Authors: Caroline Rose
Sometimes I see wagon ruts,
a memory pressed in dried mud.
If western Kansas had more folks,
this would be easier.
There might be a well-worn path by now.
Grasshoppers whir,
fly about me.
I swat at them with the broom.
My stomach clenches,
so I shake some crumbled corn bread from the stocking
straight into my mouth.
Then up ahead,
I spot the jagged branches of a currant bush.
Late-summer birds have picked over
the berries that remain.
I grab at what’s left,
red-black juice staining my fingers,
eating,
eating,
pocketing the dry ones,
squatting until my knees ache.
I stand and stretch,
look behind me,
recognizing nothing.
Something rustles,
and I reach for the broom.
Like me,
the animal freezes.
We stay that way
until my shoulders throb.
Then
a jackrabbit leaps beside me.
I drop the broom,
fall back,
glimpse it dashing zigzag.
My breath comes short
and painful.
“It was a rabbit,” I say,
but the words mean nothing
to the weakness creeping up my legs.
Here’s what’s true:
Already
the evening sky is pushing back the daylight.
Gooseflesh tingles on my arms.
I don’t know where I am,
I can’t know where I’m going.
And suddenly,
I’m running
back!
I’m running—
my heels slam into the hard-packed earth.
Running—
my breath’s jagged.
Running—
birds scatter from their grass nests.
I need those walls around me!
The pillowcase slaps my back.
Pain rips through my ankle.
I tumble to the ground
and curse the hole I’ve stepped in.
The sky is almost black when,
limping,
I reach the soddy.
My ankle’s purple.
Those stupid boots.
Fetching water today,
I catch a glimpse of myself in the stream:
hair hanging in clumps,
dress ripped at one shoulder.
I haven’t used the washtub since
the Oblingers left.
My eyes study the dirty girl.
I finger the last few currants
still in my pocket.
Maybe I could go back and check for more.
If I hadn’t been startled,
if I’d stuck it out a little longer,
I’d have bulging apron pockets.
Maybe I’d have reached another soddy.
That neighbor Mr. Chapman’s gone,
but if I’d found his place,
surely he’d have some jerky,
a tin of soda crackers left behind.
But now,
with this ankle,
I can’t go far.
And the wolf.
I shiver,
remembering how frightened I was
of just a little rabbit.
I sit beside the stream
dipping my fingers in the icy water.
In summer,
Pa and Hiram bring in trout,
speckled bodies writhing
in their hands.
I trail my fingers,
wiggling them like Hiram showed me.
Nothing happens.
I run,
holding my skirts above my knees.
I holler
and skip
and make faces at the outhouse.
I slam the door,
take a spoon to the pots and pans.
I whistle,
I spit,
think up as many unladylike things as I can,
and do them.
Out in the open.
For the whole empty world to see.
A thin sheet of ice crept across
the water pail last night.
I take the dipper and push through
to scoop a drink,
then stir the fire
for breakfast.
The sky
holds the high white
of snow.
It is too early
for this.
I am not ready.
Maybe there won’t be a storm
after all.
Autumn is devious.
Calm afternoons with no hint of breaking
can turn violent,
bringing wind,
ushering in rain
and even snow.
Or maybe I haven’t been paying enough attention
and I’ll get trapped out here
in
a
blizzard.
On
my
own.
Maybe May B
.
Maybe
Snow is falling.
Why did I not prepare
when the weather first turned?
I have left
so many things
undone.
Maybe I should check the garden
for one last potato.
I should have gathered more chips to burn
yesterday.