Wainwright said, "We was jes' talkin'. Seems like we oughta be gettin' outa here."
Pa said, "You been aroun'. You know what chancet we got a gettin' a dry place to stay."
"I know. But jes' the same----"
Al said, "Pa, if they go, I'm a-goin' too."
Pa looked startled. "You can't, Al. The truck--We ain't fit to drive that truck."
"I don' care. Me an' Aggie got to stick together."
"Now you wait," Pa said. "Come on over here." Wainwright and Al got to their feet and approached the door. "See?" Pa said, pointing. "Jus' a bank from there an' down to there." He looked at his stick. The water swirled about it now, and crept up the bank.
"Be a lot a work, an' then she might come over anyways," Wainwright protested.
"Well, we ain't doin' nothin', might's well be workin'. We ain't gonna find us no nice place to live like this. Come on, now. Le's go talk to the other fellas. We can do her if ever'body helps."
Al said, "If Aggie goes, I'm a-goin' too."
Pa said, "Look, Al, if them fellas won't dig, then we'll all hafta go. Come on, le's go talk to 'em." They hunched their shoulders and ran down the catwalk to the next car and up the walk into its open door.
Ma was at the stove, feeding a few sticks to the feeble flame. Ruthie crowded close beside her. "I'm hungry," Ruthie whined.
"No, you ain't," Ma said. "You had good mush."
"Wisht I had a box a Cracker Jack. There ain't nothin' to do. Ain't no fun."
"They'll be fun," Ma said. "You jus' wait. Be fun purty soon. Git a house an' a place, purty soon."
"Wisht we had a dog," Ruthie said.
"We'll have a dog; have a cat, too."
"Yella cat?"
"Don't bother me," Ma begged. "Don't go plaguin' me now, Ruthie. Rosasharn's sick. Jus' you be a good girl a little while. They'll be fun." Ruthie wandered, complaining, away.
From the mattress where Rose of Sharon lay covered up there came a quick sharp cry, cut off in the middle. Ma whirled and went to her. Rose of Sharon was holding her breath and her eyes were filled with terror.
"What is it?" Ma cried. The girl expelled her breath and caught it again. Suddenly Ma put her hand under the covers. Then she stood up. "Mis' Wainwright," she called. "Oh, Mis' Wainwright!"
The fat little woman came down the car. "Want me?"
"Look!" Ma pointed at Rose of Sharon's face. Her teeth were clamped on her lower lip and her forehead was wet with perspiration, and the shining terror was in her eyes.
"I think it's come," Ma said. "It's early."
The girl heaved a great sigh and relaxed. She released her lip and closed her eyes. Mrs. Wainwright bent over her.
"Did it kinda grab you all over--quick? Open up an' answer me." Rose of Sharon nodded weakly. Mrs. Wainwright turned to Ma. "Yep," she said. "It's come. Early, ya say?"
"Maybe the fever brang it."
"Well, she oughta be up on her feet. Oughta be walkin' aroun'."
"She can't," Ma said. "She ain't got the strength."
"Well, she oughta." Mrs. Wainwright grew quiet and stern with efficiency. "I he'ped with lots," she said. "Come on, le's close that door, nearly. Keep out the draf'" The two women pushed on the heavy sliding door, boosted it along until only a foot was open. "I'll git our lamp, too," Mrs. Wainwright said. Her face was purple with excitement. "Aggie," she called. "You take care of these here little fellas."
Ma nodded, "Tha's right. Ruthie! You an' Winfiel' go down with Aggie. Go on now."
"Why?" they demanded.
"'Cause you got to. Rosasharn gonna have her baby."
"I wanta watch, Ma. Please let me."
"Ruthie! You git now. You git quick." There was no argument against such a tone. Ruthie and Winfield went reluctantly down the car. Ma lighted the lantern. Mrs. Wainwright brought her Rochester lamp down and set it on the floor, and its big circular flame lighted the boxcar brightly.
Ruthie and Winfield stood behind the brush pile and peered over. "Gonna have a baby, an' we're a-gonna see," Ruthie said softly. "Don't you make no noise now. Ma won't let us watch. If she looks this-a-way, you scrunch down behin' the brush. Then we'll see."
"There ain't many kids seen it," Winfield said.
"There ain't no kids seen it," Ruthie insisted proudly. "On'y us."
Down by the mattress, in the bright light of the lamp, Ma and Mrs. Wainwright held conference. Their voices were raised a little over the hollow beating of the rain. Mrs. Wainwright took a paring knife from her apron pocket and slipped it under the mattress. "Maybe it don't do no good," she said apologetically. "Our folks always done it. Don't do no harm, anyways."
Ma nodded. "We used a plow point. I guess anything sharp'll work, long as it can cut birth pains. I hope it ain't gonna be a long one."
"You feelin' awright now?"
Rose of Sharon nodded nervously. "Is it a-comin'?"
"Sure," Ma said. "Gonna have a nice baby. You jus' got to help us. Feel like you could get up an' walk?"
"I can try."
"That's a good girl," Mrs. Wainwright said. "That is a good girl. We'll he'p you, honey. We'll walk with ya." They helped her to her feet and pinned a blanket over her shoulders. Then Ma held her arm from one side, and Mrs. Wainwright from the other. They walked her to the brush pile and turned slowly and walked her back, over and over; and the rain drummed deeply on the roof.
Ruthie and Winfield watched anxiously. "When's she goin' to have it?" he demanded.
"Sh! Don't draw 'em. We won't be let to look."
Aggie joined them behind the brush pile. Aggie's lean face and yellow hair showed in the lamplight, and her nose was long and sharp in the shadow of her head on the wall.
Ruthie whispered, "You ever saw a baby bore?"
"Sure," said Aggie.
"Well, when's she gonna have it?"
"Oh, not for a long, long time."
"Well, how long?"
"Maybe not 'fore tomorrow mornin'."
"Shucks!" said Ruthie. "Ain't no good watchin' now, then. Oh! Look!"
The walking women had stopped. Rose of Sharon had stiffened, and she whined with pain. They laid her down on the mattress and wiped her forehead while she grunted and clenched her fists. And Ma talked softly to her. "Easy," Ma said. "Gonna be all right--all right. Jus' grip ya han's. Now, then, take your lip inta your teeth. Tha's good--tha's good." The pain passed on. They let her rest awhile, and then helped her up again, and the three walked back and forth, back and forth between the pains.
Pa stuck his head in through the narrow opening. His hat dripped with water. "What ya shut the door for?" he asked. And then he saw the walking women.
Ma said, "Her time's come."
"Then--then we couldn' go 'f we wanted to."
"No."
"Then we got to buil' that bank."
"You got to."
Pa sloshed through the mud to the stream. His marking stick was four inches down. Twenty men stood in the rain. Pa cried, "We got to build her. My girl got her pains." The men gathered about him.
"Baby?"
"Yeah. We can't go now."
A tall man said, "It ain't our baby. We kin go."
"Sure," Pa said. "You can go. Go on. Nobody's stoppin' you. They's only eight shovels." He hurried to the lowest part of the bank and drove his shovel into the mud. The shovelful lifted with a sucking sound. He drove it again, and threw the mud into the low place on the stream bank. And beside him the other men ranged themselves. They heaped the mud up in a long embankment, and those who had no shovels cut live willow whips and wove them in a mat and kicked them into the bank. Over the men came a fury of work, a fury of battle. When one man dropped his shovel, another took it up. They had shed their coats and hats. Their shirts and trousers clung tightly to their bodies, their shoes were shapeless blobs of mud. A shrill scream came from the Joad car. The men stopped, listened uneasily, and then plunged to work again. And the little levee of earth extended until it connected with the highway embank
ment on either end. They were tired now, and the shovels moved more slowly. And the stream rose slowly. It edged above the place where the first dirt had been thrown.
Pa laughed in triumph. "She'd come over if we hadn' a built up!" he cried.
The stream rose slowly up the side of the new wall, and tore at the willow mat. "Higher!" Pa cried. "We got to git her higher!"
The evening came, and the work went on. And now the men were beyond weariness. Their faces were set and dead. They worked jerkily, like machines. When it was dark the women set lanterns in the car doors, and kept pots of coffee handy. And the women ran one by one to the Joad car and wedged themselves inside.
The pains were coming close now, twenty minutes apart. And Rose of Sharon had lost her restraint. She screamed fiercely under the fierce pains. And the neighbor women looked at her and patted her gently and went back to their own cars.
Ma had a good fire going now, and all her utensils, filled with water, sat on the stove to heat. Every little while Pa looked in the car door. "All right?" he asked.
"Yeah! I think so," Ma assured him.
As it grew dark, someone brought out a flashlight to work by. Uncle John plunged on, throwing mud on top of the wall.
"You take it easy," Pa said. "You'll kill yaself."
"I can'the'p it. I can't stan' that yellin'. It's like--it's like when----"
"I know," Pa said. "But jus' take it easy."
Uncle John blubbered, "I'll run away. By God, I got to work or I'll run away."
Pa turned from him. "How's she stan' on the last marker?"
The man with the flashlight threw the beam on the stick. The rain cut whitely through the light. "Comin' up."
"She'll come up slower now," Pa said. "Got to flood purty far on the other side."
"She's comin' up, though."
The women filled the coffee pots and set them out again. And as the night went on, the men moved slower and slower, and they lifted their heavy feet like draft horses. More mud on the levee, more willows int