Short Story

Adam alerted me to this short piece in this morning’s NY Times. It’s a gem.

SMALL FARM REPORT

By Verlyn Klinkenborg

Here is how things stand at midsummer. One of the Tamworth pigs is tame enough to be scratched behind the ears. The other isn’t. Two of the white geese have clubbed together and banished the third white goose from their society. The lame Ancona duck has taken refuge under the old chicken house. We would put her out of her misery, except that her misery is her life. The old Dominique rooster seems to be in a vertiginous state, always leaning and nearly always dozing. During the listless heat of the day, the chickens all lie in the dust beneath the pickup. The horses stand in the hickory shade, incognito in fly-masks, tails flicking.

The vegetable garden has gone feral. The walking onions, the chives and the blueberries are the only signs of civilization there. The less said about that the better. Hopes are high for next year. The crop of chipmunks is incredible. There have never been fatter woodchucks. The pasture is filled with the trial cawing of young crows. The swallows nearly clip me with their wings as I throw hay down from the loft. The bees are populous. The pasture at dawn is covered with spiderwebs that look like the footprints of ethereal elephants. The scarlet bee-balm is in bloom down by the mailbox, and the thistles are purpling. The hollyhocks are coming into blossom and also rotting in the leaf, as they always seem to do.

The days still come in order. Gray light collects in the bedroom long before dawn. Then comes a bleached noon and nearly always the threat of a late-afternoon thunderstorm. The darkness is notated by fireflies, who have been unusually numerous — or is it unusually bright? — this year. The crickets are now whining away, as if they were reeling in August. I am laying in all the thinking I can against a time when summer is in short supply.

Rocket Launch

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The guys have been launching rockets ever since they were, well, boys. I’ve watched Daryl and Matthew’s rockets take off vertically, then as if controlled by some unseen force, change directions and crash into the tree they were hiding behind. In this movie they pause while a plane flies overhead and you think how silly. And then you watch the missile launch and you think oh my god.

Have Paint Brush Will Travel

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After a short mid-summer break the crew is back at work, this time painting Goose’s house, which compared to ours, must feel like dessert. If time permits, they’ll move on to our barn and then Robby’s barn with a stop in between to demo our master bathroom.

Dan's Surprise

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The plan: Surprise Dan
The reason: He’s sixty
The ruse: Ask him to help me work at my house while his party gets prepped.
The sketchy part: Get him back to his house by 4:30 PM where the assembled throng awaits.

Dan and Adam arrive at my house around eleven, and after coffee and talk we begin installing replacement windows in my living room. We work through the lunch hour, after all they didn’t show up until nearly noon, and by 2 PM the windows are in with just a few trim details remaining. We break for lunch, and by 2:45 Dan is grumbling about how he’s done for the day. Nay, nay, I say, there is much more to be done.

The problem is, when Dan’s decided he’s done enough work, he always then leaves. Like a launched cruise missile, you can’t deter him. I know because we have a long history of working together. I call Linda to make sure our timing is right and she says keep him until 4 PM. I say I might have to break his legs and she says ok.

We go back to work, Dan finishes the last window around four, and I think we’re in the clear. Except that I head for the bathroom and when I return I find Dan stretched out with his eyes closed in Diane’s new reclining back chair.

“Dan, I’m going to take a shower,” I say.

“Fine,” he says.

“All I’m saying is I won’t be around in case you LEAVE,” I say.

“Fine,” he says, and proceeds to ask Matt for and then play with Matt’s new iPhone.

“Matt, where are your contacts”? Dan ask as he taps on the touch screen.

Oh nooooo, I think to myself.

Fifteen minutes go by (I imagine the assembled crowd back at the party site is getting restless) and I call Linda. “Linda, he hasn’t left yet but he tells me he’s going to in ten minutes. That gets him back to your house in twenty-five minutes.”

Sure enough, Dan finally leaves and Diane and I rush to change into our party clothes so we too may have some of those tasty appetizers catered by La Provence. We’re showered and dressed in ten minutes, and as we skate through the kitchen to exit our house in comes…. DAN.

“What are you doing here?” I try not to shout.

“I forgot my cell phone,” Dan replies.

“I would have brought it to you,” I say, almost letting the cat out.

“To my house? “ Dan asks.

“Yeah, we’re going to Bob and Mary’s for dinner.” Bob and Mary live near Dan, and I feel quite proud to come up with a reason to return the phone and to explain our pressed shirts and polished shoes.

Dan leaves the house, takes forever to get back into his car and out of the driveway, and I call Linda with a final update before we hit the road.

Was Dan surprised to see his street lined with cars? Damn right, he was.

Thanks to many, but first to his son Jim who initiated the event.

Photo Gallery

Dan’s Surprise

balloons_for_dan.jpg

The plan: Surprise Dan
The reason: He’s sixty
The ruse: Ask him to help me work at my house while his party gets prepped.
The sketchy part: Get him back to his house by 4:30 PM where the assembled throng awaits.

Dan and Adam arrive at my house around eleven, and after coffee and talk we begin installing replacement windows in my living room. We work through the lunch hour, after all they didn’t show up until nearly noon, and by 2 PM the windows are in with just a few trim details remaining. We break for lunch, and by 2:45 Dan is grumbling about how he’s done for the day. Nay, nay, I say, there is much more to be done.

The problem is, when Dan’s decided he’s done enough work, he always then leaves. Like a launched cruise missile, you can’t deter him. I know because we have a long history of working together. I call Linda to make sure our timing is right and she says keep him until 4 PM. I say I might have to break his legs and she says ok.

We go back to work, Dan finishes the last window around four, and I think we’re in the clear. Except that I head for the bathroom and when I return I find Dan stretched out with his eyes closed in Diane’s new reclining back chair.

“Dan, I’m going to take a shower,” I say.

“Fine,” he says.

“All I’m saying is I won’t be around in case you LEAVE,” I say.

“Fine,” he says, and proceeds to ask Matt for and then play with Matt’s new iPhone.

“Matt, where are your contacts”? Dan ask as he taps on the touch screen.

Oh nooooo, I think to myself.

Fifteen minutes go by (I imagine the assembled crowd back at the party site is getting restless) and I call Linda. “Linda, he hasn’t left yet but he tells me he’s going to in ten minutes. That gets him back to your house in twenty-five minutes.”

Sure enough, Dan finally leaves and Diane and I rush to change into our party clothes so we too may have some of those tasty appetizers catered by La Provence. We’re showered and dressed in ten minutes, and as we skate through the kitchen to exit our house in comes…. DAN.

“What are you doing here?” I try not to shout.

“I forgot my cell phone,” Dan replies.

“I would have brought it to you,” I say, almost letting the cat out.

“To my house? “ Dan asks.

“Yeah, we’re going to Bob and Mary’s for dinner.” Bob and Mary live near Dan, and I feel quite proud to come up with a reason to return the phone and to explain our pressed shirts and polished shoes.

Dan leaves the house, takes forever to get back into his car and out of the driveway, and I call Linda with a final update before we hit the road.

Was Dan surprised to see his street lined with cars? Damn right, he was.

Thanks to many, but first to his son Jim who initiated the event.

Photo Gallery

Stroke of Midnight. Plus One.

I hadn’t meant to stay. Actually, I had meant to miss this by hours — Michael hinted that Hil B would be in appropriate garb at the one-minute-after-midnight Sudbury Paperstore long-awaited sale of the last in the Harry Potter series, so Tricia and I swung by about 7:30. Kinda forlorn actually, and after a nice chat with the completely normally dressed Miss B, we left. Not even a picture.

But as I crawled into bed about 11:00, I couldn’t live with the yawning void of incompleteness, and back I went. This time there was rather more life, and the Divine Miss B was in more appropriate regalia.

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I hadn’t meant to stay. But the crowds built, the excitement mounted, and we spectator types, both empathetic voyeurs as well as wry connoisseurs of irony, lingered. And at the stroke of 12:01, a velvet drape was whisked off the waiting cases of tomes, and the first happy customer headed off for some long-awaited closure.

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It was pretty calm. Some folks in costume, most not, the first customer but a putative adult in street clothes, and yet many a witch or specific character impersonator — even one Death Eater in a Scream mask — surged down the rapidly flowing line to claim their own reward. I shot a few images but was too shy to capture the most salient result — big smiles on young and not-so-young alike. The sense of disbelieving rejoicing was widespread. So I leave you with this image of two happy campers with their freshly-minted magic carpet ride, me sidling in on their dad capturing their moment before joining the flow outta there.

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More Photos 

Matt's Surprise

Matt claims he didn’t ask for an iPhone for his birthday and given that he has the youthful Velcro-like mind, I won’t argue. I thought he had, or maybe I translated his enthusiasm into a a birthday wish.

His phone, ordered online, came the morning of his birthday, but we lied, and said it had not. Goose and I spent half the day switching calling plans and getting a temporary phone number so Matt would have a working phone and not just pretty piece of metal and plastic. There are lots of reasons why it took so long, most of which have to do with my stolen identity which I won’t bore you all with.

Now, how to give him gift? Wrapped in a box next to his cake? I think not. Goose said, “Give me the phone, call me, he’ll hear it ring, I’ll pull it out of my pocket and answer it, and then I’ll say, ‘Matt, it’s for you.’ “ A lover of double entendres I thought how perfect. The call is for him and so is the phone.

Diane and I phoned from the kitchen. Matt’s back was turned to us so we could watch the action, and then sing happy birthday.

The ring tone is that irritating cranking noise.

The Video

Matt’s Surprise

Matt claims he didn’t ask for an iPhone for his birthday and given that he has the youthful Velcro-like mind, I won’t argue. I thought he had, or maybe I translated his enthusiasm into a a birthday wish.

His phone, ordered online, came the morning of his birthday, but we lied, and said it had not. Goose and I spent half the day switching calling plans and getting a temporary phone number so Matt would have a working phone and not just pretty piece of metal and plastic. There are lots of reasons why it took so long, most of which have to do with my stolen identity which I won’t bore you all with.

Now, how to give him gift? Wrapped in a box next to his cake? I think not. Goose said, “Give me the phone, call me, he’ll hear it ring, I’ll pull it out of my pocket and answer it, and then I’ll say, ‘Matt, it’s for you.’ “ A lover of double entendres I thought how perfect. The call is for him and so is the phone.

Diane and I phoned from the kitchen. Matt’s back was turned to us so we could watch the action, and then sing happy birthday.

The ring tone is that irritating cranking noise.

The Video