In the morning they caught up the horses and saddled them and tied on the damp bedrolls and led the horses out to the road.
What do you want to do? said Rawlins.
I reckon we better go find his skinny ass.
What if we just went on.
John Grady mounted up and looked down at Rawlins. I dont believe I can leave him out here afoot, he said.
Rawlins nodded. Yeah, he said. I guess not.
He rode down the arroyo and encountered Blevins coming up in the same condition in which he’d left him. He sat the horse. Blevins was picking his way barefoot along the wash, carrying one boot. He looked up at John Grady.
Where’s your clothes at? said John Grady.
Washed away.
Your horse is gone.
I know it. I done been out to the road once.
What do you aim to do?
I dont know.
You dont look like the demon rum’s dealt kindly with you.
My head feels like a fat lady’s sat on it.
John Grady looked out at the morning desert shining in the new sun. He looked at the boy.
You’ve wore Rawlins completely out. I reckon you know that.
You never know when you’ll be in need of them you’ve despised, said Blevins.
Where the hell’d you hear that at?
I dont know. I just decided to say it.
John Grady shook his head. He reached and unbuckled his saddlebag and took out his spare shirt and pitched it down to Blevins.
Put that on before you get parboiled out here. I’ll ride down and see if I can see your clothes anywheres.
I appreciate it, said Blevins.
He rode down the wash and he rode back. Blevins was sitting in the sand in the shirt.
How much water was in this wash last night?
A bunch.
Where’d you find the one boot at?
In a tree.
He rode down the wash and out over the gravel fan and sat looking. He didnt see any boot. When he came back Blevins was sitting as he’d left him.
That boot’s gone, he said.
I figured as much.
John Grady reached down a hand. Let’s go.
He swung Blevins in his underwear up onto the horse behind him. Rawlins will pitch a pure hissy when he sees you, he said.
Rawlins when he saw him seemed too dismayed to speak.
He’s lost his clothes, said John Grady.
Rawlins turned his horse and set off slowly down the road. They followed. No one spoke. After a while John Grady heard something drop into the road and he looked back and saw Blevins’ boot lying there. He turned and looked at Blevins but
Blevins was peering steadily ahead from under the brim of his hat and they rode on. The horses stepped archly among the shadows that fell over the road, the bracken steamed. Bye and bye they passed a stand of roadside cholla against which small birds had been driven by the storm and there impaled. Gray nameless birds espaliered in attitudes of stillborn flight or hanging loosely in their feathers. Some of them were still alive and they twisted on their spines as the horses passed and raised their heads and cried out but the horsemen rode on. The sun rose up in the sky and the country took on new color, green fire in the acacia and paloverde and green in the roadside run-off grass and fire in the ocotillo. As if the rain were electric, had grounded circuits that the electric might be.
So mounted they rode at noon into a waxcamp pitched in the broken footlands beneath the low stone mesa running east and west before them. There was a small clear water branch here and the Mexicans had dug an open firebox and lined it with rock and scotched their boiler into the bank over it. The boiler was made from the lower half of a galvanized watertank and to bring it to this location they’d run a wooden axleshaft through the bottom and made a wooden spider whereby to bed the axle in the open end and with a team of horses rolled the tank across the desert from Zaragoza eighty miles to the east. The track of flattened chaparral was still visible bending away over the floor of the desert. When the Americans rode into their camp there were several burros standing there that had just been brought down from the mesa loaded with the candelilla plant they boiled for wax and the Mexicans had left the animals to stand while they ate their dinner. A dozen men dressed most of them in what looked to be pajamas and all of them in rags squatting under the shade of some willows and eating with tin spoons off of clay plates. They looked up but they did not stop eating.
Buenos días, said John Grady. They responded in a quick dull chorus. He dismounted and they looked at the spot where he stood and looked at each other and then went on eating.
Tienen algo que comer?
One or two of them gestured toward the fire with their spoons. When Blevins slid from the horse they looked at each other again.
The riders got their plates and utensils out of the saddlebags and John Grady got the little enameled pot out of the blackened cookbag and handed it to Blevins together with his old wooden-handled kitchen fork. They went to the fire and filled their plates with beans and chile and took each a couple of blackened corn tortillas from a piece of sheetiron laid over the fire and walked over and sat under the willows a little apart from the workers. Blevins sat with his bare legs stretched out before him but they looked so white and exposed lying there on the ground that he seemed ashamed and he tried to tuck them up under him and to cover his knees with the tails of the borrowed shirt he wore. They ate. The workers had for the most part finished their meal and they were leaning back smoking cigarettes and belching quietly.