Everyone Laughed At Her Rotten Pumpkins Until Winter Got Expensive-nhu9999 - Chainityai

Everyone Laughed At Her Rotten Pumpkins Until Winter Got Expensive-nhu9999

The tractor was already pushing the pumpkins when I pulled into the Route 9 farm market.

The sound carried across the lot, metal bucket scraping gravel, orange shells cracking under pressure, one season being shoved toward a dumpster.

It was the last Tuesday of October, and the cold had made the mud hard enough to crunch under my boots.

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Phil Gentry stood near the back of the market with the satisfied look of a man watching a problem remove itself.

He had six hundred pumpkins left from Halloween sales that had gone wrong.

A cold snap had kept families home, the school orders had dropped, and the last big weekend had passed with half the field lot still orange.

Now the pumpkins were soft, cracked, bruised by frost, and beginning to show mold around the stems.

Phil saw me and lifted one hand.

“We’re clearing them out,” he said.

“I can see that.”

“You need one?”

“I need all of them.”

He looked at me then the way men on Route 9 had looked at me since I came home from the Army.

They knew me as James Harlan’s daughter, the one with the stiff right leg, the one trying to run his hog farm alone.

They respected the idea of it from a distance.

Up close, most of them thought it was a countdown.

Garrett was sitting on a pickup tailgate near the front with another man from the feed store.

When he heard me, he laughed.

“A hobby farm like yours dies by winter; trash belongs with trash.”

His friend laughed with him.

Phil did not.

He just named a price lower than what the hauling company would have charged him to take the pumpkins away.

I paid it.

Then I started loading.

My right leg burned by the end of the first hour.

Cold settles into old metal in a body and announces itself with every step.

I did not stop.

I lifted pumpkins that split under my hands, pumpkins with one good side, pumpkins that smelled sweet at the crack and sour at the stem.

Garrett got bored before I did and drove off.

By the time I strapped the last row down, the truck sat low on its rear springs and the sun had dropped behind the market roof.

I drove home slow, with my father’s notebook on the passenger seat.

The notebook had a cracked black cover and feed dust pressed into the spine.

My father had used it for weights, breeding records, weather notes, seed ideas, pipe repairs, and the kind of math that keeps a small farm breathing.

After he died, I read it like scripture, then learned it was better than that.

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