What the Trees Won’t Hide
Houses belong in thickets of woods. Thatās what my parents believed. For privacy, for escape from work. Who wants to look out their window and see neighbors? But we have one: Mr. Yessler, and his house is also shrouded by trees. So we donāt see him too much, except I have a view of his shed from my bedroom. Mom and Dad say I donāt really need curtains because the trees hide everything, and I could just get dressed for bed in the bathroom. However, my pajamas are in my room with me, in a drawer. Itās much easier to just slip them on and look out the window at Mr. Yesslerās shed.
āHeās always working late at night,ā I say.
āYou shouldnāt spy on him. Everyone needs privacy,ā my parents tell me.
But thereās nothing else to do in a house in the woods but watch out the window as Mr. Yessler gets his shovel each night and digs until late.
āWhatās he digging?ā I ask Mom and Dad.
āMaybe a pool? Maybe heāll invite you to go swimming?ā
Maybe. Mr. Yessler ploughs our driveway in the winter and walks me to the school bus at the end of our long, shared driveway. Of course, heād let me use the pool.
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The school cafeteria sometimes serves milk cartons with pictures of kids whoāve gone missing. I donāt recognize any of them. They all live far away.
Mom and I go shopping for pajamas after school. I choose a pink frilly frock with puffed sleeves and ruffles. I put my nightgown on in my room and watch Mr. Yessler dig until I fall asleep.
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Mr. Yessler knocks on our door, tells us heāll be gone for a while. Can we watch the house? Mom and Dad say they will, of course. Heās been so kind. When I hear his car pull out of the driveway, I think about what heās been digging, hoping itās a pool heāll share. So when Mom and Dad go to the kitchen to make dinner, I slip out the front door, head down the driveway, creep around backāand hold my breath. Heās dug the biggest pool I could ever imagine, and though itās just dirt right now, it looks like thereās a lot of water inside already. I just know heāll invite me to go swimming.
All the way to the edge I go, to look in, but thereās so much stuff floating on top, so many ugly things, like shoes and hair ribbons and cartons of milk with photos dissolving into the muck. A pool shouldnāt have so many of these things inside. Shouldnāt have so many clippings and sketchesā¦ shouldnāt have a framed picture of a girl in her bedroom at night, wearing pink ruffled pajamas.