slice of southern farm life |
The arguments started out good-natured as the morning sun slid its long fingers through the haze and pushed it aside. But the tempers always climbed as high as the August sun that hit us like sledgehammers. Our skin turned red as the yellowing teepees stretched out behind us. Inevitably the men would strip off their shirts and show their farmer’s tan And the girls would cater to vanity and strip down to their tank tops And someone would go home that night with nicotine poisoning The smaller children learned quickly to avoid the tempers and the swinging knives as they ran down the rows chattering and dropping sticks two by two. They would shriek when they found a tobacco worm and squish it into an ambier spot on the bottom of a dusty boot. At lunch, Missy and I would sneak off to the creek to splash in the cold water because we were too hot and too tired to eat and the men would stand around the house bodies black from the sun and the dust and the tobacco gum and the sweat. They would smoke or spit into RC Cans. We all learned never to drink from a can without smelling first for that bite of wintergreen. Dark would be falling as we were poured into the back of pickup trucks and spilled out at home. |