It was late afternoon by the time the bull riding, the last event, was finished and the final quarter-horse race was contested and won. There would still be a good three hours of sunlight because of daylight savings, but I felt as tired as if I had worked. I suppose all that warm beer contributed to the feeling. At any rate, I was ready to go home. I still had evening chores to do and I wanted to see Mavis seated in a easy chair with her feet up. I believed she must be tired.
The crowd was coming down out of the grandstand, so I waited beside the gate for my wife and the Goodnoughs. I didn’t see them. I saw Doub Ragsdale and Louise come by with their two boys, all of them looking miserable and hot, like they weren’t satisfied, and then Pace Givens stopped to talk a minute. Pace was a dirt-poor farmer who was trying to hang on to a couple of dryland quarters east of town. His teeth were all rotten and gone to hell.
“By God,” he said. “Sanders, by God.”
“Yeah,” I said.
He was slapping me on the back. I could smell the whiskey on him. “You’re all right,” he said. “Didn’t I ever tell you that?”
“Once or twice,” I said.
“Well, don’t never weaken.”
“That’s right.”
“Don’t never weaken, Sanders.”
“Take care of yourself now,” I said.
“Hell, I’m all right,” he said. “You know why?”
“Because you never weaken.”
“I never weaken. That’s why.”
He was talking at me from about six inches distance from my face; he smelled strong of cheap whiskey, and there were people watching us and smiling as if it was a joke, but I liked Pace Givens nonetheless. He was going to lose those dryland quarters too. They just weren’t enough anymore for him to survive on. He slapped me again on the back and walked out the gate in his droop-seated, rag-cuffed overalls.
My wife hadn’t come down from the grandstand with Edith and Lyman. I climbed up into the stands; there was no one there except a young woman trying to get a little boy to wake up enough so he would walk and not have to be carried. I began to feel a little worried. I knew this entire opening-day program would be too much. I went back through the gate, looked around, didn’t see them, and walked out to Lyman’s car. It was still there, green and dust coated now with the afternoon traffic. So I returned to the buildings, walked through the exhibits and the show barns, and finally found the three of them drinking pop in the concession area. They didn’t appear concerned. Mavis and Edith were laughing at Lyman. They were giving him some kind of silly shit about something, and Lyman wasn’t altogether pleased. “What’s the joke?” I said.
“You don’t want to know,” Lyman said. “Just buy me a beer. These damn women won’t allow nothing but soda pop.
“Don’t you dare,” Mavis said.
“That’s right,” Edith said. “He has to admit it was a good system first.”
“What was?”
“The system we had for the races.”
“Don’t listen to them,” Lyman said. “Just buy me a beer, will you?”
“Of course. But what happened to your money?”
“I don’t have any money. Would I be drinking this damn stuff if I had any money?”
“What happened to it?”
“He lost it.”
“The hell I did.”
“But we know where it is. Don’t we, Edith.”
“It’s right here,” Edith said.
“Listen. If you ain’t going to buy me a beer, at least loan me a goddamn dollar. Is that asking too much?” “You have to admit it was a good system first.”
“Damn your damn system.”
“I think he’s getting mad now.”
“All right, here.” Lyman stood up and drew a checkbook from the pocket of his dress pants and sat down to write in it. “Here,” he said, “I’ll sign you a check if you don’t think you can even trust me for a goddamn dollar.”
“Just a minute,” I said. “I trust you. But what the hell are you talking about?”
“I’m talking about that goddamn fool up at the counter that won’t take my check. They got him in on this, too.”
“Who?”
“These women. Look at ’em, laughing like two cats.”