The Old Farmer Bought Their Rot And Saved The Farm They Wanted-mdue - Chainityai

The Old Farmer Bought Their Rot And Saved The Farm They Wanted-mdue

The farm market on Route 9 always smelled different at the end of October.

Not bad, exactly.

Cold mud.

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Cut hay.

Diesel smoke.

Pumpkins beginning to soften in the frost.

That year, I pulled into the lot just after noon and watched a loader tractor push the leftovers into a heap beside the dumpsters.

Hundreds of them rolled together, orange and brown and bruised, some split open at the ribs, some sagging on one side, some already freckled white around the stems.

To the market, harvest was finished.

To the manager, those pumpkins were not food anymore.

They were removal.

I sat in my blue Ford for a moment with both hands on the wheel, feeling the old ache in my right knee and the newer one in my lower back.

Ruth used to say a man should not make a decision until he had looked twice.

So I looked twice.

The first look saw rot.

The second saw feed, seed, moisture, sugar, compost, and maybe one more winter that did not get to take my place from me.

I went inside and found Troy, the market manager.

He was younger than my youngest brother would have been, thick through the neck, clean jacket, clipboard held like it made him official.

He told me they were paying a hauler to take the pumpkins before the weekend.

I asked what he would take if I loaded every one myself and cleared them before dark.

He looked out the window at my truck.

Then he looked back at me.

The number he named was less than most men spend in a week on coffee and cigarettes.

I paid it before he could decide to respect me.

When I backed the Ford to the pile, Clay Harlan and Brent Pike were leaning near the feed store doors.

Clay had land north of town, clean fences, and the kind of money that made him think God had signed his opinions.

Brent laughed at whatever Clay laughed at.

That was his main crop.

I had loaded maybe six pumpkins before Clay walked closer.

He did not come to help.

Men like that never walk toward work unless they are carrying a witness.

He looked at the cracked pumpkins, then at my truck, then at the knee I tried not to favor.

“Take that rot, old man,” he called. “Because you’ll lose the pigs by Christmas.”

Brent laughed hard enough to spill coffee on his glove.

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