Samuel
I pause in my writing, sensing something or someone. I look up from my journal into the eyes of Mrs. Lund. My cheeks blush warm; she has caught me writing and thinking about her. I quickly slap my journal closed.
Her good eye focuses on me. “I didn’t mean to startle you.”
I swallow, trying to settle my nerves. “Didn’t expect anyone, that’s for sure.”
She looks over the scenery, a faint, rough edge to her tone. “A good day for a stroll.”
“Yes.” I look down and notice King, the Nelsons’ pet blonde Labrador, at her heels. King, congenial to most people, has taken a special liking to Mrs. Lund. I remember my manners. “Care to sit?” I ask, and I move over on the slatted bench to make room.
Her hand flutters to her neck, wrapped in a colorful, crocheted scarf.
“I...suppose,” she answers without much certainty behind her words.
She sits on the edge of the bench, leaving some space between our legs.
What do we talk about?
I regret asking her to sit. Presently, my mind doesn’t dwell on conversing but on writing, and I can’t very well talk with her about what I’ve written in my journal. Or can I?
She releases me of the initial duty. “Did you grow up on a farm?”
She gives me the briefest of looks and focuses back on the rolling hills to the north. King slumps at her feet, unperturbed by the interruption in their walk.
“Yes. A dairy.” How much should I tell her? “You?” I ask.
She keeps her gaze straight ahead, but I notice how she nervously picks at the hemline of her blue, wool blazer. “No. My pa was a lumberjack and my ma a washerwoman. I took after my ma.”
I sense there’s more to her upbringing.
“Oh? How so?” I ask, hoping to draw her out.
I desire to know more about this mysterious woman with a past as veiled as her face.
She sighs heavily. “I married a man like my father and got hired on at the hotel where my mother worked.”
“And...your husband did not move to Menomonie with you?” I inquire.
She intakes a sharp breath. Perhaps I shouldn’t have asked. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean to pry,” I reassure her.
“No. I am sure you are curious about my...situation.” She turns and slants a short-lived smile at me, looking almost mischievous. “I would be.” She pauses and appears to be thinking. “To tell you the truth, I’ve not seen my husband for over five years. I believe that he’s dead. Jacob left me after...” She doesn't continue but bows her head and clenches the fingers on her left hand into a fist. With her right she reaches for the scarred side of her face. “Well, after the accident.”
I nod, not knowing whether to keep asking questions or not. Maybe if I offer something more personal, she might be more comfortable sharing those sorts of details about her life with
me.
“I was...to take over the home farm after my father died. Even though in his will he left the place to Mother. Plans were that I would operate the farm. But, unexpectedly,” I tilt my head and navigate how to proceed, “my mother remarried, and the farm is now in her husband’s name.”
I don’t tell her that my mother’s husband is dead and that it’s my fault. That’s too heavy. Too much.
She turns a sympathetic eye my way. “I’m sorry to hear that. It must be very difficult.”
I nod and agree. “It was. Is.” I switch the heat off myself. “But what about you? Why did you move from northern Wisconsin to Menomonie? And how did you and Mabel meet?”
“Ah, well. That’s a long story.” She smiles, slow and sad. “But I don’t want to ruin this pleasant afternoon with my misfortunes.”
“Well, it should be ‘tit for tat.’ We can share the unpleasantness.”
On a whim I wink at her. She responds with a blooming blush on her smooth, ivory cheek.
“Let’s just say ill-fortune led me to Menomonie, and I met Mabel through her sister, Robin, whom I...gardened with. And Mabel has been asking me to come visit for quite some Time. I finally agreed.”
Her voice sounds scratchier, and she coughs.
I offer my canteen of water to her, unscrewing the cap. “Here, take a drink.”
She takes it, and our fingers brush; hers are icy cold. I’d like to wrap them in the shelter of mine, which, I’m sure, are many degrees warmer.
“Um, thank you,” Mrs. Lund says.
She tips the canteen back, drinks, wipes her mouth, smiles, and hands it back to me. I take it, affixing the cap.
I search her good eye for the truth. “Are you glad you’ve come?” She nods like a happy child. “Yes.”
“Me too,” I tell her, and we sit in silence for a few moments, watching a flock of blackbirds swoop and dive and land in the branches of a nearby oak.
Their cackle reaches an annoying decibel and severs the companionable link we share.
I stand, sling the canteen on my shoulder, tuck my journal in my large coat pocket, and offer my elbow to her. “Can I escort you back to the house, Mrs. Lund?”
A half-smile appears on her face. “I’d like that. Thank you. And you must call me Molly.”
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