Jody had tried to make up to Julia, but she
would have none of him.
“You was pups together,” his father told him, “ten year gone,
when you was two year old and her a baby. You hurted the leetle
thing, not meanin’ no harm. She cain’t bring herself to trust
you. Hounds is often that-a-way.”
He made a circle around the sheds and corn-crib and cut south
through the black-jack. He wished he had a dog like Grandma
Hutto’s. It was white and curly-haired and did tricks. When
Grandma Hutto laughed and shook and could not stop, the dog
jumped into her lap and licked her face, wagging its plumed tail
as though it laughed with her. He would like anything that was
his own; that licked his face and followed him as old Julia
followed his father. He cut into the sand road and began to run
east. It was two miles to the Glen, but it seemed to Jody that he
could run forever. There was no ache in his legs, as when he hoed
the corn. He slowed down to make the road last longer. He had
passed the big pines and left them behind. Where he walked now,
the scrub had closed in, walling in the road with dense sand
pines, each one so thin it seemed to the boy it might make
kindling by itself. The road went up an incline. At the top he
stopped. The April sky was framed by the tawny sand and the
pines. It was as blue as his homespun shirt, dyed with Grandma
Hutto’s indigo. Small clouds were stationary, like bolls of
cotton. As he watched, the sunlight left the sky a moment and the
clouds were gray.
“There’ll come a little old drizzly rain before night-fall,”
he thought.
The down grade tempted him to a lope. He reached the
thick-bedded sand of the Silver Glen road. The tar-flower was in
bloom, and fetter-bush and sparkleberry. He slowed to a walk, so
that he might pass the changing vegetation tree by tree, bush by
bush, each one unique and familiar. He reached the magnolia tree
where he had carved the wildcat’s face. The growth was a sign
that there was water nearby. It seemed a strange thing to him,
when earth was earth and rain was rain, that scrawny pines should
grow in the scrub, while by every branch and lake and river there
grew magnolias. Dogs were the same everywhere, and oxen and mules
and horses. But trees were different in different places.
“Reckon it’s because they can’t move none,” he decided. They
took what food was in the soil under them.
The east bank of the road shelved suddenly. It dropped below
him twenty feet to a spring.
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