jack_f_twist (
jack_f_twist) wrote2006-05-05 12:55 am
![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
(no subject)
Seems that fence and that gate get worse ever year, and when Jack finally straightens, his back cracks in protest. One hand on the gate, the other on his hip, he looks out over the empty plains, squinting and sweating, before he swings the gate back and forth, testing.
It creaks a bit, but holds, and despite the heat and the ache in his neck, Jack grins, pleased with himself, takes off the rough work gloves covering his hands and sticks them in his back pocket when he turns around to head back.
The house itself squats, gray and sullen--one more lump out here in the middle a godforsaken nowhere, and the screen door bangs behind him when he heads into the kitchen, hangs his hat up on a nail by the door and gets a glass, runs some cool tap water into it.
Home sweet home.
It creaks a bit, but holds, and despite the heat and the ache in his neck, Jack grins, pleased with himself, takes off the rough work gloves covering his hands and sticks them in his back pocket when he turns around to head back.
The house itself squats, gray and sullen--one more lump out here in the middle a godforsaken nowhere, and the screen door bangs behind him when he heads into the kitchen, hangs his hat up on a nail by the door and gets a glass, runs some cool tap water into it.
Home sweet home.
no subject
And there's gratefulness in his voice, too, now, and something deep in him lights up when he nods again, eager.
"Sure. You'd like him, Momma, I know you would."
His daddy, Jack knows, wouldn't think much of Ennis. Ranch stiffs ain't never no good--that had been Joe Aguirre's opinion and on that he and Jack's daddy were certain to agree.
no subject
"You bring him, then."
She could say, and wants to say, "You bring that daughter-in-law and grandson of mine, too," but she doesn't. Instead she just takes a long swallow.
"Lord knows there's enough work to be done."
no subject
he says, and he says it around his mouth full of dry sandwich
"you bring him, you tell him don't nobody stay for free. We ain't rich like some folk."
Which is what Jack said anyway, but he can't figure it matters none. Jack'll never say anything to his little friend.
"You forgot the mayonaise."
no subject
She knows her Bible, and she knows her place, but she also knows that rich or not, you take in folk when they come, and that Jack'd said they'd come and help, and sometimes she hates John Twist, as unChristian as that may be.
All she says is, "S'pose I did," soft as can be, and the sharp look is gone, her face blank, as she takes another sip of her water and looks straight ahead.
no subject
Some things you just gotta live with.
"It wouldn't be like that," he says, to his father, stubbornly optimistic. "We'd work. Just want to help you out with this place, is all."
His sandwiches gone, he gets up from the table to put the dish in the sink, rinse it off, look out the old window that faces the south-going road. Straight as a pin and going exactly nowhere.
"May as well get some of the mowing done this afternoon."
no subject
"You do that, it's been falling behind."
As if it's Jack's fault the grass doesn't never get mowed, as if it's Jack's fault he don't never come up here no more but a few times a year, after he's gone to see that friend 'a his.
creak creak
And John takes the tabacco off his plate and, juices still dripping, shoves it back in his mouth.
no subject
Stupid, really, to go out and mow the lawn in the middle of the hottest part of the day, but Jack is restless and smarting and stifled in the kitchen, so he puts his empty, rinsed plate on the counter and turns around to put a hand--big and rough-worn--gentle on his momma's shoulder, bends down to give her worn cheek a kiss.
"Thanks for lunch, Momma."
When he straightens, he looks right at his father, trying to ignore the brown stain by the corner of John's mouth.
"Might go out 'n check on the stock after. Like you said, plenty a work to do. Figure I'll be back for dinner." The last is said more to his mother, while his hand leaves her shoulder and he turns to the door, takes his beat-up hat from off the nail on the wall and settles it on his head. Gotta go, gotta work, gotta get out of here, gotta find some air to breathe because hell if he can get any in this place.
no subject
And there's a dozen things she wants to say, really. Don't chew at the table, and The day he doesn't come back because of you is the day I'll go out and won't come back either, and Please, and mostly, What happened? because she's certain once they were--maybe not happy, even, but it didn't feel like hell to have a meal.
Dozens of things that could be said, and all she says is, "Got washing to do," as she stands and goes to gather the laundry.
Always something to do, after all.