The Brat
“Take this loaf of
bread in to your Mother and let her know we’ll be ready for dinner in about
fifteen minutes.”
“Okay, Dad” I
said, anxious as always to be considered capable of carrying out an assignment.
So why, like so
many times, did I feel the urge to do something I knew was going to get me in
trouble?
I loved to feed
the chickens and had been in hot water several times that summer because I had
shared food intended for the family with the appreciative flock of birds that
roamed our farm yard. Just the week before I had decimated a fresh batch of
doughnuts. Mom had given me a fresh doughnut to eat, reminding me to go sit on
the back steps so the crumbs would not fall on the freshly washed kitchen
floor. I loved those doughnuts and so did Dad. Mom made batches of several
dozen doughnuts at a time, rolling out an expanse of dough to just the right
thickness and cutting it with the special cutter that created the hole and the
doughnut with one quick cutting and twisting motion. She would then place the
dough in a cast iron skillet filled with hot, hot lard. The circle of dough
would sink briefly and then pop to the surface and in a minute they were ready
to be turned. Mom turned them quickly, exposing the brown bottoms and she usually
stood, fork poised, waiting to lift them out. Row after row of doughnuts slowly
appeared, cooling on layers of newspaper until the last doughnut was fried.
So there I sat on
the back steps, eating my doughnut and watching the crumbs fall when first one
and then another white chicken sauntered over, neck arching in sync with their
steps. I threw a little chunk of doughnut out on the grass and they immediately
responded, pecking at the crumbs and scratching for more. The activity was a
signal to several more chickens that food was available and first two and then
four more birds joined the first two. I couldn’t resist – I shared half my
doughnut with the appreciative fowl. A bite for me, a chunk for them and the
doughnut was gone. All eyes were on me as if to say “got any more?”
When I saw Mom
leave the kitchen I sneaked inside and grabbed two more doughnuts. The ever
increasing flock greeted my return, clucking and eyeing me closely. Soon the
two doughnuts were gone and I went in and grabbed a handful. I stood on the
back steps like a queen surrounded by her adoring subjects and dispensed my
favors.
“Young lady, WHAT
are you doing?” Dad’s voice shocked me out of my royal reverie.
“Nothin’ Dad,
honest” I said, using my fallback position of innocence whenever confronted
with my misdeeds.
“In the house with
you” he said and called out for my mother. “Evelyn, how many doughnuts did you
make?”
“Exactly six
dozen, why?” came her voice from the other room.
“She’s been
feeding the chickens again” he replied and I knew I was going to get a
spanking.
“Over the chair”
he said and I reluctantly leaned over the kitchen chair and took a few hard
whacks to my bottom, this time it was only with his hand and not the leather
belt but my tears came quickly nonetheless.
This was the most
recent in a string of feeding incidents; I had even discovered that chickens
would eat their own eggs if they were tossed on the ground. Each time I was
disciplined, first by what my parents called “a good talking to” and when that
failed the spankings while I leaned over the white wooden chair, grabbing the
rung as I was instructed.
So why on this day
I didn’t just walk across the yard with the loaf of bread and give it to my
mother is still a mystery. Having recently hit the snack jackpot with me, the
chickens had taken to following me in hopes of another treat. So I opened the
loaf of bread and tossed a slice on the ground. They pounced on it, quickly
tearing it to shreds. What could I do – I gave them another slice and another
slice until there were only four slices left in the bag. Rather nonchalantly, I
took the nearly empty bread sack in the house.
Mom had placed an
urgent call in to my grandmother when Dad unexpectedly announced that the men,
meaning he and my grandfather, would be there for the noon meal. Mom was caught
short of bread and no meal was complete on the farm without a plate of bread
and a crock of butter. When she saw the few slices of bread she assumed that
was all my grandmother had.
The men filed in
the kitchen, pausing at the sink to pump a little water and scrub their hands
with a bar of Lava soap. Their chairs scraped on the worn linoleum as they
pulled up to the table and began passing around the bowls of food.
“Could we get a
little more bread” my Dad asked.
“That’s all there
is George, I ran out and your mother must have been almost out too.”
“I sent Carolyn to
the house with a full sack of bread” he said and their eyes met across the
table, knowing without asking what had happened to the rest of the bread. The
remainder of the meal was eaten in silence except for the sounds of forks
clinking against plates and Kool Aid being poured into tall glasses. Although
the silence was ominous I foolishly held out hope that they would just forget
about the missing bread. As soon as the meal was over my dad said “out to the
granary with you” and my heart sank. The worst punishment of all was being
locked in the granary and, as I followed him across the yard, I began
imploring, “Please Daddy, don’t shut the door, please Daddy, I’ll be good, I
won’t do it again, please Daddy please don’t shut the door.”
Dad was not a man
given to sympathy – he had been raised in a stern and often cruel way and his
was the only way he knew to parent a disobedient child. Spare the rod and spoil
the child was his mantra. But for some reason, on this day, he yielded to my
entreaty and put me in the granary, but left the sliding door open a foot or
so. There was plenty of light to look around the bin that still held many
bushels of grain that had been specially cleaned to be used as seed wheat. I
sat in the middle of the small area, sifting the kernels through my fingers and
choking back the big sobs threatening to overcome me.
The granary door
was positioned so that it was not visible from most of the farmyard leaving me
nothing to look at out the door other than the nearby trees. After a few
minutes of sifting grain and craning my neck as far out the door as I could, I
began to worry that Dad would forget me there. I tested getting out of the door
and jumping the short distance to the ground, scrambling back in as it occurred
to me that I might get caught. It seemed that an hour had passed and I had gone
through the fear and anger stage directly to being bored, my nemesis when it
came to good behavior.
First one and then
another chicken came around the corner of the granary, peering at me with their
little ringed eyes, red combs perched atop their heads and their sturdy yellow
legs lifting high in the tall grass. I grabbed a small handful of wheat and let
it drizzle through the fingers of my outstretched arm. The reaction was
immediate – the chickens scurried to the open door. I grabbed another handful
of grain and threw it out the door. More chickens began to gather, fueling my
behavior. I put my hands together and began to scoop up larger portions of
grain and fling them out the door. This went on for several minutes – the birds
and I joined in our own little ecstasies.
Meanwhile, on the
other side of the granary it became obvious to my father that mischief was
afoot when he saw a steady migration of white Plymouth Rock chickens crossing
the yard and disappearing around the corner of the granary.
As though there
was a script written with my father and me the aspiring actors, another one act
play began.
“Young lady, WHAT
are you doing?”
Discipline in my
family, at that time, in that place was often swift, harsh and corporal. It
differed only slightly from the way my parents themselves had been raised and it
was what they knew. I endured more than my share of spankings: with a hand,
with a leather belt, with a lefse stick and worst of all, with branches from
the Caragana bushes that formed the southern border of our yard. Mom would
instruct me to go cut a branch and to also peel the bark, leaving a long thin
switch that was painful and left welts on my legs after a spanking. I never saw
any of their forms of discipline as a form of cruelty so much as I saw it as an
attempt to make me bend to their will – a battle that would rage until I left
for college.
As I got older the
most difficult punishment was when they would ground me from all social
activities. As a teenager I was even more willful, unwilling to obey even the
simplest rules. Since we lived in the country my first hurdle was getting
permission to go somewhere – on a date, to a dance or maybe to just drive
around the countryside with friends. Typically I had to get permission from
Dad, the keeper of the list of transgressions that could be dredged up as
reason to deny my request. If I sought permission from Mom her answer was
always the same, “Ask your Father.”
If I passed the
first hurdle with Dad the stipulations would begin – where I could go, who I
was allowed to be with, and, worst of all, what time I had to be home. I was a
full one or two years younger than the others in my small circle of friends and
it seemed that they always were given later hours than I was given.
“I want you in by
11 o’clock.”
“Oh come on Dad,
please, we are going to the drive-in in Rugby
– the movie won’t even be over by then.”
“I want you in by
11 or you can’t go.”
“Okay.”
Like the chickens
peering at me with anticipation, my friends would peer at me as I got in the
car, wanting to know my curfew. They just wanted me to be able to go out, have
fun, and not be a drag. So I would start the evening with a fib, “Oh, he really
didn’t give me a time, just after the movie is over.”
For a time I would
have fun. Instead of actually going to the drive-in theater we might go to a
different town than Rugby, we might drink a few beers, we might find a wedding
dance we could crash or sometimes, if it was a solo date, we just parked
somewhere in the country, listening to KOMA on the radio.
Then the dash
clock would start nearing eleven and I would weakly say something about going
home.
“Whaddya mean –
it’s still early – don’t be a party pooper!” or “Sweetie, stay a little longer,
come on.” Those jeers or pleas never failed to sway me and I would ignore the
little voice that said “He’s really going to be pissed”. I was a past master at
ignoring that little voice.
Later, sometimes
much later, I would have my friends or my boyfriend drop me off on the highway
near our farm driveway and I would walk the few hundred feet to the house,
hoping to sneak in without being caught. I would walk slowly up the drive,
avoiding the gravel that would crunch under my shoes, certain that Dad was lying
awake and could hear my footsteps. Then, up the back steps, opening the screen
door an inch at a time, slipping out of my shoes, tiptoeing across the kitchen
and down the hallway, praying that my sister had left the bedroom door
unlatched. Once I was safely in bed and there was no obvious sign I had been
heard I would fall asleep, knowing that the true test of my freedom would come
at breakfast.
“Snooky, what time
did you get in last night?” My Dad’s voice didn’t give me a hint whether I had
been heard or not. Falling back on old habits I said “It was probably a few
minutes after eleven, the movie got out just in time but it took a little
longer than we thought it would to get out of the exit at the drive-in.”
Without another
word he stood up, took a pen from his shirt pocket and went to the wall calendar,
the one that always hung on a nail beside the window. He circled that day’s
date and then he slowly counted out what he felt was an appropriate number of
days and circled another date.
“I heard you come
in, it was almost one o’clock. You are grounded.” At times like this even I
knew the futility of claiming innocence and I stayed silent, sometimes
wondering why I was so stupid, sometimes wondering if the extra time with my
friends had been worth it and always wondering how I would endure the days the
circles on the calendar represented.
2 comments:
Just listening to KOMA radio......
I am sure you couldn't walk across the floor of that house without walking the dead. Kind of like 31 west.
Beautifully crafted, Mom. I love how you intertwined timeframes and circumstances.
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