He always wore
one strap down on his faded overalls and the soles on his favorite work boots
had been re-souled more times than even he knew. He said he never could figure
out why somebody didn’t just sell the soles because you never wear out the top part.
His John Deer ball cap set a wee bit crooked on his sun weathered head and God
only knows what the stains are? He told time by looking at the sun because it
was always right and didn’t need no battery. In his hip pocket was a bag of
chew that gave him great pleasure he once told me, and he isn’t giving it up
not at his age. His teeth were all but gone but he could still eat a steak says
his gums are like iron after so long a time without them. He had a set of store
bought teeth his daughter insisted he get, only wore them one time and then hid
them someplace nobody would ever find. All the kids and grandkids liked coming
to see them at the old farm, hell all of them worked it at one time or another.
They learned with their hands and back what hard work was and to his
recollection not a one of them died from it. Today he was walking slowly to the
barn where he would climb on his tractor that was probably about as old as he
was, a real gem he would say and get the work done right the first time. His
wife of seventy years sat on the front porch waving as he passed by the house
like he has been doing for more years than either can really remember. “I’ll
bring you some tomatoes” he shouted to her, she smiled and waved again knowing
the tomatoes had long since been gone and the only thing still standing were
corn stalks left to die with everything else on the farm. He rode his tractor
down the dirt road and around the barn then back to the house where he would
wave to her and ride some more. Come twilight she would ring the bell he had
mounted on the wooden porch wall well over sixty years ago, it told him supper
was on the table and to come on in. They sat at the same table in the same
kitchen in the same house where they had been for two lifetimes. She smiled at
him as he told her the tomatoes weren’t quite ready yet maybe tomorrow. With
supper finished he would have a seat in his favorite chair usually falling
asleep before the dishes were done. She would cover him with one of her many
quilts she had made over time and then climb into bed praying they had one more
day together. Sometime in the night she felt him climb in beside her whispering
he couldn’t sleep without her. They held hands and life became silent for two
caring, loving hearts.
Lovely details.
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