The Widow Who Let Them Laugh Until The Rain Stopped In Texas-nga9999 - Chainityai

The Widow Who Let Them Laugh Until The Rain Stopped In Texas-nga9999

Ray Holloway came back to my porch with his cap in his hands and six years of silence in his throat.

The county road behind him was dry enough to lift dust from a passing truck and hold it in the air like a warning.

I had seen him from the kitchen window before he knocked.

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He stood at the edge of the porch, looking past the house toward the south pasture where the eucalyptus trees rose above the cattle like something planted by weather itself.

In 1982, those trees had been eighteen inches tall.

In 1988, they were thirty feet tall and the only honest shade for miles.

Ray had not come to admire them.

Men like Ray did not walk back onto a place they had judged unless hunger, grief, or proof had pushed them there.

That summer, Gonzales County had all three.

The drought had started without drama.

First the spring rains thinned.

Then the grass came up short.

Then the stock tanks dropped until their banks showed rings like a bathtub nobody could refill.

By July, ranchers were selling breeding cows they had sworn would never leave their land.

Lowell Watts sold sixty head for less than he had paid for them as calves.

Dale Purdy let go of cows whose grandmothers had stood on his father’s place.

At the feed store in Nixon, nobody laughed loudly anymore.

Dry weather has a way of taking humor out of men who built their confidence on rain.

For six years, those same men had laughed at me.

They laughed because I bought four hundred eucalyptus saplings from Calvin Ruiz at an auction in Yoakum.

They laughed because I did not plant them along the fence.

They laughed because I put them in the middle of working cattle pasture, spaced like a woman had dropped a handful of pins across a map and called it a plan.

They laughed because Frank was dead and they needed my judgment to be grief.

That made the story easier for them.

A widow losing her head was easier to understand than a widow using it.

The first day I planted, I put six saplings in the ground and went to bed with blisters inside my gloves.

The second day, I repaired Frank’s old tractor auger and planted forty-one.

By the end of two weeks, all four hundred were in.

Each one had a number.

Each one had a mark in a composition notebook.

The notebook had a black-and-white cover, a cracked spine, and more power in it than any man at the Dairy Queen knew how to respect.

My father, Eduardo Castellanos, had started it in Argentina in 1961.

He had taken me to Corrientes when I was nineteen and shown me a cattle ranch where trees stood inside the pastures on purpose.

Eucalyptus, grevillea, native hardwoods, all spaced far enough apart that grass still ruled the land.

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