen it,” he
said. “Bill and me worked in that patch of field peas. Run cultivators,
both of us. Bill was a hell of a nice fella.”
During the conversation Carlson had refused to be drawn in. He continued
to look down at the old dog. Candy watched him uneasily. At last Carlson
said, “If you want me to, I’ll put the old devil out of his misery right
now and get it over with. Ain’t nothing left for him. Can’t eat, can’t
see, can’t even walk without hurtin’.”
Candy said hopefully, “You ain’t got no gun.”
“The hell I ain’t. Got a Luger. It won’t hurt him none at all.”
Candy said, “Maybe tomorra. Le’s wait till tomorra.”
“I don’t see no reason for it,” said Carlson. He went to his bunk,
pulled his bag from underneath it and took out a Luger pistol. “Let’s
get it over with,” he said. “We can’t sleep with him stinkin’ around in
here.” He put the pistol in his hip pocket.
Candy looked a long time at Slim to try to find some reversal. And Slim
gave him none. At last Candy said softly and hopelessly, “Awright—take
’im.” He did not look down at the dog at all. He lay back on his bunk
and crossed his arms behind his head and stared at the ceiling.
From his pocket Carlson took a little leather thong. He stooped over and
tied it around the old dog’s neck. All the men except Candy watched him.
“Come boy. Come on, boy,” he said gently. And he said apologetically to
Candy, “He won’t even feel it.” Candy did not move nor answer him. He
twitched the thong. “Come on, boy.” The old dog got slowly and stiffly
to his feet and followed the gently pulling leash.
Slim said, “Carlson.”
“Yeah?”
“You know what to do.”
“What ya mean, Slim?”
“Take a shovel,” said Slim shortly.
“Oh, sure! I get you.” He led the dog out into the darkness.
George followed to the door and shut the door and set the latch gently
in its place. Candy lay rigidly on his bed staring at the ceiling.
Slim said loudly, “One of my lead mules got a bad hoof. Got to get some
tar on it.” His voice trailed off. It was silent outside. Carlson’s
footsteps died away. The silence came into the room. And the silence
lasted.
George chuckled, “I bet Lennie’s right out there in the barn with his
pup. He won’t want to come in here no more now he’s got a pup.”
Slim said, “Candy, you can have any one of them pups you want.”
Candy did not answer. The silence fell on the room again. It came out of
the night and invaded the room. George said, “Anybody like to play a
little euchre?”
“I’ll play out a few with you,” said Whit.
They took places opposite each other at the table under the light, but
George did not shuffle the cards. He rippled the edge of the deck
nervously, and the little snapping noise drew the eyes of all the men in
the room, so that he stopped doing it. The silence fell on the room
again. A minute passed, and another minute. Candy lay still, staring at
the ceiling. Slim gazed at him for a moment and then looked down at his
hands; he subdued one hand with the other, and held it down. There came
a little gnawing sound from under the floor and all the men looked down
toward it gratefully. Only Candy continued to stare at the ceiling.
“Sounds like there was a rat under there,” said George. “We ought to get
a trap down there.”
Whit broke out, “What the hell’s takin’ him so long? Lay out some cards,
why don’t you? We ain’t going to get no euchre played this way.”
George brought the cards together tightly and studied the backs of them.
The silence was in the room again.
A shot sounded in the distance. The men looked quickly at the old man.
Every head turned toward him.
For a moment he continued to stare at the ceiling. Then he rolled slowly
over and faced the wall and lay silent.
George shuffled the cards noisily and dealt them. Whit drew a scoring
board to him and set the pegs to start. Whit said, “I guess you guys
really come here to work.”
“How do ya mean?” George asked.
Whit laughed. “Well, ya come on a Friday. You got two days to work till
Sunday.”
“I don’t see how you figure,” said George.
Whit laughed again. “You do if you been around these big ranches much.
Guy that wants to look over a ranch comes in Sat’day afternoon. He gets
Sat’day night supper an’ three meals on Sunday, and he can quit Monday
mornin’ after breakfast without turning his hand. But you come to work
Friday noon. You got to put in a day an’ a half no matter how you
figure.”
George looked at him levelly. “We’re gonna stick aroun’ a while,” he
said. “Me an’ Lennie’s gonna roll up a stake.”
The door opened quietly and the stable buck put in his head; a lean
negro head, lined with pain, the eyes patient. “Mr. Slim.”
Slim took his eyes from old Candy. “Huh? Oh! Hello, Crooks. What’s’a
matter?”
“You told me to warm up tar for that mule’s foot. I got it warm.”
“Oh! Sure, Crooks. I’ll come right out an’ put it on.”
“I can do it if you want, Mr. Slim.”
“No. I’ll come do it myself.” He stood up.
Crooks said, “Mr. Slim.”
“Yeah.”
“That big new guy’s messin’ around your pups out in the barn.”
“Well, he ain’t doin’ no harm. I give him one of them pups.”
“Just thought I’d tell ya,” said Crooks. “He’s takin’ ’em outa the nest
and handlin’ them. That won’t do them no good.”
“He won’t hurt ’em,” said Slim. “I’ll come along with you now.”
George looked up. “If that crazy bastard’s foolin’ around too much, jus’
kick him out, Slim.”
Slim followed the stable buck out of the room.
George dealt and Whit picked up his cards and examined them. “Seen the
new kid yet?” he asked.
“What kid?” George asked.
“Why, Curley’s new wife.”
“Yeah, I seen her.”
“Well, ain’t she a looloo?”
“I ain’t seen that much of her,” said George.
Whit laid down his cards impressively. “Well, stick around an’ keep your
eyes open. You’ll see plenty. She ain’t concealin’ nothing. I never seen
nobody like her. She got the eye goin’ all the time on everybody. I bet
she even gives the stable buck the eye. I don’t know what the hell she
wants.”
George asked casually, “Been any trouble since she got here?”
It was obvious that Whit was not interested in his cards. He laid his
hand down and George scooped it in. George laid out his deliberate
solitaire hand—seven cards, and six on top, and five on top of those.
Whit said, “I see what you mean. No, they ain’t been nothing yet.
Curley’s got yella-jackets in his drawers, but that’s all so far. Ever’
time the guys is around she shows up. She’s lookin’ for Curley, or she
thought she lef’ somethin’ layin’ around and she’s lookin’ for it. Seems
like she can’t keep away from guys. An’ Curley’s pants is just crawlin’
with ants, but they ain’t nothing come of it yet.”
George said, “She’s gonna make a mess. They’s gonna be a bad mess about
her. She’s a jail bait all set on the trigger. That Curley got his work
cut out for him. Ranch with a bunch of guys on it ain’t no place for a
girl, specially like her.”
Whit said, “If you got idears, you ought ta come in town with us guys
tomorra night.”
“Why? What’s doin’?”
“Jus’ the usual thing. We go in to old Susy’s place. Hell of a nice
place. Old Susy’s a laugh—always crackin’ jokes. Like she says when we
come up on the front porch las’ Sat’day night. Susy opens the door and
then she yells over her shoulder, ‘Get yor coats on, girls, here comes
the sheriff.’ She never talks dirty, neither. Got five girls there.”
“What’s it set you back?” George asked.
“Two an’ a half. You can get a shot for two bits. Susy got nice chairs
to set in, too. If a guy don’t want a flop, why he can just set in the
chairs and have a couple or three shots and pass the time of day and
Susy don’t give a damn. She ain’t rushin’ guys through and kickin’ ’em
out if they don’t want a flop.”
“Might go in and look the joint over,” said George.
“Sure. Come along. It’s a hell of a lot of fun—her crackin’ jokes all
the time. Like she says one time, she says, ‘I’ve knew people that if
they got a rag rug on the floor an’ a kewpie doll lamp on the phonograph
they think they’re running a parlor house.’ That’s Clara’s house she’s
talkin’ about. An’ Susy says, ‘I know what you boys want,’ she says. ‘My
girls is clean,’ she says, ‘an’ there ain’t no water in my whisky,’ she
says. ‘If any you guys wanta look at a kewpie doll lamp an’ take your
own chance gettin’ burned, why you know where to go.’ An’ she says,
‘There’s guys around here walkin’ bow-legged ’cause they like to look at
a kewpie doll lamp.’”
George asked, “Clara runs the other house, huh?”
“Yeah,” said Whit. “We don’t never go there. Clara gets three bucks a
crack and thirty-five cents a shot, and she don’t crack no jokes. But
Susy’s place is clean and she got nice chairs. Don’t let no goo-goos in,
neither.”
“Me an’ Lennie’s rollin’ up a stake,” said George. “I might go in an’
set and have a shot, but I ain’t puttin’ out no two and a half.”
“Well, a guy got to have some fun sometime,” said Whit.
The door opened and Lennie and Carlson came in together. Lennie crept to
his bunk and sat down, trying not to attract attention. Carlson reached
under his bunk and brought out his bag. He didn’t look at old Candy, who
still faced the wall. Carlson found a little cleaning rod in the bag and
a can of oil. He laid them on his bed and then brought out the pistol,
took out the magazine and snapped the loaded shell from the chamber.
Then he fell to cleaning the barrel with the little rod. When the
ejector snapped, Candy turned over and looked for a moment at the gun
before he turned back to the wall again.
Carlson said casually, “Curley been in yet?”
“No,” said Whit. “What’s eatin’ on Curley?”
Carlson squinted down the barrel of his gun. “Lookin’ for his old lady.
I seen him going round and round outside.”
Whit said sarcastically, “He spends half his time lookin’ for her, and
the rest of the time she’s lookin’ for him.”
Curley burst into the room excitedly. “Any you guys seen my wife?” he
demanded.
“She ain’t been here,” said Whit.
Curley looked threateningly about the room. “Where the hell’s Slim?”
“Went out in the barn,” said George. “He was gonna put some tar on a
split hoof.”
Curley’s shoulders dropped and squared. “How long ago’d he go?”
“Five—ten minutes.”
Curley jumped out the door and banged it after him.
Whit stood up. “I guess maybe I’d like to see this,” he said. “Curley’s
just spoilin’ or he wouldn’t start for Slim. An’ Curley’s handy, God
damn handy. Got in the finals for the Golden Gloves. He got newspaper
clippings about it.” He considered. “But jus’ the same, he better leave
Slim alone. Nobody don’t know what Slim can do.”
“Thinks Slim’s with his wife, don’t he?” said George.
“Looks like it,” Whit said. “’Course Slim ain’t. Least I don’t think
Slim is. But I like to see the fuss if it comes off. Come on, le’s go.”
George said, “I’m stayin’ right here. I don’t want to get mixed up in
nothing. Lennie and me got to make a stake.”
Carlson finished the cleaning of the gun and put it in the bag and
pushed the bag under his bunk. “I guess I’ll go out and look her over,”
he said. Old Candy lay still, and Lennie, from his bunk, watched George
cautiously.
When Whit and Carlson were gone and the door closed after them, George
turned to Lennie. “What you got on your mind?”
“I ain’t done nothing, George. Slim says I better not pet them pups so
much for a while. Slim says it ain’t good for them; so I come right in.
I been good, George.”
“I coulda told you that,” said George.
“Well, I wasn’t hurtin’ ’em none. I jus’ had mine in my lap pettin’ it.”
George asked, “Did you see Slim out in the barn?”
“Sure I did. He tol’ me I better not pet that pup no more.”
“Did you see that girl?”
“You mean Curley’s girl?”
“Yeah. Did she come in the barn?”
“No. Anyways I never seen her.”
“You never seen Slim talkin’ to her?”
“Uh-uh. She ain’t been in the barn.”
“O.K.,” said George. “I guess them guys ain’t gonna see no fight. If
there’s any fightin’, Lennie, you keep out of it.”
“I don’t want no fights,” said Lennie. He got up from his bunk and sat
down at the table, across from George. Almost automatically George
shuffled the cards and laid out his solitaire hand. He used a
deliberate, thoughtful, slowness.
Lennie reached for a face card and studied it, then turned it upside
down and studied it. “Both ends the same,” he said. “George, why is it
both end’s the same?”
“I don’t know,” said George. “That’s jus’ the way they make ’em. What
was Slim doin’ in the barn when you seen him?”
“Slim?”
“Sure. You seen him in the barn, an’ he tol’ you not to pet the pups so
much.”
“Oh, yeah. He had a can a’ tar an’ a paint brush. I don’t know what
for.”
“You sure that girl didn’t come in like she come in here today?”
“No. She never come.”
George sighed. “You give me a good whore house every time,” he said. “A
guy can go in an’ get drunk and get ever’thing outa his system all at
once, an’ no messes. And he knows how much it’s gonna set him back.
These here jail baits is just set on the trigger of the hoosegow.”
Lennie followed his words admiringly, and moved his lips a little to
keep up. George continued, “You remember Andy Cushman, Lennie? Went to
grammar school?”
“The one that his old lady used to make hot cakes for the kids?” Lennie
asked.
“Yeah. That’s the one. You can remember anything if there’s anything to
eat in it.” George looked carefully at the solitaire hand. He put an ace
up on his scoring rack and piled a two, three and four of diamonds on
it. “Andy’s in San Quentin right now on account of a tart,” said George.
Lennie drummed on the table with his fingers. “George?”
“Huh?”
“George, how long’s it gonna be till we get that little place an’ live
on the fatta the lan’—an’ rabbits?”
“I don’ know,” said George. “We gotta get a big stake together. I know a
little place we can get cheap, but they ain’t givin’ it away.”
Old Candy turned slowly over. His eyes were wide open. He watched George
carefully.
Lennie said, “Tell about that place, George.”
“I jus’ tol’ you, jus’ las’ night.”
“Go on—tell again, George.”
“Well, it’s ten acres,” said George. “Got a little win’mill. Got a
little shack on it, an’ a chicken run. Got a kitchen, orchard, cherries,
apples, peaches, ’cots, nuts, got a few berries. They’s a place for
alfalfa and plenty water to flood it. They’s a pig pen——”
“An’ rabbits, George.”
“No place for rabbits now, but I could easy build a few hutches and you
could feed alfalfa to the rabbits.”
“Damn right, I could,” said Lennie. “You God damn right I could.”
George’s hands stopped working with the cards. His voice was growing
warmer. “An’ we could have a few pigs. I could build a smoke house like
the one gran’pa had, an’ when we kill a pig we can smoke the bacon and
the hams, and make sausage an’ all like that. An’ when the salmon run up
river we could catch a hundred of ’em an’ salt ’em down or smoke ’em. We
could have them for breakfast. They ain’t nothing so nice as smoked
salmon. When the fruit come in we could can it—and tomatoes, they’re
easy to can. Ever’ Sunday we’d kill a chicken or a rabbit. Maybe we’d
have a cow or a goat, and the cream is so God damn thick you got to cut
it with a knife and take it out with a spoon.”
Lennie watched him with wide eyes, and old Candy watched him too. Lennie
said softly, “We could live offa the fatta the lan’.”
“Sure,” said George. “All kin’s a vegetables in the garden, and if we
want a little whisky we can sell a few eggs or something, or some milk.
We’d jus’ live there. We’d belong there. There wouldn’t be no more
runnin’ round the country and gettin’ fed by a Jap cook. No, sir, we’d
have our own place where we belonged and not sleep in no bunk house.”
“Tell about the house, George,” Lennie begged.
“Sure, we’d have a little house an’ a room to ourself. Little fat iron
stove, an’ in the winter we’d keep a fire goin’ in it. It ain’t enough
land so we’d have to work too hard. Maybe six, seven hours a day. We
wouldn’t have to buck no barley eleven hours a day. An’ when we put in a
crop, why, we’d be there to take the crop up. We’d know what come of our
planting.”
“An’ rabbits,” Lennie said eagerly. “An’ I’d take care of ’em. Tell how
I’d do that, George.”
“Sure, you’d go out in the alfalfa patch an’ you’d have a sack. You’d
fill up the sack and bring it in an’ put it in the rabbit cages.”
“They’d nibble an’ they’d nibble,” said Lennie, “the way they do. I seen
’em.”
“Ever’ six weeks or so,” George continued, “them does would throw a
litter so we’d have plenty rabbits to eat an’ to sell. An’ we’d keep a
few pigeons to go flyin’ around the win’mill like they done when I was a
kid.” He looked raptly at the wall over Lennie’s head. “An’ it’d be our
own, an’ nobody could can us. If we don’t like a guy we can say, ‘Get
the hell out,’ and by God he’s got to do it. An’ if a fren’ come along,
why we’d have an extra bunk, an’ we’d say, ‘Why don’t you spen’ the
night?’ an’ by God he would. We’d have a setter dog and a couple stripe
cats, but you gotta watch out them cats don’t get the little rabbits.”
Lennie breathed hard. “You jus’ let ’em try to get the rabbits. I’ll
break their God damn necks. I’ll . . . I’ll smash ’em with a stick.” He
subsided, grumbling to himself, threatening the future cats which might
dare to disturb the future rabbits.
George sat entranced with his own picture.
When Candy spoke they both jumped as though they had been caught doing
something reprehensible. Candy said, “You know where’s a place like
that?”
George was on guard immediately. “S’pose I do,” he said. “What’s that to
you?”
“You don’t need to tell me where it’s at. Might be any place.”
“Sure,” said George. “That’s right. You couldn’t find it in a hundred
years.”
Candy went on excitedly, “How much they want for a place like that?”
George watched him suspiciously. “Well—I could get it for six hundred
bucks. The ol’ people that owns it is flat bust an’ the ol’ lady needs
an operation. Say—what’s it to you? You got nothing to do with us.”
Candy said, “I ain’t much good with on’y one hand. I lost my hand right
here on this ranch. That’s why they give me a job swampin’. An’ they
give me two hunderd an’ fifty dollars ’cause I los’ my hand. An’ I got
fifty more saved up right in the bank, right now. Tha’s three hunderd,
and I got fifty more comin’ the end a the month. Tell you what—” He
leaned forward eagerly. “S’pose I went in with you guys. Tha’s three
hunderd an’ fifty bucks I’d put in. I ain’t much good, but I could cook
and tend the chickens and hoe the garden some. How’d that be?”
George half-closed his eyes. “I gotta think about that. We was always
gonna do it by ourselves.”
Candy interrupted him, “I’d make a will an’ leave my share to you guys
in case I kick off, ’cause I ain’t got no relatives nor nothing. You
guys got any money? Maybe we could do her right now?”
George spat on the floor disgustedly. “We got ten bucks between us.”
Then he said thoughtfully, “Look, if me an’ Lennie work a month an’
don’t spen’ nothing, we’ll have a hunderd bucks. That’d be four fifty. I
bet we could swing her for that. Then you an’ Lennie could go get her
started an’ I’d get a job an’ make up the res’, an’ you could sell eggs
an’ stuff like that.”
They fell into a silence. They looked at one another, amazed. This thing
they had never really believed in was coming true. George said
reverently, “Jesus Christ! I bet we could swing her.” His eyes were full
of wonder. “I bet we could swing her,” he repeated softly.
Candy sat on the edge of his bunk. He scratched the stump of his wrist
nervously. “I got hurt four years ago,” he said. “They’ll can me purty
soon. Jus’ as soon as I can’t swamp out no bunk houses they’ll put me on
the county. Maybe if I give you guys my money, you’ll let me hoe in the
garden even after I ain’t no good at it. An’ I’ll wash dishes an’ little
chicken stuff like that. But I’ll be on our own place, an’ I’ll be let
to work on our own place.” He said miserably, “You seen what they done
to my dog tonight? They says he wasn’t no good to himself nor nobody
else. When they can me here I wisht somebody’d shoot me. But they won’t
do nothing like that. I won’t have no place to go, an’ I can’t get no
more jobs. I’ll have thirty dollars more comin’, time you guys is ready
to quit.”
George stood up. “We’ll do her,” he said. “We’ll fix up that little old
place an’ we’ll go live there.” He sat down again. They all sat still,
all bemused by the beauty of the thing, each mind was popped into the
future when this lovely thing should come about.
George said wonderingly, “S’pose they was a carnival or a circus come to
town, or a ball game, or any damn thing.” Old Candy nodded in
appreciation of the idea. “We’d just go to her,” George said. “We
wouldn’t ask nobody if we could. Jus’ say, ‘We’ll go to her,’ an’ we
would. Jus’ milk the cow and sling some grain to the chickens an’ go to
her.”
“An’ put some grass to the rabbits,” Lennie broke in. “I wouldn’t never
forget to feed them. When we gon’ta do it, George?”
“In one month. Right squack in one month. Know what I’m gon’ta do? I’m
gon’ta write to them old people that owns the place that we’ll take it.
An’ Candy’ll send a hunderd dollars to bind her.”
“Sure will,” said Candy. “They got a good stove there?”
“Sure, got a nice stove, burns coal or wood.”
“I’m gonna take my pup,” said Lennie. “I bet by Christ he likes it
there, by Jesus.”
Voices were approaching from outside. George said quickly, “Don’t tell
nobody about it. Jus’ us three an’ nobody else. They li’ble to can us so
we can’t make no stake. Jus’ go on like we was gonna buck barley the
rest of our lives, then all of a sudden some day we’ll go get our pay
an’ scram outa here.”
Lennie and Candy nodded, and they were grinning with delight. “Don’t
tell nobody,” Lennie said to himself.
Candy said, “George.”
“Huh?”
“I ought to of shot that dog myself, George. I shouldn’t ought to of let
no stranger shoot my dog.”
The door opened. Slim came in, followed by Curley and Carlson and Whit.
Slim’s hands were black with tar and he was scowling. Curley hung close
to his elbow.
Curley said, “Well, I didn’t mean nothing, Slim. I just ast you.”
Slim said, “Well, you been askin’ me too often. I’m gettin’ God damn
sick of it. If you can’t look after your own God damn wife, what you
expect me to do about it? You lay offa me.”
“I’m jus’ tryin’ to tell you I didn’t mean nothing,” said Curley. “I
jus’ thought you might of saw her.”
“Why’n’t you tell her to stay the hell home where she belongs?” said
Carlson. “You let her hang around bunk houses and pretty soon you’re
gonna have som’pin on your hands and you won’t be able to do nothing
about it.”
Curley whirled on Carlson. “You keep outta this les’ you wanta step
outside.”
Carlson laughed. “You God damn punk,” he said. “You tried to throw a
scare into Slim, an’ you couldn’t make it stick. Slim throwed a scare
inta you. You’re yella as a frog belly. I don’t care if you’re the best
welter in the country. You come for me, an’ I’ll kick your God damn head
off.”
Candy joined the attack with joy. “Glove fulla vaseline,” he said
disgustedly. Curley glared at him. His eyes slipped on past and lighted
on Lennie; and Lennie was still smiling with delight at the memory of
the ranch.
Curley stepped over to Lennie like a terrier. “What the hell you
laughin’ at?”
Lennie looked blankly at him. “Huh?”
Then Curley’s rage exploded. “Come on, ya big bastard. Get up on your
feet. No big son-of-a-bitch is gonna laugh at me. I’ll show ya who’s
yella.”
Lennie looked helplessly at George, and then he got up and tried to
retreat. Curley was balanced and poised. He slashed at Lennie with his
left, and then smashed down his nose with a right. Lennie gave a cry of
terror. Blood welled from his nose. “George,” he cried. “Make ’um let me
alone, George.” He backed until he was against the wall, and Curley
followed, slugging him in the face. Lennie’s hands remained at his
sides; he was too frightened to defend himself.
George was on his feet yelling, “Get him, Lennie. Don’t let him do it.”
Lennie covered his face with his huge paws and bleated with terror. He
cried, “Make ’um stop, George.” Then Curley attacked his stomach and cut
off his wind.
Slim jumped up. “The dirty little rat,” he cried, “I’ll get ’um myself.”
George put out his hand and grabbed Slim. “Wait a minute,” he shouted.
He cupped his hands around his mouth and yelled, “Get ’im, Lennie!”
Lennie took his hands away from his face and looked about for George,
and Curley slashed at his eyes. The big face was covered with blood.
George yelled again, “I said get him.”
Curley’s fist was swinging when Lennie reached for it. The next minute
Curley was flopping like a fish on a line, and his closed fist was lost
in Lennie’s big hand. George ran down the room. “Leggo of him, Lennie.
Let go.”
But Lennie watched in terror the flopping little man whom he held. Blood
ran down Lennie’s face, one of his eyes was cut and closed. George
slapped him in the face again and again, and still Lennie held on to the
closed fist. Curley was white and shrunken by now, and his struggling
had become weak. He stood crying, his fist lost in Lennie’s paw.
George shouted over and over, “Leggo his hand, Lennie. Leggo. Slim, come
help me while the guy got any hand left.”
Suddenly Lennie let go his hold. He crouched cowering against the wall.
“You tol’ me to, George,” he said miserably.
Curley sat down on the floor, looking in wonder at his crushed hand.
Slim and Carlson bent over him. Then Slim straightened up and regarded
Lennie with horror. “We got to get him in to a doctor,” he said. “Looks
to me like ever’ bone in his han’ is bust.”
“I didn’t wanta,” Lennie cried. “I didn’t wanta hurt him.”
Slim said, “Carlson, you get the candy wagon hitched up. We’ll take ’um
into Soledad an’ get ’um fixed up.” Carlson hurried out. Slim turned to
the whimpering Lennie. “It ain’t your fault,” he said. “This punk sure
had it comin’ to him. But—Jesus! He ain’t hardly got no han’ left.”
Slim hurried out, and in a moment returned with a tin cup of water. He
held it to Curley’s lips.
George said, “Slim, will we get canned now? We need the stake. Will
Curley’s old man can us now?”
Slim smiled wryly. He knelt down beside Curley. “You got your senses in
hand enough to listen?” he asked. Curley nodded. “Well, then listen,”
Slim went on. “I think you got your han’ caught in a machine. If you
don’t tell nobody what happened, we ain’t going to. But you jus’ tell
an’ try to get this guy canned and we’ll tell ever’body, an’ then will
you get the laugh.”
“I won’t tell,” said Curley. He avoided looking at Lennie.
Buggy wheels sounded outside. Slim helped Curley up. “Come on now.
Carlson’s gonna take you to a doctor.” He helped Curley out the door.
The sound of wheels drew away. In a moment Slim came back into the bunk
house. He looked at Lennie, still crouched fearfully against the wall.
“Le’s see your hands,” he asked.
Lennie stuck out his hands.
“Christ awmighty, I hate to have you mad at me,” Slim said.
George broke in, “Lennie was jus’ scairt,” he explained. “He didn’t know
what to do. I told you nobody ought never to fight him. No, I guess it
was Candy I told.”
Candy nodded solemnly. “That’s jus’ what you done,” he said. “Right this
morning when Curley first lit intil your fren’, you says. ‘He better not
fool with Lennie if he knows what’s good for ’um.’ That’s jus’ what you
says to me.”
George turned to Lennie. “It ain’t your fault,” he said. “You don’t need
to be scairt no more. You done jus’ what I tol’ you to. Maybe you better
go in the wash room an’ clean up your face. You look like hell.”
Lennie smiled with his bruised mouth. “I didn’t want no trouble,” he
said. He walked toward the door, but just before he came to it, he
turned back. “George?”
“What you want?”
“I can still tend the rabbits, George?”
“Sure. You ain’t done nothing wrong.”
“I di’n’t mean no harm, George.”
“Well, get the hell out and wash your face.”
4
Crooks, the negro stable buck, had his bunk in the harness room; a
little shed that leaned off the wall of the barn. On one side of the
little room there was a square four-paned window, and on the other, a
narrow plank door leading into the barn. Crooks’ bunk was a long box
filled with straw, on which his blankets were flung. On the wall by the
window there were pegs on which hung broken harness in process of being
mended; strips of new leather; and under the window itself a little
bench for leather-working tools, curved knives and needles and balls of
linen thread, and a small hand riveter. On pegs were also pieces of
harness, a split collar with the horsehair stuffing sticking out, a
broken hame, and a trace chain with its leather covering split. Crooks
had his apple box over his bunk, and in it a range of medicine bottles,
both for himself and for the horses. There were cans of saddle soap and
a drippy can of tar with its paint brush sticking over the edge. And
scattered about the floor were a number of personal possessions; for,
being alone, Crooks could leave his things about, and being a stable
buck and a cripple, he was more permanent than the other men, and he had
accumulated more possessions than he could carry on his back.
Crooks possessed several pairs of shoes, a pair of rubber boots, a big
alarm clock and a single-barreled shotgun. And he had books, too; a
tattered dictionary and a mauled copy of the California civil code for
1905. There were battered magazines and a few dirty books on a special
shelf over his bunk. A pair of large gold-rimmed spectacles hung from a
nail on the wall above his bed.
This room was swept and fairly neat, for Crooks was a proud, aloof man.
He kept his distance and demanded that other people keep theirs. His
body was bent over to the left by his crooked spine, and his eyes lay
deep in his head, and because of their depth seemed to glitter with
intensity. His lean face was lined with deep black wrinkles, and he had
thin, pain-tightened lips which were lighter than his face.
It was Saturday night. Through the open door that led into the barn came
the sound of moving horses, of feet stirring, of teeth champing on hay,
of the rattle of halter chains. In the stable buck’s room a small
electric globe threw a meager yellow light.
Crooks sat on his bunk. His shirt was out of his jeans in back. In one
hand he held a bottle of liniment, and with the other he rubbed his
spine. Now and then he poured a few drops of the liniment into his
pink-palmed hand and reached up under his shirt to rub again. He flexed
his muscles against his back and shivered.
Noiselessly Lennie appeared in the open doorway and stood there looking
in, his big shoulders nearly filling the opening. For a moment Crooks
did not see him, but on raising his eyes he stiffened and a scowl came
on his face. His hand came out from under his shirt.
Lennie smiled helplessly in an attempt to make friends.
Crooks said sharply, “You got no right to come in my room. This here’s
my room. Nobody got any right in here but me.”
Lennie gulped and his smile grew more fawning. “I ain’t doing nothing,”
he said. “Just come to look at my puppy. And I seen your light,” he
explained.
“Well, I got a right to have a light. You go on get outta my room. I
ain’t wanted in the bunk house, and you ain’t wanted in my room.”
“Why ain’t you wanted?” Lennie asked.
“’Cause I’m black. They play cards in there, but I can’t play because
I’m black. They say I stink. Well, I tell you, you all of you stink to
me.”
Lennie flapped his big hands helplessly. “Ever’body went into town,” he
said. “Slim an’ George an’ ever’body. George says I gotta stay here an’
not get in no trouble. I seen your light.”
“Well, what do you want?”
“Nothing—I seen your light. I thought I could jus’ come in an’ set.”
Crooks stared at Lennie, and he reached behind him and took down the
spectacles and adjusted them over his pink ears and stared again. “I
don’t know what you’re doin’ in the barn anyway,” he complained. “You
ain’t no skinner. They’s no call for a bucker to come into the barn at
all. You ain’t no skinner. You ain’t got nothing to do with the horses.”
“The pup,” Lennie repeated. “I come to see my pup.”
“Well, go see your pup, then. Don’t come in a place where you’re not
wanted.”
Lennie lost his smile. He advanced a step into the room, then remembered
and backed to the door again. “I looked at ’em a little. Slim says I
ain’t to pet ’em very much.”
Crooks said, “Well, you been takin’ ’em out of the nest all the time. I
wonder the old lady don’t move ’em someplace else.”
“Oh, she don’t care. She lets me.” Lennie had moved into the room again.
Crooks scowled, but Lennie’s disarming smile defeated him. “Come on in
and set a while,” Crooks said. “’Long as you won’t get out and leave me
alone, you might as well set down.” His tone was a little more friendly.
“All the boys gone into town, huh?”
“All but old Candy. He just sets in the bunk house sharpening his pencil
and sharpening and figuring.”
Crooks adjusted his glasses. “Figuring? What’s Candy figuring about?”
Lennie almost shouted, “’Bout the rabbits.”
“You’re nuts,” said Crooks. “You’re crazy as a wedge. What rabbits you
talkin’ about?”
“The rabbits we’re gonna get, and I get to tend ’em, cut grass an’ give
’em water, an’ like that.”
“Jus’ nuts,” said Crooks. “I don’t blame the guy you travel with for
keepin’ you outa sight.”
Lennie said quietly. “It ain’t no lie. We’re gonna do it. Gonna get a
little place an’ live on the fatta the lan’.”
Crooks settled himself more comfortably on his bunk. “Set down,” he
invited. “Set down on the nail keg.”
Lennie hunched down on the little barrel. “You think it’s a lie,” Lennie
said, “But it ain’t no lie. Ever’ word’s the truth, an’ you can ast
George.”
Crooks put his dark chin into his pink palm. “You travel aroun’ with
George, don’t ya?”
“Sure. Me an’ him goes ever’ place together.”
Crooks continued. “Sometimes he talks, and you don’t know what the hell
he’s talkin’ about. Ain’t that so?” He leaned forward, boring Lennie
with his deep eyes. “Ain’t that so?”
“Yeah . . . sometimes.”
“Jus’ talks on, an’ you don’t know what the hell it’s all about?”
“Yeah . . . sometimes. But . . . not always.”
Crooks leaned forward over the edge of the bunk. “I ain’t a southern
negro,” he said. “I was born right here in California. My old man had a
chicken ranch, ’bout ten acres. The white kids come to play at our
place, an’ sometimes I went to play with them, and some of them was
pretty nice. My ol’ man didn’t like that. I never knew till long later
why he didn’t like that. But I know now.” He hesitated, and when he
spoke again his voice was softer. “There wasn’t another colored family
for miles around. And now there ain’t a colored man on this ranch an’
there’s jus’ one family in Soledad.” He laughed. “If I say something,
why it’s just a nigger sayin’ it.”
Lennie asked, “How long you think it’ll be before them pups will be old
enough to pet?”
Crooks laughed again. “A guy can talk to you an’ be sure you won’t go
blabbin’. Couple of weeks an’ them pups’ll be all right. George knows
what he’s about. Jus’ talks, an’ you don’t understand nothing.” He
leaned forward excitedly. “This is just a nigger talkin’, an’ a
busted-back nigger. So it don’t mean nothing, see? You couldn’t remember
it anyways. I seen it over an’ over—a guy talkin’ to another guy and it
don’t make no difference if he don’t hear or understand. The thing is,
they’re talkin’, or they’re settin’ still not talkin’. It don’t make no
difference, no difference.” His excitement had increased until he
pounded his knee with his hand. “George can tell you screwy things, and
it don’t matter. It’s just the talking. It’s just bein’ with another
guy. That’s all.” He paused.
His voice grew soft and persuasive. “S’pose George don’t come back no
more. S’pose he took a powder and just ain’t coming back. What’ll you do
then?”
Lennie’s attention came gradually to what had been said. “What?” he
demanded.
“I said s’pose George went into town tonight and you never heard of him
no more.” Crooks pressed forward some kind of private victory. “Just
s’pose that,” he repeated.
“He won’t do it,” Lennie cried. “George wouldn’t do nothing like that. I
been with George a long time. He’ll come back tonight——” But the doubt
was too much for him. “Don’t you think he will?”
Crooks’ face lighted with pleasure in his torture. “Nobody can’t tell
what a guy’ll do,” he observed calmly. “Le’s say he wants to come back
and can’t. S’pose he gets killed or hurt so he can’t come back.”
Lennie struggled to understand. “George won’t do nothing like that,” he
repeated. “George is careful. He won’t get hurt. He ain’t never been
hurt, ’cause he’s careful.”
“Well, s’pose, jus’ s’pose he don’t come back. What’ll you do then?”
Lennie’s face wrinkled with apprehension. “I don’ know. Say, what you
doin’ anyways?” he cried. “This ain’t true. George ain’t got hurt.”
Crooks bored in on him. “Want me ta tell ya what’ll happen? They’ll take
ya to the booby hatch. They’ll tie ya up with a collar, like a dog.”
Suddenly Lennie’s eyes centered and grew quiet, and mad. He stood up and
walked dangerously toward Crooks. “Who hurt George?” he demanded.
Crooks saw the danger as it approached him. He edged back on his bunk to
get out of the way. “I was just supposin’,” he said. “George ain’t hurt.
He’s all right. He’ll be back all right.”
Lennie stood over him. “What you supposin’ for? Ain’t nobody goin’ to
suppose no hurt to George.”
Crooks removed his glasses and wiped his eyes with his fingers. “Jus’
set down,” he said. “George ain’t hurt.”
Lennie growled back to his seat on the nail keg. “Ain’t nobody goin’ to
talk no hurt to George,” he grumbled.
Crooks said gently, “Maybe you can see now. You got George. You _know_
he’s goin’ to come back. S’pose you didn’t have nobody. S’pose you
couldn’t go into the bunk house and play rummy ’cause you was black.
How’d you like that? S’pose you had to sit out here an’ read books. Sure
you could play horseshoes till it got dark, but then you got to read
books. Books ain’t no good. A guy needs somebody—to be near him.” He
whined, “A guy goes nuts if he ain’t got nobody. Don’t make no
difference who the guy is, long’s he’s with you. I tell ya,” he cried,
“I tell ya a guy gets too lonely an’ he gets sick.”
“George gonna come back,” Lennie reassured himself in a frightened
voice. “Maybe George come back already. Maybe I better go see.”
Crooks said, “I didn’t mean to scare you. He’ll come back. I was talkin’
about myself. A guy sets alone out here at night, maybe readin’ books or
thinkin’ or stuff like that. Sometimes he gets thinkin’, an’ he got
nothing to tell him what’s so an’ what ain’t so. Maybe if he sees
somethin’, he don’t know whether it’s right or not. He can’t turn to
some other guy and ast him if he sees it too. He can’t tell. He got
nothing to measure by. I seen things out here. I wasn’t drunk. I don’t
know if I was asleep. If some guy was with me, he could tell me I was
asleep, an’ then it would be all right. But I jus’ don’t know.” Crooks
was looking across the room now, looking toward the window.
Lennie said miserably, “George wun’t go away and leave me. I know George
wun’t do that.”
The stable buck went on dreamily, “I remember when I was a little kid on
my old man’s chicken ranch. Had two brothers. They was always near me,
always there. Used to sleep right in the same room, right in the same
bed—all three. Had a strawberry patch. Had an alfalfa patch. Used to
turn the chickens out in the alfalfa on a sunny morning. My brothers’d
set on a fence rail an’ watch ’em—white chickens they was.”
Gradually Lennie’s interest came around to what was being said. “George
says we’re gonna have alfalfa for the rabbits.”
“What rabbits?”
“We’re gonna have rabbits an’ a berry patch.”
“You’re nuts.”
“We are too. You ast George.”
“You’re nuts.” Crooks was scornful. “I seen hunderds of men come by on
the road an’ on the ranches, with their bindles on their back an’ that
same damn thing in their heads. Hunderds of them. They come, an’ they
quit an’ go on; an’ every damn one of ’em’s got a little piece of land
in his head. An’ never a God damn one of ’em ever gets it. Just like
heaven. Ever’body wants a little piece of lan’. I read plenty of books
out here. Nobody never gets to heaven, and nobody gets no land. It’s
just in their head. They’re all the time talkin’ about it, but it’s jus’
in their head.” He paused and looked toward the open door, for the
horses were moving restlessly and the halter chains clinked. A horse
whinnied. “I guess somebody’s out there,” Crooks said. “Maybe Slim. Slim
comes in sometimes two, three times a night. Slim’s a real skinner. He
looks out for his team.” He pulled himself painfully upright and moved
toward the door. “That you, Slim?” he called.
Candy’s voice answered. “Slim went in town. Say, you seen Lennie?”
“Ya mean the big guy?”
“Yeah. Seen him around any place?”
“He’s in here,” Crooks said shortly. He went back to his bunk and lay
down.
Candy stood in the doorway scratching his bald wrist and looking blindly
into the lighted room. He made no attempt to enter. “Tell ya what,
Lennie. I been figuring out about them rabbits.”
Crooks said irritably, “You can come in if you want.”
Candy seemed embarrassed. “I do’ know. ’Course, if ya want me to.”
“Come on in. If ever’body’s comin’ in, you might just as well.” It was
difficult for Crooks to conceal his pleasure with anger.
Candy came in, but he was still embarrassed. “You got a nice cozy little
place in here,” he said to Crooks. “Must be nice to have a room all to
yourself this way.”
“Sure,” said Crooks. “And a manure pile under the window. Sure, it’s
swell.”
Lennie broke in, “You said about them rabbits.”
Candy leaned against the wall beside the broken collar while he
scratched the wrist stump. “I been here a long time,” he said. “An’
Crooks been here a long time. This’s the first time I ever been in his
room.”
Crooks said darkly, “Guys don’t come into a colored man’s room very
much. Nobody been here but Slim. Slim an’ the boss.”
Candy quickly changed the subject. “Slim’s as good a skinner as I ever
seen.”
Lennie leaned toward the old swamper. “About them rabbits,” he insisted.
Candy smiled. “I got it figured out. We can make some money on them
rabbits if we go about it right.”
“But I get to tend ’em,” Lennie broke in. “George says I get to tend
’em. He promised.”
Crooks interrupted brutally. “You guys is just kiddin’ yourself. You’ll
talk about it a hell of a lot, but you won’t get no land. You’ll be a
swamper here till they take you out in a box. Hell, I seen too many
guys. Lennie here’ll quit an’ be on the road in two, three weeks. Seems
like ever’ guy got land in his head.”
Candy rubbed his cheek angrily. “You God damn right we’re gonna do it.
George says we are. We got the money right now.”
“Yeah?” said Crooks. “An’ where’s George now? In town in a whore house.
That’s where your money’s goin’. Jesus, I seen it happen too many times.
I seen too many guys with land in their head. They never get none under
their hand.”
Candy cried, “Sure they all want it. Everybody wants a little bit of
land, not much. Jus’ som’thin’ that was his. Somethin’ he could live on
and there couldn’t nobody throw him off of it. I never had none. I
planted crops for damn near ever’body in this state, but they wasn’t my
crops, and when I harvested ’em, it wasn’t none of my harvest. But we
gonna do it now, and don’t make no mistake about that. George ain’t got
the money in town. That money’s in the bank. Me an’ Lennie an’ George.
We gonna have a room to ourself. Were gonna have a dog an’ rabbits an’
chickens. We’re gonna have green corn an’ maybe a cow or a goat.” He
stopped, overwhelmed with his picture.
Crooks asked, “You say you got the money?”
“Damn right. We got most of it. Just a little bit more to get. Have it
all in one month. George got the land all picked out, too.”
Crooks reached around and explored his spine with his hand. “I never
seen a guy really do it,” he said. “I seen guys nearly crazy with
loneliness for land, but ever’ time a whore house or a blackjack game
took what it takes.” He hesitated. “. . . If you . . . guys would want a
hand to work for nothing—just his keep, why I’d come an’ lend a hand. I
ain’t so crippled I can’t work like a son-of-a-bitch if I want to.”
“Any you boys seen Curley?”
They swung their heads toward the door. Looking in was Curley’s wife.
Her face was heavily made up. Her lips were slightly parted. She
breathed strongly, as though she had been running.
“Curley ain’t been here,” Candy said sourly.
She stood still in the doorway, smiling a little at them, rubbing the
nails of one hand with the thumb and forefinger of the other. And her
eyes traveled from one face to another. “They left all the weak ones
here,” she said finally. “Think I don’t know where they all went? Even
Curley, I know where they all went.”
Lennie watched her, fascinated; but Candy and Crooks were scowling down
away from her eyes. Candy said, “Then if you know, why you want to ast
us where Curley is at?”
She regarded them amusedly. “Funny thing,” she said. “If I catch any one
man, and he’s alone, I get along fine with him. But just let two of the
guys get together an’ you won’t talk. Jus’ nothing but mad.” She dropped
her fingers and put her hands on her hips. “You’re all scared of each
other, that’s what. Ever’ one of you’s scared the rest is goin’ to get
something on you.”
After a pause Crooks said, “Maybe you better go along to your own house
now. We don’t want no trouble.”
“Well, I ain’t giving you no trouble. Think I don’t like to talk to
somebody ever’ once in a while? Think I like to stick in that house alla
time?”
Candy laid the stump of his wrist on his knee and rubbed it gently with
his hand. He said accusingly, “You gotta husban’. You got no call
foolin’ aroun’ with other guys, causin’ trouble.”
The girl flared up. “Sure I gotta husban’. You all seen him. Swell guy,
ain’t he? Spends all his time sayin’ what he’s gonna do to guys he don’t
like, and he don’t like nobody. Think I’m gonna stay in that two-by-four
house and listen how Curley’s gonna lead with his left twict, and then
bring in the ol’ right cross? ‘One-two’ he says. ‘Jus the ol’ one-two
an’ he’ll go down.’” She paused and her face lost its sullenness and
grew interested. “Say—what happened to Curley’s han’?”
There was an embarrassed silence. Candy stole a look at Lennie. Then he
coughed. “Why . . . Curley . . . he got his han’ caught in a machine,
ma’am. Bust his han’.”
She watched for a moment, and then she laughed. “Baloney! What you think
you’re sellin’ me? Curley started som’pin’ he didn’ finish. Caught in a
machine—baloney! Why, he ain’t give nobody the good ol’ one-two since
he got his han’ bust. Who bust him?”
Candy repeated sullenly, “Got it caught in a machine.”
“Awright,” she said contemptuously. “Awright, cover ’im up if ya wanta.
Whatta I care? You bindle bums think you’re so damn good. Whatta ya
think I am, a kid? I tell ya I could of went with shows. Not jus’ one,
neither. An’ a guy tol’ me he could put me in pitchers. . . .” She was
breathless with indignation. “—Sat’iday night. Ever’body out doin’
som’pin’. Ever’body! An’ what am I doin’? Standin’ here talkin’ to a
bunch of bindle stiffs—a nigger an’ a dum-dum and a lousy ol’
sheep—an’ likin’ it because they ain’t nobody else.”
Lennie watched her, his mouth half open. Crooks had retired into the
terrible protective dignity of the negro. But a change came over old
Candy. He stood up suddenly and knocked his nail keg over backward. “I
had enough,” he said angrily. “You ain’t wanted here. We told you you
ain’t. An’ I tell ya, you got floozy idears about what us guys amounts
to. You ain’t got sense enough in that chicken head to even see that we
ain’t stiffs. S’pose you get us canned. S’pose you do. You think we’ll
hit the highway an’ look for another lousy two-bit job like this. You
don’t know that we got our own ranch to go to, an’ our own house. We
ain’t got to stay here. We gotta house and chickens an’ fruit trees an’
a place a hunderd time prettier than this. An’ we got fren’s, that’s
what we got. Maybe there was a time when we was scared of gettin’
canned, but we ain’t no more. We got our own lan’, and it’s ours, an’ we
c’n go to it.”
Curley’s wife laughed at him. “Baloney,” she said. “I seen too many you
guys. If you had two bits in the worl’, why you’d be in gettin’ two
shots of corn with it and suckin’ the bottom of the glass. I know you
guys.”
Candy’s face had grown redder and redder, but before she was done
speaking, he had control of himself. He was the master of the situation.
“I might of knew,” he said gently. “Maybe you just better go along an’
roll your hoop. We ain’t got nothing to say to you at all. We know what
we got, and we don’t care whether you know it or not. So maybe you
better jus’ scatter along now, ’cause Curley maybe ain’t gonna like his
wife out in the barn with us ‘bindle stiffs.’”
She looked from one face to another, and they were all closed against
her. And she looked longest at Lennie, until he dropped his eyes in
embarrassment. Suddenly she said, “Where’d you get them bruises on your
face?”
Lennie looked up guiltily. “Who—me?”
“Yeah, you.”
Lennie looked to Candy for help, and then he looked at his lap again.
“He got his han’ caught in a machine,” he said.
Curley’s wife laughed. “O.K., Machine. I’ll talk to you later. I like
machines.”
Candy broke in. “You let this guy alone. Don’t you do no messing aroun’
with him. I’m gonna tell George what you says. George won’t have you
messin’ with Lennie.”
“Who’s George?” she asked. “The little guy you come with?”
Lennie smiled happily. “That’s him,” he said. “That’s the guy, an’ he’s
gonna let me tend the rabbits.”
“Well, if that’s all you want, I might get a couple rabbits myself.”
Crooks stood up from his bunk and faced her. “I had enough,” he said
coldly. “You got no rights comin’ in a colored man’s room. You got no
rights messing around in here at all. Now you jus’ get out, an’ get out
quick. If you don’t, I’m gonna ast the boss not to ever let you come in
the barn no more.”
She turned on him in scorn. “Listen, Nigger,” she said. “You know what I
can do to you if you open your trap?”
Crooks stared hopelessly at her, and then he sat down on his bunk and
drew into himself.
She closed on him. “You know what I could do?”
Crooks seemed to grow smaller, and he pressed himself against the wall.
“Yes, ma’am.”
“Well, you keep your place then, Nigger. I could get you strung up on a
tree so easy it ain’t even funny.”
Crooks had reduced himself to nothing. There was no personality, no
ego—nothing to arouse either like or dislike. He said, “Yes, ma’am,”
and his voice was toneless.
For a moment she stood over him as though waiting for him to move so
that she could whip at him again; but Crooks sat perfectly still, his
eyes averted, everything that might be hurt drawn in. She turned at last
to the other two.
Old Candy was watching her, fascinated. “If you was to do that, we’d
tell,” he said quietly. “We’d tell about you framin’ Crooks.”
“Tell an’ be damned,” she cried. “Nobody’d listen to you, an’ you know
it. Nobody’d listen to you.”
Candy subsided. “No . . .” he agreed. “Nobody’d listen to us.”
Lennie whined, “I wisht George was here. I wisht George was here.”
Candy stepped over to him. “Don’t you worry none,” he said. “I jus’
heard the guys comin’ in. George’ll be in the bunk house right now, I
bet.” He turned to Curley’s wife. “You better go home now,” he said
quietly. “If you go right now, we won’t tell Curley you was here.”
She appraised him coolly. “I ain’t sure you heard nothing.”
“Better not take no chances,” he said. “If you ain’t sure, you better
take the safe way.”
She turned to Lennie. “I’m glad you bust up Curley a little bit. He got
it comin’ to him. Sometimes I’d like to bust him myself.” She slipped
out the door and disappeared into the dark barn. And while she went
through the barn, the halter chains rattled, and some horses snorted and
some stamped their feet.
Crooks seemed to come slowly out of the layers of protection he had put
on. “Was that the truth what you said about the guys come back?” he
asked.
“Sure. I heard ’em.”
“Well, I didn’t hear nothing.”
“The gate banged,” Candy said, and he went on, “Jesus Christ, Curley’s
wife can move quiet. I guess she had a lot of practice, though.”
Crooks avoided the whole subject now. “Maybe you guys better go,” he
said. “I ain’t sure I want you in here no more. A colored man got to
have some rights even if he don’t like ’em.”
Candy said, “That bitch didn’t ought to of said that to you.”
“It wasn’t nothing,” Crooks said dully. “You guys comin’ in an’ settin’
made me forget. What she says is true.”
The horses snorted out in the barn and the chains rang and a voice
called, “Lennie. Oh, Lennie. You in the barn?”
“It’s George,” Lennie cried. And he answered, “Here, George. I’m right
in here.”
In a second George stood framed in the door, and he looked
disapprovingly about. “What you doin’ in Crooks’ room. You hadn’t ought
to be in here.”
Crooks nodded. “I tol’ ’em, but they come in anyways.”
“Well, why’n’t you kick ’em out?”
“I di’n’t care much,” said Crooks. “Lennie’s a nice fella.”
Now Candy aroused himself. “Oh, George! I been figurin’ and figurin’. I
got it doped out how we can even make some money on them rabbits.”
George scowled. “I thought I tol’ you not to tell nobody about that.”
Candy was crestfallen. “Didn’t tell nobody but Crooks.”
George said, “Well you guys get outta here. Jesus, seems like I can’t go
away for a minute.”
Candy and Lennie stood up and went toward the door. Crooks called,
“Candy!”
“Huh?”
“’Member what I said about hoein’ and doin’ odd jobs?”
“Yeah,” said Candy. “I remember.”
“Well, jus’ forget it,” said Crooks. “I didn’ mean it. Jus’ foolin’. I
wouldn’ want to go no place like that.”
“Well, O.K., if you feel like that. Goodnight.”
The three men went out of the door. As they went through the barn the
horses snorted and the halter chains rattled.
Crooks sat on his bunk and looked at the door for a moment, and then he
reached for the liniment bottle. He pulled out his shirt in back, poured
a little liniment in his pink palm and, reaching around, he fell slowly
to rubbing his back.
5
One end of the great barn was piled high with new hay and over the pile
hung the four-taloned Jackson fork suspended from its pulley. The hay
came down like a mountain slope to the other end of the barn, and there
was a level place as yet unfilled with the new crop. At the sides the
feeding racks were visible, and between the slats the heads of horses
could be seen.
It was Sunday afternoon. The resting horses nibbled the remaining wisps
of hay, and they stamped their feet and they bit the wood of the mangers
and rattled the halter chains. The afternoon sun sliced in through the
cracks of the barn walls and lay in bright lines on the hay. There was
the buzz of flies in the air, the lazy afternoon humming.
From outside came the clang of horseshoes on the playing peg and the
shouts of men, playing, encouraging, jeering. But in the barn it was
quiet and humming and lazy and warm.
Only Lennie was in the barn, and Lennie sat in the hay beside a packing
case under a manger in the end of the barn that had not been filled with
hay. Lennie sat in the hay and looked at a little dead puppy that lay in
front of him. Lennie looked at it for a long time, and then he put out
his huge hand and stroked it, stroked it clear from one end to the
other.
And Lennie said softly to the puppy, “Why do you got to get killed? You
ain’t so little as mice. I didn’t bounce you hard.” He bent the pup’s
head up and looked in its face, and he said to it, “Now maybe George
ain’t gonna let me tend no rabbits, if he fin’s out you got killed.”
He scooped a little hollow and laid the puppy in it and covered it over
with hay, out of sight; but he continued to stare at the mound he had
made. He said, “This ain’t no bad thing like I got to go hide in the
brush. Oh! no. This ain’t. I’ll tell George I foun’ it dead.”
He unburied the puppy and inspected it, and he stroked it from ears to
tail. He went on sorrowfully, “But he’ll know. George always knows.
He’ll say, ‘You done it. Don’t try to put nothing over on me.’ An’ he’ll
say, ‘Now jus’ for that you don’t get to tend no rabbits!’”
Suddenly his anger arose. “God damn you,” he cried. “Why do you got to
get killed? You ain’t so little as mice.” He picked up the pup and
hurled it from him. He turned his back on it. He sat bent over his knees
and he whispered, “Now I won’t get to tend the rabbits. Now he won’t let
me.” He rocked himself back and forth in his sorrow.
From outside came the clang of horseshoes on the iron stake, and then a
little chorus of cries. Lennie got up and brought the puppy back and
laid it on the hay and sat down. He stroked the pup again. “You wasn’t
big enough,” he said. “They tol’ me and tol’ me you wasn’t. I di’n’t
know you’d get killed so easy.” He worked his fingers on the pup’s limp
ear. “Maybe George won’t care,” he said. “This here God damn little
son-of-a-bitch wasn’t nothing to George.”
Curley’s wife came around the end of the last stall. She came very
quietly, so that Lennie didn’t see her. She wore her bright cotton dress
and the mules with the red ostrich feathers. Her face was made up and
the little sausage curls were all in place. She was quite near to him
before Lennie looked up and saw her.
In a panic he shoveled hay over the puppy with his fingers. He looked
sullenly up at her.
She said, “What you got there, sonny boy?”
Lennie glared at her. “George says I ain’t to have nothing to do with
you—talk to you or nothing.”
She laughed. “George giving you orders about everything?”
Lennie looked down at the hay. “Says I can’t tend no rabbits if I talk
to you or anything.”
She said quietly, “He’s scared Curley’ll get mad. Well, Curley got his
arm in a sling—an’ if Curley gets tough, you can break his other han’.
You didn’t put nothing over on me about gettin’ it caught in no
machine.”
But Lennie was not to be drawn. “No, sir. I ain’t gonna talk to you or
nothing.”
She knelt in the hay beside him. “Listen,” she said. “All the guys got a
horseshoe tenement goin’ on. It’s on’y about four o’clock. None of them
guys is goin’ to leave that tenement. Why can’t I talk to you? I never
get to talk to nobody. I get awful lonely.”
Lennie said, “Well, I ain’t supposed to talk to you or nothing.”
“I get lonely,” she said. “You can talk to people, but I can’t talk to
nobody but Curley. Else he gets mad. How’d you like not to talk to
anybody?”
Lennie said, “Well, I ain’t supposed to. George’s scared I’ll get in
trouble.”
She changed the subject. “What you got covered up there?”
Then all of Lennie’s woe came back on him. “Jus’ my pup,” he said sadly.
“Jus’ my little pup.” And he swept the hay from on top of it.
“Why, he’s dead,” she cried.
“He was so little,” said Lennie. “I was jus’ playin’ with him . . . an’
he made like he’s gonna bite me . . . an’ I made like I was gonna smack
him . . . an’ . . . an’ I done it. An’ then he was dead.”
She consoled him. “Don’t you worry none. He was jus’ a mutt. You can get
another one easy. The whole country is fulla mutts.”
“It ain’t that so much,” Lennie explained miserably. “George ain’t gonna
let me tend no rabbits now.”
“Why don’t he?”
“Well, he said if I done any more bad things he ain’t gonna let me tend
the rabbits.”
She moved closer to him and she spoke soothingly. “Don’t you worry about
talkin’ to me. Listen to the guys yell out there. They got four dollars
bet in that tenement. None of them ain’t gonna leave till it’s over.”
“If George sees me talkin’ to you he’ll give me hell,” Lennie said
cautiously. “He tol’ me so.”
Her face grew angry. “Wha’s the matter with me?” she cried. “Ain’t I got
a right to talk to nobody? Whatta they think I am, anyways? You’re a
nice guy. I don’t know why I can’t talk to you. I ain’t doin’ no harm to
you.”
“Well, George says you’ll get us in a mess.”
“Aw, nuts!” she said. “What kinda harm am I doin’ to you? Seems like
they ain’t none of them cares how I gotta live. I tell you I ain’t used
to livin’ like this. I coulda made somethin’ of myself.” She said
darkly, “Maybe I will yet.” And then her words tumbled out in a passion
of communication, as though she hurried before her listener could be
taken away. “I lived right in Salinas,” she said. “Come there when I was
a kid. Well, a show come through, an’ I met one of the actors. He says I
could go with that show. But my ol’ lady wouldn’ let me. She says
because I was on’y fifteen. But the guy says I coulda. If I’d went, I
wouldn’t be livin’ like this, you bet.”
Lennie stroked the pup back and forth. “We gonna have a little
place—an’ rabbits,” he explained.
She went on with her story quickly, before she should be interrupted.
“’Nother time I met a guy, an’ he was in pitchers. Went out to the
Riverside Dance Palace with him. He says he was gonna put me in the
movies. Says I was a natural. Soon’s he got back to Hollywood he was
gonna write to me about it.” She looked closely at Lennie to see whether
she was impressing him. “I never got that letter,” she said. “I always
thought my ol’ lady stole it. Well, I wasn’t gonna stay no place where I
couldn’t get nowhere or make something of myself, an’ where they stole
your letters. I ast her if she stole it, too, an’ she says no. So I
married Curley. Met him out to the Riverside Dance Palace that same
night.” She demanded, “You listenin’?”
“Me? Sure.”
“Well, I ain’t told this to nobody before. Maybe I ought’n to. I don’
_like_ Curley. He ain’t a nice fella.” And because she had confided in
him, she moved closer to Lennie and sat beside him. “Coulda been in the
movies, an’ had nice clothes—all them nice clothes like they wear. An’
I coulda sat in them big hotels, an’ had pitchers took of me. When they
had them previews I coulda went to them, an’ spoke in the radio, an’ it
wouldn’ta cost me a cent because I was in the pitcher. An’ all them nice
clothes like they wear. Because this guy says I was a natural.” She
looked up at Lennie, and she made a small grand gesture with her arm and
hand to show that she could act. The fingers trailed after her leading
wrist, and her little finger stuck out grandly from the rest.
Lennie sighed deeply. From outside came the clang of a horseshoe on
metal, and then a chorus of cheers. “Somebody made a ringer,” said
Curley’s wife.
Now the light was lifting as the sun went down, and the sun streaks
climbed up the wall and fell over the feeding racks and over the heads
of the horses.
Lennie said, “Maybe if I took this pup out and throwed him away George
wouldn’t never know. An’ then I could tend the rabbits without no
trouble.”
Curley’s wife said angrily, “Don’t you think of nothing but rabbits?”
“We gonna have a little place,” Lennie explained patiently. “We gonna
have a house an’ a garden and a place for alfalfa, an’ that alfalfa is
for the rabbits, an’ I take a sack and get it all fulla alfalfa and then
I take it to the rabbits.”
She asked, “What makes you so nuts about rabbits?”
Lennie had to think carefully before he could come to a conclusion. He
moved cautiously close to her, until he was right against her. “I like
to pet nice things. Once at a fair I seen some of them long-hair
rabbits. An’ they was nice, you bet. Sometimes I’ve even pet mice, but
not when I could get nothing better.”
Curley’s wife moved away from him a little. “I think you’re nuts,” she
said.
“No I ain’t,” Lennie explained earnestly. “George says I ain’t. I like
to pet nice things with my fingers, sof’ things.”
She was a little bit reassured. “Well, who don’t?” she said. “Ever’body
likes that. I like to feel silk an’ velvet. Do you like to feel velvet?”
Lennie chuckled with pleasure. “You bet, by God,” he cried happily. “An’
I had some, too. A lady give me some, an’ that lady was—my own Aunt
Clara. She give it right to me—’bout this big a piece. I wisht I had
that velvet right now.” A frown came over his face. “I lost it,” he
said. “I ain’t seen it for a long time.”
Curley’s wife laughed at him. “You’re nuts,” she said. “But you’re a
kinda nice fella. Jus’ like a big baby. But a person can see kinda what
you mean. When I’m doin’ my hair sometimes I jus’ set an’ stroke it
’cause it’s so soft.” To show how she did it, she ran her fingers over
the top of her head. “Some people got kinda coarse hair,” she said
complacently. “Take Curley. His hair is jus’ like wire. But mine is soft
and fine. ’Course I brush it a lot. That makes it fine. Here—feel right
here.” She took Lennie’s hand and put it on her head. “Feel right aroun’
there an’ see how soft it is.”
Lennie’s big fingers fell to stroking her hair.
“Don’t you muss it up,” she said.
Lennie said, “Oh! That’s nice,” and he stroked harder. “Oh, that’s
nice.”
“Look out, now, you’ll muss it.” And then she cried angrily, “You stop
it now, you’ll mess it all up.” She jerked her head sideways, and
Lennie’s fingers closed on her hair and hung on. “Let go,” she cried.
“You let go!”
Lennie was in a panic. His face was contorted. She screamed then, and
Lennie’s other hand closed over her mouth and nose. “Please don’t,” he
begged. “Oh! Please don’t do that. George’ll be mad.”
She struggled violently under his hands. Her feet battered on the hay
and she writhed to be free; and from under Lennie’s hand came a muffled
screaming. Lennie began to cry with fright. “Oh! Please don’t do none of
that,” he begged. “George gonna say I done a bad thing. He ain’t gonna
let me tend no rabbits.” He moved his hand a little and her hoarse cry
came out. Then Lennie grew angry. “Now don’t,” he said. “I don’t want
you to yell. You gonna get me in trouble jus’ like George says you will.
Now don’t you do that.” And she continued to struggle, and her eyes were
wild with terror. He shook her then, and he was angry with her. “Don’t
you go yellin’,” he said, and he shook her; and her body flopped like a
fish. And then she was still, for Lennie had broken her neck.
He looked down at her, and carefully he removed his hand from over her
mouth, and she lay still. “I don’t want ta hurt you,” he said, “but
George’ll be mad if you yell.” When she didn’t answer nor move he bent
closely over her. He lifted her arm and let it drop. For a moment he
seemed bewildered. And then he whispered in fright, “I done a bad thing.
I done another bad thing.”
He pawed up the hay until it partly covered her.
From outside the barn came a cry of men and the double clang of shoes on
metal. For the first time Lennie became conscious of the outside. He
crouched down in the hay and listened. “I done a real bad thing,” he
said. “I shouldn’t of did that. George’ll be mad. An’ . . . he said
. . . an’ hide in the brush till he come. He’s gonna be mad. In the
brush till he come. Tha’s what he said.” Lennie went back and looked at
the dead girl. The puppy lay close to her. Lennie picked it up. “I’ll
throw him away,” he said. “It’s bad enough like it is.” He put the pup
under his coat, and he crept to the barn wall and peered out between the
cracks, toward the horseshoe game. And then he crept around the end of
the last manger and disappeared.
The sun streaks were high on the wall by now, and the light was growing
soft in the barn. Curley’s wife lay on her back, and she was half
covered with hay.
It was very quiet in the barn, and the quiet of the afternoon was on the
ranch. Even the clang of the pitched shoes, even the voices of the men
in the game seemed to grow more quiet. The air in the barn was dusky in
advance of the outside day. A pigeon flew in through the open hay door
and circled and flew out again. Around the last stall came a shepherd
bitch, lean and long, with heavy, hanging dugs. Halfway to the packing
box where the puppies were she caught the dead scent of Curley’s wife,
and the hair rose along her spine. She whimpered and cringed to the
packing box, and jumped in among the puppies.
Curley’s wife lay with a half-covering of yellow hay. And the meanness
and the plannings and the discontent and the ache for attention were all
gone from her face. She was very pretty and simple, and her face was
sweet and young. Now her rouged cheeks and her reddened lips made her
seem alive and sleeping very lightly. The curls, tiny little sausages,
were spread on the hay behind her head, and her lips were parted.
As happens sometimes, a moment settled and hovered and remained for much
more than a moment. And sound stopped and movement stopped for much,
much more than a moment.
Then gradually time awakened again and moved sluggishly on. The horses
stamped on the other side of the feeding racks and the halter chains
clinked. Outside, the men’s voices became louder and clearer.
From around the end of the last stall old Candy’s voice came. “Lennie,”
he called. “Oh, Lennie! You in here? I been figuring some more. Tell you
what we can do, Lennie.” Old Candy appeared around the end of the last
stall. “Oh, Lennie!” he called again; and then he stopped, and his body
stiffened. He rubbed his smooth wrist on his white stubble whiskers. “I
di’n’t know you was here,” he said to Curley’s wife.
When she didn’t answer, he stepped nearer. “You oughten to sleep out
here,” he said disapprovingly; and then he was beside her and—“Oh,
Jesus Christ!” He looked about helplessly, and he rubbed his beard. And
then he jumped up and went quickly out of the barn.
But the barn was alive now. The horses stamped and snorted, and they
chewed the straw of their bedding and they clashed the chains of their
halters. In a moment Candy came back, and George was with him.
George said, “What was it you wanted to see me about?”
Candy pointed at Curley’s wife. George stared. “What’s the matter with
her?” he asked. He stepped closer, and then he echoed Candy’s words.
“Oh, Jesus Christ!” He was down on his knees beside her. He put his hand
over her heart. And finally, when he stood up, slowly and stiffly, his
face was as hard and tight as wood, and his eyes were hard.
Candy said, “What done it?”
George looked coldly at him. “Ain’t you got any idear?” he asked. And
Candy was silent. “I should of knew,” George said hopelessly. “I guess
maybe way back in my head I did.”
Candy asked, “What we gonna do now, George? What we gonna do now?”
George was a long time in answering. “Guess . . . we gotta tell the
. . . guys. I guess we gotta get ’im an’ lock ’im up. We can’t let ’im
get away. Why, the poor bastard’d starve.” And he tried to reassure
himself. “Maybe they’ll lock ’im up an’ be nice to ’im.”
But Candy said excitedly, “We oughtta let ’im get away. You don’t know
that Curley. Curley gon’ta wanta get ’im lynched. Curley’ll get ’im
killed.”
George watched Candy’s lips. “Yeah,” he said at last, “that’s right,
Curley will. An’ the other guys will.” And he looked back at Curley’s
wife.
Now Candy spoke his greatest fear. “You an’ me can get that little
place, can’t we, George? You an’ me can go there an’ live nice, can’t
we, George? Can’t we?”
Before George answered, Candy dropped his head and looked down at the
hay. He knew.
George said softly, “—I think I knowed from the very first. I think I
knowed we’d never do her. He usta like to hear about it so much I got to
thinking maybe we would.”
“Then—it’s all off?” Candy asked sulkily.
George didn’t answer his question. George said, “I’ll work my month an’
I’ll take my fifty bucks an’ I’ll stay all night in some lousy cat
house. Or I’ll set in some poolroom till ever’body goes home. An’ then
I’ll come back an’ work another month an’ I’ll have fifty bucks more.”
Candy said, “He’s such a nice fella. I didn’ think he’d do nothing like
this.”
George still stared at Curley’s wife. “Lennie never done it in
meanness,” he said. “All the time he done bad things, but he never done
one of ’em mean.” He straightened up and looked back at Candy. “Now
listen. We gotta tell the guys. They got to bring him in, I guess. They
ain’t no way out. Maybe they won’t hurt ’im.” He said sharply, “I ain’t
gonna let ’em hurt Lennie. Now you listen. The guys might think I was in
on it. I’m gonna go in the bunk house. Then in a minute you come out and
tell the guys about her, and I’ll come along and make like I never seen
her. Will you do that? So the guys won’t think I was in on it?”
Candy said, “Sure, George. Sure I’ll do that.”
“O.K. Give me a couple minutes then, and you come runnin’ out an’ tell
like you jus’ found her. I’m going now.” George turned and went quickly
out of the barn.
Old Candy watched him go. He looked helplessly back at Curley’s wife,
and gradually his sorrow and his anger grew into words. “You God damn
tramp,” he said viciously. “You done it, di’n’t you? I s’pose you’re
glad. Ever’body knowed you’d mess things up. You wasn’t no good. You
ain’t no good now, you lousy tart.” He sniveled, and his voice shook. “I
could of hoed in the garden and washed dishes for them guys.” He paused,
and then went on in a singsong. And he repeated the old words: “If they
was a circus or a baseball game . . . we would of went to her . . . jus’
said ‘ta hell with work,’ an’ went to her. Never ast nobody’s say so.
An’ they’d of been a pig and chickens . . . an’ in the winter . . . the
little fat stove . . . an’ the rain comin’ . . . an’ us jus’ settin’
there.” His eyes blinded with tears and he turned and went weakly out of
the barn, and he rubbed his bristly whiskers with his wrist stump.
Outside the noise of the game stopped. There was a rise of voices in
question, a drum of running feet and the men burst into the barn. Slim
and Carlson and young Whit and Curley, and Crooks keeping back out of
attention range. Candy came after them, and last of all came George.
George had put on his blue denim coat and buttoned it, and his black hat
was pulled down low over his eyes. The men raced around the last stall.
Their eyes found Curley’s wife in the gloom, they stopped and stood
still and looked.
Then Slim went quietly over to her, and he felt her wrist. One lean
finger touched her cheek, and then his hand went under her slightly
twisted neck and his fingers explored her neck. When he stood up the men
crowded near and the spell was broken.
Curley came suddenly to life. “I know who done it,” he cried. “That big
son-of-a-bitch done it. I know he done it. Why—ever’body else was out
there playin’ horseshoes.” He worked himself into a fury. “I’m gonna get
him. I’m going for my shotgun. I’ll kill the big son-of-a-bitch myself.
I’ll shoot ’im in the guts. Come on, you guys.” He ran furiously out of
the barn. Carlson said, “I’ll get my Luger,” and he ran out too.
Slim turned quietly to George. “I guess Lennie done it, all right,” he
said. “Her neck’s bust. Lennie coulda did that.”
George didn’t answer, but he nodded slowly. His hat was so far down on
his forehead that his eyes were covered.
Slim went on, “Maybe like that time in Weed you was tellin’ about.”
Again George nodded.
Slim sighed. “Well, I guess we got to get him. Where you think he might
of went?”
It seemed to take George some time to free his words. “He—would of went
south,” he said. “We come from north so he would of went south.”
“I guess we gotta get ’im,” Slim repeated.
George stepped close. “Couldn’ we maybe bring him in an’ they’ll lock
him up? He’s nuts, Slim. He never done this to be mean.”
Slim nodded. “We might,” he said. “If we could keep Curley in, we might.
But Curley’s gonna want to shoot ’im. Curley’s still mad about his hand.
An’ s’pose they lock him up an’ strap him down and put him in a cage.
That ain’t no good, George.”
“I know,” said George. “I know.”
Carlson came running in. “The bastard’s stole my Luger,” he shouted. “It
ain’t in my bag.” Curley followed him, and Curley carried a shotgun in
his good hand. Curley was cold now.
“All right, you guys,” he said. “The nigger’s got a shotgun. You take
it, Carlson. When you see ’um, don’t give ’im no chance. Shoot for his
guts. That’ll double ’im over.”
Whit said excitedly, “I ain’t got a gun.”
Curley said, “You go in Soledad an’ get a cop. Get Al Wilts, he’s deputy
sheriff. Le’s go now.” He turned suspiciously on George. “You’re comin’
with us, fella.”
“Yeah,” said George. “I’ll come. But listen, Curley. The poor bastard’s
nuts. Don’t shoot ’im. He di’n’t know what he was doin’.”
“Don’t shoot ’im?” Curley cried. “He got Carlson’s Luger. ’Course we’ll
shoot ’im.”
George said weakly, “Maybe Carlson lost his gun.”
“I seen it this morning,” said Carlson. “No, it’s been took.”
Slim stood looking down at Curley’s wife. He said, “Curley—maybe you
better stay here with your wife.”
Curley’s face reddened. “I’m goin’,” he said. “I’m gonna shoot the guts
outa that big bastard myself, even if I only got one hand. I’m gonna get
’im.”
Slim turned to Candy. “You stay here with her then, Candy. The rest of
us better get goin’.”
They moved away. George stopped a moment beside Candy and they both
looked down at the dead girl until Curley called, “You George! You stick
with us so we don’t think you had nothin’ to do with this.”
George moved slowly after them, and his feet dragged heavily.
And when they were gone, Candy squatted down in the hay and watched the
face of Curley’s wife. “Poor bastard,” he said softly.
The sound of the men grew fainter. The barn was darkening gradually and,
in their stalls, the horses shifted their feet and rattled the halter
chains. Old Candy lay down in the hay and covered his eyes with his arm.
6
The deep green pool of the Salinas River was still in the late
afternoon. Already the sun had left the valley to go climbing up the
slopes of the Gabilan mountains, and the hilltops were rosy in the sun.
But by the pool among the mottled sycamores, a pleasant shade had
fallen.
A water snake glided smoothly up the pool, twisting its periscope head
from side to side; and it swam the length of the pool and came to the
legs of a motionless heron that stood in the shallows. A silent head and
beak lanced down and plucked it out by the head, and the beak swallowed
the little snake while its tail waved frantically.
A far rush of wind sounded and a gust drove through the tops of the
trees like a wave. The sycamore leaves turned up their silver sides, the
brown, dry leaves on the ground scudded a few feet. And row on row of
tiny wind waves flowed up the pool’s green surface.
As quickly as it had come, the wind died, and the clearing was quiet
again. The heron stood in the shallows, motionless and waiting. Another
little water snake swam up the pool, turning its periscope head from
side to side.
Suddenly Lennie appeared out of the brush, and he came as silently as a
creeping bear moves. The heron pounded the air with its wings, jacked
itself clear of the water and flew off down river. The little snake slid
in among the reeds at the pool’s side.
Lennie came quietly to the pool’s edge. He knelt down and drank, barely
touching his lips to the water. When a little bird skittered over the
dry leaves behind him, his head jerked up and he strained toward the
sound with eyes and ears until he saw the bird, and then he dropped his
head and drank again.
When he was finished, he sat down on the bank, with his side to the
pool, so that he could watch the trail’s entrance. He embraced his knees
and laid his chin down on his knees.
The light climbed on out of the valley, and as it went, the tops of the
mountains seemed to blaze with increasing brightness.
Lennie said softly, “I di’n’t forget, you bet, God damn. Hide in the
brush an’ wait for George.” He pulled his hat down low over his eyes.
“George gonna give me hell,” he said. “George gonna wish he was alone
an’ not have me botherin’ him.” He turned his head and looked at the
bright mountain tops. “I can go right off there an’ find a cave,” he
said. And he continued sadly, “—an’ never have no ketchup—but I won’t
care. If George don’t want me . . . I’ll go away. I’ll go away.”
And then from out of Lennie’s head there came a little fat old woman.
She wore thick bull’s-eye glasses and she wore a huge gingham apron with
pockets, and she was starched and clean. She stood in front of Lennie
and put her hands on her hips, and she frowned disapprovingly at him.
And when she spoke, it was in Lennie’s voice. “I tol’ you an’ tol’ you,”
she said. “I tol’ you, ‘Min’ George because he’s such a nice fella an’
good to you.’ But you don’t never take no care. You do bad things.”
And Lennie answered her, “I tried, Aunt Clara, ma’am. I tried and tried.
I couldn’ help it.”
“You never give a thought to George,” she went on in Lennie’s voice. “He
been doin’ nice things for you alla time. When he got a piece a pie you
always got half or more’n half. An’ if they was any ketchup, why he’d
give it all to you.”
“I know,” said Lennie miserably. “I tried, Aunt Clara, ma’am. I tried
and tried.”
She interrupted him. “All the time he coulda had such a good time if it
wasn’t for you. He woulda took his pay an’ raised hell in a whore house,
and he coulda set in a pool room an’ played snooker. But he got to take
care of you.”
Lennie moaned with grief. “I know, Aunt Clara, ma’am. I’ll go right off
in the hills an’ I’ll fin’ a cave an’ I’ll live there so I won’t be no
more trouble to George.”
“You jus’ say that,” she said sharply. “You’re always sayin’ that, an’
you know sonofabitching well you ain’t never gonna do it. You’ll jus’
stick around an’ stew the b’Jesus outa George all the time.”
Lennie said, “I might jus’ as well go away. George ain’t gonna let me
tend no rabbits now.”
Aunt Clara was gone, and from out of Lennie’s head there came a gigantic
rabbit. It sat on its haunches in front of him, and it waggled its ears
and crinkled its nose at him. And it spoke in Lennie’s voice too.
“Tend rabbits,” it said scornfully. “You crazy bastard. You ain’t fit to
lick the boots of no rabbit. You’d forget ’em and let ’em go hungry.
That’s what you’d do. An’ then what would George think?”
“I would _not_ forget,” Lennie said loudly.
“The hell you wouldn’,” said the rabbit. “You ain’t worth a greased
jack-pin to ram you into hell. Christ knows George done ever’thing he
could to jack you outa the sewer, but it don’t do no good. If you think
George gonna let you tend rabbits, you’re even crazier’n usual. He
ain’t. He’s gonna beat hell outa you with a stick, that’s what he’s
gonna do.”
Now Lennie retorted belligerently, “He ain’t neither. George won’t do
nothing like that. I’ve knew George since—I forget when—and he ain’t
never raised his han’ to me with a stick. He’s nice to me. He ain’t
gonna be mean.”
“Well he’s sick of you,” said the rabbit. “He’s gonna beat hell outa you
an’ then go away an’ leave you.”
“He won’t,” Lennie cried frantically. “He won’t do nothing like that. I
know George. Me an’ him travels together.”
But the rabbit repeated softly over and over, “He gonna leave you, ya
crazy bastard. He gonna leave ya all alone. He gonna leave ya, crazy
bastard.”
Lennie put his hands over his ears. “He ain’t, I tell ya he ain’t.” And
he cried, “Oh! George—George—George!”
George came quietly out of the brush and the rabbit scuttled back into
Lennie’s brain.
George said quietly, “What the hell you yellin’ about?”
Lennie got up on his knees. “You ain’t gonna leave me, are ya, George? I
know you ain’t.”
George came stiffly near and sat down beside him. “No.”
“I knowed it,” Lennie cried. “You ain’t that kind.”
George was silent.
Lennie said, “George.”
“Yeah?”
“I done another bad thing.”
“It don’t make no difference,” George said, and he fell silent again.
Only the topmost ridges were in the sun now. The shadow in the valley
was blue and soft. From the distance came the sound of men shouting to
one another. George turned his head and listened to the shouts.
Lennie said, “George.”
“Yeah?”
“Ain’t you gonna give me hell?”
“Give ya hell?”
“Sure, like you always done before. Like, ‘If I di’n’t have you I’d take
my fifty bucks—’”
“Jesus Christ, Lennie! You can’t remember nothing that happens, but you
remember ever’ word I say.”
“Well, ain’t you gonna say it?”
George shook himself. He said woodenly, “If I was alone I could live so
easy.” His voice was monotonous, had no emphasis. “I could get a job an’
not have no mess.” He stopped.
“Go on,” said Lennie. “An’ when the enda the month come—”
“An’ when the end of the month come I could take my fifty bucks an’ go
to a . . . cat house . . .” He stopped again.
Lennie looked eagerly at him. “Go on, George. Ain’t you gonna give me no
more hell?”
“No,” said George.
“Well, I can go away,” said Lennie. “I’ll go right off in the hills an’
find a cave if you don’ want me.”
George shook himself again. “No,” he said. “I want you to stay with me
here.”
Lennie said craftily—“Tell me like you done before.”
“Tell you what?”
“’Bout the other guys an’ about us.”
George said, “Guys like us got no fambly. They make a little stake an’
then they blow it in. They ain’t got nobody in the worl’ that gives a
hoot in hell about ’em—”
“_But not us_,” Lennie cried happily. “Tell about us now.”
George was quiet for a moment. “But not us,” he said.
“Because—”
“Because I got you an’—”
“An’ I got you. We got each other, that’s what, that gives a hoot in
hell about us,” Lennie cried in triumph.
The little evening breeze blew over the clearing and the leaves rustled
and the wind waves flowed up the green pool. And the shouts of men
sounded again, this time much closer than before.
George took off his hat. He said shakily, “Take off your hat, Lennie.
The air feels fine.”
Lennie removed his hat dutifully and laid it on the ground in front of
him. The shadow in the valley was bluer, and the evening came fast. On
the wind the sound of crashing in the brush came to them.
Lennie said, “Tell how it’s gonna be.”
George had been listening to the distant sounds. For a moment he was
business-like. “Look acrost the river, Lennie, an’ I’ll tell you so you
can almost see it.”
Lennie turned his head and looked off across the pool and up the
darkening slopes of the Gabilans. “We gonna get a little place,” George
began. He reached in his side pocket and brought out Carlson’s Luger; he
snapped off the safety, and the hand and gun lay on the ground behind
Lennie’s back. He looked at the back of Lennie’s head, at the place
where the spine and skull were joined.
A man’s voice called from up the river, and another man answered.
“Go on,” said Lennie.
George raised the gun and his hand shook, and he dropped his hand to the
ground again.
“Go on,” said Lennie. “How’s it gonna be. We gonna get a little place.”
“We’ll have a cow,” said George. “An’ we’ll have maybe a pig an’
chickens . . . an’ down the flat we’ll have a . . . little piece
alfalfa——”
“For the rabbits,” Lennie shouted.
“For the rabbits,” George repeated.
“And I get to tend the rabbits.”
“An’ you get to tend the rabbits.”
Lennie giggled with happiness. “An’ live on the fatta the lan’.”
“Yes.”
Lennie turned his head.
“No, Lennie. Look down there acrost the river, like you can almost see
the place.”
Lennie obeyed him. George looked down at the gun.
There were crashing footsteps in the brush now. George turned and looked
toward them.
“Go on, George. When we gonna do it?”
“Gonna do it soon.”
“Me an’ you.”
“You . . . an’ me. Ever’body gonna be nice to you. Ain’t gonna be no
more trouble. Nobody gonna hurt nobody nor steal from ’em.”
Lennie said, “I thought you was mad at me, George.”
“No,” said George. “No, Lennie. I ain’t mad. I never been mad, an’ I
ain’t now. That’s a thing I want ya to know.”
The voices came close now. George raised the gun and listened to the
voices.
Lennie begged, “Le’s do it now. Le’s get that place now.”
“Sure, right now. I gotta. We gotta.”
And George raised the gun and steadied it, and he brought the muzzle of
it close to the back of Lennie’s head. The hand shook violently, but his
face set and his hand steadied. He pulled the trigger. The crash of the
shot rolled up the hills and rolled down again. Lennie jarred, and then
settled slowly forward to the sand, and he lay without quivering.
George shivered and looked at the gun, and then he threw it from him,
back up on the bank, near the pile of old ashes.
The brush seemed filled with cries and with the sound of running feet.
Slim’s voice shouted, “George. Where you at, George?”
But George sat stiffly on the bank and looked at his right hand that had
thrown the gun away. The group burst into the clearing, and Curley was
ahead. He saw Lennie lying on the sand. “Got him, by God.” He went over
and looked down at Lennie, and then he looked back at George. “Right in
the back of the head,” he said softly.
Slim came directly to George and sat down beside him, sat very close to
him. “Never you mind,” said Slim. “A guy got to sometimes.”
But Carlson was standing over George. “How’d you do it?” he asked.
“I just done it,” George said tiredly.
“Did he have my gun?”
“Yeah. He had your gun.”
“An’ you got it away from him and you took it an’ you killed him?”
“Yeah. Tha’s how.” George’s voice was almost a whisper. He looked
steadily at his right hand that had held the gun.
Slim twitched George’s elbow. “Come on, George. Me an’ you’ll go in an’
get a drink.”
George let himself be helped to his feet. “Yeah, a drink.”
Slim said, “You hadda, George. I swear you hadda. Come on with me.” He
led George into the entrance of the trail and up toward the highway.
Curley and Carlson looked after them. And Carlson said, “Now what the
hell ya suppose is eatin’ them two guys?”
A L S O B Y J O H N S T E I N B E C K
Travels with Charley in Search of America
The Winter of Our Discontent Once There Was a War
The Short Reign of Pippin IV Sweet Thursday
East of Eden The Log from the Sea of Cortez (_Compass_)
Burning Bright (a play in story form)
A Russian Journal The Pearl
The Wayward Bus Cannery Row
Bombs Away The Moon Is Down (Novel)
The Moon Is Down (Play)
Sea of Cortez (in collaboration with Edward F. Ricketts)
The Grapes of Wrath (_Compass_) The Forgotten Village
The Long Valley (_Compass_) The Red Pony
Of Mice and Men (Play) Saint Katy the Virgin
In Dubious Battle Tortilla Flat
To a God Unknown The Pastures of Heaven
Cup of Gold
THE END
TRANSCRIBER NOTES
Misspelled words and printer errors have been corrected. Where
multiple spellings occur, majority use has been employed.
Punctuation has been maintained except where obvious printer
errors occur.
For ease of navigation, Chapter numbers have been added to the
text version of this eBook. The original book did not have
chapter numbers or names. Other versions rely on visual cues and
internally generated bookmarks and table of contents.
[The end of _Of Mice and Men_ by John Steinbeck]