by Mary Daurio
Earl Grey tea
I
headed off to school, so Dad lost his general dogsbody to help out with the
horses. Mom filled in, though she was lucky to know the mane from the tail.
“It
will be fine Enid. You can drive Bead. He's gentle, and you’ll be safe as in
your mother’s arms.” Dad poured her a cup of tea. He slid it towards her,
across the table, then gently caressed her dainty hand.
The
fact that her mother had been dead for several years didn’t make the prospect
very appealing. Furthermore, Bead was a huge horse with pie plate hooves. Mom
always thought he should be carrying a knight in shining armour, never mind
pulling a cart. He was a beautiful Standardbred. Breading being what it was in
those days he could have had a little Percheron in his bloodlines, as he was
massive and shining black. Despite her inexperience and Bead’s size, she gamely
agreed to lend a hand.
It
all went well on the trip down the road away from the farm. Bead tucked his head
in behind father and followed the lead horse. Mom didn’t have to do much real
driving, just hold the reins. It was the trip home that caused the grief. They
turned their horses on the road, and now Bead was in the lead. We used to let
the horses travel home pretty quick; they wanted to anyway, and it gave us an
idea of the speed they had. I didn’t say it was a good idea. Bead, now with the
prospect of home and following a habit we allowed took off on the trot, tail in
the air, his pie-plate hooves eating up the road. Mom did the only thing she
knew how, pull on the reins. Classic rookie mistake, instead of the desired
effect this just made Bead go faster. Dad hollered “Let the lines go loose!”
Standardbreds go faster when you pull on the lines.
Mom
couldn’t hear him, and Bead didn’t let up until he was in the barnyard. She got
off the cart and waited for Dad and his horse to arrive. Giving the big black
horse a pat she said, “No offence boy but I like my beads on a necklace!”
Her
voice and her hands shook. “That’s it for me. You can tend to these horses. I’ve
housework calling my name, and from now on that’s where I’ll stay!”
Days
passed, and Mom was called into service again. Not with the horses this time,
but to help fix the line fence at the river crossing. Cows were finding their
way through. Fencing was also something I would have helped with if at home. Mom
took to the task riding beside Dad on the little B tractor, as it would be
needed to pull the wire tight for proper fence mending.
The
river at the point of mending was at least waist-deep in a dry year with a
shallow ledge bordering the deep. Dad waded in and secured the wire. It was when
he came back to the little B that trouble came fast and furious. He used the
wheel of the tractor to haul himself out, and his legs slipped behind the tire
as the tractor bucked back and landed on him, pinning him beneath it. The little
B was mired in mud, firmly planting him in the soggy river bed. The water
threating to cover him completely.
He
gasped, the wind knocked out of him. “Enid, go get the big tractor and the
chain. You’ll have to pull this tractor off me.”
She
ran to the shed as if Satan was chasing her, and powered back with the big
Newfield tractor and the heavy chain. Dad sandwiched between the little B, and
the muddy river bed was thankful for its cushion, so the weight of the machine
wasn’t on him completely. His legs were losing feeling, and he admitted to being
scared. Cold and tired, he was still able to direct her.
Her
hands slipped on the chain as she connected it, joining the two tractors. Her
knuckles came away bloody. “Jesus Christ,” she said. Dad wasn’t sure if she was
cursing or praying, because he never heard her curse in all their years of
marriage.
It
was time to try and haul the little tractor out of the river. The Newfield had
the power, hopefully. If it failed and the B slid back further into the mud and
water it would be a total disaster. Dad would remain buried in mud like a
crawdad.
“Enid,
take her out in first gear and not much throttle. Let her pull slow and steady.
“ He stopped because he was losing his wind, and she waited, worried. He drew in
as deep a breath as he was able and continued. “If you feel your tires slipping
back, brake and we'll re-evaluate. I know you can do it.”
She
did, and he lived to play another day. Once the tractor was off him, Dad
couldn't get up by himself. His legs were numb and semi-useless, so Mom had to
haul him up. She was sweating and panting, thankful for the cool fall breeze
that sang through the willows at the river bank. Thankful for that and a whole
lot more.
“I
should have put the chain on you,” she said, hugging him as he leaned against
her and kissed her bloody knuckles with his muddy lips.
I
went home that weekend and heard all they had been up to and wondered if it was
safe to leave this pair alone.
Dad
tells his story about the fiasco with the tractor and ends it, “I knew she loved
me the way her feet flew to get the tractor and rescue me from disaster. She
still carries the torch!”
Mom
turned around from the stove where she was tending stew and laughed as loud as I
ever heard her.“Don’t flatter yourself, boy. I just didn’t want to get stuck
caring for those crow bait horses you insist on filling the barn with.”
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