The day had started out cold and overcast when Wendy began
chores at five that morning. She had been awakened by another one of those
dreams, of the day her mother left ten years earlier, a day she only half
remember. Her father had told her they would stop eventually, but he had never
lived to see that. She missed him more than ever on days like these, after all,
as her mother had often said, she was her daddy’s girl.
By the time Wendy had the animals fed and the cows milked it
was pouring rain. She sighed, “What a rotten start to the day.” One of the cows
had pulled up lame and she had gotten kicked by a neighboring cow when she was
trying to check the offending foot on top of everything else.
It was hard work and now that her dad was gone, and Wendy was
doing it all alone for now. It had been just her and her father working the
farm after her mother left. She had never been content on the farm with its
endless days of work, days repeating with little variation other than planting
and harvesting. They hired hands then to help with the hay and putting up feed
for the cows. It was more than one man and young girl could manage since her
mother had refused to do any of it after the cows were milked.
Wendy drank her much needed cup of coffee and gazed over the
ripening hay fields. They would need cut and baled soon, she thought. Maybe
that neighbor kid on the next farm would help. Her eyes closed briefly and she
wavered on her feet causing her nearly drop her cup. She awoke with a start. It
was the same thing every year around the time when her mother had disappeared
without a word, without ever calling or writing to let anyone know where she
was. She always had a hard time sleeping then, as if she got a lot of sleep in
the first place.
Wendy shook her head to clear her muddled mind. “No time for a
nap!” she said to the cat. “I have a lot of work to do if this rain ever lets
up.”
The cat hopped off the chair where he was perched and rubbed
her leg, purring.
“You have work too, my fine feline. I saw a mouse today. The
rain we’ve had over the last week is making them seek dry shelter and in the
house is where they chose. Do your job.” She reached down and petted the calico
fur and then went to wash the few dishes.
Wendy’s neighbor Carl Lester knocked on Wendy’s door. She
jumped at the sound. She wasn’t expecting anyone. Drying her hands, she went to
the door.
“Monring Wendy,” Carl said. “Thought I’d come over and see if
you needed help with anything.”
“Hi Carl. I’m just checking tractors today to make sure
they’re ready to go when the hay dries, if it quits raining that is,” she
answered. “Say, can Carl, Jr. help put up the hay this year? With my dad gone I
just won’t be able to do it by myself.”
“I tell you what Wendy, we’ll both help. You help us with
ours and then we’ll come do yours. That sound like a deal?”
“That sounds great! Thank you,” she said.
“That’s what neighbors are for. I know your dad tried to
keep mostly to himself after your mom left, but I hope maybe you’ll be out and
about as time allows now.” He smiled. “You know, I can remember when no matter
what he was doing, in the fields, bucking hay, whatever, your dad always
stopped when he saw that bus and went to welcome his girl home from school.”
Wendy smiled back. “I think helping each other is a good
idea. It is lonely around here without anyone but the cat and that silly dog in
the barn. I tell you what, if Rex doesn’t get where he responds to me like he
did dad, I’ll have to get rid of him.”
“Well, he always was your dad’s dog. Give him time. He knows
who you are. He’ll come around.”
“Thanks. I’ll see you later then. That tractor isn’t going
to fix itself,” she said.
“What’s wrong with it?” he asked.
“It just needs greased and the hay baler needs checked over.
I think there was some string caught in the hooks last year. I need to get that
out.”
Wendy went about her day making sure the equipment was in
working order. She kept thinking as she worked about the small section at the
end of the orchard where she planted flowers every year. They bloomed this time
of year. As lovely as they were, it reminded her of the ugliest day of her
life.
Wendy tried to remember. She spoke out loud to the cat. Mother
had been going into town more often than usual," she said. That day when I
got home from school mother’s car was home for a change. Daddy was busy
planting corn since we had gotten an early spring. I waved at him when the bus
passed the field. There was another vehicle in the yard and I wondered who was
visiting. I heard voices coming through the open windows. They were laughing
and one was a man’s voice. I thought maybe it was a friend of Daddy’s that stopped
by and was waiting for him.”
I left my books on the kitchen table and followed the
voices. And then to my shock Mother was in bed with a man. I had never seen him
before. I screamed and ran from the room. I remember going to dad's office. It was covered in taxidermy from his hunting when he got something really extraordinary and he kept his hunting rifles on display in a special cabinet near the desk. That is the last thing I remember for hours.
I woke up in bed. I was in my
pajamas. When I got up I realized my mother was gone, her car, her clothes,
some nick-knacks were all gone. I was devastated. Daddy and I cried for
weeks.” She stroked the cat. “I do remember also that Daddy was doing some
laundry when I went down for breakfast. For some reason our clothes were all
muddy. He said it happened chasing cows, so I dropped it. The dreams started
about then. Daddy thought if worked with my hands and grew something just for
me, to take my mind off things, I would feel better. She got up and found a
tissue and wiped her eyes.
Wendy looked out the window. “I remember finding the plot of
earth freshly tilled at the end of the orchard. I thought my mother must have intended
to plant flowers there so I did it instead. They’ve grown there really well all
this time. All that had grown there before were brambles and weeds.”
Wendy awoke with a start. She sat up in the bed, shaking
with tears streaming down her face at a pace faster than the rain that was
falling outside. “Daddy always said one day I would remember what I did that
day,” she told the cat that was now climbing all over her lap frantically.
Wendy had screamed right before she was shocked from her dream.
At last the rain stopped and the temperature rose warming
the remainder of the day to the high eighties. And then, as suddenly as it had
risen, the temperature dropped when the sun began to set. With the nightly
chores done, Wendy stood just outside the barn watching the sun set. The
temperature cooling down had caused a fog to begin. As it arose from the still
wet earth, Wendy was barely able to make out the cows as they grazed. The fog
turned into a mist and eventually engulfed everything animal and vegetable,
living and dead.