Of Mice and Men
By John Steinbeck
Day 4 Audio |
George followed to the door and shut the door and set the latch gently in
its place. Candy lay rigidly on his bed staring at the ceiling.
Slim said loudly, “One of my lead mules got a bad hoof. Got to get some
tar on it.” His voice trailed off. It was silent outside. Carlson’s footsteps
died away. The silence came into the room. And the silence lasted.
George chuckled, “I bet Lennie’s right out there in the barn with his pup.
He won’t want to come in here no more now he’s got a pup.”
Slim said, “Candy, you can have any one of them pups you want.”
Candy did not answer. The silence fell on the room again. It came out of
the night and invaded the room. George said, “Anybody like to play a little
euchre?”
“I’ll play out a few with you,” said Whit.
They took places opposite each other at the table under the light, but
George did not shuffle the cards. He rippled the edge of the deck nervously, and
the little snapping noise drew the eyes of all the men in the room, so that he
stopped doing it. The silence fell on the room again. A minute passed, and
another minute. Candy lay still, staring at the ceiling. Slim gazed at him for a
moment and then looked down at his hands; he subdued one hand with the other,
and held it down. There came a little gnawing sound from under the floor and all
the men looked down toward it gratefully. Only Candy continued to stare at the
ceiling.
“Sounds like there was a rat under there,” said George. “We ought to get a
trap down there.”
Whit broke out, “What the hell’s takin’ him so long? Lay out some cards,
why don’t you? We ain’t going to get no euchre played this way.”
George brought the cards together tightly and studied the backs of them.
The silence was in the room again.
A shot sounded in the distance. The men looked quickly at the old man.
Every head turned toward him.
For a moment he continued to stare at the ceiling. Then he rolled slowly
over and faced the wall and lay silent.
George shuffled the cards noisily and dealt them. Whit drew a scoring
board to him and set the pegs to start. Whit said, “I guess you guys really come
here to work.”
“How do ya mean?” George asked.
Whit laughed. “Well, ya come on a Friday. You got two days to work till
Sunday.”
“I don’t see how you figure,” said George.
Whit laughed again. “You do if you been around these big ranches much. Guy
that wants to look over a ranch comes in Sat’day afternoon. He gets Sat’day
night supper an’ three meals on Sunday, and he can quit Monday mornin’ after
breakfast without turning his hand. But you come to work Friday noon. You got to
put in a day an’ a half no matter how you figure.”
George looked at him levelly. “We’re gonna stick aroun’ a while,” he said.
“Me an’ Lennie’s gonna roll up a stake.”
The door opened quietly and the stable buck put in his head; a lean negro
head, lined with pain, the eyes patient. “Mr. Slim.”
Slim took his eyes from old Candy. “Huh? Oh! Hello, Crooks. What’s’ a
matter?”
“You told me to warm up tar for that mule’s foot. I got it warm.”
“Oh! Sure, Crooks. I’ll come right out an’ put it on.”
“I can do it if you want, Mr. Slim.”
“No. I’ll come do it myself.” He stood up.
Crooks said, “Mr. Slim.”
“Yeah.”
“That big new guy’s messin’ around your pups out in the barn.”
“Well, he ain’t doin’ no harm. I give him one of them pups.”
“Just thought I’d tell ya,” said Crooks. “He’s takin’ ‘em outa the nest
and handlin’ them. That won’t do them no good.”
“He won’t hurt ‘em,” said Slim. “I’ll come along with you now.”
George looked up. “If that crazy bastard’s foolin’ around too much, jus’
kick him out, Slim.”
Slim followed the stable buck out of the room.
George dealt and Whit picked up his cards and examined them. “Seen the new
kid yet?” he asked.
“What kid?” George asked.
“Why, Curley’s new wife.”
“Yeah, I seen her.”
“Well, ain’t she a looloo?”
“I ain’t seen that much of her,” said George.
Whit laid down his cards impressively. “Well, stick around an’ keep your
eyes open. You’ll see plenty. She ain’t concealin’ nothing. I never seen nobody
like her. She got the eye goin’ all the time on everybody. I bet she even gives
the stable buck the eye. I don’t know what the hell she wants.”
George asked casually, “Been any trouble since she got here?”
It was obvious that Whit was not interested in his cards. He laid his hand
down and George scooped it in. George laid out his deliberate solitaire
hand—seven cards, and six on top, and five on top of those.
Whit said, “I see what you mean. No, they ain’t been nothing yet. Curley’s
got yella-jackets in his drawers, but that’s all so far. Ever’ time the guys is
around she shows up. She’s lookin’ for Curley, or she thought she lef’ somethin’
layin’ around and she’s lookin’ for it. Seems like she can’t keep away from
guys. An’ Curley’s pants is just crawlin’ with ants, but they ain’t nothing come
of it yet.”
George said, “She’s gonna make a mess. They’s gonna be a bad mess about
her. She’s a jail bait all set on the trigger. That Curley got his work cut out
for him. Ranch with a bunch of guys on it ain’t no place for a girl, specially
like her.”
Whit said, “If you got idears, you oughtta come in town with us guys
tomorra night.”
“Why? What’s doin’?”
“Jus’ the usual thing. We go in to old Susy’s place. Hell of a nice place.
Old Susy’s a laugh—always crackin’ jokes. Like she says when we come up on the
front porch las’ Sat’day night. Susy opens the door and then she yells over her
shoulder, ‘Get yor coats on, girls, here comes the sheriff.’ She never talks
dirty, neither. Got five girls there.”
“What’s it set you back?” George asked.
“Two an’ a half. You can get a shot for two bits. Susy got nice chairs to
set in, too. If a guy don’t want a flop, why he can just set in the chairs and
have a couple or three shots and pass the time of day and Susy don’t give a
damn. She ain’t rushin’ guys through and kickin’ ‘em out if they don’t want a
flop.”
“Might go in and look the joint over,” said George.
“Sure. Come along. It’s a hell of a lot of fun—her crackin’ jokes all the
time. Like she says one time, she says, ‘I’ve knew people that if they got a rag
rug on the floor an’ a kewpie doll lamp on the phonograph they think they’re
running a parlor house.’ That’s Clara’s house she’s talkin’ about. An’ Susy
says, ‘I know what you boys want,’ she says. ‘My girls is clean,’ she says, ‘an’
there ain’t no water in my whisky,’ she says. ‘If any you guys wanta look at a
kewpie doll lamp an’ take your own chance gettin’ burned, why you know where to
go.’ An’ she says, ‘There’s guys around here walkin’ bow-legged ‘cause they like
to look at a kewpie doll lamp.’”
George asked, “Clara runs the other house, huh?”
“Yeah,” said Whit. “We don’t never go there. Clara gets three bucks a
crack and thirty-five cents a shot, and she don’t crack no jokes. But Susy’s
place is clean and she got nice chairs. Don’t let no goo-goos in, neither.”
“Me an’ Lennie’s rollin’ up a stake,” said George. “I might go in an’ set
and have a shot, but I ain’t puttin’ out no two and a half.”
“Well, a guy got to have some fun sometime,” said Whit.
The door opened and Lennie and Carlson came in together. Lennie crept to
his bunk and sat down, trying not to attract attention. Carlson reached under
his bunk and brought out his bag. He didn’t look at old Candy, who still faced
the wall. Carlson found a little cleaning rod in the bag and a can of oil. He
laid them on his bed and then brought out the pistol, took out the magazine and
snapped the loaded shell from the chamber. Then he fell to cleaning the barrel
with the little rod. When the ejector snapped, Candy turned over and looked for
a moment at the gun before he turned back to the wall again.
Carlson said casually, “Curley been in yet?”
“No,” said Whit. “What’s eatin’ on Curley?”
Carlson squinted down the barrel of his gun. “Lookin’ for his old lady. I
seen him going round and round outside.”
Whit said sarcastically, “He spends half his time lookin’ for her, and the
rest of the time she’s lookin’ for him.”
Curley burst into the room excitedly. “Any you guys seen my wife?” he
demanded.
“She ain’t been here,” said Whit.
Curley looked threateningly about the room. “Where the hell’s Slim?”
“Went out in the barn,” said George. “He was gonna put some tar on a split
hoof.”
Curley’s shoulders dropped and squared. “How long ago’d he go?”
“Five—ten minutes.”
Curley jumped out the door and banged it after him.
Whit stood up. “I guess maybe I’d like to see this,” he said. “Curley’s
just spoilin’ or he wouldn’t start for Slim. An’ Curley’s handy, God damn handy.
Got in the finals for the Golden Gloves. He got newspaper clippings about it.”
He considered. “But jus’ the same, he better leave Slim alone. Nobody don’t know
what Slim can do.”
“Thinks Slim’s with his wife, don’t he?” said George.
“Looks like it,” Whit said. “’Course Slim ain’t. Least I don’t think Slim
is. But I like to see the fuss if it comes off. Come on, le’s go.”
George said, “I’m stayin’ right here. I don’t want to get mixed up in
nothing. Lennie and me got to make a stake.”
Carlson finished the cleaning of the gun and put it in the bag and pushed
the bag under his bunk. “I guess I’ll go out and look her over,” he said. Old
Candy lay still, and Lennie, from his bunk, watched George cautiously.
When Whit and Carlson were gone and the door closed after them, George
turned to Lennie. “What you got on your mind?”
“I ain’t done nothing, George. Slim says I better not pet them pups so
much for a while. Slim says it ain’t good for them; so I come right in. I been
good, George.”
“I coulda told you that,” said George.
“Well, I wasn’t hurtin’ ‘em none. I jus’ had mine in my lap pettin’ it.”
George asked, “Did you see Slim out in the barn?”
“Sure I did. He tol’ me I better not pet that pup no more.”
“Did you see that girl?”
“You mean Curley’s girl?”
“Yeah. Did she come in the barn?”
“No. Anyways I never seen her.”
“You never seen Slim talkin’ to her?”
“Uh-uh. She ain’t been in the barn.”
“O.K.,” said George. “I guess them guys ain’t gonna see no fight. If
there’s any fightin’, Lennie, you keep out of it.”
“I don’t want no fights,” said Lennie. He got up from his bunk and sat
down at the table, across from George. Almost automatically George shuffled the
cards and laid out his solitaire hand. He used a deliberate, thoughtful
slowness.
Lennie reached for a face card and studied it, then turned it upside down
and studied it. “Both ends the same,” he said. “George, why is it both ends the
same?”
“I don’t know,” said George. “That’s jus’ the way they make ‘em. What was
Slim doin’ in the barn when you seen him?”
“Slim?”
“Sure. You seen him in the barn, an’ he tol’ you not to pet the pups so
much.”
“Oh, yeah. He had a can a’ tar an’ a paint brush. I don’t know what for.”
“You sure that girl didn’t come in like she come in here today?”
“No. She never come.”
George sighed. “You give me a good whore house every time,” he said. “A
guy can go in an’ get drunk and get ever’thing outa his system all at once, an’
no messes. And he knows how much it’s gonna set him back. These here jail baits
is just set on the trigger of the hoosegow.”
Lennie followed his words admiringly, and moved his lips a little to keep
up. George continued, “You remember Andy Cushman, Lennie? Went to grammar
school?”
“The one that his old lady used to make hot cakes for the kids?” Lennie
asked.
“Yeah. That’s the one. You can remember anything if there’s anything to
eat in it.” George looked carefully at the solitaire hand. He put an ace up on
his scoring rack and piled a two, three and four of diamonds on it. “Andy’s in
San Quentin right now on account of a tart,” said George.
Lennie drummed on the table with his fingers. “George?”
“Huh?”
“George, how long’s it gonna be till we get that little place an’ live on
the fatta the lan’—an’ rabbits?”
“I don’t know”, said George. “We gotta get a big stake together. I know a
little place we can get cheap, but they ain’t givin’ it away.”
Old Candy turned slowly over. His eyes were wide open. He watched George
carefully.
Lennie said, “Tell about that place, George.”
“I jus’ tol’ you, jus’ las’ night.”
“Go on—tell again, George.”
“Well, it’s ten acres,” said George. “Got a little win’mill. Got a little
shack on it, an’ a chicken run. Got a kitchen, orchard, cherries, apples,
peaches, ‘cots, nuts, got a few berries. They’s a place for alfalfa and plenty
water to flood it. They’s a pig pen—”
“An’ rabbits, George.”
“No place for rabbits now, but I could easy build a few hutches and you
could feed alfalfa to the rabbits.”
“Damn right, I could,” said Lennie. “You God damn right I could.”
George’s hands stopped working with the cards. His voice was growing
warmer. “An’ we could have a few pigs. I could build a smoke house like the one
gran’pa had, an’ when we kill a pig we can smoke the bacon and the hams, and
make sausage an’ all like that. An’ when the salmon run up river we could catch
a hundred of ‘em an’ salt ‘em down or smoke ‘em. We could have them for
breakfast. They ain’t nothing so nice as smoked salmon. When the fruit come in
we could can it—and tomatoes, they’re easy to can. Ever’ Sunday we’d kill a
chicken or a rabbit. Maybe we’d have a cow or a goat, and the cream is so God
damn thick you got to cut it with a knife and take it out with a spoon.”
Lennie watched him with wide eyes, and old Candy watched him too. Lennie
said softly, “We could live offa the fatta the lan’.”
“Sure,” said George. “All kin’s a vegetables in the garden, and if we want
a little whisky we can sell a few eggs or something, or some milk. We’d jus’
live there. We’d belong there. There wouldn’t be no more runnin’ round the
country and gettin’ fed by a Jap cook. No, sir, we’d have our own place where we
belonged and not sleep in no bunk house.”
“Tell about the house, George,” Lennie begged.
“Sure, we’d have a little house an’ a room to ourself. Little fat iron
stove, an’ in the winter we’d keep a fire goin’ in it. It ain’t enough land so
we’d have to work too hard. Maybe six, seven hours a day. We wouldn’t have to
buck no barley eleven hours a day. An’ when we put in a crop, why, we’d be there
to take the crop up. We’d know what come of our planting.”
“An’ rabbits,” Lennie said eagerly. “An’ I’d take care of ‘em. Tell how
I’d do that, George.”
“Sure, you’d go out in the alfalfa patch an’ you’d have a sack. You’d fill
up the sack and bring it in an’ put it in the rabbit cages.”
“They’d nibble an’ they’d nibble,” said Lennie, “the way they do. I seen
‘em.”
“Ever’ six weeks or so,” George continued, “them does would throw a litter
so we’d have plenty rabbits to eat an’ to sell. An’ we’d keep a few pigeons to
go flyin’ around the win’mill like they done when I was a kid.” He looked raptly
at the wall over Lennie’s head. “An’ it’d be our own, an’ nobody could can us.
If we don’t like a guy we can say, ‘Get the hell out,’ and by God he’s got to do
it. An’ if a fren’ come along, why we’d have an extra bunk, an’ we’d say, ‘Why
don’t you spen’ the night?’ an’ by God he would. We’d have a setter dog and a
couple stripe cats, but you gotta watch out them cats don’t get the little
rabbits.”
Lennie breathed hard. “You jus’ let ‘em try to get the rabbits. I’ll break
their God damn necks. I’ll . . . . I’ll smash ‘em with a stick.” He subsided,
grumbling to himself, threatening the future cats which might dare to disturb
the future rabbits.
George sat entranced with his own picture.
When Candy spoke they both jumped as though they had been caught doing
something reprehensible. Candy said, “You know where’s a place like that?”
George was on guard immediately. “S’pose I do,” he said. “What’s that to
you?”
“You don’t need to tell me where it’s at. Might be any place.”
“Sure,” said George. “That’s right. You couldn’t find it in a hundred
years.”
Candy went on excitedly, “How much they want for a place like that?”
George watched him suspiciously. “Well—I could get it for six hundred
bucks. The ol’ people that owns it is flat bust an’ the ol’ lady needs an
operation. Say—what’s it to you? You got nothing to do with us.”
Candy said, “I ain’t much good with on’y one hand. I lost my hand right
here on this ranch. That’s why they give me a job swampin’. An’ they give me two
hunderd an’ fifty dollars ‘cause I los’ my hand. An’ I got fifty more saved up
right in the bank, right now. Tha’s three hunderd, and I got fifty more comin’
the end a the month. Tell you what—” He leaned forward eagerly. “S’pose I went
in with you guys. Tha’s three hunderd an’ fifty bucks I’d put in. I ain’t much
good, but I could cook and tend the chickens and hoe the garden some. How’d that
be?”
George half-closed his eyes. “I gotta think about that. We was always
gonna do it by ourselves.”
Candy interrupted him, “I’d make a will an’ leave my share to you guys in
case I kick off, ‘cause I ain’t got no relatives nor nothing. You guys got any
money? Maybe we could do her right now?”
George spat on the floor disgustedly. “We got ten bucks between us.” Then
he said thoughtfully, “Look, if me an’ Lennie work a month an’ don’t spen’
nothing, we’ll have a hunderd bucks. That’d be four fifty. I bet we could swing
her for that. Then you an’ Lennie could go get her started an’ I’d get a job an’
make up the res’, an’ you could sell eggs an’ stuff like that.”
They fell into a silence. They looked at one another, amazed. This thing
they had never really believed in was coming true. George said reverently,
“Jesus Christ! I bet we could swing her.” His eyes were full of wonder. “I bet
we could swing her,” he repeated softly.
Candy sat on the edge of his bunk. He scratched the stump of his wrist
nervously. “I got hurt four year ago,” he said. “They’ll can me purty soon. Jus’
as soon as I can’t swamp out no bunk houses they’ll put me on the county. Maybe
if I give you guys my money, you’ll let me hoe in the garden even after I ain’t
no good at it. An’ I’ll wash dishes an’ little chicken stuff like that. But I’ll
be on our own place, an’ I’ll be let to work on our own place.” He said
miserably, “You seen what they done to my dog tonight? They says he wasn’t no
good to himself nor nobody else. When they can me here I wisht somebody’d shoot
me. But they won’t do nothing like that. I won’t have no place to go, an’ I
can’t get no more jobs. I’ll have thirty dollars more comin’, time you guys is
ready to quit.”
George stood up. “We’ll do her,” he said. “We’ll fix up that little old
place an’ we’ll go live there.” He sat down again. They all sat still, all
bemused by the beauty of the thing, each mind was popped into the future when
this lovely thing should come about.
George said wonderingly, “S’pose they was a carnival or a circus come to
town, or a ball game, or any damn thing.” Old Candy nodded in appreciation of
the idea. “We’d just go to her,” George said. “We wouldn’t ask nobody if we
could. Jus’ say, ‘We’ll go to her,’ an’ we would. Jus’ milk the cow and sling
some grain to the chickens an’ go to her.”
“An’ put some grass to the rabbits,” Lennie broke in. “I wouldn’t never
forget to feed them. When we gon’ta do it, George?”
“In one month. Right squack in one month. Know what I’m gon’ta do? I’m
gon’ta write to them old people that owns the place that we’ll take it. An’
Candy’ll send a hunderd dollars to bind her.”
“Sure will,” said Candy. “They got a good stove there?”
“Sure, got a nice stove, burns coal or wood.”
“I’m gonna take my pup,” said Lennie. “I bet by Christ he likes it there,
by Jesus.”
Voices were approaching from outside. George said quickly, “Don’t tell
nobody about it. Jus’ us three an’ nobody else. They li’ble to can us so we
can’t make no stake. Jus’ go on like we was gonna buck barley the rest of our
lives, then all of a sudden some day we’ll go get our pay an’ scram outa here.”
Lennie and Candy nodded, and they were grinning with delight. “Don’t tell
nobody,” Lennie said to himself.
Candy said, “George.”
“Huh?”
“I ought to of shot that dog myself, George. I shouldn’t ought to of let
no stranger shoot my dog.”
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