Rhubarb (ReDux)

Heat and dust.  The little girl kicked a stone down the road.  No fair!  Sent to the store twice in one day, a quarter clutched in her small, sweaty hand.

At the corner the old woman with the sun hat still worked in her yard.  This morning she’d been clipping roses, now she was cutting rhubarb with a sharp knife.  Whack! at the ground. Whack! again at the top.  A pile of shiny red stalks at her feet, huge wilting leaves heaped on the grass.

Little Girl put her head down and walked faster.  Too late.  “Barbara Jayne!  Would you like to take some rhubarb to your mother?”  “No!  I hafta go to the store!”  She broke into a run.  “Your mother makes such lovely pies.”

Little Girl ran faster down the long hill.  She stopped at the crossing, hopped into the street as a car horn blared, raced to the curb and up the steps to the store.  Inside it was stuffy but cooler.  The fat storeman smoked at the back counter, looked up from his newspaper.  “Back again, huh?”  Little Girl laid the quarter on the counter.   “Loaf of bread, quart of milk.”  The storeman’s eyebrow shot up.  “Please!”

He fetched the milk from the icebox, the bread from the bin, took the quarter.  “You got change comin’ or do you want some candy?”  “No!”  Little Girl grabbed the groceries.  “Ma says put it on her account.”  She slammed out the door, into the blinding afternoon.

The hill was steeper now that she was walking up it.  She was thirsty, should have bought a soda.  But Sister would have seen the bottle and told on her.  Pooh.  She stopped, tried to put the loaf of bread on her head for shade.  It wouldn’t stay, dropped in the dusty road.  A car was coming!  She picked up the loaf, wiped the package clean on her dress and turned her back on the swirl of dust stirred up by the passing auto.

By the time she reached the top of the hill, Little Girl thought a drink of milk might be a good idea.  Nope.  She’d be in trouble with Sister for opening the bottle.

At the corner, Old Woman had disappeared from her yard, the rhubarb stalks were gone, too.  But the big green leaves still lay on the grass.  Little Girl looked up and down the road.  She looked at Old Woman’s house.  No one.  Setting the milk and bread at the side of the road, she picked up a rhubarb leaf, plonked it on her head.  Cool relief!

Little Girl walked toward home, remembering, in the nick of time, to turn back and fetch the bread and milk from the roadside.

“Hurry up, slow poke!  That milk will be curdled by the time you get in here.”  Sister stood on the porch.  “What do you have on your head?”  Ma stood at the kitchen window, laughing.

“Sun hat!”  Little Girl tipped her head back, stuck out her tongue.

Sister bounded off the porch, jerked the milk and bread out of Little Girl’s hands.  “Come on!  Ma’s gonna make a rhubarb pie for dinner.  You gotta go to the store for butter.”

 

 

Images designed by Hannah Fulop

March

Across our country

Reverberate blasts and cries

Will they hear them now?

 

Voices of the young

Crescendo, focused and strong

Media may hear

 

Boots are on the ground

Marching for all of our lives

Lawmakers still deaf

The Company

He had worked for The Company for eight months and had learned.  There were three kinds of employees: the Bigwigs, the Wheels and the Cogs.  The Bigwigs worked upstairs.  The Wheels had private offices.  The Cogs slogged it out in cubicles.  He was a Cog.

The physical plant was cheap.  Walls surrounded the private offices but they did not contain conversations therein.  He tried to keep his ears shut, he still heard too much.

Now one of the Bigwigs wanted to know what he knew about the Wheel who supervised him.  In the palace intrigue, whose side was he on?

Image from Flickr Commons

Calliope

I’m looking for my muse. Have you seen her? After searching for her in the usual haunts, I’ve decided she’s hiding from the daily onslaught of scandal, lies and corruption. I tried to keep her well with sleep and vegetables, but I’d find her sneaking peaks at MSNBC and reading WAPO. At first, I thought that might help, but for every hour she spent consuming TRMS she would spend three trembling under the bed. Maybe I need to let her go. Find a new muse with the muscle-mass of a body-builder and the goal focus of a raptor.

A drabble by Becky Kjelstrom

Painting by Charles Meynier

Inside Out- Haiku Triplet

 

Moss, darkness, cold, cling to

Bones of winter trees

A picture through a window

 

Sprinkles of rain, pelts of hail

Rivers pound boulders

Autos hum in the background

 

Mist obscures the distant peaks

Humus mutes footfalls

Nature from the inside out

 

image by Becky Kjelstrom

NOISE

She had lived there for ages.  When she first arrived, the walls of her apartment were thick.  In order to hear what was happening next door she had to strain her ears, even though her hearing was quite good.  Over the years, the vibrations, the rise and fall of decibels, the expanding and contracting frequencies, must have eroded wood and plaster.  How else to explain?  She was nearly deaf but clearly perceived the voices, movements, even the thoughts of her neighbors.  They might as well be in the same room as she.  They might as well be in her head.

Image by Denny Muller via Unsplash.com