Flesh Of My Flesh
The same year his wife died Clarence tripped off the tractor. Helplessly big, game leg rigid as a plea in the air, he twisted his head to watch the mower shuffle toward him over the sweet timothy singing its awesome melody. It severed him mid-thigh. The storm of his own blood twisting around him, he thought fast and saved himself dancing: a beetle on its back, he jigged round and round, wild, to turn his head downhill. Later they told him what he had already learned from the death of his wife: when a limb is gone you still feel it, still reach to touch it. So it was for him in the armchair of the early dark autumn afternoon.
Learning Respect
The bull chased the old man every week. For months he ran, barely making the fence, in time leaving a patch of his pants fluttering like an angry tongue on the barbed wire. August, patience depleted, he carried a bat when he went to check the pump, and when the bull charged, he struck, square between the eyes, like the strong man at the circus. The bell rang, and the fine animal fell in its tracks. Turning, the man dragged the bat beside him, his heart pounding. He knew a boundary existed where fear turned rage was punished: it was his only breeding bull. Later, resolute, he went back. Seeing the man, the dazed beast fled to the field’s far side, and seeing the bull, released, the man laughed.
Husbandry, First Lesson
When flames from the granaries threatened the stock house, water was out at the barn, and the younger men had scrambled to the pump to start a bucket brigade, Charlie snatched a teacup and climbed to the roof, his own circus, a one- handed balancing act. We watched from the far side of the lane while, cup overflowing, heart exuberant, he doused sparks, one by one. Charlie was old enough to remember the dead wagon that came for the heifer lost in calving, old enough to remember the tornado that tore a two-by-four from the barn to drive it through a sow’s belly; he was old enough to know there is sufficient violence for everyone — every human, every beast. So, caught without bucket that day, Charlie skittered along the roof, china cup in his weathered hand, a pig’s pain guiding his immense heart.