Twenty Mules, Three Faded Lines, And The Widow They Mocked For Mud-mdue - Chainityai

Twenty Mules, Three Faded Lines, And The Widow They Mocked For Mud-mdue

The morning the mules came to Carver’s Mill, every man outside the feed store counted them like they were counting down to my ruin.

Twenty mules came single file down Draper Road behind a wagon driven by a Kendrick boy who looked embarrassed to be part of the errand.

Some were young, some were old, and most had the worn-out look of animals nobody had bothered to understand.

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That was why I wanted them.

Unwanted things and unwanted people have a way of recognizing each other before the rest of the world catches up.

I was thirty-nine years old, six years widowed, and still farming the Birch place with the same hands men said were too small for the work.

Walter had died in the spring fever of 1908 and left me his name, his debt, his barns, his tools, and every opinion in town about what a woman could manage alone.

I managed enough to keep the bank quiet.

That was the first thing they disliked.

Men in Carver’s Mill preferred a widow either helpless or grateful.

I was neither.

The farm was eighty-three acres of hill ground that would grow if you knew where the rock sat and where the rain ran.

Then there was the west bottom.

The west bottom was one hundred and twelve acres along the creek, all black soil and old brush, too soft for horses, too narrow for tractors, and too wet to promise anything except a broken axle.

My father, Amos Birch, had taken me there when I was twelve.

He scooped the soil into my palm and told me it was what a hundred years of leaves and water looked like when they settled down and became wealth.

I asked why we did not plant it.

He looked at the standing water, the root humps, the creek bends, and the ground that swallowed his boot almost to the ankle.

He said someone would figure it out one day.

He did not live long enough to be that someone.

Neither did his father.

So the best ground on the Birch place sat useless in plain sight, which is how most treasure hides from people who are too proud to bend down.

The Hendrick family had bought tractors and no longer wanted the last twenty mules.

Tom Hendrick told me he would send them to a rendering yard for whatever the man paid if nobody took them.

I asked his price for all twenty.

He stared at me like I had asked for a thunderstorm in a bottle.

Then he named a number low enough to shame both of us, and I paid it.

By sundown, the town had made the purchase into a sermon.

Ned Prater said mules were finished.

Clyde Foss said no serious farmer used animal power anymore.

Elias Voss, president of Carver’s Mill Savings and Loan, waited one day longer before he came to my porch.

That was Elias’s style.

He liked other men to laugh first so he could arrive as the reasonable one.

He wore polished shoes into a farm kitchen and laid a bank notice on my table like he was laying down a verdict.

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