A trip to the farm was not something that appeared on the kitchen calendar after a family planning session. It was always wonderful, but it just up and happened. My father would call home toward the middle of the day on a Friday and announce to Martha that we were off to Knox County. As soon as elementary school turned out, I would be piled int the back of the car, rushed home and shortly thereafter, off we would go, speeding east out of New Mexico toward my aunt and uncle’s farm in Texas.
It
was about a 5-hour trek. If we got going quickly and only stopped once for a
bathroom break, then we got there in time for a late meal. Course, when you crossed the New Mexico/Texas
border you automatically lost an hour. So supper was going to be late, no
matter how fast we went. The time change seemed to fuel my Dad’s focus on
getting out the door.
“It’s
4:30 in Texas!” he would holler out to no one in particular, as he waited at
the back door for my mother to get whatever we needed to travel with.
Once,
after we had got going and were traveling down the road, I heard her say to
him:
“Bill,
scooting out the backdoor on short notice for several nights in Knox County isn’t
like running into town for an ice cream cone at Dairy Queen. Things have to be
collected and packed. The car has to be taken care of. I have to get a snack
packed and coffee made for the thermos. And you don’t give me any warning.”
He
listened and then said quietly, “You make too much of all this, Sugar. When I
call and say we are going to the farm just get yourself and the boy together
and I’ll take care of the rest.”
There
was a long pause before my mother responded: “Okay, fine.”
My
Dad never seemed to get that phrase. They were married almost half a century. I
never saw him snap on the reality that “okay, fine” actually meant that
retaliation was looming. He never got this. Never. Well, he wasn’t getting it
this time either.
It
was on our next trip to the farm, some months down the way, when the ax fell on
my father.
I
came out the backdoor of Will Rogers Elementary at the final bell and there my
mother was in the car parked along the curb in approximately the usual place. I
remember vaguely having a plan to go down the road to one of my bud’s house to ride
bikes after getting home.
“No,”
mother said. “We’re off to the farm.”
That
was fine with me. I loved to go.
I
immediately noticed a difference in my mother as she drove us home. She was
remarkably pleasant. Absent was the kind of tension that always came with the
scurrying about that was required to get us off on these trips. She asked about
my day and listened attentively. We
talked about the books I would need to take on the trip because, farm or no
farm, I would have to get my homework addressed over the weekend.
When
we got to the house I expected to be told to get out of the way, so she could
tilt around the house like a whirlwind before my Dad rolled in. It didn’t
happen. We walked in the back door, she went down the hall and shortly emerged
with her small travel bag and a little cosmetics container that she always
called her ditty bag.
She
then turned her attention to putting together my little suitcase. She even called
me into my room where she was working and very pleasantly engaged me in
conversation about what I would like to wear.
After
we packed my little bag she said, “Let’s have a cool drink and wait for your Daddy
to get here.” We retired to the kitchen and she poured us both a tall glass of
iced tea. I sat at the table and watched her calmly drink her tea and smoke a
cigarette.
Presently we heard my father’s old work car leave the pavement and roll up the dirt and gravel road to the back door. At these sounds she began to clear the table and tidy up the sink area. When he walked in the back door, she had finished and collected our things. We stood ready to depart.
My
father breezed right past us with hardly a glance on the way to the bathroom. When
he returned, my mother had installed me in the backseat of the car and the
little dab of luggage was tucked away in the trunk. She stood outside the car
and smoked another cigarette.
Coming
out the backdoor, my Father had a puzzled look on his face. He looked at her
and she said, “Lock that back door. There’s the boy and I’ve got what I need.”
For
just a moment he looked startled. But that passed quickly. He locked the back
door and scurried down the steps and into the car. We were on our way toward Texas.
We
had just rolled into Seminole, not far over the Texas line, getting ready for
the longer run over to Snyder when my Dad happened to glance at the fuel gauge.
He was surprised to notice that it didn’t indicate full.
“Gas
gauge says we’re nearly out of gas,” he exclaimed. He then looked over at my
mother with a kind of look that seemed to indicate that he expected some word
of explanation would issue forth from her lips. But she simply continued to
gaze out the window with a casual and serene countenance.
He
pulled into the Conoco station on the outskirts of town. I slipped out of the
back seat and found the rest room. I didn’t need to go all that much, but when
my Dad was driving on trips you didn’t want to pass up an opportunity. My mother
stayed in the car. Shortly, we pulled out of the station and the trip was
resumed.
Another
hour into the trip and we were really into rural country. It was dinner time
now, and my Father asked for his thermos of coffee. And maybe it was time to
have a sandwich? Martha said there wasn’t any.
Dad
was puzzled. Nothing? Really?
Martha
shrugged and looked out her window.
I
could tell Dad was puzzled and working on how this turn of events came to be. I
watched him carefully. He just kept staring straight out the window, watching
the road. But his hands were working on the wheel in an agitated manner. He
finally took a plentiful breath, gave a long exhaling “well” and then lapsed
into silence. We were all quiet now.
Finally
he announced, “We’re almost to Snyder, and I’m hungry. Guess we’ll stop there
and get a little something. How would that be, Shorty?”
I
was enthusiastic, of course. A second stop on a trip was unprecedented, let
alone getting to eat out somewhere.
We
made to the farm about an hour and a half later than usual and settled in for
the night right after.
I came around the corner into the kitchen the next morning to find my father sitting at the table, cup of coffee in hand and a perplexed kind of look on his face. My uncle, Charles Meek, sat on the other side of the table with his chair tilted back against the wall, his arms folded across his chest, grinning like a Cheshire cat. Aunt Gladys was at the stove and Martha was serving biscuits onto the table.
Bill
looked up at her and said, “You didn’t bring any of my things? Nothing?”
“Well,
like I said, no, I didn’t bring any of your things.”
My
Dad turned his face and gazed at his brother-in-law who, still grinning, nodded
almost imperceptibly.
My
Mother continued, “Bill, you told me to get myself and the boy in the car with
whatever we needed, and you would take care of the rest.”
“Well,”
my Dad said and then just let that word hang in the air like an orphan.
“You
know,” my uncle offered, “it sure is nice to have a wife who will obey.” He
continued to grin broadly.
My
Dad looked over at him and said quietly, “Yeah.” Then, “A blessing sure
enough.”
Aunt
Gladys approached the table with the eggs while my mom got the rest of the
things in place. “You boys eat some breakfast and we’ll get you outfitted while
Charles is out tending to chores” my aunt directed.
By
now I had taken my place at the table and noticed my Dad was wearing the same
clothes he had driven down in, that he needed a shave, and that his hair wasn’t
all that tidy. But he was quite a sight to see once he had been equipped with a
new wardrobe and kit for the weekend!
Dad usually wore his fishing cap, which was really an old ball cap that was stashed in his tackle box which was, of course, back in the storeroom at home. One of Uncle Charles’ straw work hats fit after a fashion.
A
cotton work shirt, again from Charles’ closet, was pressed into action. It served
but did not fit all that well. It was more
than big enough around the chest and girth. Charles was a stockier man than
Bill Pharis. He was a good deal shorter as well. So, the shirt was bigger and
baggier than needed, and the sleeves were short. Real short. That was remedied
by simply rolling up the sleeves.
It
was not so easy to disguise the height and weight differential when it came to
trousers. Charles had plenty of denim work pants not being used. But the same
challenge had to be faced as with the shirt. The waist was plenty ample. Gladys
produced a length of rope that allowed Bill to cinch up the waist. But the legs
were a different matter.
“Why
you look pretty good in pedal pushers, Bill,” chortled Charles when Bill
appeared from the bedroom with breeches legs that barely covered his calves. He
still had his long black socks on that he had worn to work the day before, so
these covered up the exposed part of his legs.
It
was spring so no jacket was required.
The
problem of shoes could not be fixed. Bill had exceptionally long and narrow
feet. He would simply have to make do with his dress shoes he had worn
down.
“Let’s
look on the bright side,” he said to Charles.
“Man can’t do chores in dress shoes.”
“Fair
enough” Charles said with a grin. “Don’t
want to see you sloshing around near the hog trough in those” pointing at his
shoes.
The
process was complete when Gladys produced a toothbrush still packaged up which
she had back in the closet. Bill and Charles could share a razor.
On
Saturday afternoon Bill, my uncle and I piled into the truck and went down to
Paul’s Store to pick up some bait before heading over to Lake Kemp for some fishing.
My
Dad’s dress caught Paul’s attention the minute we walked through the door, but
he didn’t say anything. Charles just grinned when he caught Paul eyeing my Dad.
“Town folk dress funny,” Charles remarked.
My
Dad took the invitation to tell the tale. The men all joined in commiserating
about the challenge of dealing with wives.
They ended the whole thing with the old proverb: “women — can’t live with
them and can’t live without them.” It was good natured.
The
next time an occasion to go to the farm presented itself, my Dad’s approach was
a good deal different.
It
was a Monday morning at breakfast. My Dad said to my Mom as he was reaching for
another biscuit, “I’m thinking about calling Charles and seeing if he could do
a little fishing this weekend if we ran over there. What do you think?”
Mom looked thoughtful for a moment. “You talking about going on Friday after work?”
“That’s
my thinking,” Dad said.
“I
believe we could,” she said.
“You
up for that, Shorty?” my Dad asked me.
“You
know it.”
“Good,”
my mother said. “It’s settled. I’ll have everything packed and ready when you
get in on Friday.”