At noon he told Betty to make something to eat, and when she’d heated the frozen pizza he made them sit together at the table. Nobody said anything, and only Hoyt ate very much. After this silent meal he forced them back into the living room where he could watch them.
Once in the long afternoon a car drove up and stopped out front in Detroit Street. When he heard the door of the car shut Hoyt looked past the edge of the curtains, and a sheriff’s deputy was walking up the path toward the door, then the deputy knocked and Hoyt cursed between his teeth. He motioned Betty and the two children back to the bedrooms and hissed at Luther to answer the door. Get rid of him. And you goddamn better remember what I said.
Luther went out onto the porch and talked and answered a few questions in his slow manner. Finally the deputy left and Luther came back in and shut the door. Hoyt came out of the hall and watched through the curtains as the car drove off. Then he sat them down on the couch again, to watch television. In the evening he forced them to their beds and in this way the second night passed in the trailer.
The next morning in the gray dawn he was gone. They came out of their bedrooms and discovered that he had vanished without a sound.
AT DAYBREAK HOYT HAD WALKED ACROSS TOWN TO ELTON Chatfield’s house. He had waited at the curb beside Elton’s old pickup until he came out, then caught a ride with him to the feedlot east of Holt. At the feedlot he entered the office and stood at the desk where the manager was talking on the phone to a cattle buyer. The manager looked up at him and frowned and went on talking. After a while he hung up. What are you doing in here? he said. You’re suppose to be riding pens.
I quit, Hoyt said.
What do you mean you quit?
I come to draw my pay.
The hell you have.
You owe me for two weeks. I’ll take it now.
The manager pushed his hat back on his head. You don’t give much notice, do you. He took out a checkbook from a middle drawer and started to write.
I’ll take it in cash, Hoyt said.
What?
I want cash. I don’t need a check.
Well, I’ll be goddamned. You expect me to come up with cash on a Monday morning.
That’s right.
What if I don’t have no cash?
I’ll take what you got.
He studied Hoyt closely. Where you running off to, Hoyt?
That ain’t none of your business.
Some woman chasing you? he said. He took out his wallet and removed what few bills there were and dropped them forward onto the desktop. Now get your ass out of here.
Hoyt stuffed the bills in his pocket. How about giving me a lift over to the highway? he said.
You want a ride?
I want to get over to the highway.
You better start in to walking then. I wouldn’t give you a lift to a goddamn dog fight. Get the fuck out of here.
Hoyt stood for a moment, looking at him, thinking if there was something he needed to say, then he turned and stepped out of the office into the fenced yard. It was already beginning to warm up, the sun risen higher in the sky, the sky completely clear and blue. He walked out past the cattle yards, where the fat cattle were all feeding at the plank troughs at the fences, and walked out onto the gravel road, headed south toward the highway two miles in the distance. There were fields of corn stubble along the road, and small birds flew up from the ditches, chittering as he approached. A pheasant cackled from across the stubble. When he reached the highway he stood at the roadside, leaning against a signpost, waiting for a ride to come along.
Half an hour later a man in a blue Ford pickup stopped beside the road. The man leaned across and rolled down the window. Bud, where you headed to?
Denver, Hoyt said.
Well, get in here. You can ride as far as I’m going.
Hoyt climbed in and shut the door and they drove west toward town. The man glanced at him. What you gone and done to your face there?
Where?
Your nigh ear.
I wasn’t looking and snatched it on a tree limb.