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He Needed a Bride to Stack the Hay — She Turned His Forsaken Acres Into the Jewel of the West

She had wrapped it herself in Zanesville the morning she left and had not unwrapped it since. She held it for a moment in the dark room. The weight of it familiar in a way that made the strangeness of everything else recede slightly. And then she carried it out. The south pasture lay east of the barn, still in shadow.

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She could see where the ground had been worked once, years back. The soil pressed down now, compacted. A few dried stalks from something that had tried and not been finished. She set the blade against the earth and pushed with her boot. The ground resisted. Three years of frost and sun had locked it down. She worked the spade in at an angle and leaned.

And the first slab of sod came up black and cold and smelling of something that had been waiting. She worked for an hour before the light came fully. She worked another hour after that. When he came out of the barn, he stopped. He stood at the fence line with his hands loose at his sides and watched her. She was 50 yards into the pasture by then.

A long dark line of turned earth behind her. She did not look up. He did not come across the fence. He stood there for perhaps a full minute, then went back the way he had come. The old hand found her there mid-morning when he came to move the horses to the lower paddock. He leaned on the fence post and watched with the same expression he seemed to keep for most things.

Not surprised. Not moved. Simply present. South facing. He said finally. She drove the spade in and turned another row. I know. She said. He came back the next morning. She was already in the pasture when the sky was still gray at the edges. The spade finding its rhythm in the cold ground. She heard the fence creak and knew without looking that it was him.

He did not cross over. He stood where he had stood the morning before. Hands loose, watching. She worked one row and then another. The turned earth was darker than the surrounding ground. Almost wet looking against the pale gray. The smell of it had changed from the first day. Less like cold storage now. More like something active.

Ready. He stayed for perhaps 10 minutes and then left. The third morning came with a second spade, a long-handled one, older than hers, the blade worn thin at the tip from years of use. He set it against the fence post without a word and looked at her across the distance. “I have it,” she said. He looked at the turned rows.

He looked at her. He picked the spade back up and went to the barn. She watched him go and then turned another row. That evening she sat at the kitchen table mending a tear in the girl’s good dress. And the old hand came in from the cold and set his hat on the hook by the door. He poured himself a cup from the pot she had left on the stove and stood at the window with it looking toward the south pasture in the last of the light.

There was nothing to see out there now but the dark strip of worked ground, visible even at this hour. He was quiet for a long time. Then he said, without turning, “That ground hasn’t been touched since before she passed.” She set the dress down on her knee. “The wife,” he said. He was still looking at the window.

“She had the same notion about that corner of the field. Talked about a kitchen garden. Talked about it the whole summer of ’80. He took a slow sip of the coffee. Then it was ’81 and it didn’t happen. The lamp made the room feel small and close. Somewhere upstairs the girl moved across the floor and then was still.

She picked the dress back up, found the needle. The old hand didn’t say anything more for a while and when he did speak again, it was only to say the coffee was good and thank her for leaving it. He set the cup in the dry sink and took his hat and went out. She sat with the dress in her lap and did not sew for a time.

Through the window, the strip of turned earth was barely visible now. Just a shadow of a different shade against the field. February, 1881. She had not known the month until now. She had not asked. She threaded the needle and kept on. The morning came in cold and gray. A low ceiling of clouds sitting flat over the basin.

She was in the side yard beating dust from a rug she’d found rolled behind the door of the spare room when she heard small feet in the grass behind her. She did not turn right away. She kept at the rug, one measured stroke and then another until the footsteps stopped just short of her. The girl was standing at the edge of the hard-packed yard with both hands held out in front of her, cupped together, her chin tipped down to look at what she was carrying.

She lifted her hands a little when she saw she’d been noticed. In her palms was a fistful of chicory, five, maybe six stems pulled up rough at the root. The blue flowers still open despite the cold. She set the rug beater against the fence post. She crossed to the girl and crouched down so they were level with each other.

The flowers were the color of a clear sky, which that morning sky was not. She took them from the small hands and straightened. Her throat closed the way a door closes when the latch catches. She turned toward the fence and looked at the line of ridge beyond the near field. Not at anything in particular. She stood there with the stems in her hand until she could breathe without it showing.

When she turned back, the girl was still there, still watching. She looked down at the flowers again. She said they were beautiful. She said it quietly and without looking up and then she walked to the house and the girl, after a moment, followed. She put the stems in a tin cup and worked water into it from the pitcher on the shelf.

Set the cup on the window sill above the dry sink where the light, such as it was, came through in the afternoon. The girl sat at the table for the rest of the afternoon. She did not ask for anything and she did not offer to help. She simply sat, watching, the way a cat will settle near someone who has not frightened it.

They worked in the same room without speaking and it was not uncomfortable. At supper, the girl ate her bowl and went upstairs without being told. He came in from the south field sometime after dark. Hung his hat, washed his hands in the basin. She had left a plate covered with a cloth on the stove shelf. He pulled the cloth back.

He ate standing up the way he sometimes did when he was tired. Then he turned to set the plate in the dry sink and he stopped. The tin cup sat on the window sill with its stems leaning slightly to one side. The blue petals gone dark in the low light. He looked at it for a moment. He set the plate down carefully without sound and went to find his daughter.

June came in warm and stayed. The kitchen garden had taken hold the way way good ground does when it has been properly worked. Not all at once, not with any announcement, but steadily, row by row, until one morning she looked out from the doorway and the beds were full. Carrot tops feathering, bean tendrils finding the stakes she had driven in May.

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