A
Mother's Place
by Donna Gamache
Dorothy
feels that she is getting old and doubts her place in the family. Now she wants
to move out and start a new life. Why does she want to live by herself? Will she
really leave her son and daughter-in-law? Read the following story for the answers.
The rain still fell in a silent
gray sheet when Dorothy opened her bedroom curtains to peer outside. "Another
gray day, gray and gloomy," she muttered, though really the rain was more than
welcome after last year's drought.
"Old and gray and gloomy, just like me," she added to herself, though it
wasn't
exactly true. Her hair wasn't completely gray, and she was only in her mid-fifties,
middle-aged really, she knew. And usually she acted younger than her years,
if anything. She could still do all the work she'd ever done - keep the house
going, plant and weed the garden, drive the truck when needed - though maybe
she wasn't as speedy at some tasks, as she once was. And Tim, her son, did suggest
a couple of years ago, that she needn't bother to drive the tractor anymore.
But that was because it wasn't really necessary, anyway, it wasn't because she
was getting old. So why, all of a sudden, did she feel old?
"Blame it on the rain," she muttered. But, watching through the window as Tim
hurried through the downpour from pig barn to cattle shed, she knew the answer.
She'd known it last night, of course, after the blow up with Jenny, Tim's wife.
Oh, it hadn't been a real blow up, just an argument over where to plant the
garden. Jenny wanted it close to the house, so she could work there once the
baby was born. Dorothy argued that the closest garden patch needed fallowing.
They'd left the decision to Tim, who sided with Jenny,
and Dorothy stumped off
to bed at 8.30 p.m., feeling old and lonely, and missing Steve as she hadn't
missed him for a long time.
Steve - Dorothy's husband - had died ten years ago, when Tim was just twenty.
Tim had quit his agriculture course at the university and come home to work
the farm, toiling like a Trojan to pay off the debts his father left. Dorothy
worked alongside him, in the beginning, until he proved himself; then gradually
she relinquished more of the work to him and concentrated on her garden and
flowers, and the housework.
Things didn't change much when Tim married Jenny two years ago. Dorothy wondered,
in the beginning, how the arrangement would work out, for she stayed in the
house and Jenny just moved in. It couldn't have been easy for Jenny, Dorothy
knew that, to move into your mother-in-law's house and let her run your life.
But there hadn't been much change, really. Everybody adapted. Jenny worked
at the potato plant in town, and kept her job. Dorothy surrendered some of the
housework to her, and occasional meals, but she still did most of the day-to-day
household running. Jenny either worked days, or slept, depending on her shifts
at the plant. Most often she worked nights and slept until four or so.
The washing was still Dorothy's responsibility, and the garden work and the
flower beds. She still drove dinner out to the fields for Tim, and sometimes
she drove the truck, during harvest or spring work. She wasn't ready to retire
yet!
"But it looks like I'll have to," she murmured, turning away from the window
to dress. "Last night was just the tip of the iceberg. The rest will show up
soon."
Things were changing now.
Tim and Jenny's baby was due in two months, and last
week Jenny stopped working at the potato plant. "I can't take all the bending
any longer," she said. "And anyway, I need time to get things ready for the
baby."
She'd been home now, full time, for a week. She'd prepared all the meals during
that time, and driven Tim's dinner out to him in the west field for the last
two days. Last night she'd announced new plans for the garden, and that's when
the argument developed.
"I'm ," Dorothy thought, then realized she was speaking out loud.
"A on this farm. They don't need me here anymore."
Not that anything had been said to that effect. There had been no suggestions
that she should move out and leave the house to them. But they must be thinking
that, weren't they?
The house was small, with only two bedrooms and the study. Originally, of course,
she and Steve had planned the study to be a third bedroom. But when Tim was
their only child, the study was created instead. Now, Tim and Jenny planned
to change it into a baby's room. But she'd noticed Jenny's glance in the direction
of her own bedroom. If Dorothy didn't occupy it, then the baby could. And what
a pity it was to reconvert the study, with all its space for Tim's farm records.
The kitchen was small, too, for a farm kitchen. Too small for two women to
work there all the time. They'd be in each other's way, Dorothy knew that. How
would they ever manage at canning time?
She sighed, and turned back to look outside once more. A few yards away, the
hung heavy in the rain. She could almost smell them, though her window
was shut. While she watched, Tim made a dash for the house, splashing through
large puddles as he ran. It must have been pouring all night. Surprisingly,
she'd slept, though her mind was when she went to bed.
There was only one possible solution, she had decided: to move out, move into
town and establish a new life. Life was full of changes, and this would be one
of them. She'd adapted after Steve's death, and after Tim's marriage; she could
do it again.
There were a couple of houses available in town, she knew, small houses suitable
for a middle-aged widow who didn't need much space.
And there were suites available, if she could stand
living in an apartment without a yard or garden. The solution
was there. And yet - to leave the farm where she'd spent the last thirty years?
To leave these fields and pastures where she'd worked first with Steve, later
with Tim? To leave behind the poplar grove where she liked to bird-watch; the
small creek where she and Steve walked, in younger years, and made their plans;
the swimming hole where Steve taught Tim to swim? How could she leave these
memories behind?
Opening the curtains wider, to let in what light there was, she turned and
went out to the kitchen. Tim and Jenny were there, Tim working on his usual
big breakfast, Jenny relaxing with a cup of coffee. Dorothy saw the look that
passed between them as she came out. What were they planning? Had they decided
to ask her to move? To leave the farm? Well, she'd fool them.
She'd have her
say first!
"Coffee, Mom?" Tim asked, and poured her a cup without waiting for a reply.
He knew her habits well.
"Thank you," she grunted, settling into her chair. Then, the decision made,
she looked at him sharply. "I guess we have to talk, don't we? There have to
be some changes made here, don't there?"
"Mom, please," Tim interrupted. "About last night, we're sorry. We
weren't
thinking properly. With the baby and all, you'll probably be doing most of the
garden work still. So we'll leave the garden up to you. Where it is and what
you want to plant. You'll be officially in charge, Garden Manager, if that's
okay."
Dorothy closed her mouth, the wind gone from her sails for a moment. Then she
squared her shoulders and started again. "But the garden's not all, is it? Let's
face it. Around here, I won't be needed anymore. More than that. In this house,
I’m in the way."
"Mother -" Tim started, but she spoke above him.
"The way I see it, the answer is for me to move into town, give you and Jenny
the house, and a life of your own without your mother always looking over your
shoulder. And I'll make a new life for myself." Abruptly she stopped, took a
gulp of coffee, though it was almost too hot, and stared out the window at the
rain.
For a few minutes silence reigned. Then Tim spoke again. "Is that really the
way you want it, Mother? If it is, okay. But I don't believe it is. I think
you're making a sacrifice because you think that's what we want. And you don't
have to, you know. It's not necessary." He paused to chew on his toast for a
moment but Dorothy didn't answer.
"We have another idea, Mom," Jenny said quietly, hesitatingly.
"If you don't
like it, say so. But we'd like to tell you."
"Say what you want," Dorothy grunted. She knew she sounded old and
.
She didn't want to sound like that. It just came out that way.
"Jenny and I," Tim began, "we know it isn't easy for you with another woman
in your house. But we don't want you to leave. We need you here, even if you
don't realize it. We'll need you more, once the baby comes. We'll need you to
help babysit, if Jenny is working with me. Or we'll still need you to help me,
if Jenny is busy with the baby." He paused. "But we have another idea."
Dorothy turned away from the window where she'd been staring resolutely at
the rain, and looked at him. He looked so much like Steve when he set his chin
in that determined way.
"Jenny and I went to look at a that Jim Briscoe is selling. We thought
maybe we'd buy it and move it into the yard here for us. Only, it's small. Not
really big enough for us, with the baby and all. So, well, we wondered, what
about using the trailer for you?"
"We could set it up on the other side of the lilac bushes," Jenny broke in.
"It would be a little closer to the garden, and you could still have your own
piece of land and flower beds."
"You'd be close to us, but not with us," Tim said. "I know this is your house,
and if you don't like that idea, well," he shrugged, "we could look for a bigger
trailer for ourselves, and you could still stay here. But we don't want you
moving to town, leaving the farm, unless that's what you want." He stopped abruptly,
as though he had run out of words, and turned back to his breakfast.
There was a long silence, broken only by the patter of rain on the window.
There must be a wind starting up, Dorothy thought momentarily. And
it's blown
a weight off my shoulders.
Then, through the sudden lump in her throat, she spoke. "I like the idea fine,
Tim. And Jenny. When can I look at the trailer to see what I'll need?" She smiled,
hoping they wouldn't notice the moisture in her eyes.
"Better wait until this rain stops and things dry up a
bit," Tim said. "We don't want to track it up with mud. It's just newly painted."
"What rain?" asked Dorothy, the day's gloom suddenly gone.
"What rain?"
(1 860 words)
TOP