I Put You In My Past [Opal + Potato] //drought plot
May 4, 2014 4:46:29 GMT -5
Post by gamemaker kelsier on May 4, 2014 4:46:29 GMT -5
P O T A T O E A R N E S T
An' there's usually only one thing that folk can't deal with an' that'd be change. Now when I'm sayin' that, it could be meaning just about anythin' I suppose. Sometimes change comes all sweet and soft, small an' not really all too hurtful, but sort of welcome. It can be real good, like a beautiful girl spendin' a whole afternoon with you in the garden, or the sound of her accent, all regal like a queen. Sometimes it ain't really all that sweet, like wavin' goodbye to her at the train station, jostlin' for room on a platform that's so packed with folk that fallin' onto the rails seems more like a fact rather than a possibility. My sister told me that the prob-a-bil-it-y of ever seein' her face again was not really all that high. If there was any chance at all, I could be happy.
But see, life changes, it moves on even when we don't really want it too, an' it's comin' on over two years since I last was seein' her face an' hearin' the sweetness of her voice. I'm fond of recallin' it, how hearin' her speak was like bitin' into a peach. Nowadays I'm convinced she was more of a fantasy than a person an' if my sister was still here I'm sure she'd agree, her nose turned up an' her face all sour.
Truthfully, these last two years ain't really been the kindest that they could have been. I don't really know what brought on the heat. Old Lady Natalie said that it was God, that he was mad at us for all our sinnin'. I wouldn't claim to be in the head of Ripred his self, but as far as I kin tell I don't think we were doin' that much sinnin'. I'm a Ripred fearin' boy an all, I was raised up good an proper by ma an' pa, but it gets real hard to keep faith when you can't unnerstand what your god is plannin' for you. The reverend likes ter go on an' on about how we gotta keep the faith so that Ripred kin lead us out of this dark but I stopped going to church a few months week back when the effort came ter be too much.
The truth is this, all of my fields of taters an' vegetables, all the plants I grew myself in my own little garden, all of ther grass an' all of ther trees, they're dead because there ain't no more water in the whole earth, not enough for them. All the water we can find is at the bottom of our little well in the front yard, an even then it's brown an' it smells bad, an' truth be told I am starvin' ter death.
Ma is dead.
It didn't really take her all that long ter keel over. Truth was, ma was a real tough lady, but the heat an' the starvin' ain't real good for anyone an' frankly it's surprisin' that we all ain't dead too. I just remember how it was though. I was thinkin' that we'd be fine at first, that the heat would pass an' the water would come back at some time. It'd have to rain, it can't just not. But it ain't rained for two years an' I'm thinking it won't be happenin' soon. I think it'll wait till all of us are dead.
My sister left after Ma went. She said she was gonna go find out how she could get the water back, usin' her sciency stuff I reckon. She sends letters every now an' then, they always start sayin' that she hopes we're in good health but Da an' I never learnt us our letters so we gotta take 'em to ther reverend if we want them read to us an' lately I don't got the strength to walk all ther way to his house. Even to go out to ther well I gotta take my rake to support myself.
Da is grown weaker an' weaker. He's an old man an' he's heartsick for ma. Thing is, we ain't really eaten properly in weeks. All we got is our old grain stores an' those were meager at best. We gotta keep givin' to ther Capitol an' so now we don't got nothin' an' we're gonna starve to death I guess. I can't plant anythin' cause nothin' takes. They used tah be sayin' that I had some type of magical thumb, that I could grow anythin'. Well, it's a lie, I ain't grown nothin' but dry dirt for a very long time. I've lost my touch an' I can't save my father an' I can't save myself.
Da groans from his bed an' I rouse myself, shakin' my tired limbs all up so that I can get him a drink. That's all I got ter give him now because we don't got no fancy medicines an' Old Lady Natalie held on for a long time, that's fer sure, but even crotchety old ladies gotta die. IT's weird though when someone you thought would never ever let go of life, not in a hunnered years let's go.
I get the ladle of water an' I lift it to his lips cause he ain't got the power an' strength anymore to lift his own self up. I wait for him to slurp it up but he doesn't stir to drink. He only stares at me. An' he stares at me, an' he keeps starin' and he don't blink, he ain't blinkin', he ain't blinkin'. "Pa?" I ask, my voice a croak that comes slow an' more scared than I would like outta my throat. He doesn't reply. An' he keeps on starin' an' I'm eighteen years old now, I can't be cryin', I can't be. I can't be cryin' because I gotta be strong for the women but the women ain't here because one is dead an' who really knows about my sister because we ain't received a letter in weeks an' weeks. AN' that could be because the mail man died but who knows an' I might the last one left.
A sob comes out of my throat an' I drop the ladle to the ground an' I hit my Da's chest, hopin' that it'll startle him back to life an' I won't have to be alone because I don't want to be alone. An' he won't wake up an' damn I'm tired. I don't wanna have to deal with this because I knew that one day I'd have to be buryin' my parents but it weren't supposed to be so early.
An' before I know it, I'm stumblin' out the door, an' I don't got my rake to keep me steady an' I don't know where I'm goin' because there ain't no taters in the field to care for an' there ain't nobody to run to for help because they're all too weak or they're too dead an' I don't know what to do because I'm only eighteen an' this time the change is too big to handle.
I keel over into the dirt soon enough, and I take big handfuls of it, knees and hands getting dirty as I crumble the clumps up in my hands. I open my mouth but it's dry an' it don't make a sound an I wanna scream but nothin' is comin' out so I shut my eyes up real tight an' I pretend that I'm not the last one left.Pull me out of this I can't breath
It's burning through my chest