First Things First
I only know a couple of things. First â most people talk more than I do. Pa kept saying I should talk more. I just never could think of anything to say. Like when the barn burned down. I tried to put it out. All I had was a bucket, and I kept carrying water from the house. From the well, actually. The well was alongside the house.
Yeah, I know there was a creek. I could have got water there, but the fire was so darn pretty I just kept goinâ to the well where I could look over my shoulder and see the fire burn as I got water to put it out. The flames were yellow and orange and wispy-like, swirlinâ up into the sky like a girlâs dress as sheâs dancing the dirty boogie.
I knew the water would never put it out. Isnât that the thing? You do stuff because itâs the thing youâre supposed to do even though you know it wonât do any good â like goinâ to school, like getting a job, getting married. I mean whatâs the point.
And then Ma and Pa came back from town in the old Ford, screaminâ their lungs out as I stood on the porch with my empty bucket, the sun goinâ down, the wind blowinâ through the holler, and me cryinâ my eyes out because the barn was burned down to the ground and now there wouldnât be no more fire.
Pa was so mad he couldnât talk. Ma could, though. She said, âYou started that there fire, didnât you?â
Now I loved Ma, but I hated her questions. I was glum.
âWhereâs your schoolbooks, Johnny?â she asked.
We stood lookinâ at the embers glow as evening set in, the holler filling up with smoke, the heat reaching us from across the road. Some questions were best left unanswered, but I would never miss those darn books.
The second thing I know is that people tend to forget stuff. This whole thing will blow over.