p1A 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 treesâwillows fresh and green with every spring, carrying in their lower leaf junctures the debris of the winterâs 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 âcoons, 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.
p2There 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.
p3Evening 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.
p4They 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.
p5The 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.
p6âLennie!â he said sharply. âLennie, for Godâ sakes donât drink so much.â Lennie continued to snort into the pool. The small man leaned over and shook him by the shoulder. âLennie. You gonna be sick like you was last night.â
p7Lennie 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. âThaâs good,â he said. âYou drink some, George. You take a good big drink.â He smiled happily.
p8George unslung his bindle and dropped it gently on the bank. âI ainât sure itâs good water,â he said. âLooks kinda scummy.â
p9Lennie 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. âLook, George. Look what I done.â
p10George knelt beside the pool and drank from his hand with quick scoops. âTastes all right,â he admitted. âDonât really seem to be running, though. You never oughta drink water when it ainât running, Lennie,â he said hopelessly. âYouâd drink out of a gutter if you was thirsty.â 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 Georgeâs hat was.
p11George stared morosely at the water. The rims of his eyes were red with sun glare. He said angrily, âWe could just as well of rode clear to the ranch if that bastard bus driver knew what he was talkinâ about. âJesâ a little stretch down the highway,â he says. âJesâ a little stretch.â God damn near four miles, thatâs what it was! Didnât wanta stop at the ranch gate, thatâs what. Too God damn lazy to pull up. Wonder he isnât too damn good to stop in Soledad at all. Kicks us out and says, âJesâ a little stretch down the road.â I bet it was more than four miles. Damn hot day.â
p12Lennie looked timidly over to him. âGeorge?â
p13âYeah, what ya want?â
p14âWhere we goinâ, George?â
p15The little man jerked down the brim of his hat and scowled over at Lennie. âSo you forgot that awready, did you? I gotta tell you again, do I? Jesus Christ, youâre a crazy bastard!â
p16âI forgot,â Lennie said softly. âI tried not to forget. Honest to God I did, George.â
p17âO.K.âO.K. Iâll tell ya again. I ainât got nothing to do. Might jusâ as well spenâ all my time tellinâ you things and then you forget âem, and I tell you again.â âTried and tried,â said Lennie, âbut it didnât do no good. I remember about the rabbits, George.â
p18âThe hell with the rabbits. Thatâs all you ever can remember is them rabbits. O.K.! Now you listen and this time you got to remember so we donât get in no trouble. You remember settinâ in that gutter on Howard street and watchinâ that blackboard?â
p19Lennieâs face broke into a delighted smile. âWhy sure, George, I remember that . . . but . . . whatâd we do then? I remember some girls come by and you says . . . you say . . .â
p20âThe hell with what I says. You remember about us goinâ into Murray and Readyâs, and they give us work cards and bus tickets?â
p21âOh, sure, George. I remember that now.â His hands went quickly into his side coat pockets. He said gently, âGeorge . . . I ainât got mine. I musta lost it.â He looked down at the ground in despair.
p22âYou never had none, you crazy bastard. I got both of âem here. Think Iâd let you carry your own work card?â
p23Lennie grinned with relief. âI . . . I thought I put it in my side pocket.â His hand went into the pocket again.
p24George looked sharply at him. âWhatâd you take outa that pocket?â
p25âAinât a thing in my pocket,â Lennie said cleverly.
p26âI know there ainât. You got it in your hand. What you got in your handâhidinâ it?â
p27âI ainât got nothinâ, George. Honest.â
p28âCome on, give it here.â
p29Lennie held his closed hand away from Georgeâs direction. âItâs onây a mouse, George.â
p30âA mouse? A live mouse?â
p31âUh-uh. Jusâ a dead mouse, George. I didnâ kill it. Honest! I found it. I found it dead.â
p32âGive it here!â said George.
p33âAw, leave me have it, George.â
p34âGive it here!â
p35Lennieâs closed hand slowly obeyed. George took the mouse and threw it across the pool to the other side, among the brush. âWhat you want of a dead mouse, anyways?â
p36âI could pet it with my thumb while we walked along,â said Lennie.
p37âWell, you ainât petting no mice while you walk with me. You remember where weâre goinâ now?â
p38Lennie looked startled and then in embarrassment hid his face against his knees. âI forgot again.â
p39âJesus Christ,â George said resignedly. âWellâlook, weâre gonna work on a ranch like the one we come from up north.â
p40âUp north?â
p41âIn Weed.â
p42âOh, sure. I remember. In Weed.â
p43âThat ranch weâre goinâ to is right down there about a quarter mile. Weâre gonna go in anâ see the boss. Now, lookâIâll give him the work tickets, but you ainât gonna say a word. You jusâ stand there and donât say nothing. If he finds out what a crazy bastard you are, we wonât get no job, but if he sees ya work before he hears ya talk, weâre set. Ya got that?â
p44âSure, George. Sure I got it.â
p45âO.K. Now when we go in to see the boss, what you gonna do?â
p46âI . . . I,â Lennie thought. His face grew tight with thought. âI . . . ainât gonna say nothinâ. Jusâ gonna stanâ there.â
p47âGood boy. Thatâs swell. You say that over two, three times so you sure wonât forget it.â
p48Lennie droned to himself softly, âI ainât gonna say nothinâ . . . I ainât gonna say nothinâ . . . I ainât gonna say nothinâ.â
p49âO.K.,â said George. âAnâ you ainât gonna do no bad things like you done in Weed, neither.â
p50Lennie looked puzzled. âLike I done in Weed?â
p51âOh, so ya forgot that too, did ya? Well, I ainât gonna remind ya, fear ya do it again.â
p52A light of understanding broke on Lennieâs face. âThey run us outa Weed,â he exploded triumphantly.
p53âRun us out, hell,â said George disgustedly. âWe run. They was lookinâ for us, but they didnât catch us.â
p54Lennie giggled happily. âI didnât forget that, you bet.â
p55George 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. âGod, youâre a lot of trouble,â said George. âI could get along so easy and so nice if I didnât have you on my tail. I could live so easy and maybe have a girl.â
p56For a moment Lennie lay quiet, and then he said hopefully, âWe gonna work on a ranch, George.â
p57âAwright. You got that. But weâre gonna sleep here because I got a reason.â
p58The 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.
p59âGeorgeâwhy ainât we goinâ on to the ranch and get some supper? They got supper at the ranch.â
p60George rolled on his side. âNo reason at all for you. I like it here. Tomorra weâre gonna go to work. I seen thrashinâ machines on the way down. That means weâll be bucking grain bags, bustinâ a gut. Tonight Iâm gonna lay right here and look up. I like it.â
p61Lennie got up on his knees and looked down at George. âAinât we gonna have no supper?â
p62âSure we are, if you gather up some dead willow sticks. I got three can of beans in my bindle. You get a fire ready. Iâll give you a match when you get the sticks together. Then weâll heat the beans and have supper.â
p63Lennie said, âI like beans with ketchup.â
p64âWell, we ainât got no ketchup. You go get wood. Anâ donât you fool around. Itâll be dark before long.â
p65Lennie 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. âPoor bastard,â he said softly, and then went on whistling again.
p66In a moment Lennie came crashing back through the brush. He carried one small willow stick in his hand. George sat up. âAwright,â he said brusquely. âGiâme that mouse!â
p67But Lennie made an elaborate pantomime of innocence. âWhat mouse, George? I ainât got no mouse.â
p68George held out his hand. âCome on. Give it to me. You ainât puttinâ nothing over.â
p69Lennie hesitated, backed away, looked wildly at the brush line as though he contemplated running for his freedom. George said coldly, âYou gonna give me that mouse or do I have to sock you?â
p70âGive you what, George?â
p71âYou know God damn well what. I want that mouse.â
p72Lennie reluctantly reached into his pocket. His voice broke a little. âI donât know why I canât keep it. It ainât nobodyâs mouse. I didnât steal it. I found it lyinâ right beside the road.â
p73Georgeâs hand remained outstretched imperiously. Slowly, like a terrier who doesnât 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.
p74âI wasnât doinâ nothing bad with it, George. Jusâ strokinâ it.â
p75George 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. âYou crazy fool. Donât you think I could see your feet was wet where you went acrost the river to get it?â He heard Lennieâs whimpering cry and wheeled about. âBlubberinâ like a baby! Jesus Christ! A big guy like you.â Lennieâs lip quivered and tears started in his eyes. âAw, Lennie!â George put his hand on Lennieâs shoulder. âI ainât takinâ it away jusâ for meanness. That mouse ainât fresh, Lennie; and besides, youâve broke it pettinâ it. You get another mouse thatâs fresh and Iâll let you keep it a little while.â
p76Lennie sat down on the ground and hung his head dejectedly. âI donât know where there is no other mouse. I remember a lady used to give âem to meâeverâ one she got. But that lady ainât here.â
p77George scoffed. âLady, huh? Donât even remember who that lady was. That was your own Aunt Clara. Anâ she stopped givinâ âem to ya. You always killed âem.â
p78Lennie looked sadly up at him. âThey was so little,â he said, apologetically. âIâd pet âem, and pretty soon they bit my fingers and I pinched their heads a little and then they was deadâbecause they was so little.â
p79âI wishât weâd get the rabbits pretty soon, George. They ainât so little.â
p80âThe hell with the rabbits. Anâ you ainât to be trusted with no live mice. Your Aunt Clara give you a rubber mouse and you wouldnât have nothing to do with it.â
p81âIt wasnât no good to pet,â said Lennie.
p82The 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 poolâs surface.
p83âYou gonna get that wood?â George demanded. âThereâs plenty right up against the back of that sycamore. Floodwater wood. Now you get it.â
p84Lennie 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 doveâs 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.
p85âThereâs enough beans for four men,â George said.
p86Lennie watched him from over the fire. He said patiently, âI like âem with ketchup.â
p87âWell, we ainât got any,â George exploded. âWhatever we ainât got, thatâs what you want. God aâmighty, if I was alone I could live so easy. I could go get a job anâ work, anâ 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. Anâ 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.â Lennie knelt and looked over the fire at the angry George. And Lennieâs face was drawn with terror. âAnâ whatta I got,â George went on furiously. âI got you! You canât keep a job and you lose me everâ job I get. Jusâ keep me shovinâ all over the country all the time. Anâ that ainât the worst. You get in trouble. You do bad things and I got to get you out.â His voice rose nearly to a shout. âYou crazy son-of-a-bitch. You keep me in hot water all the time.â He took on the elaborate manner of little girls when they are mimicking one another. âJusâ wanted to feel that girlâs dressâjusâ wanted to pet it like it was a mouseââ Well, how the hell did she know you jusâ 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 lookinâ for us, and we got to sneak out in the dark and get outta the country. All the time somethinâ like thatâall the time. I wisht I could put you in a cage with about a million mice anâ let you have fun.â His anger left him suddenly. He looked across the fire at Lennieâs anguished face, and then he looked ashamedly at the flames.
p88It 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.
p89âGeorge,â very softly. No answer. âGeorge!â
p90âWhatta you want?â
p91âI was only foolinâ, George. I donât want no ketchup. I wouldnât eat no ketchup if it was right here beside me.â
p92âIf it was here, you could have some.â
p93âBut I wouldnât eat none, George. Iâd leave it all for you. You could cover your beans with it and I wouldnât touch none of it.â
p94George still stared morosely at the fire. âWhen I think of the swell time I could have without you, I go nuts. I never get no peace.â
p95Lennie still knelt. He looked off into the darkness across the river. âGeorge, you want I should go away and leave you alone?â
p96âWhere the hell could you go?â
p97âWell, I could. I could go off in the hills there. Some place Iâd find a cave.â
p98âYeah? Howâd you eat. You ainât got sense enough to find nothing to eat.â
p99âIâd find things, George. I donât need no nice food with ketchup. Iâd lay out in the sun and nobodyâd hurt me. Anâ if I founâ a mouse, I could keep it. Nobodyâd take it away from me.â
p100George looked quickly and searchingly at him. âI been mean, ainât I?â
p101âIf you donâ want me I can go off in the hills anâ find a cave. I can go away any time.â
p102âNoâlook! I was jusâ foolinâ, Lennie. âCause I want you to stay with me. Trouble with mice is you always kill âem.â He paused. âTell you what Iâll do, Lennie. First chance I get Iâll give you a pup. Maybe you wouldnât kill it. Thatâd be better than mice. And you could pet it harder.â
p103Lennie avoided the bait. He had sensed his advantage. âIf you donât want me, you only jusâ got to say so, and Iâll go off in those hills right thereâright up in those hills and live by myself. Anâ I wonât get no mice stole from me.â
p104George said, âI want you to stay with me, Lennie. Jesus Christ, somebodyâd shoot you for a coyote if you was by yourself. No, you stay with me. Your Aunt Clara wouldnât like you running off by yourself, even if she is dead.â
p105Lennie spoke craftily, âTell meâlike you done before.â
p106âTell you what?â
p107âAbout the rabbits.â
p108George snapped, âYou ainât gonna put nothing over on me.â
p109Lennie pleaded, âCome on, George. Tell me. Please, George. Like you done before.â
p110âYou get a kick outta that, donât you? Awright, Iâll tell you, and then weâll eat our supper. . . .â
p111Georgeâs voice became deeper. He repeated his words rhythmically as though he had said them many times before. âGuys like us, that work on ranches, are the loneliest guys in the world. They got no family. They donât belong no place. They come to a ranch anâ work up a stake and then they go inta town and blow their stake, and the first thing you know theyâre poundinâ their tail on some other ranch. They ainât got nothing to look ahead to.â
p112Lennie was delighted. âThatâs itâthatâs it. Now tell how it is with us.â
p113George went on. âWith us it ainât like that. We got a future. We got somebody to talk to that gives a damn about us. We donât have to sit in no bar room blowinâ in our jack jusâ 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.â
p114Lennie broke in. âBut not us! Anâ why? Because . . . because I got you to look after me, and you got me to look after you, and thatâs why.â He laughed delightedly. âGo on now, George!â
p115âYou got it by heart. You can do it yourself.â
p116âNo, you. I forget some aâ the things. Tell about how itâs gonna be.â
p117âO.K. Somedayâweâre gonna get the jack together and weâre gonna have a little house and a couple of acres anâ a cow and some pigs andâââ
p118âAnâ live off the fatta the lanâ,â Lennie shouted. âAnâ have rabbits. Go on, George! Tell about what weâre 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.â
p119âWhyânât you do it yourself? You know all of it.â
p120âNo . . . you tell it. It ainât the same if I tell it. Go on . . . George. How I get to tend the rabbits.â
p121âWell,â said George, âweâll have a big vegetable patch and a rabbit hutch and chickens. And when it rains in the winter, weâll just say the hell with goinâ to work, and weâll build up a fire in the stove and set around it anâ listen to the rain cominâ down on the roofâNuts!â He took out his pocket knife. âI ainât got time for no more.â 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.
p122They sat by the fire and filled their mouths with beans and chewed mightily. A few beans slipped out of the side of Lennieâs mouth. George gestured with his spoon. âWhat you gonna say tomorrow when the boss asks you questions?â
p123Lennie stopped chewing and swallowed. His face was concentrated. âI . . . I ainât gonna . . . say a word.â
p124âGood boy! Thatâs fine, Lennie! Maybe youâre gettinâ better. When we get the coupla acres I can let you tend the rabbits all right. âSpecially if you remember as good as that.â
p125Lennie choked with pride. âI can remember,â he said.
p126George motioned with his spoon again. âLook, Lennie. I want you to look around here. You can remember this place, canât you? The ranch is about a quarter mile up that way. Just follow the river?â
p127âSure,â said Lennie. âI can remember this. Diânât I remember about not gonna say a word?â
p128ââŻâCourse you did. Well, look. Lennieâif you jusâ happen to get in trouble like you always done before, I want you to come right here anâ hide in the brush.â
p129âHide in the brush,â said Lennie slowly.
p130âHide in the brush till I come for you. Can you remember that?â
p131âSure I can, George. Hide in the brush till you come.â
p132âBut you ainât gonna get in no trouble, because if you do, I wonât let you tend the rabbits.â He threw his empty bean can off into the brush.
p133âI wonât get in no trouble, George. I ainât gonna say a word.â
p134âO.K. Bring your bindle over here by the fire. Itâs gonna be nice sleepinâ here. Lookinâ up, and the leaves. Donât build up no more fire. Weâll let her die down.â
p135They 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, âGeorgeâyou asleep?â
p136âNo. Whatta you want?â
p137âLetâs have different color rabbits, George.â
p138âSure we will,â George said sleepily. âRed and blue and green rabbits, Lennie. Millions of âem.â
p139âFurry ones, George, like I seen in the fair in Sacramento.â
p140âSure, furry ones.â
p141ââŻâCause I can jusâ as well go away, George, anâ live in a cave.â
p142âYou can jusâ as well go to hell,â said George. âShut up now.â
p143The 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
p144The 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.
p145At about ten oâclock 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.
p146The 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.
p147âThe boss was expectinâ you last night,â the old man said. âHe was sore as hell when you wasnât here to go out this morning.â He pointed with his right arm, and out of the sleeve came a round stick-like wrist, but no hand. âYou can have them two beds there,â he said, indicating two bunks near the stove.
p148George 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. âSay. What the hellâs this?â
p149âI donât know,â said the old man.
p150âSays âpositively kills lice, roaches and other scourges.â What the hell kind of bed you giving us, anyways. We donât want no pants rabbits.â
p151The 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. âTell you whatââ he said finally, âlast guy that had this bed was a blacksmithâhell of a nice fella and as clean a guy as you want to meet. Used to wash his hands even after he ate.â
p152âThen how come he got graybacks?â George was working up a slow anger. Lennie put his bindle on the neighboring bunk and sat down. He watched George with open mouth.
p153âTell you what,â said the old swamper. âThis here blacksmithâname of Whiteyâwas the kind of guy that would put that stuff around even if there wasnât no bugsâjust to make sure, see? Tell you what he used to doâAt meals heâd peel his boilâ potatoes, anâ heâd take out everâ little spot, no matter what kind, before heâd eat it. And if there was a red splotch on an egg, heâd scrape it off. Finally quit about the food. Thatâs the kinda guy he wasâclean. Used ta dress up Sundays even when he wasnât going no place, put on a necktie even, and then set in the bunk house.â
p154âI ainât so sure,â said George skeptically. âWhat did you say he quit for?â
p155The old man put the yellow can in his pocket, and he rubbed his bristly white whiskers with his knuckles. âWhy . . . he . . . just quit, the way a guy will. Says it was the food. Just wanted to move. Didnât give no other reason but the food. Just says âgimme my timeâ one night, the way any guy would.â
p156George 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, âI guess the bossâll be out here in a minute. He was sure burned when you wasnât here this morning. Come right in when we was eatinâ breakfast and says, âWhere the hellâs them new men?â Anâ he give the stable buck hell, too.â
p157George patted a wrinkle out of his bed, and sat down. âGive the stable buck hell?â he asked.
p158âSure. Ya see the stable buckâs a nigger.â
p159âNigger, huh?â
p160âYeah. Nice fella too. Got a crooked back where a horse kicked him. The boss gives him hell when heâs mad. But the stable buck donât give a damn about that. He reads a lot. Got books in his room.â
p161âWhat kind of a guy is the boss?â George asked.
p162âWell, heâs a pretty nice fella. Gets pretty mad sometimes, but heâs pretty nice. Tell ya whatâknow what he done Christmas? Brang a gallon of whisky right in here and says, âDrink hearty boys. Christmas comes but once a year.ââŻâ
p163âThe hell he did! Whole gallon?â
p164âYes 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 wouldnât let him use his feet, so the nigger got him. If he coulda used his feet, Smitty says he woulda killed the nigger. The guys said on account of the niggerâs got a crooked back, Smitty canât use his feet.â He paused in relish of the memory. âAfter that the guys went into Soledad and raised hell. I didnât go in there. I ainât got the poop no more.â
p165Lennie 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.
p166The old swamper looked quickly at him, and then shuffled to the door rubbing his whiskers with his knuckles as he went. âThem guys just come,â he said, and shuffled past the boss and out the door.
p167The boss stepped into the room with the short, quick steps of a fat-legged man. âI wrote Murray and Ready I wanted two men this morning. You got your work slips?â George reached into his pocket and produced the slips and handed them to the boss. âIt wasnât Murray and Readyâs fault. Says right here on the slip that you was to be here for work this morning.â
p168George looked down at his feet. âBus driver give us a bum steer,â he said. âWe hadda walk ten miles. Says we was here when we wasnât. We couldnât get no rides in the morning.â
p169The boss squinted his eyes. âWell, I had to send out the grain teams short two buckers. Wonât do any good to go out now till after dinner.â 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. âWhatâs your name?â
p170âGeorge Milton.â
p171âAnd whatâs yours?â
p172George said, âHis nameâs Lennie Small.â
p173The names were entered in the book. âLeâs see, this is the twentieth, noon the twentieth.â He closed the book. âWhere you boys been working?â
p174âUp around Weed,â said George.
p175âYou, too?â to Lennie.
p176âYeah, him too,â said George.
p177The boss pointed a playful finger at Lennie. âHe ainât much of a talker, is he?â
p178âNo, he ainât, but heâs sure a hell of a good worker. Strong as a bull.â
p179Lennie smiled to himself. âStrong as a bull,â he repeated.
p180George scowled at him, and Lennie dropped his head in shame at having forgotten.
p181The boss said suddenly, âListen, Small!â Lennie raised his head. âWhat can you do?â
p182In a panic, Lennie looked at George for help. âHe can do anything you tell him,â said George. âHeâs a good skinner. He can rassel grain bags, drive a cultivator. He can do anything. Just give him a try.â
p183The boss turned on George. âThen why donât you let him answer? What you trying to put over?â
p184George broke in loudly, âOh! I ainât saying heâs bright. He ainât. But I say heâs a God damn good worker. He can put up a four hundred pound bale.â
p185The boss deliberately put the little book in his pocket. He hooked his thumbs in his belt and squinted one eye nearly closed. âSayâwhat you sellinâ?â
p186âHuh?â
p187âI said what stake you got in this guy? You takinâ his pay away from him?â
p188âNo, âcourse I ainât. Why ya think Iâm sellinâ him out?â
p189âWell, I never seen one guy take so much trouble for another guy. I just like to know what your interest is.â
p190George said, âHeâs my . . . cousin. I told his old lady Iâd take care of him. He got kicked in the head by a horse when he was a kid. Heâs awright. Just ainât bright. But he can do anything you tell him.â
p191The boss turned half away. âWell, God knows he donât need any brains to buck barley bags. But donât you try to put nothing over, Milton. I got my eye on you. Whyâd you quit in Weed?â
p192âJob was done,â said George promptly.
p193âWhat kinda job?â
p194âWe . . . we was digginâ a cesspool.â
p195âAll right. But donât try to put nothing over, âcause you canât get away with nothing. I seen wise guys before. Go on out with the grain teams after dinner. Theyâre pickinâ up barley at the threshing machine. Go out with Slimâs team.â
p196âSlim?â
p197âYeah. Big tall skinner. Youâll see him at dinner.â 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.
p198When the sound of his footsteps had died away, George turned on Lennie. âSo you wasnât gonna say a word. You was gonna leave your big flapper shut and leave me do the talkinâ. Damn near lost us the job.â
p199Lennie stared hopelessly at his hands. âI forgot, George.â
p200âYeah, you forgot. You always forget, anâ I got to talk you out of it.â He sat down heavily on the bunk. âNow heâs got his eye on us. Now we got to be careful and not make no slips. You keep your big flapper shut after this.â He fell morosely silent.
p201âGeorge.â
p202âWhat you want now?â
p203âI wasnât kicked in the head with no horse, was I, George?â
p204âBe a damn good thing if you was,â George said viciously. âSave everâbody a hell of a lot of trouble.â
p205âYou said I was your cousin, George.â
p206âWell, that was a lie. Anâ Iâm damn glad it was. If I was a relative of yours Iâd shoot myself.â He stopped suddenly, stepped to the open front door and peered out. âSay, what the hell you doinâ listeninâ?â
p207The 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. âI wasnât listeninâ. I was jusâ standinâ in the shade a minute scratchinâ my dog. I jusâ now finished swampinâ out the wash house.â
p208âYou was pokinâ your big ears into our business,â George said. âI donât like nobody to get nosey.â
p209The old man looked uneasily from George to Lennie, and then back. âI jusâ come there,â he said. âI didnât hear nothing you guys was sayinâ. I ainât interested in nothing you was sayinâ. A guy on a ranch donât never listen nor he donât ast no questions.â
p210âDamn right he donât,â said George, slightly mollified, ânot if he wants to stay workinâ long.â But he was reassured by the swamperâs defense. âCome on in and set down a minute,â he said. âThatâs a hell of an old dog.â
p211âYeah. I had âim ever since he was a pup. God, he was a good sheep dog when he was younger.â He stood his broom against the wall and he rubbed his white bristled cheek with his knuckles. âHowâd you like the boss?â he asked.
p212âPretty good. Seemed awright.â
p213âHeâs a nice fella,â the swamper agreed. âYou got to take him right.â
p214At 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. âSeen my old man?â he asked.
p215The swamper said, âHe was here jusâ a minute ago, Curley. Went over to the cook house, I think.â
p216âIâll try to catch him,â 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. âYou the new guys the old man was waitinâ for?â
p217âWe just come in,â said George.
p218âLet the big guy talk.â
p219Lennie twisted with embarrassment.
p220George said, âSâpose he donât want to talk?â
p221Curley lashed his body around. âBy Christ, heâs gotta talk when heâs spoke to. What the hell are you gettinâ into it for?â
p222âWe travel together,â said George coldly.
p223âOh, so itâs that way.â
p224George was tense, and motionless. âYeah, itâs that way.â
p225Lennie was looking helplessly to George for instruction.
p226âAnâ you wonât let the big guy talk, is that it?â
p227âHe can talk if he wants to tell you anything.â He nodded slightly to Lennie.
p228âWe jusâ come in,â said Lennie softly.
p229Curley stared levelly at him. âWell, nexâ time you answer when youâre spoke to.â He turned toward the door and walked out, and his elbows were still bent out a little.
p230George watched him out, and then he turned back to the swamper. âSay, what the hellâs he got on his shoulder? Lennie didnât do nothing to him.â
p231The old man looked cautiously at the door to make sure no one was listening. âThatâs the bossâs son,â he said quietly. âCurleyâs pretty handy. He done quite a bit in the ring. Heâs a lightweight, and heâs handy.â
p232âWell, let him be handy,â said George. âHe donât have to take after Lennie. Lennie didnât do nothing to him. Whatâs he got against Lennie?â
p233The swamper considered. . . . âWell . . . tell you what. Curleyâs like a lot of little guys. He hates big guys. Heâs alla time picking scraps with big guys. Kind of like heâs mad at âem because he ainât a big guy. You seen little guys like that, ainât you? Always scrappy?â
p234âSure,â said George. âI seen plenty tough little guys. But this Curley better not make no mistakes about Lennie. Lennie ainât handy, but this Curley punk is gonna get hurt if he messes around with Lennie.â
p235âWell, Curleyâs pretty handy,â the swamper said skeptically. âNever did seem right to me. Sâpose Curley jumps a big guy anâ licks him. Everâbody says what a game guy Curley is. And sâpose he does the same thing and gets licked. Then everâbody 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 ainât givinâ nobody a chance.â
p236George was watching the door. He said ominously, âWell, he better watch out for Lennie. Lennie ainât no fighter, but Lennieâs strong and quick and Lennie donât know no rules.â He walked to the square table and sat down on one of the boxes. He gathered some of the cards together and shuffled them.
p237The old man sat down on another box. âDonât tell Curley I said none of this. Heâd slough me. He just donât give a damn. Wonât ever get canned âcause his old manâs the boss.â
p238George cut the cards and began turning them over, looking at each one and throwing it down on a pile. He said, âThis guy Curley sounds like a son-of-a-bitch to me. I donât like mean little guys.â
p239âSeems to me like heâs worse lately,â said the swamper. âHe got married a couple of weeks ago. Wife lives over in the bossâs house. Seems like Curley is cockierân ever since he got married.â
p240George grunted, âMaybe heâs showinâ off for his wife.â
p241The swamper warmed to his gossip. âYou seen that glove on his left hand?â
p242âYeah. I seen it.â
p243âWell, that gloveâs fulla vaseline.â
p244âVaseline? What the hell for?â
p245âWell, I tell ya whatâCurley says heâs keepinâ that hand soft for his wife.â
p246George studied the cards absorbedly. âThatâs a dirty thing to tell around,â he said.
p247The old man was reassured. He had drawn a derogatory statement from George. He felt safe now, and he spoke more confidently. âWaitâll you see Curleyâs wife.â
p248George cut the cards again and put out a solitaire lay, slowly and deliberately. âPurty?â he asked casually.
p249âYeah. Purty . . . butâââ
p250George studied his cards. âBut what?â
p251âWellâshe got the eye.â
p252âYeah? Married two weeks and got the eye? Maybe thatâs why Curleyâs pants is full of ants.â
p253âI seen her give Slim the eye. Slimâs a jerkline skinner. Hell of a nice fella. Slim donât need to wear no high-heeled boots on a grain team. I seen her give Slim the eye. Curley never seen it. Anâ I seen her give Carlson the eye.â
p254George pretended a lack of interest. âLooks like we was gonna have fun.â
p255The swamper stood up from his box. âKnow what I think?â George did not answer. âWell, I think Curleyâs married . . . a tart.â
p256âHe ainât the first,â said George. âThereâs plenty done that.â
p257The 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. âI gotta be settinâ out the wash basins for the guys. The teamsâll be in before long. You guys gonna buck barley?â
p258âYeah.â
p259âYou wonât tell Curley nothing I said?â
p260âHell no.â
p261âWell, you look her over, mister. You see if she ainât a tart.â He stepped out the door into the brilliant sunshine.
p262George 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. âStable Buckâooh, sta-able Buck!â And then, âWhere the hell is that God damn nigger?â
p263George 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.
p264âLook, Lennie! This here ainât no set up. Iâm scared. You gonna have trouble with that Curley guy. I seen that kind before. He was kinda feelinâ you out. He figures heâs got you scared and heâs gonna take a sock at you the first chance he gets.â
p265Lennieâs eyes were frightened. âI donât want no trouble,â he said plaintively. âDonât let him sock me, George.â
p266George got up and went over to Lennieâs bunk and sat down on it. âI hate that kinda bastard,â he said. âI seen plenty of âem. Like the old guy says, Curley donât take no chances. He always wins.â He thought for a moment. âIf he tangles with you, Lennie, weâre gonna get the can. Donât make no mistake about that. Heâs the bossâs son. Look, Lennie. You try to keep away from him, will you? Donât never speak to him. If he comes in here you move clear to the other side of the room. Will you do that, Lennie?â
p267âI donât want no trouble,â Lennie mourned. âI never done nothing to him.â
p268âWell, that wonât do you no good if Curley wants to plug himself up for a fighter. Just donât have nothing to do with him. Will you remember?â
p269âSure, George. I ainât gonna say a word.â
p270The 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, âYou ainât mad, George?â
p271âI ainât mad at you. Iâm mad at this here Curley bastard. I hoped we was gonna get a little stake togetherâmaybe a hundred dollars.â His tone grew decisive. âYou keep away from Curley, Lennie.â
p272âSure I will, George. I wonât say a word.â
p273âDonât let him pull you inâbutâif the son-of-a-bitch socks youâlet âim have it.â
p274âLet âim have what, George?â
p275âNever mind, never mind. Iâll 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?â
p276Lennie raised up on his elbow. His face contorted with thought. Then his eyes moved sadly to Georgeâs face. âIf I get in any trouble, you ainât gonna let me tend the rabbits.â
p277âThatâs not what I meant. You remember where we slepâ last night? Down by the river?â
p278âYeah. I remember. Oh, sure I remember! I go there anâ hide in the brush.â
p279âHide till I come for you. Donât let nobody see you. Hide in the brush by the river. Say that over.â
p280âHide in the brush by the river, down in the brush by the river.â
p281âIf you get in trouble.â
p282âIf I get in trouble.â
p283A brake screeched outside. A call came, âStableâBuck. Oh! Sta-able Buck.â
p284George said, âSay it over to yourself, Lennie, so you wonât forget it.â
p285Both 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. âIâm lookinâ for Curley,â she said. Her voice had a nasal, brittle quality.
p286George looked away from her and then back. âHe was in here a minute ago, but he went.â
p287âOh!â She put her hands behind her back and leaned against the door frame so that her body was thrown forward. âYouâre the new fellas that just come, ainât ya?â
p288âYeah.â
p289Lennieâs 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. âSometimes Curleyâs in here,â she explained.
p290George said brusquely, âWell he ainât now.â
p291âIf he ainât, I guess I better look some place else,â she said playfully.
p292Lennie watched her, fascinated. George said, âIf I see him, Iâll pass the word you was looking for him.â
p293She smiled archly and twitched her body. âNobody canât blame a person for lookinâ,â she said. There were footsteps behind her, going by. She turned her head. âHi, Slim,â she said.
p294Slimâs voice came through the door. âHi, Good-lookinâ.â
p295âIâm tryinâ to find Curley, Slim.â
p296âWell, you ainât tryinâ very hard. I seen him goinâ in your house.â
p297She was suddenly apprehensive. ââŻâBye, boys,â she called into the bunk house, and she hurried away.
p298George looked around at Lennie. âJesus, what a tramp,â he said. âSo thatâs what Curley picks for a wife.â
p299âSheâs purty,â said Lennie defensively.
p300âYeah, and sheâs sure hidinâ it. Curley got his work ahead of him. Bet sheâd clear out for twenty bucks.â
p301Lennie still stared at the doorway where she had been. âGosh, she was purty.â He smiled admiringly. George looked quickly down at him and then he took him by an ear and shook him.
p302âListen to me, you crazy bastard,â he said fiercely. âDonât you even take a look at that bitch. I donât care what she says and what she does. I seen âem poison before, but I never seen no piece of jail bait worse than her. You leave her be.â
p303Lennie tried to disengage his ear. âI never done nothing, George.â
p304âNo, you never. But when she was standinâ in the doorway showinâ her legs, you wasnât lookinâ the other way, neither.â
p305âI never meant no harm, George. Honest I never.â
p306âWell, you keep away from her, âcause sheâs a rat-trap if I ever seen one. You let Curley take the rap. He let himself in for it. Glove fulla vaseline,â George said disgustedly. âAnâ I bet heâs eatinâ raw eggs and writinâ to the patent medicine houses.â
p307Lennie cried out suddenlyââI donâ like this place, George. This ainât no good place. I wanna get outa here.â
p308âWe gotta keep it till we get a stake. We canât help it, Lennie. Weâll get out jusâ as soon as we can. I donât like it no better than you do.â He went back to the table and set out a new solitaire hand. âNo, I donât like it,â he said. âFor two bits Iâd shove out of here. If we can get jusâ a few dollars in the poke weâll 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.â
p309Lennie leaned eagerly toward him. âLeâs go, George. Leâs get outta here. Itâs mean here.â
p310âWe gotta stay,â George said shortly. âShut up now. The guysâll be cominâ in.â
p311From the washroom nearby came the sound of running water and rattling basins. George studied the cards. âMaybe we oughtta wash up,â he said. âBut we ainât done nothing to get dirty.â
p312A 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 wheelerâs 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.
p313He smoothed out his crushed hat, creased it in the middle and put it on. He looked kindly at the two in the bunk house. âItâs brighterân a bitch outside,â he said gently. âCanât hardly see nothing in here. You the new guys?â
p314âJust come,â said George.
p315âGonna buck barley?â
p316âThatâs what the boss says.â
p317Slim sat down on a box across the table from George. He studied the solitaire hand that was upside down to him. âHope you get on my team,â he said. His voice was very gentle. âI gotta pair of punks on my team that donât know a barley bag from a blue ball. You guys ever bucked any barley?â
p318âHell, yes,â said George. âI ainât nothing to scream about, but that big bastard there can put up more grain alone than most pairs can.â
p319Lennie, 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. âYou guys travel around together?â His tone was friendly. It invited confidence without demanding it.
p320âSure,â said George. âWe kinda look after each other.â He indicated Lennie with his thumb. âHe ainât bright. Hell of a good worker, though. Hell of a nice fella, but he ainât bright. Iâve knew him for a long time.â
p321Slim looked through George and beyond him. âAinât many guys travel around together,â he mused. âI donât know why. Maybe everâbody in the whole damn world is scared of each other.â
p322âItâs a lot nicer to go around with a guy you know,â said George.
p323A powerful, big-stomached man came into the bunk house. His head still dripped water from the scrubbing and dousing. âHi, Slim,â he said, and then stopped and stared at George and Lennie.
p324âThese guys jusâ come,â said Slim by way of introduction.
p325âGlad ta meet ya,â the big man said. âMy nameâs Carlson.â
p326âIâm George Milton. This hereâs Lennie Small.â
p327âGlad ta meet ya,â Carlson said again. âHe ainât very small.â He chuckled softly at his joke. âAinât small at all,â he repeated. âMeant to ask you, Slimâhowâs your bitch? I seen she wasnât under your wagon this morning.â
p328âShe slang her pups last night,â said Slim. âNine of âem. I drowned four of âem right off. She couldnât feed that many.â
p329âGot five left, huh?â
p330âYeah, five. I kept the biggest.â
p331âWhat kinda dogs you think theyâre gonna be?â
p332âI dunno,â said Slim. âSome kinda shepherds, I guess. Thatâs the most kind I seen around here when she was in heat.â
p333Carlson went on, âGot five pups, huh. Gonna keep all of âem?â
p334âI dunno. Have to keep âem a while so they can drink Luluâs milk.â
p335Carlson said thoughtfully, âWell, looka here, Slim. I been thinkinâ. That dog of Candyâs is so God damn old he canât hardly walk. Stinks like hell, too. Everâ time he comes into the bunk house I can smell him for two, three days. Whyânât 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, canât eat. Candy feeds him milk. He canât chew nothing else.â
p336George 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.
p337âThere she goes,â said Carlson.
p338Outside, there was a burst of voices as a group of men went by.
p339Slim stood up slowly and with dignity. âYou guys better come on while theyâs still something to eat. Wonât be nothing left in a couple of minutes.â
p340Carlson stepped back to let Slim precede him, and then the two of them went out the door.
p341Lennie was watching George excitedly. George rumpled his cards into a messy pile. âYeah!â George said, âI heard him, Lennie. Iâll ask him.â
p342âA brown and white one,â Lennie cried excitedly.
p343âCome on. Leâs get dinner. I donât know whether he got a brown and white one.â
p344Lennie didnât move from his bunk. âYou ask him right away, George, so he wonât kill no more of âem.â
p345âSure. Come on now, get up on your feet.â
p346Lennie rolled off his bunk and stood up, and the two of them started for the door. Just as they reached it, Curley bounced in.
p347âYou seen a girl around here?â he demanded angrily.
p348George said coldly. ââŻâBout half an hour ago maybe.â
p349âWell what the hell was she doinâ?â
p350George stood still, watching the angry little man. He said insultingly, âShe saidâshe was lookinâ for you.â
p351Curley 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. âWell, which wayâd she go?â he demanded at last.
p352âI dunno,â said George. âI didnât watch her go.â
p353Curley scowled at him, and turning, hurried out the door.
p354George said, âYa know, Lennie, Iâm scared Iâm gonna tangle with that bastard myself. I hate his guts. Jesus Christ! Come on. They wonât be a damn thing left to eat.â
p355They 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.
p356After 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
p357Although 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.
p358Slim 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.
p359âIt wasnât nothing,â said Slim. âI would of had to drowned most of âem anyways. No need to thank me about that.â
p360George said, âIt wasnât much to you, maybe, but it was a hell of a lot to him. Jesus Christ, I donât know how weâre gonna get him to sleep in here. Heâll want to sleep right out in the barn with âem. Weâll have trouble keepinâ him from getting right in the box with them pups.â
p361âIt wasnât nothing,â Slim repeated. âSay, you sure was right about him. Maybe he ainât bright, but I never seen such a worker. He damn near killed his partner buckinâ barley. There ainât nobody can keep up with him. God awmighty I never seen such a strong guy.â
p362George spoke proudly. âJusâ tell Lennie what to do anâ heâll do it if it donât take no figuring. He canât think of nothing to do himself, but he sure can take orders.â
p363There was a clang of horseshoe on iron stake outside and a little cheer of voices.
p364Slim moved back slightly so the light was not on his face. âFunny how you anâ him string along together.â It was Slimâs calm invitation to confidence.
p365âWhatâs funny about it?â George demanded defensively.
p366âOh, 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 jusâ seems kinda funny a cuckoo like him and a smart little guy like you travelinâ together.â
p367âHe ainât no cuckoo,â said George. âHeâs dumb as hell, but he ainât crazy. Anâ I ainât so bright neither, or I wouldnât be buckinâ barley for my fifty and found. If I was bright, if I was even a little bit smart, Iâd have my own little place, anâ Iâd be bringinâ in my own crops, âstead of doinâ all the work and not getting what comes up outa the ground.â George fell silent. He wanted to talk. Slim neither encouraged nor discouraged him. He just sat back quiet and receptive.
p368âIt ainât so funny, him anâ me goinâ arounâ together,â George said at last. âHim 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 workinâ. Got kinda used to each other after a little while.â
p369âUmm,â said Slim.
p370George looked over at Slim and saw the calm, God-like eyes fastened on him. âFunny,â said George. âI used to have a hell of a lot of fun with âim. Used to play jokes on âim âcause he was too dumb to take care of âimself. 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 heâd do any damn thing I tolâ him. If I tolâ him to walk over a cliff, over heâd go. That wasnât so damn much fun after a while. He never got mad about it, neither. Iâve beat the hell outa him, and he coulda bust every bone in my body jusâ with his hanâs, but he never lifted a finger against me.â Georgeâs voice was taking on the tone of confession. âTell you what made me stop that. One day a bunch of guys was standinâ around up on the Sacramento River. I was feelinâ pretty smart. I turns to Lennie and says, âJump in.â Anâ he jumps. Couldnât swim a stroke. He damn near drowned before we could get him. Anâ he was so damn nice to me for pullinâ him out. Clean forgot I told him to jump in. Well, I ainât done nothing like that no more.â
p371âHeâs a nice fella,â said Slim. âGuy donât need no sense to be a nice fella. Seems to me sometimes it jusâ works the other way around. Take a real smart guy and he ainât hardly ever a nice fella.â
p372George 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.
p373âI ainât got no people,â George said. âI seen the guys that go around on the ranches alone. That ainât no good. They donât have no fun. After a long time they get mean. They get wantinâ to fight all the time.â
p374âYeah, they get mean,â Slim agreed. âThey get so they donât want to talk to nobody.â
p375ââŻâCourse Lennieâs a God damn nuisance most of the time,â said George. âBut you get used to goinâ around with a guy anâ you canât get rid of him.â
p376âHe ainât mean,â said Slim. âI can see Lennie ainât a bit mean.â
p377ââŻâCourse he ainât mean. But he gets in trouble alla time because heâs so God damn dumb. Like what happened in Weedâââ He stopped, stopped in the middle of turning over a card. He looked alarmed and peered over at Slim. âYou wouldnât tell nobody?â
p378âWhatâd he do in Weed?â Slim asked calmly.
p379âYou wouldnâ tell? . . . No, âcourse you wouldnâ.â
p380âWhatâd he do in Weed?â Slim asked again.
p381âWell, he seen this girl in a red dress. Dumb bastard like he is, he wants to touch everâthing he likes. Just wants to feel it. So he reaches out to feel this red dress anâ the girl lets out a squawk, and that gets Lennie all mixed up, and he holds on âcause thatâs the only thing he can think to do. Well, this girl squawks and squawks. I was jusâ a little bit off, and I heard all the yellinâ, so I comes running, anâ by that time Lennieâs so scared all he can think to do is jusâ hold on. I socked him over the head with a fence picket to make him let go. He was so scairt he couldnât let go of that dress. And heâs so God damn strong, you know.â
p382Slimâs eyes were level and unwinking. He nodded very slowly. âSo what happens?â
p383George carefully built his line of solitaire cards. âWell, that girl rabbits in anâ 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 onây our heads sticking outa water, anâ up under the grass that sticks out from the side of the ditch. Anâ that night we scrammed outa there.â
p384Slim sat in silence for a moment. âDidnât hurt the girl none, huh?â he asked finally.
p385âHell, no. He just scared her. Iâd be scared too if he grabbed me. But he never hurt her. He jusâ wanted to touch that red dress, like he wants to pet them pups all the time.â
p386âHe ainât mean,â said Slim. âI can tell a mean guy a mile off.â
p387ââŻâCourse he ainât, and heâll do any damn thing Iâââ
p388Lennie came in through the door. He wore his blue denim coat over his shoulders like a cape, and he walked hunched way over.
p389âHi, Lennie,â said George. âHow do you like the pup now?â
p390Lennie said breathlessly, âHeâs brown anâ white jusâ like I wanted.â He went directly to his bunk and lay down and turned his face to the wall and drew up his knees.
p391George put down his cards very deliberately. âLennie,â he said sharply.
p392Lennie twisted his neck and looked over his shoulder. âHuh? What you want, George?â
p393âI tolâ you you couldnât bring that pup in here.â
p394âWhat pup, George? I ainât got no pup.â
p395George 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.
p396Lennie sat up quickly. âGive âum to me, George.â
p397George said, âYou get right up anâ take this pup back to the nest. Heâs gotta sleep with his mother. You want to kill him? Just born last night anâ you take him out of the nest. You take him back or Iâll tell Slim not to let you have him.â
p398Lennie held out his hands pleadingly. âGive âum to me, George. Iâll take âum back. I didnât mean no harm, George. Honest I didnât. I jusâ wanted to pet âum a little.â
p399George handed the pup to him. âAwright. You get him back there quick, and donâ you take him out no more. Youâll kill him, the first thing you know.â Lennie fairly scuttled out of the room.
p400Slim had not moved. His calm eyes followed Lennie out the door. âJesus,â he said. âHeâs jesâ like a kid, ainât he.â
p401âSure heâs jesâ like a kid. There ainât no more harm in him than a kid neither, except heâs so strong. I bet he wonât come in here to sleep tonight. Heâd sleep right alongside that box in the barn. Wellâlet âim. He ainât doinâ no harm out there.â
p402It was almost dark outside now. Old Candy, the swamper, came in and went to his bunk, and behind him struggled his old dog. âHello, Slim. Hello, George. Didnât neither of you play horseshoes?â
p403âI donât like to play everâ night,â said Slim.
p404Candy went on, âEither you guys got a slug of whisky? I gotta gut ache.â
p405âI ainât,â said Slim. âIâd drink it myself if I had, anâ I ainât got a gut ache neither.â
p406âGotta bad gut ache,â said Candy. âThem God damn turnips give it to me. I knowed they was going to before I ever eat âem.â
p407The 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. âDarkerân hell in here,â he said. âJesus, how that nigger can pitch shoes.â
p408âHeâs plenty good,â said Slim.
p409âDamn right he is,â said Carlson. âHe donât give nobody else a chance to winâââ He stopped and sniffed the air, and still sniffing, looked down at the old dog. âGod awmighty, that dog stinks. Get him outa here, Candy! I donât know nothing that stinks as bad as an old dog. You gotta get him out.â
p410Candy rolled to the edge of his bunk. He reached over and patted the ancient dog, and he apologized, âI been around him so much I never notice how he stinks.â
p411âWell, I canât stand him in here,â said Carlson. âThat stink hangs around even after heâs gone.â He walked over with his heavy-legged stride and looked down at the dog. âGot no teeth,â he said. âHeâs all stiff with rheumatism. He ainât no good to you, Candy. Anâ he ainât no good to himself. Whyânât you shoot him, Candy?â
p412The old man squirmed uncomfortably. âWellâhell! I had him so long. Had him since he was a pup. I herded sheep with him.â He said proudly, âYou wouldnât think it to look at him now, but he was the best damn sheep dog I ever seen.â
p413George said, âI seen a guy in Weed that had an Airedale could herd sheep. Learned it from the other dogs.â
p414Carlson was not to be put off. âLook, Candy. This olâ dog jusâ suffers hisself all the time. If you was to take him out and shoot him right in the back of the headââ he leaned over and pointed, ââright there, why heâd never know what hit him.â
p415Candy looked about unhappily. âNo,â he said softly. âNo, I couldnâ do that. I had âim too long.â
p416âHe donât have no fun,â Carlson insisted. âAnd he stinks to beat hell. Tell you what. Iâll shoot him for you. Then it wonât be you that does it.â
p417Candy threw his legs off his bunk. He scratched the white stubble whiskers on his cheek nervously. âIâm so used to him,â he said softly. âI had him from a pup.â
p418âWell, you ainât beinâ kind to him keepinâ him alive,â said Carlson. âLook, Slimâs bitch got a litter right now. I bet Slim would give you one of them pups to raise up, wouldnât you, Slim?â
p419The skinner had been studying the old dog with his calm eyes. âYeah,â he said. âYou can have a pup if you want to.â He seemed to shake himself free for speech. âCarlâs right, Candy. That dog ainât no good to himself. I wisht somebodyâd shoot me if I got old anâ a cripple.â
p420Candy looked helplessly at him, for Slimâs opinions were law. âMaybe itâd hurt him,â he suggested. âI donât mind takinâ care of him.â
p421Carlson said, âThe way Iâd shoot him, he wouldnât feel nothing. Iâd put the gun right there.â He pointed with his toe. âRight back of the head. He wouldnât even quiver.â
p422Candy 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. âDid I show you this, Slim?â he asked.
p423âShow me what?â
p424The young man turned to the back of the magazine, put it down on the table and pointed with his finger. âRight there, read that.â Slim bent over it. âGo on,â said the young man. âRead it out loud.â
p425ââŻâDear Editor:ââŻâ Slim read slowly. ââŻâI 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 donât write many letters. Just thought I would tell you I think your mag is the best dimeâs worth I ever spent.ââŻâ
p426Slim looked up questioningly. âWhat you want me to read that for?â
p427Whit said, âGo on. Read the name at the bottom.â
p428Slim read, ââŻâYours for success, William Tenner.ââŻâ He glanced up at Whit again. âWhat you want me to read that for?â
p429Whit closed the magazine impressively. âDonât you remember Bill Tenner? Worked here about three months ago?â
p430Slim thought. . . . âLittle guy?â he asked. âDrove a cultivator?â
p431âThatâs him,â Whit cried. âThatâs the guy!â
p432âYou think heâs the guy wrote this letter?â
p433âI know it. Bill and me was in here one day. Bill had one of them books that just come. He was lookinâ in it and he says, âI wrote a letter. Wonder if they put it in the book!â But it wasnât there. Bill says, âMaybe theyâre savinâ it for later.â Anâ thatâs just what they done. There it is.â
p434âGuess youâre right,â said Slim. âGot it right in the book.â
p435George held out his hand for the magazine. âLetâs look at it?â
p436Whit 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. âI wonder if Bill seen it,â he said. âBill and me worked in that patch of field peas. Run cultivators, both of us. Bill was a hell of a nice fella.â
p437During 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, âIf you want me to, Iâll put the old devil out of his misery right now and get it over with. Ainât nothing left for him. Canât eat, canât see, canât even walk without hurtinâ.â
p438Candy said hopefully, âYou ainât got no gun.â
p439âThe hell I ainât. Got a Luger. It wonât hurt him none at all.â
p440Candy said, âMaybe tomorra. Leâs wait till tomorra.â
p441âI donât see no reason for it,â said Carlson. He went to his bunk, pulled his bag from underneath it and took out a Luger pistol. âLetâs get it over with,â he said. âWe canât sleep with him stinkinâ around in here.â He put the pistol in his hip pocket.
p442Candy looked a long time at Slim to try to find some reversal. And Slim gave him none. At last Candy said softly and hopelessly, âAwrightâtake âim.â 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.
p443From his pocket Carlson took a little leather thong. He stooped over and tied it around the old dogâs neck. All the men except Candy watched him. âCome boy. Come on, boy,â he said gently. And he said apologetically to Candy, âHe wonât even feel it.â Candy did not move nor answer him. He twitched the thong. âCome on, boy.â The old dog got slowly and stiffly to his feet and followed the gently pulling leash.
p444Slim said, âCarlson.â
p445âYeah?â
p446âYou know what to do.â
p447âWhat ya mean, Slim?â
p448âTake a shovel,â said Slim shortly.
p449âOh, sure! I get you.â He led the dog out into the darkness.
p450George 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.
p451Slim said loudly, âOne of my lead mules got a bad hoof. Got to get some tar on it.â His voice trailed off. It was silent outside. Carlsonâs footsteps died away. The silence came into the room. And the silence lasted.
p452George chuckled, âI bet Lennieâs right out there in the barn with his pup. He wonât want to come in here no more now heâs got a pup.â
p453Slim said, âCandy, you can have any one of them pups you want.â
p454Candy did not answer. The silence fell on the room again. It came out of the night and invaded the room. George said, âAnybody like to play a little euchre?â
p455âIâll play out a few with you,â said Whit.
p456They 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.
p457âSounds like there was a rat under there,â said George. âWe ought to get a trap down there.â
p458Whit broke out, âWhat the hellâs takinâ him so long? Lay out some cards, why donât you? We ainât going to get no euchre played this way.â
p459George brought the cards together tightly and studied the backs of them. The silence was in the room again.
p460A shot sounded in the distance. The men looked quickly at the old man. Every head turned toward him.
p461For a moment he continued to stare at the ceiling. Then he rolled slowly over and faced the wall and lay silent.
p462George shuffled the cards noisily and dealt them. Whit drew a scoring board to him and set the pegs to start. Whit said, âI guess you guys really come here to work.â
p463âHow do ya mean?â George asked.
p464Whit laughed. âWell, ya come on a Friday. You got two days to work till Sunday.â
p465âI donât see how you figure,â said George.
p466Whit laughed again. âYou do if you been around these big ranches much. Guy that wants to look over a ranch comes in Satâday afternoon. He gets Satâday night supper anâ three meals on Sunday, and he can quit Monday morninâ after breakfast without turning his hand. But you come to work Friday noon. You got to put in a day anâ a half no matter how you figure.â
p467George looked at him levelly. âWeâre gonna stick arounâ a while,â he said. âMe anâ Lennieâs gonna roll up a stake.â
p468The door opened quietly and the stable buck put in his head; a lean negro head, lined with pain, the eyes patient. âMr. Slim.â
p469Slim took his eyes from old Candy. âHuh? Oh! Hello, Crooks. Whatâsâa matter?â
p470âYou told me to warm up tar for that muleâs foot. I got it warm.â
p471âOh! Sure, Crooks. Iâll come right out anâ put it on.â
p472âI can do it if you want, Mr. Slim.â
p473âNo. Iâll come do it myself.â He stood up.
p474Crooks said, âMr. Slim.â
p475âYeah.â
p476âThat big new guyâs messinâ around your pups out in the barn.â
p477âWell, he ainât doinâ no harm. I give him one of them pups.â
p478âJust thought Iâd tell ya,â said Crooks. âHeâs takinâ âem outa the nest and handlinâ them. That wonât do them no good.â
p479âHe wonât hurt âem,â said Slim. âIâll come along with you now.â
p480George looked up. âIf that crazy bastardâs foolinâ around too much, jusâ kick him out, Slim.â
p481Slim followed the stable buck out of the room.
p482George dealt and Whit picked up his cards and examined them. âSeen the new kid yet?â he asked.
p483âWhat kid?â George asked.
p484âWhy, Curleyâs new wife.â
p485âYeah, I seen her.â
p486âWell, ainât she a looloo?â
p487âI ainât seen that much of her,â said George.
p488Whit laid down his cards impressively. âWell, stick around anâ keep your eyes open. Youâll see plenty. She ainât concealinâ nothing. I never seen nobody like her. She got the eye goinâ all the time on everybody. I bet she even gives the stable buck the eye. I donât know what the hell she wants.â
p489George asked casually, âBeen any trouble since she got here?â
p490It 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 handâseven cards, and six on top, and five on top of those.
p491Whit said, âI see what you mean. No, they ainât been nothing yet. Curleyâs got yella-jackets in his drawers, but thatâs all so far. Everâ time the guys is around she shows up. Sheâs lookinâ for Curley, or she thought she lefâ somethinâ layinâ around and sheâs lookinâ for it. Seems like she canât keep away from guys. Anâ Curleyâs pants is just crawlinâ with ants, but they ainât nothing come of it yet.â
p492George said, âSheâs gonna make a mess. Theyâs gonna be a bad mess about her. Sheâs 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 ainât no place for a girl, specially like her.â
p493Whit said, âIf you got idears, you ought ta come in town with us guys tomorra night.â
p494âWhy? Whatâs doinâ?â
p495âJusâ the usual thing. We go in to old Susyâs place. Hell of a nice place. Old Susyâs a laughâalways crackinâ jokes. Like she says when we come up on the front porch lasâ Satâday night. Susy opens the door and then she yells over her shoulder, âGet yor coats on, girls, here comes the sheriff.â She never talks dirty, neither. Got five girls there.â
p496âWhatâs it set you back?â George asked.
p497âTwo anâ a half. You can get a shot for two bits. Susy got nice chairs to set in, too. If a guy donât 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 donât give a damn. She ainât rushinâ guys through and kickinâ âem out if they donât want a flop.â
p498âMight go in and look the joint over,â said George.
p499âSure. Come along. Itâs a hell of a lot of funâher crackinâ jokes all the time. Like she says one time, she says, âIâve knew people that if they got a rag rug on the floor anâ a kewpie doll lamp on the phonograph they think theyâre running a parlor house.â Thatâs Claraâs house sheâs talkinâ about. Anâ Susy says, âI know what you boys want,â she says. âMy girls is clean,â she says, âanâ there ainât no water in my whisky,â she says. âIf any you guys wanta look at a kewpie doll lamp anâ take your own chance gettinâ burned, why you know where to go.â Anâ she says, âThereâs guys around here walkinâ bow-legged âcause they like to look at a kewpie doll lamp.ââŻâ
p500George asked, âClara runs the other house, huh?â
p501âYeah,â said Whit. âWe donât never go there. Clara gets three bucks a crack and thirty-five cents a shot, and she donât crack no jokes. But Susyâs place is clean and she got nice chairs. Donât let no goo-goos in, neither.â
p502âMe anâ Lennieâs rollinâ up a stake,â said George. âI might go in anâ set and have a shot, but I ainât puttinâ out no two and a half.â
p503âWell, a guy got to have some fun sometime,â said Whit.
p504The 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 didnât 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.
p505Carlson said casually, âCurley been in yet?â
p506âNo,â said Whit. âWhatâs eatinâ on Curley?â
p507Carlson squinted down the barrel of his gun. âLookinâ for his old lady. I seen him going round and round outside.â
p508Whit said sarcastically, âHe spends half his time lookinâ for her, and the rest of the time sheâs lookinâ for him.â
p509Curley burst into the room excitedly. âAny you guys seen my wife?â he demanded.
p510âShe ainât been here,â said Whit.
p511Curley looked threateningly about the room. âWhere the hellâs Slim?â
p512âWent out in the barn,â said George. âHe was gonna put some tar on a split hoof.â
p513Curleyâs shoulders dropped and squared. âHow long agoâd he go?â
p514âFiveâten minutes.â
p515Curley jumped out the door and banged it after him.
p516Whit stood up. âI guess maybe Iâd like to see this,â he said. âCurleyâs just spoilinâ or he wouldnât start for Slim. Anâ Curleyâs handy, God damn handy. Got in the finals for the Golden Gloves. He got newspaper clippings about it.â He considered. âBut jusâ the same, he better leave Slim alone. Nobody donât know what Slim can do.â
p517âThinks Slimâs with his wife, donât he?â said George.
p518âLooks like it,â Whit said. ââŻâCourse Slim ainât. Least I donât think Slim is. But I like to see the fuss if it comes off. Come on, leâs go.â
p519George said, âIâm stayinâ right here. I donât want to get mixed up in nothing. Lennie and me got to make a stake.â
p520Carlson finished the cleaning of the gun and put it in the bag and pushed the bag under his bunk. âI guess Iâll go out and look her over,â he said. Old Candy lay still, and Lennie, from his bunk, watched George cautiously.
p521When Whit and Carlson were gone and the door closed after them, George turned to Lennie. âWhat you got on your mind?â
p522âI ainât done nothing, George. Slim says I better not pet them pups so much for a while. Slim says it ainât good for them; so I come right in. I been good, George.â
p523âI coulda told you that,â said George.
p524âWell, I wasnât hurtinâ âem none. I jusâ had mine in my lap pettinâ it.â
p525George asked, âDid you see Slim out in the barn?â
p526âSure I did. He tolâ me I better not pet that pup no more.â
p527âDid you see that girl?â
p528âYou mean Curleyâs girl?â
p529âYeah. Did she come in the barn?â
p530âNo. Anyways I never seen her.â
p531âYou never seen Slim talkinâ to her?â
p532âUh-uh. She ainât been in the barn.â
p533âO.K.,â said George. âI guess them guys ainât gonna see no fight. If thereâs any fightinâ, Lennie, you keep out of it.â
p534âI donât want no fights,â 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.
p535Lennie reached for a face card and studied it, then turned it upside down and studied it. âBoth ends the same,â he said. âGeorge, why is it both endâs the same?â
p536âI donât know,â said George. âThatâs jusâ the way they make âem. What was Slim doinâ in the barn when you seen him?â
p537âSlim?â
p538âSure. You seen him in the barn, anâ he tolâ you not to pet the pups so much.â
p539âOh, yeah. He had a can aâ tar anâ a paint brush. I donât know what for.â
p540âYou sure that girl didnât come in like she come in here today?â
p541âNo. She never come.â
p542George sighed. âYou give me a good whore house every time,â he said. âA guy can go in anâ get drunk and get everâthing outa his system all at once, anâ no messes. And he knows how much itâs gonna set him back. These here jail baits is just set on the trigger of the hoosegow.â
p543Lennie followed his words admiringly, and moved his lips a little to keep up. George continued, âYou remember Andy Cushman, Lennie? Went to grammar school?â
p544âThe one that his old lady used to make hot cakes for the kids?â Lennie asked.
p545âYeah. Thatâs the one. You can remember anything if thereâs anything to eat in it.â 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. âAndyâs in San Quentin right now on account of a tart,â said George.
p546Lennie drummed on the table with his fingers. âGeorge?â
p547âHuh?â
p548âGeorge, how longâs it gonna be till we get that little place anâ live on the fatta the lanââanâ rabbits?â
p549âI donâ know,â said George. âWe gotta get a big stake together. I know a little place we can get cheap, but they ainât givinâ it away.â
p550Old Candy turned slowly over. His eyes were wide open. He watched George carefully.
p551Lennie said, âTell about that place, George.â
p552âI jusâ tolâ you, jusâ lasâ night.â
p553âGo onâtell again, George.â
p554âWell, itâs ten acres,â said George. âGot a little winâmill. Got a little shack on it, anâ a chicken run. Got a kitchen, orchard, cherries, apples, peaches, âcots, nuts, got a few berries. Theyâs a place for alfalfa and plenty water to flood it. Theyâs a pig penâââ
p555âAnâ rabbits, George.â
p556âNo place for rabbits now, but I could easy build a few hutches and you could feed alfalfa to the rabbits.â
p557âDamn right, I could,â said Lennie. âYou God damn right I could.â
p558Georgeâs hands stopped working with the cards. His voice was growing warmer. âAnâ we could have a few pigs. I could build a smoke house like the one granâpa had, anâ when we kill a pig we can smoke the bacon and the hams, and make sausage anâ all like that. Anâ when the salmon run up river we could catch a hundred of âem anâ salt âem down or smoke âem. We could have them for breakfast. They ainât nothing so nice as smoked salmon. When the fruit come in we could can itâand tomatoes, theyâre easy to can. Everâ Sunday weâd kill a chicken or a rabbit. Maybe weâd 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.â
p559Lennie watched him with wide eyes, and old Candy watched him too. Lennie said softly, âWe could live offa the fatta the lanâ.â
p560âSure,â said George. âAll kinâs a vegetables in the garden, and if we want a little whisky we can sell a few eggs or something, or some milk. Weâd jusâ live there. Weâd belong there. There wouldnât be no more runninâ round the country and gettinâ fed by a Jap cook. No, sir, weâd have our own place where we belonged and not sleep in no bunk house.â
p561âTell about the house, George,â Lennie begged.
p562âSure, weâd have a little house anâ a room to ourself. Little fat iron stove, anâ in the winter weâd keep a fire goinâ in it. It ainât enough land so weâd have to work too hard. Maybe six, seven hours a day. We wouldnât have to buck no barley eleven hours a day. Anâ when we put in a crop, why, weâd be there to take the crop up. Weâd know what come of our planting.â
p563âAnâ rabbits,â Lennie said eagerly. âAnâ Iâd take care of âem. Tell how Iâd do that, George.â
p564âSure, youâd go out in the alfalfa patch anâ youâd have a sack. Youâd fill up the sack and bring it in anâ put it in the rabbit cages.â
p565âTheyâd nibble anâ theyâd nibble,â said Lennie, âthe way they do. I seen âem.â
p566âEverâ six weeks or so,â George continued, âthem does would throw a litter so weâd have plenty rabbits to eat anâ to sell. Anâ weâd keep a few pigeons to go flyinâ around the winâmill like they done when I was a kid.â He looked raptly at the wall over Lennieâs head. âAnâ itâd be our own, anâ nobody could can us. If we donât like a guy we can say, âGet the hell out,â and by God heâs got to do it. Anâ if a frenâ come along, why weâd have an extra bunk, anâ weâd say, âWhy donât you spenâ the night?â anâ by God he would. Weâd have a setter dog and a couple stripe cats, but you gotta watch out them cats donât get the little rabbits.â
p567Lennie breathed hard. âYou jusâ let âem try to get the rabbits. Iâll break their God damn necks. Iâll . . . Iâll smash âem with a stick.â He subsided, grumbling to himself, threatening the future cats which might dare to disturb the future rabbits.
p568George sat entranced with his own picture.
p569When Candy spoke they both jumped as though they had been caught doing something reprehensible. Candy said, âYou know whereâs a place like that?â
p570George was on guard immediately. âSâpose I do,â he said. âWhatâs that to you?â
p571âYou donât need to tell me where itâs at. Might be any place.â
p572âSure,â said George. âThatâs right. You couldnât find it in a hundred years.â
p573Candy went on excitedly, âHow much they want for a place like that?â
p574George watched him suspiciously. âWellâI could get it for six hundred bucks. The olâ people that owns it is flat bust anâ the olâ lady needs an operation. Sayâwhatâs it to you? You got nothing to do with us.â
p575Candy said, âI ainât much good with onây one hand. I lost my hand right here on this ranch. Thatâs why they give me a job swampinâ. Anâ they give me two hunderd anâ fifty dollars âcause I losâ my hand. Anâ I got fifty more saved up right in the bank, right now. Thaâs three hunderd, and I got fifty more cominâ the end a the month. Tell you whatââ He leaned forward eagerly. âSâpose I went in with you guys. Thaâs three hunderd anâ fifty bucks Iâd put in. I ainât much good, but I could cook and tend the chickens and hoe the garden some. Howâd that be?â
p576George half-closed his eyes. âI gotta think about that. We was always gonna do it by ourselves.â
p577Candy interrupted him, âIâd make a will anâ leave my share to you guys in case I kick off, âcause I ainât got no relatives nor nothing. You guys got any money? Maybe we could do her right now?â
p578George spat on the floor disgustedly. âWe got ten bucks between us.â Then he said thoughtfully, âLook, if me anâ Lennie work a month anâ donât spenâ nothing, weâll have a hunderd bucks. Thatâd be four fifty. I bet we could swing her for that. Then you anâ Lennie could go get her started anâ Iâd get a job anâ make up the resâ, anâ you could sell eggs anâ stuff like that.â
p579They fell into a silence. They looked at one another, amazed. This thing they had never really believed in was coming true. George said reverently, âJesus Christ! I bet we could swing her.â His eyes were full of wonder. âI bet we could swing her,â he repeated softly.
p580Candy sat on the edge of his bunk. He scratched the stump of his wrist nervously. âI got hurt four years ago,â he said. âTheyâll can me purty soon. Jusâ as soon as I canât swamp out no bunk houses theyâll put me on the county. Maybe if I give you guys my money, youâll let me hoe in the garden even after I ainât no good at it. Anâ Iâll wash dishes anâ little chicken stuff like that. But Iâll be on our own place, anâ Iâll be let to work on our own place.â He said miserably, âYou seen what they done to my dog tonight? They says he wasnât no good to himself nor nobody else. When they can me here I wisht somebodyâd shoot me. But they wonât do nothing like that. I wonât have no place to go, anâ I canât get no more jobs. Iâll have thirty dollars more cominâ, time you guys is ready to quit.â
p581George stood up. âWeâll do her,â he said. âWeâll fix up that little old place anâ weâll go live there.â 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.
p582George said wonderingly, âSâpose they was a carnival or a circus come to town, or a ball game, or any damn thing.â Old Candy nodded in appreciation of the idea. âWeâd just go to her,â George said. âWe wouldnât ask nobody if we could. Jusâ say, âWeâll go to her,â anâ we would. Jusâ milk the cow and sling some grain to the chickens anâ go to her.â
p583âAnâ put some grass to the rabbits,â Lennie broke in. âI wouldnât never forget to feed them. When we gonâta do it, George?â
p584âIn one month. Right squack in one month. Know what Iâm gonâta do? Iâm gonâta write to them old people that owns the place that weâll take it. Anâ Candyâll send a hunderd dollars to bind her.â
p585âSure will,â said Candy. âThey got a good stove there?â
p586âSure, got a nice stove, burns coal or wood.â
p587âIâm gonna take my pup,â said Lennie. âI bet by Christ he likes it there, by Jesus.â
p588Voices were approaching from outside. George said quickly, âDonât tell nobody about it. Jusâ us three anâ nobody else. They liâble to can us so we canât make no stake. Jusâ go on like we was gonna buck barley the rest of our lives, then all of a sudden some day weâll go get our pay anâ scram outa here.â
p589Lennie and Candy nodded, and they were grinning with delight. âDonât tell nobody,â Lennie said to himself.
p590Candy said, âGeorge.â
p591âHuh?â
p592âI ought to of shot that dog myself, George. I shouldnât ought to of let no stranger shoot my dog.â
p593The door opened. Slim came in, followed by Curley and Carlson and Whit. Slimâs hands were black with tar and he was scowling. Curley hung close to his elbow.
p594Curley said, âWell, I didnât mean nothing, Slim. I just ast you.â
p595Slim said, âWell, you been askinâ me too often. Iâm gettinâ God damn sick of it. If you canât look after your own God damn wife, what you expect me to do about it? You lay offa me.â
p596âIâm jusâ tryinâ to tell you I didnât mean nothing,â said Curley. âI jusâ thought you might of saw her.â
p597âWhyânât you tell her to stay the hell home where she belongs?â said Carlson. âYou let her hang around bunk houses and pretty soon youâre gonna have somâpin on your hands and you wonât be able to do nothing about it.â
p598Curley whirled on Carlson. âYou keep outta this lesâ you wanta step outside.â
p599Carlson laughed. âYou God damn punk,â he said. âYou tried to throw a scare into Slim, anâ you couldnât make it stick. Slim throwed a scare inta you. Youâre yella as a frog belly. I donât care if youâre the best welter in the country. You come for me, anâ Iâll kick your God damn head off.â
p600Candy joined the attack with joy. âGlove fulla vaseline,â 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.
p601Curley stepped over to Lennie like a terrier. âWhat the hell you laughinâ at?â
p602Lennie looked blankly at him. âHuh?â
p603Then Curleyâs rage exploded. âCome on, ya big bastard. Get up on your feet. No big son-of-a-bitch is gonna laugh at me. Iâll show ya whoâs yella.â
p604Lennie 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. âGeorge,â he cried. âMake âum let me alone, George.â He backed until he was against the wall, and Curley followed, slugging him in the face. Lennieâs hands remained at his sides; he was too frightened to defend himself.
p605George was on his feet yelling, âGet him, Lennie. Donât let him do it.â
p606Lennie covered his face with his huge paws and bleated with terror. He cried, âMake âum stop, George.â Then Curley attacked his stomach and cut off his wind.
p607Slim jumped up. âThe dirty little rat,â he cried, âIâll get âum myself.â
p608George put out his hand and grabbed Slim. âWait a minute,â he shouted. He cupped his hands around his mouth and yelled, âGet âim, Lennie!â
p609Lennie 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, âI said get him.â
p610Curleyâs 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 Lennieâs big hand. George ran down the room. âLeggo of him, Lennie. Let go.â
p611But Lennie watched in terror the flopping little man whom he held. Blood ran down Lennieâs 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 Lennieâs paw.
p612George shouted over and over, âLeggo his hand, Lennie. Leggo. Slim, come help me while the guy got any hand left.â
p613Suddenly Lennie let go his hold. He crouched cowering against the wall. âYou tolâ me to, George,â he said miserably.
p614Curley 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. âWe got to get him in to a doctor,â he said. âLooks to me like everâ bone in his hanâ is bust.â
p615âI didnât wanta,â Lennie cried. âI didnât wanta hurt him.â
p616Slim said, âCarlson, you get the candy wagon hitched up. Weâll take âum into Soledad anâ get âum fixed up.â Carlson hurried out. Slim turned to the whimpering Lennie. âIt ainât your fault,â he said. âThis punk sure had it cominâ to him. ButâJesus! He ainât hardly got no hanâ left.â Slim hurried out, and in a moment returned with a tin cup of water. He held it to Curleyâs lips.
p617George said, âSlim, will we get canned now? We need the stake. Will Curleyâs old man can us now?â
p618Slim smiled wryly. He knelt down beside Curley. âYou got your senses in hand enough to listen?â he asked. Curley nodded. âWell, then listen,â Slim went on. âI think you got your hanâ caught in a machine. If you donât tell nobody what happened, we ainât going to. But you jusâ tell anâ try to get this guy canned and weâll tell everâbody, anâ then will you get the laugh.â
p619âI wonât tell,â said Curley. He avoided looking at Lennie.
p620Buggy wheels sounded outside. Slim helped Curley up. âCome on now. Carlsonâs gonna take you to a doctor.â 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. âLeâs see your hands,â he asked.
p621Lennie stuck out his hands.
p622âChrist awmighty, I hate to have you mad at me,â Slim said.
p623George broke in, âLennie was jusâ scairt,â he explained. âHe didnât know what to do. I told you nobody ought never to fight him. No, I guess it was Candy I told.â
p624Candy nodded solemnly. âThatâs jusâ what you done,â he said. âRight this morning when Curley first lit intil your frenâ, you says, âHe better not fool with Lennie if he knows whatâs good for âum.â Thatâs jusâ what you says to me.â
p625George turned to Lennie. âIt ainât your fault,â he said. âYou donât need to be scairt no more. You done jusâ what I tolâ you to. Maybe you better go in the wash room anâ clean up your face. You look like hell.â
p626Lennie smiled with his bruised mouth. âI didnât want no trouble,â he said. He walked toward the door, but just before he came to it, he turned back. âGeorge?â
p627âWhat you want?â
p628âI can still tend the rabbits, George?â
p629âSure. You ainât done nothing wrong.â
p630âI diânât mean no harm, George.â
p631âWell, get the hell out and wash your face.â
4
p632Crooks, 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. Crooksâ 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.
p633Crooks 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.
p634This 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.
p635It 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 buckâs room a small electric globe threw a meager yellow light.
p636Crooks 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.
p637Noiselessly 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.
p638Lennie smiled helplessly in an attempt to make friends.
p639Crooks said sharply, âYou got no right to come in my room. This hereâs my room. Nobody got any right in here but me.â
p640Lennie gulped and his smile grew more fawning. âI ainât doing nothing,â he said. âJust come to look at my puppy. And I seen your light,â he explained.
p641âWell, I got a right to have a light. You go on get outta my room. I ainât wanted in the bunk house, and you ainât wanted in my room.â
p642âWhy ainât you wanted?â Lennie asked.
p643ââŻâCause Iâm black. They play cards in there, but I canât play because Iâm black. They say I stink. Well, I tell you, you all of you stink to me.â
p644Lennie flapped his big hands helplessly. âEverâbody went into town,â he said. âSlim anâ George anâ everâbody. George says I gotta stay here anâ not get in no trouble. I seen your light.â
p645âWell, what do you want?â
p646âNothingâI seen your light. I thought I could jusâ come in anâ set.â
p647Crooks stared at Lennie, and he reached behind him and took down the spectacles and adjusted them over his pink ears and stared again. âI donât know what youâre doinâ in the barn anyway,â he complained. âYou ainât no skinner. Theyâs no call for a bucker to come into the barn at all. You ainât no skinner. You ainât got nothing to do with the horses.â
p648âThe pup,â Lennie repeated. âI come to see my pup.â
p649âWell, go see your pup, then. Donât come in a place where youâre not wanted.â
p650Lennie lost his smile. He advanced a step into the room, then remembered and backed to the door again. âI looked at âem a little. Slim says I ainât to pet âem very much.â
p651Crooks said, âWell, you been takinâ âem out of the nest all the time. I wonder the old lady donât move âem someplace else.â
p652âOh, she donât care. She lets me.â Lennie had moved into the room again.
p653Crooks scowled, but Lennieâs disarming smile defeated him. âCome on in and set a while,â Crooks said. ââŻâLong as you wonât get out and leave me alone, you might as well set down.â His tone was a little more friendly. âAll the boys gone into town, huh?â
p654âAll but old Candy. He just sets in the bunk house sharpening his pencil and sharpening and figuring.â
p655Crooks adjusted his glasses. âFiguring? Whatâs Candy figuring about?â
p656Lennie almost shouted, ââŻâBout the rabbits.â
p657âYouâre nuts,â said Crooks. âYouâre crazy as a wedge. What rabbits you talkinâ about?â
p658âThe rabbits weâre gonna get, and I get to tend âem, cut grass anâ give âem water, anâ like that.â
p659âJusâ nuts,â said Crooks. âI donât blame the guy you travel with for keepinâ you outa sight.â
p660Lennie said quietly, âIt ainât no lie. Weâre gonna do it. Gonna get a little place anâ live on the fatta the lanâ.â
p661Crooks settled himself more comfortably on his bunk. âSet down,â he invited. âSet down on the nail keg.â
p662Lennie hunched down on the little barrel. âYou think itâs a lie,â Lennie said, âBut it ainât no lie. Everâ wordâs the truth, anâ you can ast George.â
p663Crooks put his dark chin into his pink palm. âYou travel arounâ with George, donât ya?â
p664âSure. Me anâ him goes everâ place together.â
p665Crooks continued. âSometimes he talks, and you donât know what the hell heâs talkinâ about. Ainât that so?â He leaned forward, boring Lennie with his deep eyes. âAinât that so?â
p666âYeah . . . sometimes.â
p667âJusâ talks on, anâ you donât know what the hell itâs all about?â
p668âYeah . . . sometimes. But . . . not always.â
p669Crooks leaned forward over the edge of the bunk. âI ainât a southern negro,â he said. âI was born right here in California. My old man had a chicken ranch, âbout ten acres. The white kids come to play at our place, anâ sometimes I went to play with them, and some of them was pretty nice. My olâ man didnât like that. I never knew till long later why he didnât like that. But I know now.â He hesitated, and when he spoke again his voice was softer. âThere wasnât another colored family for miles around. And now there ainât a colored man on this ranch anâ thereâs jusâ one family in Soledad.â He laughed. âIf I say something, why itâs just a nigger sayinâ it.â
p670Lennie asked, âHow long you think itâll be before them pups will be old enough to pet?â
p671Crooks laughed again. âA guy can talk to you anâ be sure you wonât go blabbinâ. Couple of weeks anâ them pupsâll be all right. George knows what heâs about. Jusâ talks, anâ you donât understand nothing.â He leaned forward excitedly. âThis is just a nigger talkinâ, anâ a busted-back nigger. So it donât mean nothing, see? You couldnât remember it anyways. I seen it over anâ overâa guy talkinâ to another guy and it donât make no difference if he donât hear or understand. The thing is, theyâre talkinâ, or theyâre settinâ still not talkinâ. It donât make no difference, no difference.â His excitement had increased until he pounded his knee with his hand. âGeorge can tell you screwy things, and it donât matter. Itâs just the talking. Itâs just beinâ with another guy. Thatâs all.â He paused.
p672His voice grew soft and persuasive. âSâpose George donât come back no more. Sâpose he took a powder and just ainât coming back. Whatâll you do then?â
p673Lennieâs attention came gradually to what had been said. âWhat?â he demanded.
p674âI said sâpose George went into town tonight and you never heard of him no more.â Crooks pressed forward some kind of private victory. âJust sâpose that,â he repeated.
p675âHe wonât do it,â Lennie cried. âGeorge wouldnât do nothing like that. I been with George a long time. Heâll come back tonightâââ But the doubt was too much for him. âDonât you think he will?â
p676Crooksâ face lighted with pleasure in his torture. âNobody canât tell what a guyâll do,â he observed calmly. âLeâs say he wants to come back and canât. Sâpose he gets killed or hurt so he canât come back.â
p677Lennie struggled to understand. âGeorge wonât do nothing like that,â he repeated. âGeorge is careful. He wonât get hurt. He ainât never been hurt, âcause heâs careful.â
p678âWell, sâpose, jusâ sâpose he donât come back. Whatâll you do then?â
p679Lennieâs face wrinkled with apprehension. âI donâ know. Say, what you doinâ anyways?â he cried. âThis ainât true. George ainât got hurt.â
p680Crooks bored in on him. âWant me ta tell ya whatâll happen? Theyâll take ya to the booby hatch. Theyâll tie ya up with a collar, like a dog.â
p681Suddenly Lennieâs eyes centered and grew quiet, and mad. He stood up and walked dangerously toward Crooks. âWho hurt George?â he demanded.
p682Crooks saw the danger as it approached him. He edged back on his bunk to get out of the way. âI was just supposinâ,â he said. âGeorge ainât hurt. Heâs all right. Heâll be back all right.â
p683Lennie stood over him. âWhat you supposinâ for? Ainât nobody goinâ to suppose no hurt to George.â
p684Crooks removed his glasses and wiped his eyes with his fingers. âJusâ set down,â he said. âGeorge ainât hurt.â
p685Lennie growled back to his seat on the nail keg. âAinât nobody goinâ to talk no hurt to George,â he grumbled.
p686Crooks said gently, âMaybe you can see now. You got George. You know heâs goinâ to come back. Sâpose you didnât have nobody. Sâpose you couldnât go into the bunk house and play rummy âcause you was black. Howâd you like that? Sâpose you had to sit out here anâ read books. Sure you could play horseshoes till it got dark, but then you got to read books. Books ainât no good. A guy needs somebodyâto be near him.â He whined, âA guy goes nuts if he ainât got nobody. Donât make no difference who the guy is, longâs heâs with you. I tell ya,â he cried, âI tell ya a guy gets too lonely anâ he gets sick.â
p687âGeorge gonna come back,â Lennie reassured himself in a frightened voice. âMaybe George come back already. Maybe I better go see.â
p688Crooks said, âI didnât mean to scare you. Heâll come back. I was talkinâ about myself. A guy sets alone out here at night, maybe readinâ books or thinkinâ or stuff like that. Sometimes he gets thinkinâ, anâ he got nothing to tell him whatâs so anâ what ainât so. Maybe if he sees somethinâ, he donât know whether itâs right or not. He canât turn to some other guy and ast him if he sees it too. He canât tell. He got nothing to measure by. I seen things out here. I wasnât drunk. I donât know if I was asleep. If some guy was with me, he could tell me I was asleep, anâ then it would be all right. But I jusâ donât know.â Crooks was looking across the room now, looking toward the window.
p689Lennie said miserably, âGeorge wunât go away and leave me. I know George wunât do that.â
p690The stable buck went on dreamily, âI remember when I was a little kid on my old manâs chicken ranch. Had two brothers. They was always near me, always there. Used to sleep right in the same room, right in the same bedâall three. Had a strawberry patch. Had an alfalfa patch. Used to turn the chickens out in the alfalfa on a sunny morning. My brothersâd set on a fence rail anâ watch âemâwhite chickens they was.â
p691Gradually Lennieâs interest came around to what was being said. âGeorge says weâre gonna have alfalfa for the rabbits.â
p692âWhat rabbits?â
p693âWeâre gonna have rabbits anâ a berry patch.â
p694âYouâre nuts.â
p695âWe are too. You ast George.â
p696âYouâre nuts.â Crooks was scornful. âI seen hunderds of men come by on the road anâ on the ranches, with their bindles on their back anâ that same damn thing in their heads. Hunderds of them. They come, anâ they quit anâ go on; anâ every damn one of âemâs got a little piece of land in his head. Anâ never a God damn one of âem ever gets it. Just like heaven. Everâbody wants a little piece of lanâ. I read plenty of books out here. Nobody never gets to heaven, and nobody gets no land. Itâs just in their head. Theyâre all the time talkinâ about it, but itâs jusâ in their head.â He paused and looked toward the open door, for the horses were moving restlessly and the halter chains clinked. A horse whinnied. âI guess somebodyâs out there,â Crooks said. âMaybe Slim. Slim comes in sometimes two, three times a night. Slimâs a real skinner. He looks out for his team.â He pulled himself painfully upright and moved toward the door. âThat you, Slim?â he called.
p697Candyâs voice answered. âSlim went in town. Say, you seen Lennie?â
p698âYa mean the big guy?â
p699âYeah. Seen him around any place?â
p700âHeâs in here,â Crooks said shortly. He went back to his bunk and lay down.
p701Candy stood in the doorway scratching his bald wrist and looking blindly into the lighted room. He made no attempt to enter. âTell ya what, Lennie. I been figuring out about them rabbits.â
p702Crooks said irritably, âYou can come in if you want.â
p703Candy seemed embarrassed. âI doâ know. âCourse, if ya want me to.â
p704âCome on in. If everâbodyâs cominâ in, you might just as well.â It was difficult for Crooks to conceal his pleasure with anger.
p705Candy came in, but he was still embarrassed. âYou got a nice cozy little place in here,â he said to Crooks. âMust be nice to have a room all to yourself this way.â
p706âSure,â said Crooks. âAnd a manure pile under the window. Sure, itâs swell.â
p707Lennie broke in, âYou said about them rabbits.â
p708Candy leaned against the wall beside the broken collar while he scratched the wrist stump. âI been here a long time,â he said. âAnâ Crooks been here a long time. Thisâs the first time I ever been in his room.â
p709Crooks said darkly, âGuys donât come into a colored manâs room very much. Nobody been here but Slim. Slim anâ the boss.â
p710Candy quickly changed the subject. âSlimâs as good a skinner as I ever seen.â
p711Lennie leaned toward the old swamper. âAbout them rabbits,â he insisted.
p712Candy smiled. âI got it figured out. We can make some money on them rabbits if we go about it right.â
p713âBut I get to tend âem,â Lennie broke in. âGeorge says I get to tend âem. He promised.â
p714Crooks interrupted brutally. âYou guys is just kiddinâ yourself. Youâll talk about it a hell of a lot, but you wonât get no land. Youâll be a swamper here till they take you out in a box. Hell, I seen too many guys. Lennie hereâll quit anâ be on the road in two, three weeks. Seems like everâ guy got land in his head.â
p715Candy rubbed his cheek angrily. âYou God damn right weâre gonna do it. George says we are. We got the money right now.â
p716âYeah?â said Crooks. âAnâ whereâs George now? In town in a whore house. Thatâs where your moneyâs goinâ. 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.â
p717Candy cried, âSure they all want it. Everybody wants a little bit of land, not much. Jusâ somâthinâ that was his. Somethinâ he could live on and there couldnât nobody throw him off of it. I never had none. I planted crops for damn near everâbody in this state, but they wasnât my crops, and when I harvested âem, it wasnât none of my harvest. But we gonna do it now, and donât make no mistake about that. George ainât got the money in town. That moneyâs in the bank. Me anâ Lennie anâ George. We gonna have a room to ourself. Weâre gonna have a dog anâ rabbits anâ chickens. Weâre gonna have green corn anâ maybe a cow or a goat.â He stopped, overwhelmed with his picture.
p718Crooks asked, âYou say you got the money?â
p719âDamn 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.â
p720Crooks reached around and explored his spine with his hand. âI never seen a guy really do it,â he said. âI seen guys nearly crazy with loneliness for land, but everâ time a whore house or a blackjack game took what it takes.â He hesitated. â. . . If you . . . guys would want a hand to work for nothingâjust his keep, why Iâd come anâ lend a hand. I ainât so crippled I canât work like a son-of-a-bitch if I want to.â
p721âAny you boys seen Curley?â
p722They swung their heads toward the door. Looking in was Curleyâs wife. Her face was heavily made up. Her lips were slightly parted. She breathed strongly, as though she had been running.
p723âCurley ainât been here,â Candy said sourly.
p724She 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. âThey left all the weak ones here,â she said finally. âThink I donât know where they all went? Even Curley. I know where they all went.â
p725Lennie watched her, fascinated; but Candy and Crooks were scowling down away from her eyes. Candy said, âThen if you know, why you want to ast us where Curley is at?â
p726She regarded them amusedly. âFunny thing,â she said. âIf I catch any one man, and heâs alone, I get along fine with him. But just let two of the guys get together anâ you wonât talk. Jusâ nothing but mad.â She dropped her fingers and put her hands on her hips. âYouâre all scared of each other, thatâs what. Everâ one of youâs scared the rest is goinâ to get something on you.â
p727After a pause Crooks said, âMaybe you better go along to your own house now. We donât want no trouble.â
p728âWell, I ainât giving you no trouble. Think I donât like to talk to somebody everâ once in a while? Think I like to stick in that house alla time?â
p729Candy laid the stump of his wrist on his knee and rubbed it gently with his hand. He said accusingly, âYou gotta husbanâ. You got no call foolinâ arounâ with other guys, causinâ trouble.â
p730The girl flared up. âSure I gotta husbanâ. You all seen him. Swell guy, ainât he? Spends all his time sayinâ what heâs gonna do to guys he donât like, and he donât like nobody. Think Iâm gonna stay in that two-by-four house and listen how Curleyâs gonna lead with his left twict, and then bring in the olâ right cross? âOne-twoâ he says. âJus the olâ one-two anâ heâll go down.ââŻâ She paused and her face lost its sullenness and grew interested. âSayâwhat happened to Curleyâs hanâ?â
p731There was an embarrassed silence. Candy stole a look at Lennie. Then he coughed. âWhy . . . Curley . . . he got his hanâ caught in a machine, maâam. Bust his hanâ.â
p732She watched for a moment, and then she laughed. âBaloney! What you think youâre sellinâ me? Curley started somâpinâ he didnâ finish. Caught in a machineâbaloney! Why, he ainât give nobody the good olâ one-two since he got his hanâ bust. Who bust him?â
p733Candy repeated sullenly, âGot it caught in a machine.â
p734âAwright,â she said contemptuously. âAwright, cover âim up if ya wanta. Whatta I care? You bindle bums think youâre so damn good. Whatta ya think I am, a kid? I tell ya I could of went with shows. Not jusâ one, neither. Anâ a guy tolâ me he could put me in pitchers. . . .â She was breathless with indignation. ââSatâiday night. Everâbody out doinâ somâpinâ. Everâbody! Anâ what am I doinâ? Standinâ here talkinâ to a bunch of bindle stiffsâa nigger anâ a dum-dum and a lousy olâ sheepâanâ likinâ it because they ainât nobody else.â
p735Lennie 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. âI had enough,â he said angrily. âYou ainât wanted here. We told you you ainât. Anâ I tell ya, you got floozy idears about what us guys amounts to. You ainât got sense enough in that chicken head to even see that we ainât stiffs. Sâpose you get us canned. Sâpose you do. You think weâll hit the highway anâ look for another lousy two-bit job like this. You donât know that we got our own ranch to go to, anâ our own house. We ainât got to stay here. We gotta house and chickens anâ fruit trees anâ a place a hunderd time prettier than this. Anâ we got frenâs, thatâs what we got. Maybe there was a time when we was scared of gettinâ canned, but we ainât no more. We got our own lanâ, and itâs ours, anâ we cân go to it.â
p736Curleyâs wife laughed at him. âBaloney,â she said. âI seen too many you guys. If you had two bits in the worlâ, why youâd be in gettinâ two shots of corn with it and suckinâ the bottom of the glass. I know you guys.â
p737Candyâs face had grown redder and redder, but before she was done speaking, he had control of himself. He was the master of the situation. âI might of knew,â he said gently. âMaybe you just better go along anâ roll your hoop. We ainât got nothing to say to you at all. We know what we got, and we donât care whether you know it or not. So maybe you better jusâ scatter along now, âcause Curley maybe ainât gonna like his wife out in the barn with us âbindle stiffs.ââŻâ
p738She 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, âWhereâd you get them bruises on your face?â
p739Lennie looked up guiltily. âWhoâme?â
p740âYeah, you.â
p741Lennie looked to Candy for help, and then he looked at his lap again. âHe got his hanâ caught in a machine,â he said.
p742Curleyâs wife laughed. âO.K., Machine. Iâll talk to you later. I like machines.â
p743Candy broke in. âYou let this guy alone. Donât you do no messing arounâ with him. Iâm gonna tell George what you says. George wonât have you messinâ with Lennie.â
p744âWhoâs George?â she asked. âThe little guy you come with?â
p745Lennie smiled happily. âThatâs him,â he said. âThatâs the guy, anâ heâs gonna let me tend the rabbits.â
p746âWell, if thatâs all you want, I might get a couple rabbits myself.â
p747Crooks stood up from his bunk and faced her. âI had enough,â he said coldly. âYou got no rights cominâ in a colored manâs room. You got no rights messing around in here at all. Now you jusâ get out, anâ get out quick. If you donât, Iâm gonna ast the boss not to ever let you come in the barn no more.â
p748She turned on him in scorn. âListen, Nigger,â she said. âYou know what I can do to you if you open your trap?â
p749Crooks stared hopelessly at her, and then he sat down on his bunk and drew into himself.
p750She closed on him. âYou know what I could do?â
p751Crooks seemed to grow smaller, and he pressed himself against the wall. âYes, maâam.â
p752âWell, you keep your place then, Nigger. I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it ainât even funny.â
p753Crooks had reduced himself to nothing. There was no personality, no egoânothing to arouse either like or dislike. He said, âYes, maâam,â and his voice was toneless.
p754For 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.
p755Old Candy was watching her, fascinated. âIf you was to do that, weâd tell,â he said quietly. âWeâd tell about you framinâ Crooks.â
p756âTell anâ be damned,â she cried. âNobodyâd listen to you, anâ you know it. Nobodyâd listen to you.â
p757Candy subsided. âNo . . .â he agreed. âNobodyâd listen to us.â
p758Lennie whined, âI wisht George was here. I wisht George was here.â
p759Candy stepped over to him. âDonât you worry none,â he said. âI jusâ heard the guys cominâ in. Georgeâll be in the bunk house right now, I bet.â He turned to Curleyâs wife. âYou better go home now,â he said quietly. âIf you go right now, we wonât tell Curley you was here.â
p760She appraised him coolly. âI ainât sure you heard nothing.â
p761âBetter not take no chances,â he said. âIf you ainât sure, you better take the safe way.â
p762She turned to Lennie. âIâm glad you bust up Curley a little bit. He got it cominâ to him. Sometimes Iâd like to bust him myself.â 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.
p763Crooks seemed to come slowly out of the layers of protection he had put on. âWas that the truth what you said about the guys come back?â he asked.
p764âSure. I heard âem.â
p765âWell, I didnât hear nothing.â
p766âThe gate banged,â Candy said, and he went on, âJesus Christ, Curleyâs wife can move quiet. I guess she had a lot of practice, though.â
p767Crooks avoided the whole subject now. âMaybe you guys better go,â he said. âI ainât sure I want you in here no more. A colored man got to have some rights even if he donât like âem.â
p768Candy said, âThat bitch didnât ought to of said that to you.â
p769âIt wasnât nothing,â Crooks said dully. âYou guys cominâ in anâ settinâ made me forget. What she says is true.â
p770The horses snorted out in the barn and the chains rang and a voice called, âLennie. Oh, Lennie. You in the barn?â
p771âItâs George,â Lennie cried. And he answered, âHere, George. Iâm right in here.â
p772In a second George stood framed in the door, and he looked disapprovingly about. âWhat you doinâ in Crooksâ room. You hadnât ought to be in here.â
p773Crooks nodded. âI tolâ âem, but they come in anyways.â
p774âWell, whyânât you kick âem out?â
p775âI diânât care much,â said Crooks. âLennieâs a nice fella.â
p776Now Candy aroused himself. âOh, George! I been figurinâ and figurinâ. I got it doped out how we can even make some money on them rabbits.â
p777George scowled. âI thought I tolâ you not to tell nobody about that.â
p778Candy was crestfallen. âDidnât tell nobody but Crooks.â
p779George said, âWell you guys get outta here. Jesus, seems like I canât go away for a minute.â
p780Candy and Lennie stood up and went toward the door. Crooks called, âCandy!â
p781âHuh?â
p782ââŻâMember what I said about hoeinâ and doinâ odd jobs?â
p783âYeah,â said Candy. âI remember.â
p784âWell, jusâ forget it,â said Crooks. âI didnâ mean it. Jusâ foolinâ. I wouldnâ want to go no place like that.â
p785âWell, O.K., if you feel like that. Goodnight.â
p786The three men went out of the door. As they went through the barn the horses snorted and the halter chains rattled.
p787Crooks 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
p788One 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.
p789It 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.
p790From 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.
p791Only 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.
p792And Lennie said softly to the puppy, âWhy do you got to get killed? You ainât so little as mice. I didnât bounce you hard.â He bent the pupâs head up and looked in its face, and he said to it, âNow maybe George ainât gonna let me tend no rabbits, if he finâs out you got killed.â
p793He 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, âThis ainât no bad thing like I got to go hide in the brush. Oh! no. This ainât. Iâll tell George I founâ it dead.â
p794He unburied the puppy and inspected it, and he stroked it from ears to tail. He went on sorrowfully, âBut heâll know. George always knows. Heâll say, âYou done it. Donât try to put nothing over on me.â Anâ heâll say, âNow jusâ for that you donât get to tend no rabbits!ââŻâ
p795Suddenly his anger arose. âGod damn you,â he cried. âWhy do you got to get killed? You ainât so little as mice.â 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, âNow I wonât get to tend the rabbits. Now he wonât let me.â He rocked himself back and forth in his sorrow.
p796From 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. âYou wasnât big enough,â he said. âThey tolâ me and tolâ me you wasnât. I diânât know youâd get killed so easy.â He worked his fingers on the pupâs limp ear. âMaybe George wonât care,â he said. âThis here God damn little son-of-a-bitch wasnât nothing to George.â
p797Curleyâs wife came around the end of the last stall. She came very quietly, so that Lennie didnât 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.
p798In a panic he shoveled hay over the puppy with his fingers. He looked sullenly up at her.
p799She said, âWhat you got there, sonny boy?â
p800Lennie glared at her. âGeorge says I ainât to have nothing to do with youâtalk to you or nothing.â
p801She laughed. âGeorge giving you orders about everything?â
p802Lennie looked down at the hay. âSays I canât tend no rabbits if I talk to you or anything.â
p803She said quietly, âHeâs scared Curleyâll get mad. Well, Curley got his arm in a slingâanâ if Curley gets tough, you can break his other hanâ. You didnât put nothing over on me about gettinâ it caught in no machine.â
p804But Lennie was not to be drawn. âNo, sir. I ainât gonna talk to you or nothing.â
p805She knelt in the hay beside him. âListen,â she said. âAll the guys got a horseshoe tenement goinâ on. Itâs onây about four oâclock. None of them guys is goinâ to leave that tenement. Why canât I talk to you? I never get to talk to nobody. I get awful lonely.â
p806Lennie said, âWell, I ainât supposed to talk to you or nothing.â
p807âI get lonely,â she said. âYou can talk to people, but I canât talk to nobody but Curley. Else he gets mad. Howâd you like not to talk to anybody?â
p808Lennie said, âWell, I ainât supposed to. Georgeâs scared Iâll get in trouble.â
p809She changed the subject. âWhat you got covered up there?â
p810Then all of Lennieâs woe came back on him. âJusâ my pup,â he said sadly. âJusâ my little pup.â And he swept the hay from on top of it.
p811âWhy, heâs dead,â she cried.
p812âHe was so little,â said Lennie. âI was jusâ playinâ with him . . . anâ he made like heâs gonna bite me . . . anâ I made like I was gonna smack him . . . anâ . . . anâ I done it. Anâ then he was dead.â
p813She consoled him. âDonât you worry none. He was jusâ a mutt. You can get another one easy. The whole country is fulla mutts.â
p814âIt ainât that so much,â Lennie explained miserably. âGeorge ainât gonna let me tend no rabbits now.â
p815âWhy donât he?â
p816âWell, he said if I done any more bad things he ainât gonna let me tend the rabbits.â
p817She moved closer to him and she spoke soothingly. âDonât you worry about talkinâ to me. Listen to the guys yell out there. They got four dollars bet in that tenement. None of them ainât gonna leave till itâs over.â
p818âIf George sees me talkinâ to you heâll give me hell,â Lennie said cautiously. âHe tolâ me so.â
p819Her face grew angry. âWhaâs the matter with me?â she cried. âAinât I got a right to talk to nobody? Whatta they think I am, anyways? Youâre a nice guy. I donât know why I canât talk to you. I ainât doinâ no harm to you.â
p820âWell, George says youâll get us in a mess.â
p821âAw, nuts!â she said. âWhat kinda harm am I doinâ to you? Seems like they ainât none of them cares how I gotta live. I tell you I ainât used to livinâ like this. I coulda made somethinâ of myself.â She said darkly, âMaybe I will yet.â And then her words tumbled out in a passion of communication, as though she hurried before her listener could be taken away. âI lived right in Salinas,â she said. âCome there when I was a kid. Well, a show come through, anâ I met one of the actors. He says I could go with that show. But my olâ lady wouldnâ let me. She says because I was onây fifteen. But the guy says I coulda. If Iâd went, I wouldnât be livinâ like this, you bet.â
p822Lennie stroked the pup back and forth. âWe gonna have a little placeâanâ rabbits,â he explained.
p823She went on with her story quickly, before she should be interrupted. ââŻâNother time I met a guy, anâ 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. Soonâs he got back to Hollywood he was gonna write to me about it.â She looked closely at Lennie to see whether she was impressing him. âI never got that letter,â she said. âI always thought my olâ lady stole it. Well, I wasnât gonna stay no place where I couldnât get nowhere or make something of myself, anâ where they stole your letters. I ast her if she stole it, too, anâ she says no. So I married Curley. Met him out to the Riverside Dance Palace that same night.â She demanded, âYou listeninâ?â
p824âMe? Sure.â
p825âWell, I ainât told this to nobody before. Maybe I oughtân to. I donâ like Curley. He ainât a nice fella.â And because she had confided in him, she moved closer to Lennie and sat beside him. âCoulda been in the movies, anâ had nice clothesâall them nice clothes like they wear. Anâ I coulda sat in them big hotels, anâ had pitchers took of me. When they had them previews I coulda went to them, anâ spoke in the radio, anâ it wouldnâta cost me a cent because I was in the pitcher. Anâ all them nice clothes like they wear. Because this guy says I was a natural.â 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.
p826Lennie sighed deeply. From outside came the clang of a horseshoe on metal, and then a chorus of cheers. âSomebody made a ringer,â said Curleyâs wife.
p827Now 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.
p828Lennie said, âMaybe if I took this pup out and throwed him away George wouldnât never know. Anâ then I could tend the rabbits without no trouble.â
p829Curleyâs wife said angrily, âDonât you think of nothing but rabbits?â
p830âWe gonna have a little place,â Lennie explained patiently. âWe gonna have a house anâ a garden and a place for alfalfa, anâ that alfalfa is for the rabbits, anâ I take a sack and get it all fulla alfalfa and then I take it to the rabbits.â
p831She asked, âWhat makes you so nuts about rabbits?â
p832Lennie had to think carefully before he could come to a conclusion. He moved cautiously close to her, until he was right against her. âI like to pet nice things. Once at a fair I seen some of them long-hair rabbits. Anâ they was nice, you bet. Sometimes Iâve even pet mice, but not when I could get nothing better.â
p833Curleyâs wife moved away from him a little. âI think youâre nuts,â she said.
p834âNo I ainât,â Lennie explained earnestly. âGeorge says I ainât. I like to pet nice things with my fingers, sofâ things.â
p835She was a little bit reassured. âWell, who donât?â she said. âEverâbody likes that. I like to feel silk anâ velvet. Do you like to feel velvet?â
p836Lennie chuckled with pleasure. âYou bet, by God,â he cried happily. âAnâ I had some, too. A lady give me some, anâ that lady wasâmy own Aunt Clara. She give it right to meââbout this big a piece. I wisht I had that velvet right now.â A frown came over his face. âI lost it,â he said. âI ainât seen it for a long time.â
p837Curleyâs wife laughed at him. âYouâre nuts,â she said. âBut youâre a kinda nice fella. Jusâ like a big baby. But a person can see kinda what you mean. When Iâm doinâ my hair sometimes I jusâ set anâ stroke it âcause itâs so soft.â To show how she did it, she ran her fingers over the top of her head. âSome people got kinda coarse hair,â she said complacently. âTake Curley. His hair is jusâ like wire. But mine is soft and fine. âCourse I brush it a lot. That makes it fine. Hereâfeel right here.â She took Lennieâs hand and put it on her head. âFeel right arounâ there anâ see how soft it is.â
p838Lennieâs big fingers fell to stroking her hair.
p839âDonât you muss it up,â she said.
p840Lennie said, âOh! Thatâs nice,â and he stroked harder. âOh, thatâs nice.â
p841âLook out, now, youâll muss it.â And then she cried angrily, âYou stop it now, youâll mess it all up.â She jerked her head sideways, and Lennieâs fingers closed on her hair and hung on. âLet go,â she cried. âYou let go!â
p842Lennie was in a panic. His face was contorted. She screamed then, and Lennieâs other hand closed over her mouth and nose. âPlease donât,â he begged. âOh! Please donât do that. Georgeâll be mad.â
p843She struggled violently under his hands. Her feet battered on the hay and she writhed to be free; and from under Lennieâs hand came a muffled screaming. Lennie began to cry with fright. âOh! Please donât do none of that,â he begged. âGeorge gonna say I done a bad thing. He ainât gonna let me tend no rabbits.â He moved his hand a little and her hoarse cry came out. Then Lennie grew angry. âNow donât,â he said. âI donât want you to yell. You gonna get me in trouble jusâ like George says you will. Now donât you do that.â And she continued to struggle, and her eyes were wild with terror. He shook her then, and he was angry with her. âDonât you go yellinâ,â he said, and he shook her; and her body flopped like a fish. And then she was still, for Lennie had broken her neck.
p844He looked down at her, and carefully he removed his hand from over her mouth, and she lay still. âI donât want ta hurt you,â he said, âbut Georgeâll be mad if you yell.â When she didnât 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, âI done a bad thing. I done another bad thing.â
p845He pawed up the hay until it partly covered her.
p846From 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. âI done a real bad thing,â he said. âI shouldnât of did that. Georgeâll be mad. Anâ . . . he said . . . anâ hide in the brush till he come. Heâs gonna be mad. In the brush till he come. Thaâs what he said.â Lennie went back and looked at the dead girl. The puppy lay close to her. Lennie picked it up. âIâll throw him away,â he said. âItâs bad enough like it is.â 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.
p847The sun streaks were high on the wall by now, and the light was growing soft in the barn. Curleyâs wife lay on her back, and she was half covered with hay.
p848It 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 Curleyâs wife, and the hair rose along her spine. She whimpered and cringed to the packing box, and jumped in among the puppies.
p849Curleyâs 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.
p850As 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.
p851Then 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 menâs voices became louder and clearer.
p852From around the end of the last stall old Candyâs voice came. âLennie,â he called. âOh, Lennie! You in here? I been figuring some more. Tell you what we can do, Lennie.â Old Candy appeared around the end of the last stall. âOh, Lennie!â he called again; and then he stopped, and his body stiffened. He rubbed his smooth wrist on his white stubble whiskers. âI diânât know you was here,â he said to Curleyâs wife.
p853When she didnât answer, he stepped nearer. âYou oughten to sleep out here,â he said disapprovingly; and then he was beside her andââOh, Jesus Christ!â He looked about helplessly, and he rubbed his beard. And then he jumped up and went quickly out of the barn.
p854But 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.
p855George said, âWhat was it you wanted to see me about?â
p856Candy pointed at Curleyâs wife. George stared. âWhatâs the matter with her?â he asked. He stepped closer, and then he echoed Candyâs words. âOh, Jesus Christ!â 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.
p857Candy said, âWhat done it?â
p858George looked coldly at him. âAinât you got any idear?â he asked. And Candy was silent. âI should of knew,â George said hopelessly. âI guess maybe way back in my head I did.â
p859Candy asked, âWhat we gonna do now, George? What we gonna do now?â
p860George was a long time in answering. âGuess . . . we gotta tell the . . . guys. I guess we gotta get âim anâ lock âim up. We canât let âim get away. Why, the poor bastardâd starve.â And he tried to reassure himself. âMaybe theyâll lock âim up anâ be nice to âim.â
p861But Candy said excitedly, âWe oughtta let âim get away. You donât know that Curley. Curley gonâta wanta get âim lynched. Curleyâll get âim killed.â
p862George watched Candyâs lips. âYeah,â he said at last, âthatâs right, Curley will. Anâ the other guys will.â And he looked back at Curleyâs wife.
p863Now Candy spoke his greatest fear. âYou anâ me can get that little place, canât we, George? You anâ me can go there anâ live nice, canât we, George? Canât we?â
p864Before George answered, Candy dropped his head and looked down at the hay. He knew.
p865George said softly, ââI think I knowed from the very first. I think I knowed weâd never do her. He usta like to hear about it so much I got to thinking maybe we would.â
p866âThenâitâs all off?â Candy asked sulkily.
p867George didnât answer his question. George said, âIâll work my month anâ Iâll take my fifty bucks anâ Iâll stay all night in some lousy cat house. Or Iâll set in some poolroom till everâbody goes home. Anâ then Iâll come back anâ work another month anâ Iâll have fifty bucks more.â
p868Candy said, âHeâs such a nice fella. I didnâ think heâd do nothing like this.â
p869George still stared at Curleyâs wife. âLennie never done it in meanness,â he said. âAll the time he done bad things, but he never done one of âem mean.â He straightened up and looked back at Candy. âNow listen. We gotta tell the guys. They got to bring him in, I guess. They ainât no way out. Maybe they wonât hurt âim.â He said sharply, âI ainât gonna let âem hurt Lennie. Now you listen. The guys might think I was in on it. Iâm gonna go in the bunk house. Then in a minute you come out and tell the guys about her, and Iâll come along and make like I never seen her. Will you do that? So the guys wonât think I was in on it?â
p870Candy said, âSure, George. Sure Iâll do that.â
p871âO.K. Give me a couple minutes then, and you come runninâ out anâ tell like you jusâ found her. Iâm going now.â George turned and went quickly out of the barn.
p872Old Candy watched him go. He looked helplessly back at Curleyâs wife, and gradually his sorrow and his anger grew into words. âYou God damn tramp,â he said viciously. âYou done it, diânât you? I sâpose youâre glad. Everâbody knowed youâd mess things up. You wasnât no good. You ainât no good now, you lousy tart.â He sniveled, and his voice shook. âI could of hoed in the garden and washed dishes for them guys.â He paused, and then went on in a singsong. And he repeated the old words: âIf they was a circus or a baseball game . . . we would of went to her . . . jusâ said âta hell with work,â anâ went to her. Never ast nobodyâs say so. Anâ theyâd of been a pig and chickens . . . anâ in the winter . . . the little fat stove . . . anâ the rain cominâ . . . anâ us jusâ settinâ there.â 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.
p873Outside 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 Curleyâs wife in the gloom, they stopped and stood still and looked.
p874Then 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.
p875Curley came suddenly to life. âI know who done it,â he cried. âThat big son-of-a-bitch done it. I know he done it. Whyâeverâbody else was out there playinâ horseshoes.â He worked himself into a fury. âIâm gonna get him. Iâm going for my shotgun. Iâll kill the big son-of-a-bitch myself. Iâll shoot âim in the guts. Come on, you guys.â He ran furiously out of the barn. Carlson said, âIâll get my Luger,â and he ran out too.
p876Slim turned quietly to George. âI guess Lennie done it, all right,â he said. âHer neckâs bust. Lennie coulda did that.â
p877George didnât answer, but he nodded slowly. His hat was so far down on his forehead that his eyes were covered.
p878Slim went on, âMaybe like that time in Weed you was tellinâ about.â
p879Again George nodded.
p880Slim sighed. âWell, I guess we got to get him. Where you think he might of went?â
p881It seemed to take George some time to free his words. âHeâwould of went south,â he said. âWe come from north so he would of went south.â
p882âI guess we gotta get âim,â Slim repeated.
p883George stepped close. âCouldnâ we maybe bring him in anâ theyâll lock him up? Heâs nuts, Slim. He never done this to be mean.â
p884Slim nodded. âWe might,â he said. âIf we could keep Curley in, we might. But Curleyâs gonna want to shoot âim. Curleyâs still mad about his hand. Anâ sâpose they lock him up anâ strap him down and put him in a cage. That ainât no good, George.â
p885âI know,â said George. âI know.â
p886Carlson came running in. âThe bastardâs stole my Luger,â he shouted. âIt ainât in my bag.â Curley followed him, and Curley carried a shotgun in his good hand. Curley was cold now.
p887âAll right, you guys,â he said. âThe niggerâs got a shotgun. You take it, Carlson. When you see âum, donât give âim no chance. Shoot for his guts. Thatâll double âim over.â
p888Whit said excitedly, âI ainât got a gun.â
p889Curley said, âYou go in Soledad anâ get a cop. Get Al Wilts, heâs deputy sheriff. Leâs go now.â He turned suspiciously on George. âYouâre cominâ with us, fella.â
p890âYeah,â said George. âIâll come. But listen, Curley. The poor bastardâs nuts. Donât shoot âim. He diânât know what he was doinâ.â
p891âDonât shoot âim?â Curley cried. âHe got Carlsonâs Luger. âCourse weâll shoot âim.â
p892George said weakly, âMaybe Carlson lost his gun.â
p893âI seen it this morning,â said Carlson. âNo, itâs been took.â
p894Slim stood looking down at Curleyâs wife. He said, âCurleyâmaybe you better stay here with your wife.â
p895Curleyâs face reddened. âIâm goinâ,â he said. âIâm gonna shoot the guts outa that big bastard myself, even if I only got one hand. Iâm gonna get âim.â
p896Slim turned to Candy. âYou stay here with her then, Candy. The rest of us better get goinâ.â
p897They moved away. George stopped a moment beside Candy and they both looked down at the dead girl until Curley called, âYou George! You stick with us so we donât think you had nothinâ to do with this.â
p898George moved slowly after them, and his feet dragged heavily.
p899And when they were gone, Candy squatted down in the hay and watched the face of Curleyâs wife. âPoor bastard,â he said softly.
p900The 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
p901The 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.
p902A 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.
p903A 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 poolâs green surface.
p904As 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.
p905Suddenly 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 poolâs side.
p906Lennie came quietly to the poolâs 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.
p907When he was finished, he sat down on the bank, with his side to the pool, so that he could watch the trailâs entrance. He embraced his knees and laid his chin down on his knees.
p908The light climbed on out of the valley, and as it went, the tops of the mountains seemed to blaze with increasing brightness.
p909Lennie said softly, âI diânât forget, you bet, God damn. Hide in the brush anâ wait for George.â He pulled his hat down low over his eyes. âGeorge gonna give me hell,â he said. âGeorge gonna wish he was alone anâ not have me botherinâ him.â He turned his head and looked at the bright mountain tops. âI can go right off there anâ find a cave,â he said. And he continued sadly, ââanâ never have no ketchupâbut I wonât care. If George donât want me . . . Iâll go away. Iâll go away.â
p910And then from out of Lennieâs head there came a little fat old woman. She wore thick bullâs-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.
p911And when she spoke, it was in Lennieâs voice. âI tolâ you anâ tolâ you,â she said. âI tolâ you, âMinâ George because heâs such a nice fella anâ good to you.â But you donât never take no care. You do bad things.â
p912And Lennie answered her, âI tried, Aunt Clara, maâam. I tried and tried. I couldnâ help it.â
p913âYou never give a thought to George,â she went on in Lennieâs voice. âHe been doinâ nice things for you alla time. When he got a piece a pie you always got half or moreân half. Anâ if they was any ketchup, why heâd give it all to you.â
p914âI know,â said Lennie miserably. âI tried, Aunt Clara, maâam. I tried and tried.â
p915She interrupted him. âAll the time he coulda had such a good time if it wasnât for you. He woulda took his pay anâ raised hell in a whore house, and he coulda set in a pool room anâ played snooker. But he got to take care of you.â
p916Lennie moaned with grief. âI know, Aunt Clara, maâam. Iâll go right off in the hills anâ Iâll finâ a cave anâ Iâll live there so I wonât be no more trouble to George.â
p917âYou jusâ say that,â she said sharply. âYouâre always sayinâ that, anâ you know sonofabitching well you ainât never gonna do it. Youâll jusâ stick around anâ stew the bâJesus outa George all the time.â
p918Lennie said, âI might jusâ as well go away. George ainât gonna let me tend no rabbits now.â
p919Aunt Clara was gone, and from out of Lennieâs 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 Lennieâs voice too.
p920âTend rabbits,â it said scornfully. âYou crazy bastard. You ainât fit to lick the boots of no rabbit. Youâd forget âem and let âem go hungry. Thatâs what youâd do. Anâ then what would George think?â
p921âI would not forget,â Lennie said loudly.
p922âThe hell you wouldnâ,â said the rabbit. âYou ainât worth a greased jack-pin to ram you into hell. Christ knows George done everâthing he could to jack you outa the sewer, but it donât do no good. If you think George gonna let you tend rabbits, youâre even crazierân usual. He ainât. Heâs gonna beat hell outa you with a stick, thatâs what heâs gonna do.â
p923Now Lennie retorted belligerently, âHe ainât neither. George wonât do nothing like that. Iâve knew George sinceâI forget whenâand he ainât never raised his hanâ to me with a stick. Heâs nice to me. He ainât gonna be mean.â
p924âWell heâs sick of you,â said the rabbit. âHeâs gonna beat hell outa you anâ then go away anâ leave you.â
p925âHe wonât,â Lennie cried frantically. âHe wonât do nothing like that. I know George. Me anâ him travels together.â
p926But the rabbit repeated softly over and over, âHe gonna leave you, ya crazy bastard. He gonna leave ya all alone. He gonna leave ya, crazy bastard.â
p927Lennie put his hands over his ears. âHe ainât, I tell ya he ainât.â And he cried, âOh! GeorgeâGeorgeâGeorge!â
p928George came quietly out of the brush and the rabbit scuttled back into Lennieâs brain.
p929George said quietly, âWhat the hell you yellinâ about?â
p930Lennie got up on his knees. âYou ainât gonna leave me, are ya, George? I know you ainât.â
p931George came stiffly near and sat down beside him. âNo.â
p932âI knowed it,â Lennie cried. âYou ainât that kind.â
p933George was silent.
p934Lennie said, âGeorge.â
p935âYeah?â
p936âI done another bad thing.â
p937âIt donât make no difference,â George said, and he fell silent again.
p938Only 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.
p939Lennie said, âGeorge.â
p940âYeah?â
p941âAinât you gonna give me hell?â
p942âGive ya hell?â
p943âSure, like you always done before. Like, âIf I diânât have you Iâd take my fifty bucksâââŻâ
p944âJesus Christ, Lennie! You canât remember nothing that happens, but you remember everâ word I say.â
p945âWell, ainât you gonna say it?â
p946George shook himself. He said woodenly, âIf I was alone I could live so easy.â His voice was monotonous, had no emphasis. âI could get a job anâ not have no mess.â He stopped.
p947âGo on,â said Lennie. âAnâ when the enda the month comeââ
p948âAnâ when the end of the month come I could take my fifty bucks anâ go to a . . . cat house . . .â He stopped again.
p949Lennie looked eagerly at him. âGo on, George. Ainât you gonna give me no more hell?â
p950âNo,â said George.
p951âWell, I can go away,â said Lennie. âIâll go right off in the hills anâ find a cave if you donâ want me.â
p952George shook himself again. âNo,â he said. âI want you to stay with me here.â
p953Lennie said craftilyââTell me like you done before.â
p954âTell you what?â
p955ââŻâBout the other guys anâ about us.â
p956George said, âGuys like us got no fambly. They make a little stake anâ then they blow it in. They ainât got nobody in the worlâ that gives a hoot in hell about âemââ
p957âBut not us,â Lennie cried happily. âTell about us now.â
p958George was quiet for a moment. âBut not us,â he said.
p959âBecauseââ
p960âBecause I got you anâââ
p961âAnâ I got you. We got each other, thatâs what, that gives a hoot in hell about us,â Lennie cried in triumph.
p962The 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.
p963George took off his hat. He said shakily, âTake off your hat, Lennie. The air feels fine.â
p964Lennie 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.
p965Lennie said, âTell how itâs gonna be.â
p966George had been listening to the distant sounds. For a moment he was business-like. âLook acrost the river, Lennie, anâ Iâll tell you so you can almost see it.â
p967Lennie turned his head and looked off across the pool and up the darkening slopes of the Gabilans. âWe gonna get a little place,â George began. He reached in his side pocket and brought out Carlsonâs Luger; he snapped off the safety, and the hand and gun lay on the ground behind Lennieâs back. He looked at the back of Lennieâs head, at the place where the spine and skull were joined.
p968A manâs voice called from up the river, and another man answered.
p969âGo on,â said Lennie.
p970George raised the gun and his hand shook, and he dropped his hand to the ground again.
p971âGo on,â said Lennie. âHowâs it gonna be. We gonna get a little place.â
p972âWeâll have a cow,â said George. âAnâ weâll have maybe a pig anâ chickens . . . anâ down the flat weâll have a . . . little piece alfalfaâââ
p973âFor the rabbits,â Lennie shouted.
p974âFor the rabbits,â George repeated.
p975âAnd I get to tend the rabbits.â
p976âAnâ you get to tend the rabbits.â
p977Lennie giggled with happiness. âAnâ live on the fatta the lanâ.â
p978âYes.â
p979Lennie turned his head.
p980âNo, Lennie. Look down there acrost the river, like you can almost see the place.â
p981Lennie obeyed him. George looked down at the gun.
p982There were crashing footsteps in the brush now. George turned and looked toward them.
p983âGo on, George. When we gonna do it?â
p984âGonna do it soon.â
p985âMe anâ you.â
p986âYou . . . anâ me. Everâbody gonna be nice to you. Ainât gonna be no more trouble. Nobody gonna hurt nobody nor steal from âem.â
p987Lennie said, âI thought you was mad at me, George.â
p988âNo,â said George. âNo, Lennie. I ainât mad. I never been mad, anâ I ainât now. Thatâs a thing I want ya to know.â
p989The voices came close now. George raised the gun and listened to the voices.
p990Lennie begged, âLeâs do it now. Leâs get that place now.â
p991âSure, right now. I gotta. We gotta.â
p992And George raised the gun and steadied it, and he brought the muzzle of it close to the back of Lennieâs 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.
p993George shivered and looked at the gun, and then he threw it from him, back up on the bank, near the pile of old ashes.
p994The brush seemed filled with cries and with the sound of running feet. Slimâs voice shouted, âGeorge. Where you at, George?â
p995But 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. âGot him, by God.â He went over and looked down at Lennie, and then he looked back at George. âRight in the back of the head,â he said softly.
p996Slim came directly to George and sat down beside him, sat very close to him. âNever you mind,â said Slim. âA guy got to sometimes.â
p997But Carlson was standing over George. âHowâd you do it?â he asked.
p998âI just done it,â George said tiredly.
p999âDid he have my gun?â
p1000âYeah. He had your gun.â
p1001âAnâ you got it away from him and you took it anâ you killed him?â
p1002âYeah. Thaâs how.â Georgeâs voice was almost a whisper. He looked steadily at his right hand that had held the gun.
p1003Slim twitched Georgeâs elbow. âCome on, George. Me anâ youâll go in anâ get a drink.â
p1004George let himself be helped to his feet. âYeah, a drink.â
p1005Slim said, âYou hadda, George. I swear you hadda. Come on with me.â He led George into the entrance of the trail and up toward the highway.
p1006Curley and Carlson looked after them. And Carlson said, âNow what the hell ya suppose is eatinâ them two guys?â