Joey's house was easy to find, because his black horse grazed behind it, hobbled to a long rope.
There was not much to graze on, just a few little sage bushes and a tuft or two of grass. The horse lifted its head when it saw Grasshopper. The two horses had met the last time Joey was in Ojinaga. The black horse neighed, and when he did, a chubby young Mexican woman came out the door. When she saw Maria, she quickly retreated. A second later, a white woman came out. The woman was shivering; she wore only a thin housecoat. But she waited politely for Maria to speak.
'Is my son here?' Maria asked. She did not dismount.
'Joey Garza,' she said, in case the woman was stupid and could not think who her son might be.
'Joey, yes,' Beulah said. 'He's here, but he ain't awake.' 'Wake him and tell him his mother is here,' Maria said. 'I have some news he needs to know.' 'You can come in. I ain't going to wake him,' Beulah said. 'He don't like it when people wake him up.' Maria got off Grasshopper and pushed into the little house. The white woman had a smell. It must not be easy to wash, in such a place, where there was much sand and little water, Maria thought.
She did not look like a bad woman, the white woman; she was not young, and she was frightened.
Inside, two fat Mexican girls sat on a pallet, trying to huddle under one blanket.
There was another room. The low door to it was shut, but Maria pushed it open. Joey, her boy, was asleep, under many blankets. The room was dim. She could just see Joey's face, a young face, so young that for a moment she saw him merely as her son, the child she had borne, the child she loved.
He was still only a young boy. Perhaps it was not too late to save him, to help him become decent.
'Joey, wake up, you need to leave,' she said, touching his shoulder.
Joey did wake up, and the moment he looked at her, the hope that had been rising in Maria sank again and vanished. There was only bottomless cold in Joey's eyes.
'This is my room. I don't like women in here,' Joey said. 'Get out.' Maria felt anger surge up. She wanted to deliver the slap that would make him good, or at least make him realize he was in danger. She had ridden five days and crossed the freezing river for him, and all he had for her was a look that was as cold as the black waters of the Pecos. It was not a thing she could take patiently--not from her own child.
'Goddamn you, leave!' Maria yelled, slapping him. 'Get up and leave. They've sent the great killer for you. Call. Go down into the Madre and go quick, or you'll be dead!' 'You leave,' Joey said. 'Don't come where you're not invited, and don't hit me again. You're a stupid woman. You've ridden all this way to tell me what I already knew. I know about Captain Call.' 'You don't know about him,' Maria said. 'You just know the name. He took my father. He took my brother. Now he will take my son, and it's because my son is stupid, so stupid he thinks he can't die.' 'No old gringo will kill me, and no old gringo will make me run to the Madre, either,' Joey replied.
'Then you're dead, if you think that way,' Maria told him. 'I will go home and tell your brother and sister that you died. They love you, even though you don't care about them.' 'You'll tell them a lie, then,' Joey said.
'I won't die. Call will die, if he comes here. He'll die before he even knows that his death is coming.' Maria turned away. She went back to the room where the three women waited, uneasily.
She saw that they were all frightened, the two fat girls and the tired, smelly woman.
'Is there any man here he listens to?' she asked. 'Is there anyone who can make him listen?' 'John Wesley Hardin, if it's anybody,' Beulah said. 'John Wesley's killed all those people. I think Joey likes him.
But John Wesley's crazy.' 'I don't care. Where is he?' Maria asked.
'He never sleeps, I guess he's in the saloon,' Beulah said. She felt afraid of the Mexican woman. Her eyes were angry.
When she came in from the storm, her dress and her hair had been covered with sleet, but she hadn't seemed to care. She had walked in and awakened Joey, which nobody did. Maybe the woman was his mother, maybe she wasn't, but in the eyes of the three women, she was scary. Gabriela was so scared, she wanted to hide under her blanket; Marieta was too cold to care. She shivered and sniffled. Not many women came to Crow Town. A woman who appeared out of an ice storm might be a witch woman.
Maria left the house. Her head was hurting.
She felt she might be feverish, from almost freezing in the black water. In her fever, she could not control her thoughts. She didn't know where Captain Call was, but in her mind he was close, so close that he might come and kill Joey that very day if she didn't do something quickly.
She saw smoke coming from the roof of another low, lumpy building. Maybe that was the cantina. A row of crows sat on the roof of the building. The row went all the way around the low roof. Now and again, a crow would fly up, wheel, come back to the building and take its place in the row. When the crows flapped their wings, a little rain of sleet fell from their feathers.
Maria heard a snort and looked around to see a large pig following her. The pig was the color of sand. She had the pistol that Billy Williams had insisted she take. She took the pistol and pointed it at the pig. The pig was not just large, it was giant. Maria's hands felt a little warmer. She was in a better state to shoot than she had been back when Famous Shoes showed up. The pig snorted again, but it didn't charge her. She had seen pigs charge people in Ojinaga, when the pigs were angry for some reason. She didn't know whether the great sandy pig was angry, or when it might charge her.
The pig stopped and looked at her, but again, it didn't charge. Maria turned and trudged on toward the cantina. It was hard to walk. The sand seemed to fill the street. There were no horses outside the cantina, though Maria saw a glow under the uneven wooden door. Perhaps the wild man was there, in the cantina, the man Joey might listen to.
When she was almost to the cantina, she heard the great pig snort again, and when she turned, it was trotting toward her. Without thinking, she pointed the pistol at the pig and shot. She wanted to scare it away, and she knew sometimes loud noises frightened pigs. When the church bell rang in Ojinaga, the pigs and goats became nervous for a bit. She did not expect to hit the pig, with the sleet blowing. She had not shot a pistol since Benito's time. He had enjoyed shooting and would let her shoot with him, although he was stingy about bullets and did not want to let a woman use too many of them.
To Maria's surprise, the big pig slid forward on its snout, almost at her feet. Then it rolled over, a great hill of