"Ma, why couldn't I bring my doll?"
Her daughter Cassie's question jolted Sarah back to reality.
"We had no room for her in the wagon, honey. We'll get you another one when we get to our new home.”
How do I tell her the truth?
"When? I want her now!"
"I don't know when, Cassie. Soon I hope."
Glancing at her husband, Effird, she saw a big bovine face un-marked by any intellectual function. …show more content…
Afterward, she lived alone on the farm, unafraid, because she knew how to shoot a shotgun and wouldn’t have thought twice about popping someone between the eyes. She also kept a razor-sharp double-bladed Kentucky toothpick in a leather sheath in her pocket. A knife could be a girl’s best friend.
However, a destitute hollowness lived inside of her, thanks to Uncle Buck. Day and night it gnawed at her, twisting her gut so hard that vomit sometimes erupted without notice. When she closed her eyes to sleep, terrifying dreams grappled her. As she fought demons that flitted in and out of her head, most nights found her sitting in the wooden rocker by the fire.
A handful of neighbors checked on her after her ma died. Bear-ing gifts of homemade jams, jellies, bread, sugar, flour, cornmeal, and quilts, the wives tried to be sociable, while their nestlings of-fered entertainment by chasing each other around the barn and hol-lering like banshees. A feeling of thankfulness enveloped Sarah when everybody left. Her lack of social skills didn’t allow her to enjoy company. She soon became known far and wide as a cur-mudgeon who was tetched in the head.
On their last visit, she overheard a conversation that neighbor Polly Kershaw and her husband John carried on as they drove away from Sarah’s