Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Hay Season

 In this dimly lit room, she can see that very little about the hospital has changed in 15 years.  Sterile white plaster walls.  Brown linoleum floors.  Scents of antiseptic and soap.  The memory she draws upon is from the last time she was here.  A happier occasion.  The birth of her son.  This time, though, she is here to be with him while he dies. The doctor has confirmed her worst fear.  There is nothing more to be done.

This son of hers, Jack, lays motionless on a narrow bed.  In an attempt to make his few remaining hours more comfortable, he has been covered with a blanket, a damp cloth placed on his forehead.  Traces of blood at the corners of his mouth are the only visible sign of the accident, almost letting her believe that her son is not so terribly broken after all.  She remembers the night he was born.  A perfect little boy.  But still, a mixed blessing.  Sons in this family grow up to be farmers, and if there is one certainty in farming, it is that nothing is ever certain.

                                              ***

The boy’s father is not at the hospital, as one would expect.  The cut hay is ready to be baled, and rain is forecasted.  Hanging in the balance is the livelihood that one thousand acres of sweet timothy will provide.  But as he hurries to bale row after row, anguish consumes him.  Farming is a gamble. Rain. Insects. Fire.  Drought.  The risk of serious injury.  Still, he should have realized that his boy was too inexperienced to drive a tractor so close to the irrigation ditch.  So close that a wheel happened to catch the edge of the slope, and the tractor rolled, crushing his son beneath its iron bulk.

                                               ***

Around two a.m. she loses her fight with exhaustion and nods off, but is roused a few hours  later by an insistent Wake up Elsie! She is alert in an instant, heart pounding.  Her eyes, full of questions, seek answers from the owner of the voice.  Her husband.  Tears are streaming down his face.

Henry? 

Her tone is shrill.  His words spill out, cracked with emotion. 

It’s ok , Elsie!  Look!  Jack’s conscious! The doc thinks he’s going to make it!

It takes a moment for her disbelief to turn to relief, and then, utter joy, and she rushes to cradle her son, her boy, her baby, in her arms.

For now, Henry decides, the news about the rain can wait.

10 comments:

  1. I could see this story in a book. If he made it I'm sure he had a huge recovery time.

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  2. Alissa, amazingly enough, the real life 15 year old did make it! I don't know how-he was pretty badly injured. He walks with a limp now, but that could be from the time he was kicked by a steer...

    Thank you so much for reading and commenting!

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  3. Oh this is very sad and I to have heard this happened more times than I would ever want to.
    It is a fact of farming, the machinery is safer now but it is also much faster so a lot of limbs have been lost. Farming is a hard life to put your children into. Tired people forget the little things and accidents happen.
    Great writing and I love those old photos. B

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  4. Buttons-when my uncle was a young boy in the 40's, he fell into the manure spreader on a local farm. His wounds were deep and very dirty, and I don't think he was near a hospital, so he didn't receive treatment for many hours. Amazingly, he pulled through too. When my family and I lived in the small rural town of Alfred, New York, the local college had a program called Farmedics-specifically geared towards responding to farm injuries. Thanks for your lovely comment:)

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  5. The was a 71 year-old man that was attending a tractor rally at the Nebraska State Fair this year (they set a world record with 950+ tractors,) and died when it rolled over on him. I imagine it was a vintage tractor and more difficult to control.

    Loved the story.

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  6. Nancy, that is so tragic! A similar thing happened here at a local farm museum's threshing bee-an elderly man volunteered to drive a tractor and wagon, and he jack knifed and rolled and was killed. Same thing-vintage machinery. Just so sad!

    I'm so glad you stopped by here:)

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  7. I can't believe this story is true. I am glad it had a happy ending! I always hear about several farming accidents on the local news each year and it makes me so sad. The big machinery can be so dangerous.

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    1. Tammy-farming is such a dangerous way to make a living, isn't it! When we lived in New York the the local university had a program called Farmedics-basically paramedic training for farm related accidents.

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  8. Valerie--- powerfully told! Even though I got here through the link on your most recent post and figured I knew what was going to happen, I was still caught up in it moment to moment. It's all the details -- the blood, the forecast, the mother dipping into sleep against her will -- that make it captivating.

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    1. Esther, Thank you so much for visiting and commenting! I am so glad you stopped by!

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