Downtown at the noon hour was quiet except for a handful of Negroes from the country who were sitting on the shaded railroad-station platform eating rat-trap cheese and soda crackers. Occasionally an automobile would plow through town on its way to Atlanta or Savannah, leaving the air tasting like ant poison for half an hour afterward.

  Claude and Willeen came rattling down the street, across the square, Jack’s old car hitting the railroad irons with a sound like a brick running through a cotton gin. Claude drove up to the filling station and stopped. Crip woke up and ran out to see who it was. Claude had lifted he seat and was unscrewing the gas-tank cap.

  “Boy, you need lots of gas today,” Crip said, putting the nozzle into he tank and looking at Willeen at the same time.

  “Give me two gallons,” Claude said.

  “What you two going to do now?” Crip asked, turning the pump rank.

  “That ain’t no lie,” Claude said, winking at Willeen.

  Crip hung up the hose while Claude was counting out the change for the gasoline. He took a quick look into the back seat to see if Claude and Willeen had any baggage for a trip. There was not a thing. He looked again to be sure.

  Crip did not have time to do any more looking around, because he had to have one more look at Willeen before Claude drove off with her. It was too late then to ask her why she had not told him something about it. If he had known about it in time, he could have asked her himself. It would not have been any trouble for him to get married. He could have done it just as easily as Claude did. But, God Almighty, what a funny feeling Willeen gave you when you looked at her real hard. It made you feel as if you were eating a clingstone peach and had got down almost to the last of it, and the more you sucked it, and bit the stone, the better the peach tasted, and you began to feel sort of hoggish but didn’t give a damn how you acted when you couldn’t get enough of it.

  Willeen got back into the front seat and sat down. Claude grabbed up the water bucket and began filling the radiator.

  It would have been easy enough to have married her, if you had only thought about it before Claude did. You’d make a monkey of yourself, all over the place, any day of the week, for some of that. By that time your eyes felt dry and stuck in your head when you had blinked them for so long, and when you shut them for a moment to get them moistened, you were ready to start all over again. After that you couldn’t help seeing all the pretty things she had and you forgot all about tending the filling station and got to thinking that maybe I could fix it up someway or other. It wasn’t so long ago that Willeen told you you could throw her down if you wanted to. You were a damn fool not to do it when she gave you the chance. But that wasn’t now by a long shot. They drove off down the street leaving Crip standing there looking like a cow mired in quicksand.

  Claude drove around the square seven or eight times, warming up the engine, and finally stopped in front of the poolroom. It made him itch all over when he thought of having a cue stick in his hands. There was no reason why he should not take time to shoot a couple of games. He might be able to win half a dollar, and then he could buy another couple gallons of gas. They could ride twice as far if they had two more. It was time for the one-thirty ginnery whistle to blow, and people were already on their way back from dinner. A game was just starting when Claude went inside, and he grabbed a cue stick from the rack and got in. They played five rounds of three-handed straight, and Claude came out even, after all.

  Somebody in the street was blowing an automobile horn. Upton Daniels came in, and Claude started a two-handed game of rotation with him. Claude broke, and made the seven and the fifteen ball.

  “Boy, what a shot!” he said. “I wouldn’t take dollars for this stick of mine. There’s never been one like it before.”

  Upton made a face by pushing out his mouth.

  “You ought to have seen me ring them in last night,” said Claude. “Seven and eleven were pay balls, and I rang them in nine games in a row. It takes a good man to do that.”

  “Pig’s butt,” Upton said.

  Upton shot and missed an easy one. He banged his cue stick on the floor and made another face with his mouth.

  Claude ran in three balls, missed the fourth, but Upton was left sewn up behind the fourteen. Upton jerked up his cue and scattered the balls with the heavy end.

  “That gives a man away every time,” Claude said, chalking his cue tip. “The first thing I learned about shooting pool was to keep my head. That’s why I’m the best shot in town. If you was as good as I am, you could make yourself a little money now and then off the drummers who come to town. I know you’ve made runs of thirty-seven and thirty-eight every once in a while, but that was just luck.”

  “Pig’s butt,” Upton said.

  The horn out in the street started blowing again. When they finished the game, Claude went out to the front of the poolroom and looked into the street to see who was making so much racket. He had missed a couple of easy shots just on that account.

  When he saw Willeen sitting in the car, he shoved his cue stick at Upton and ran outside. Willeen looked angry.

  “God Almighty,” Claude said under his breath, getting into the car and driving off.

  It was about five o’clock in the afternoon then, and there were only two gallons of gasoline in the tank. Ten miles out of town, Claude turned around and came back. When they reached his house, it was time for supper.

  “I’ll go inside and fix things up first,” he told Willeen. “It won’t take long.”

  He got out and started up the steps. Willeen called him back, and he went to the car.

  “I’d like to go home first and get a few things, Claude,” she said. “You wouldn’t mind, would you?”

  “Sure, that’s all right,” he said, starting the car. “By the time you’re ready, I’ll have got things fixed up here. I’ll be by for you about ten o’clock.”

  “You don’t have to wait that long, Claude,” Willeen said. “I’ll be ready in just a few minutes.”

  “I’ve got to see a fellow downtown,” Claude said. “It might take me a couple of hours to find him. We’d better make it ten o’clock, like I said. I’ve got to take this car back where I got it from, for another thing.”

  On his way back after leaving Willeen at her father’s house, Claude stopped at the poolroom a minute. Somebody gave him a drink of corn, and after that he decided to shoot a few games of pool with Upton before going home to fix things up for Willeen.

  Claude’s old man was downtown early the next morning. When he passed the filling station, Jack and Crip asked him where Claude was.

  “He and Willeen are still asleep,” Claude’s old man said. “But I reckon you’ll be seeing Claude most any time now. Is there anything in particular you boys want to see him about? Is that job ready for him?”

  “He’s still got my car,” Jack said. “He ought to bring it back. I only let him have it for a couple hours yesterday, and he kept it all day and all night.”

  “Don’t worry about your car, son,” old man Barker said. “It’s standing up there in the front yard of the house right this minute. Claude’ll be coming downtown with it before very long.”

  He went across the square and sat down in the shade in front of the post office. There were three or four men over there who had been talking about the news in the morning paper.

  After he had sat down, somebody asked him how Claude was getting along now that he was married to Willeen Howard. Old man Barker nodded his head. Somebody else spat into the dust. “This would sure-God be a puny country if it got cleaned out of girls like that. If the time ever comes when they don’t invite a throw-down, then it’s time to let the niggers and boll weevils and screwworms run wild.” Claude’s old man sort of chuckled to himself. The boy wasn’t up when he left home. “What did Claude have to say when he woke up this morning? I’ll bet it was the same thing I said when I was in his place once,” the fellow said, winking.

  About an hour later Claude drove Jac
k’s car down to the filling station. They were waiting for him.

  “How’s everything, Claude?” Jack said.

  “Couldn’t be better,” Claude told him.

  “It’s a funny feeling, though, I bet,” Jack said.

  Claude turned and looked at Crip a moment. Crip looked straight at him, but he had nothing to say to Claude.

  “Funny?” Claude said, laughing a little and going to the gas pump and leaning against it. “Funny ain’t no name for it, Crip.”

  Crip looked at him between the eyes.

  “I still can’t seem to get over it somehow,” Claude said. “This morning I woke up and opened my eyes and I saw a bare arm lying over me. When I saw it, I was scared to death. I jumped out of bed in a hurry, thinking to myself, ‘What in hell am I doing sleeping in bed with a white girl?’ ”

  Crip kicked at the tires on Jack’s old car to see how well they were holding up. He walked all the way around it a couple times. Nobody had said anything after Claude finished talking.

  After a while Claude walked off down the street towards the poolroom. Jack pushed the car behind the filling station where it would be out of the way. While he was back there, he took the cap off the gas tank to see if Claude had left any gas in it. There was almost a whole gallon inside. Jack thought that was funny, because Claude had started off into the country as if he had figured on taking a trip somewhere.

  (First published in Kneel to the Rising Sun)

  The Grass Fire

  DURING THE LAST week of April nobody with any sense at all would have gone out and deliberately set fire to a hayfield. There had been no rainfall since the March thaw and the country was as dry as road dust in midsummer. The farmers who had fields that needed burning over were waiting for a heavy shower of rain to come and soak the ground thoroughly before they dared begin the spring firing.

  Carl Abbott had been in the habit of burning over his fields the last week of April for the past thirty years and he said that he was not going to start that late in his life letting his new crop hay be ruined by raspberry bushes and gray-birch seedlings if he knew anything about it. The people in the town thought he was merely talking to himself again to make himself heard, and that he really had the good sense to keep fire away from dry grass until a hard rain had come. Carl was always talking about the way he stuck to his lifelong habits, and people never paid much attention to him any more, anyway.

  It was late in the afternoon when Carl got ready to fire the field on the north side of his farm. He carried two buckets of water with him, and a broom, and went up the side road to the north field.

  When he reached the gate, he saw Jake Thompson come driving down the backroad. Carl tried to get through the gate and behind the stone wall before Jake saw him, but he could not hide himself quickly enough because of the two buckets of water he was carrying, and his wooden leg.

  “Hey there!” Jake called, whipping up his horse. “What you doing in that hayfield?”

  Carl waited until Jake drove up to the gap in the wall. He put the buckets down and leaned against the broom handle.

  “I’m standing here looking at you,” Carl told him. “But I’m already tired of doing that, and so now I’m going in here and fire my hayfield.”

  “Why! you damned old fool,” Jake said, “don’t you know that you’ll burn up your whole farm if you do that now? Feel that wind — it’ll carry flame down across that meadow and into that wood lot before you know which way to look. Nobody with any sense would fire a hayfield until after a good heavy rain comes and soaks the ground.”

  “I didn’t ask for the loan of any of your advice,” Carl said.

  “And I don’t generally pass it around to every damn fool I meet, either,” Jake said, “but I hate to have to sit here and see a man burn up all he’s got and ever will have. The town’s not going to raise money to waste on supporting you. There’s too many just like you living on the town already.”

  “Guess I can live on the town if I’ve a mind to. Been paying taxes for thirty years and more.”

  “If it was left up to me,” Jake said, “I’d dig a big hole in the ground and cover you up in it. And I’m man enough left to do it, too.”

  Carl stooped over and picked up the water buckets.

  “Didn’t you hear about that grass fire over in the east part of town day before yesterday?” Jake asked. “A man over there set fire to his hayfield and it got loose from him and burned up his wife.”

  “That’s nothing to concern me,” Carl said. “Haven’t got a wife, and never felt the need for one. It’s people with wives who do all the fool things in the world, anyway.”

  “Guess you’re right about that,” Jake said. “I was about to let it slip my mind that your daddy had a wife.”

  Carl turned around with the water buckets and walked a dozen yards out into the field. The dead grass was almost waist high, and it cracked and waved in the wind like chaff in a hay barn. Each time Carl took a step in the dead grass a puff of dust rose up behind him and blew away in the wind. Carl was beginning to believe that Jake was right after all. He had not realized how dry the country really was.

  Jake drove his horse and buggy to the side of the road and crossed his legs. He sat back to wait and see how big a fool Carl Abbott really was.

  “If you go and fire that hayfield, you’d better go take out some insurance on your stock and buildings. They won’t be worth a dime otherwise; though I guess if I was hard put to it, I could give you a dollar for the ashes, including yours. They’d make the finest kind of top dressing for my potato field this year.”

  “If you’ve got any business of your own, why don’t you go and attend to it?” Carl said. “Didn’t invite you to stay here.”

  “By God, I pay just as many taxes for the upkeep of the town’s roads as you do, Carl Abbott. Shall stand here until I get good and ready to go somewhere else.”

  Carl always said something or did something to make Jake angry whenever they got within sight or hearing distance of each other.

  Jake crossed his legs again and snapped the leaves off a birch seedling with his horsewhip.

  The wind was coming down from the northeast, but it shifted so frequently that nobody could have determined its true direction. In the month of April there was no way of finding out which way the wind was blowing. Jake had said that in April the wind came in all directions, except straight up, and that if man were to dig a hole in the ground it would come that way, too.

  Carl stooped over in the grass and struck a match on the seat of his pants. He held the flame close to a tuft of grass and weathered it with his hands.

  The flame flared up so quickly and so suddenly that it jumped up through his arms and singed his whiskers before he could get out of the way. The wind was true in the east just then, and it was blowing at about thirty miles an hour. The flame died down almost as suddenly as it had flared up, and a column of white smoke coiled straight upward for a few feet before it was caught in the wind and carried down over the meadow. The fire was smoldering in the dead grass, and the white smoke showed that it was feeding on the crisp dry tufts that grew around the stems like powder puffs. A hayfield could never be burned over completely if it were not for the small coils of grass that curled in tufts close to the ground. When the tufts blazed, the long waist-high stems caught and burned through. Then the tall grass fell over as if it were being mown with a scythe, and the fire would be under way, feeding itself far faster than any number of men could have done.

  Jake Thompson watched the white smoke boil and curl in the air. He saw Carl walk over to one of the buckets and souse the broom in the water, taking all the time he wished. Then he went back to the fire and stood looking at it smolder in the tufts.

  A fairly new, well-sewn house broom and a pail or two of water was the finest kind of fire-fighting equipment in a hayfield. But farmers who burned over hayfields rarely undertook such a task without having three or four men to help keep the fire under control. Six men who
knew how to souse a broom in a bucket of water at the proper time, keeping it sufficiently wet so the broom-straw would not catch on fire, could burn over the largest hayfield in the state. Water alone would not even begin to put out a grass fire; it was the smothering of the flame with the broad side of the broom that kept it from spreading. But nobody with any sense at all would have thought of firing a field that year until a rain had come and made the ground moist and dampened the grass tufts. Under those conditions a field would have burned so slowly that one man could have kept it under control.

  Jake knew that Carl did not have a chance in the world of being able to check that fire once it had got under way.

  The white smoke was boiling upward in a column the size of a barrelhead by that time. The wind had shifted again, circling around Carl’s back and blowing down across the meadow from a new angle. The grass tops bowed under the force of the wind, and the wind was changing so frequently that it kept the field waving first in one and then in some other direction. Carl looked around and overhead as if by that he were doing something that would cause the wind to die down into a breeze.

  Jake crossed his legs again and waited to see what was going to happen next. Carl Abbott was without doubt the biggest fool he had ever known.

  Suddenly the flames shot into the air higher than Carl’s head and began leaping across the field towards the meadow like a pack of red foxes let loose. Carl jumped backward, stumbling, and overturning one of the buckets of water. The flames bent over under the force of the wind until they looked as if they were lying flat on top of the grass. That made the field burn even faster still, the leaping flame setting fire to the grass quicker than the eye could follow. It had been burning no longer than two or three minutes, but in that short time it had spread out into the shape of a quarter cut of pie, and it was growing larger and larger each second. Carl ran around in circles, his wooden leg sticking into the ground and tripping him with nearly every step. He would have to stop every step or two and take both hands to pull the wooden peg out of the ground.