Authors: Caroline Rose
I bang at the boards,
not sure exactly
where to place each piece,
but figuring with so few to go,
the planks will show me where they belong.
Maybe Mr. Oblinger will
want to fix these boards
to his liking
someday.
I stop myself.
He’s never coming back.
I am afraid
in the dark
all alone
I am afraid
It started small:
Hiram’s church-going shirt left untucked,
My dirty hands at suppertime.
Then we got bold:
Sneaked a piece of cooling pie,
waded deeper in the stream
than Pa allowed.
Somehow Hiram rarely caught trouble.
That smile of his softened Ma.
Pa, grateful for extra hands,
overlooked the times Hiram forgot to milk,
misplaced the saw,
dropped his boot in the creek.
I thought of something he wouldn’t dare do.
“Get Ma’s scissors
and meet me out back.”
It was just the two of us behind the soddy,
but I leaned in close.
“Cut some of my hair.”
He narrowed his eyes.
“Why’d I want to do that?”
“Afraid Ma will notice?” I sang.
“Worried Pa will tell you
to wait for him in the barn?”
“You’re daring me?” he asked.
“I am,” I said.
That was enough to stir him.
And when he grabbed at a braid
and the scissors snapped,
I scooped it up,
a four-inch rope of brown hair.
Swishing it under his nose, I told him,
“You’re going to get it tonight.”
That smile of his lit up his face.
“Don’t I know it.”
I swatted at him with the braid,
yelled, “I’m showing Ma!”
and ran.
It is not strange
to wear the same dress
from day to day,
but to awake,
still clothed,
and not notice
until the coffee’s made—
I hope Mrs. Oblinger fell off that horse
and is still wandering the prairie.
Mr. Oblinger
better be dead.
Pa deserves the mess he’s made,
sending me here.
His only daughter
abandoned
by strangers,
forgotten
by family,
left behind
by classmates,
ignored
by Teacher.
Nobody cares
about me.
I hate this place.
Today,
if it takes forever,
I will see the place
where the earth touches sky.
I will find it.
I will track it down.
I will not sit here and wait
for nobody to come,
for nothing to happen.
Have Hiram and I been wasting time
on a foolish game?
Today,
I will learn the truth.
Over my shoulder I check for the soddy
one time,
two times,
three.
Why did I think I’d be brave enough
to set out on my own?
How did Hiram and I
get this idea anyway?
The earth is round,
Miss Sanders told us.
She brought that globe to school,
let us pass it around.
If stories were true,
I’d follow a bread-crumb path
all the way home.
But I have no heart for fairy tales
anymore.
I return to the soddy,
gather pebbles at the creek,
and line them up,
a family of smooth stones.
One by one
I heave them into the water,
harder,
then harder still,
until I’m wet,
and hoarse from yelling,
and done with childish dreams.
I have decided
there is no need to iron
my dresses
or the linens.
And my hair,
I don’t have to pull it back
in a braid.
My coffee
doesn’t need to be hot.
Who will notice?
I think it might be September,
if I’ve counted right.