The thing that’s bothering me about this story so far is the build of pressure from edgeward that will soon provide the change in Rachel’s life. This is something she senses throughout her life but doesn’t understand, something that hangs over her all the time, but especially just before a festival. It’s a part of her from her earliest years. But as you will see next week, she’s always misinterpreted it. Let me know whether that menace or pressure or potentiality for change is even perceptible in this current draft (acodispo@gmail.com).
One evening a few years later, as she prepared the meal, Rachel heard Carlen and Gunter talking out in the garden.
“Well, it’s at least time to be thinking about it,” Carlen said in a louder tone. “We aren’t getting any younger. Sometime in the next few years.”
Rachel quietly pulled the window open, letting in a rush of cold fall air which made the steam from the soup pot twice as visible.
“The problem,” Gunter said, “is that she doesn’t spend enough time with anyone her age to get to know them. We’re a little far from town for that.”
“We could give her some time to herself, send her down to the town. She could stay with Gerta, learn the herbs.”
There was silence in the garden for a moment or two. Rachel moved to stand at the other end of the window, and she could see her parents, sitting across a garden row from each other on three-legged stools, bending down to weed. Carlen’s long white hair was wrapped up in a bun on her head to keep it out of the dirt. Gunter was looking at his wife. His back was to Rachel and she couldn’t see his face, but his form spoke of sadness.
“We couldn’t spare her, Gerta. There’s too much to be done. We could sell the pigs, and perhaps you and I could manage on our own for a while, but that money would only last so long.”
“I know, love,” said Carlen. They bent back to weeding, but in a moment Gunter straightened again. He looked out mornward, towards the town. Then he moved his stool closer to the garden bed and bent down to speak very quietly to his wife.
Continue reading →