BARN STORMERS
She was leaning back against a bail of hay as she stared up into the rafters of the barn at an owl’s nest built so long ago that it was frayed and sagging over both sides of the truss, thin wisps of grass hanging down in long strands like lifelines to nowhere.
“Why do you still look at me that way?” she asked.
“Because I still see the children in your eyes,” he said.
She held the shotgun across her lap, feeling sad for him, but there was nothing she could do for him now.
“Well the children are gone,” she said. “It’s time you accepted that.”
He nodded and said that he knew it.
Yes, he said that he knew it, but she knew what he was thinking. She knew he was thinking there was a still place for them somewhere, a life to be re-made somehow. And she wondered where he found such baseless hopes.
He crawled quietly across the dirt floor to a crack in the wall boards, watching to see if anyone was coming.
“The sun’s going down,” he said.
“They’ll come again when it gets dark,” she said. “They won’t give up.”
“Neither will we,” he said, turning to look at her, to make sure that she was still with him. He drew back the bolt on the old M-1 rilfe to make sure that it was loaded, the way he did every half an hour. A man could never be too sure of his weapon.
“Do you remember the summer in South Dakota?”
“I don’t want to remember South Dakota,” she said irritably. “Why do you always do this just
before things get crazy?”
“Do you remember what Tabitha said when she first saw Mount Rushmore?”
“Dan. Stop.”
“She said, Mommy, look. George Washington! Do you remember?”
She stared at him.
“God, she was smart,” he said, smiling into the long ago. “Only five years-old and she already knew who the hell he was. She got that from you, you know. How smart she was.”
She shook her head, having long forgotten.
“It doesn’t matter now,” she said. “She’s gone.”
“Say her name, Jill.”
“No.”
“Say it.”
“I told you no, Dan. Enough.”
“Jill, say your daughter’s goddamn name!”
“No!” She jammed the barrel of the shotgun up under her chin, staring him defiantly in the eyes.
“I’ll do it!”
“Oh, no, you won’t,” he said, waving her off. “It’s way too soon for that.”
She got to her feet and walked a small circle. “So where are they already? They’ve changed their routine.”
“Just one last time?” he asked quietly.
She walked over and crouched before him with the shotgun cradled in her arms, looking almost soulfully into his eyes. “I’ve told you no a dozen times. Now stop it.”
She went to the front of the barn where they had barricaded the door with a giant stack of hay bails and watched through a knothole in the wall. She didn’t see any movement at all. There didn’t even seem to be a breeze among the alfalfa. She fluffed her fatigue shirt to circulate the air over her otherwise bare breasts. The temperature was well over 90 degrees and it was humid as hell.
“Why don’t they come?” she muttered. “Ferals never give up.”
She cast a glance towards the back of the barn where her husband sat looking at the photos in his wallet. Maybe it’s because he didn’t carry them for nine months apiece, she told herself, resenting him. She went to him and stood over him, her hand out for the wallet. “I want to see.”
He shook his head and stuck the wallet back into his fatigues.
“No. No, if I thought you really wanted to see them, I’d give it to you, but you don’t. You’ll do something to it. Throw it out there with them maybe. I can’t help it you’re jealous.”
She kicked his boot and turned away again.
“It’s stifling in here.”
“Sit back down,” he said. “You’re wasting energy. Water too. Hey, do you know why lions sleep all day?”
“You mean back when they’re were lions?” she said.
“To conserve energy—water.”
“Well, there’s a pump right out there,” she said pointing, “and when it gets dark, I’m going back out to refill the water bladders. Let’em try and stop me.”
He chuckled and reached up his hand.
She took it and hauled him to his feet.
“They might not like you using their well,” he said, shifting his combat harness around to adjust the fit. “Especially now that we won’t let’em near it. Better we both go.”
“Now?”
“Why not? They’re not expecting us to come during the day.”