1HERES a place,” pa says. He pulls the team up and sits looking at the house. We could get some water over yonder.”

2All right,” I say. Youll have to borrow a bucket from them, Dewey Dell.”

3God knows,” pa says. I wouldn’t be beholden, God knows.”

4If you see a good-sized can, you might bring it,” I say. Dewey Dell gets down from the wagon, carrying the package. You had more trouble than you expected, selling those cakes in Mottson,” I say. How do our lives ravel out into the no-wind, no-sound, the weary gestures wearily recapitulant: echoes of old compulsions with no-hand on no-strings: in sunset we fall into furious attitudes, dead gestures of dolls. Cash broke his leg and now the sawdust is running out. He is bleeding to death is Cash.

5I wouldn’t be beholden,” pa says. God knows.”

6Then make some water yourself,” I say. We can use Cashs hat.”

7When Dewey Dell comes back the man comes with her. Then he stops and she comes on and he stands there and after a while he goes back to the house and stands on the porch, watching us.

8We better not try to lift him down,” pa says. We can fix it here.”

9Do you want to be lifted down, Cash?” I say.

10Wont we get to Jefferson to-morrow?” he says. He is watching us, his eyes interrogatory, intent, and sad. I can last it out.”

11Itll be easier on you,” pa says. Itll keep it from rubbing together.”

12I can last it,” Cash says. Well lose time stopping.”

13We done bought the cement, now,” pa says.

14I could last it,” Cash says. “It ain’t but one more day. It dont bother to speak of.” He looks at us, his eyes wide in his thin grey face, questioning. It sets up so,” he says.

15We done bought it now,” pa says.

16I mix the cement in the can, stirring the slow water into the pale-green thick coils. I bring the can to the wagon where Cash can see. He lies on his back, his thin profile in silhouette, ascetic and profound against the sky. “Does that look about right?” I say.

17You dont want too much water, or it wont work right,” he says.

18Is this too much?”

19Maybe if you could get a little sand,” he says. It ain’t but one more day,” he says. It dont bother me none.”

20Vardaman goes back down the road to where we crossed the branch and returns with sand. He pours it slowly into the thick coiling in the can. I go to the wagon again.

21Does that look all right?”

22Yes,” Cash says. I could have lasted. It dont bother me none.”

23We loosen the splints and pour the cement over his leg, slow.

24Watch out for it,” Cash says. Dont get none on it if you can help.”

25Yes,” I say. Dewey Dell tears a piece of paper from the package and wipes the cement from the top of it as it drips from Cashs leg.

26How does that feel?”

27It feels fine,” he says. Its cold. It feels fine.”

28If itll just help you,” pa says. I asks your forgiveness. I never forseen it no more than you.”

29It feels fine,” Cash says.

30If you could just ravel out into time. That would be nice. It would be nice if you could just ravel out into time.

31We replace the splints, the cords, drawing them tight, the cement in thick pale green slow surges among the cords, Cash watching us quietly with that profound questioning look.

32Thatll steady it,” I say.

33Ay,” Cash says. Im obliged.”

34Then we all turn on the wagon and watch him. He is coming up the road behind us, wooden-backed, wooden-faced, moving only from his hips down. He comes up without a word, with his pale rigid eyes in his high sullen face, and gets into the wagon.

35Heres a hill,” pa says. I reckon youll have to get out and walk.”