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    Out of the Dust

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      and twisted rails,

      scorched dirt, and

      charred ties.

      No one talks about fire

      right to my face.

      They can’t forget how fire changed my life.

      But I hear them talking anyway.

      April 1935

      The Mail Train

      They promised

      through rain,

      heat,

      snow,

      and gloom

      but they never said anything about dust.

      And so the mail got stuck

      for hours,

      for days,

      on the Santa Fe

      because mountains of dust

      had blown over the tracks,

      because blizzards of dust

      blocked the way.

      And all that time,

      as the dust beat down on the cars,

      a letter was waiting inside a mail bag.

      A letter from Aunt Ellis, my father’s sister,

      written just to me,

      inviting me to live with her in Lubbock.

      I want to get out of here,

      but not to Aunt Ellis,

      and not to Lubbock, Texas.

      My father didn’t say much when I asked

      what I should do.

      “Let’s wait and see,”

      he said.

      What’s that supposed to mean?

      April 1935

      Migrants

      We’ll be back when the rain comes,

      they say,

      pulling away with all they own,

      straining the springs of their motor cars.

      Don’t forget us.

      And so they go,

      fleeing the blowing dust,

      fleeing the fields of brown-tipped wheat

      barely ankle high,

      and sparse as the hair on a dog’s belly.

      We’ll be back, they say,

      pulling away toward Texas,

      Arkansas,

      where they can rent a farm,

      pull in enough cash,

      maybe start again.

      We’ll be back when it rains,

      they say,

      setting out with their bedsprings and mattresses,

      their cookstoves and dishes,

      their kitchen tables,

      and their milk goats

      tied to their running boards

      in rickety cages,

      setting out for

      California,

      where even though they say they’ll come back,

      they just might stay

      if what they hear about that place is true.

      Don’t forget us, they say.

      But there are so many leaving,

      how can I remember them all?

      April 1935

      Blankets of Black

      On the first clear day

      we staggered out of our caves of dust

      into the sunlight,

      turning our faces to the big blue sky.

      On the second clear day

      we believed

      the worst was over at last.

      We flocked outside,

      traded in town,

      going to stores and coming out

      only to find the air still clear

      and gentle,

      grateful for each easy breath.

      On the third clear day

      summer came in April

      and the churches opened their arms to all comers

      and all comers came.

      After church,

      folks headed for

      picnics,

      car trips. No one could stay inside.

      My father and I argued about the funeral

      of Grandma Lucas,

      who truly was no relation.

      But we ended up going anyway,

      driving down the road in a procession to Texhoma.

      Six miles out of town the air turned cold,

      birds beat their wings

      everywhere you looked,

      whole flocks

      dropping out of the sky,

      crowding on fence posts.

      I was sulking in the truck beside my father

      when

      heaven’s shadow crept across the plains,

      a black cloud,

      big and silent as Montana,

      boiling on the horizon and

      barreling toward us.

      More birds tumbled from the sky

      frantically keeping ahead of the dust.

      We watched as the storm swallowed the light.

      The sky turned from blue

      to black,

      night descended in an instant

      and the dust was on us.

      The wind screamed.

      The blowing dirt ran

      so thick

      I couldn’t see the brim of my hat

      as we plunged from the truck,

      fleeing.

      The dust swarmed

      like it had never swarmed before.

      My father groped for my hand,

      pulled me away from the truck.

      We ran,

      a blind pitching toward the shelter of a small house,

      almost invisible,

      our hands tight together,

      running toward the ghostly door,

      pounding on it with desperation.

      A woman opened her home to us,

      all of us,

      not just me and my father,

      but the entire funeral procession,

      and one after another,

      we tumbled inside, gasping,

      our lungs burning for want of air.

      All the lamps were lit against the dark,

      the house dazed by dust,

      gazed weakly out.

      The walls shook in the howling wind.

      We helped tack up sheets on the windows and doors

      to keep the dust down.

      Cars and trucks

      unable to go on,

      their ignitions shorted out by the static electricity,

      opened up and let out more passengers,

      who stumbled for shelter.

      One family came in

      clutched together,

      their pa, divining the path

      with a long wooden rod.

      If it hadn’t been for the company,

      this storm would have broken us

      completely,

      broken us more thoroughly than

      the plow had broken the Oklahoma sod,

      more thoroughly than my burns

      had broken the ease of my hands.

      But for the sake of the crowd,

      and the hospitality of the home that sheltered us,

      we held on

      and waited,

      sitting or standing, breathing through wet cloths

      as the fog of dust filled the room

      and settled slowly over us.

      When it let up a bit,

      some went on to bury Grandma Lucas,

      but my father and I,

      we cleaned the thick layer of grime

      off the truck,

      pulled out of the procession and headed on home,

      creeping slowly along the dust-mounded road.

      When we got back,

      we found the barn half covered in dunes,

      I couldn’t tell which rise of dust was Ma and

      Franklin’s grave.

      The front door hung open,

      blown in by the wind.

      Dust lay two feet deep in ripply waves

      across the parlor floor,

      dust blanketed the cookstove,

      the icebox,

      the kitchen chairs,

      everything deep in dust.

      And the piano …

      buried in dust.

      While I started to shovel,

      my father went out to the barn.

      He came back, and when I asked, he said

      the animals

      weren’t good,

      and the tractor was dusted out,

      and I said, “It’s a
    wonder

      the truck got us home.”

      I should have held my tongue.

      When he tried starting the truck again,

      it wouldn’t turn over.

      April 1935

      The Visit

      Mad Dog came by

      to see how we made out

      after the duster.

      He didn’t come to court me.

      I didn’t think he had.

      We visited more than an hour.

      The sky cleared enough to see Black Mesa.

      I showed him my father’s pond.

      Mad Dog said he was going to Amarillo,

      to sing, on the radio,

      and if he sang good enough,

      they might give him a job there.

      “You’d leave the farm?” I asked.

      He nodded.

      “You’d leave school?”

      He shrugged.

      Mad Dog scooped a handful of dust,

      like a boy in a sandpit.

      He said, “I love this land,

      no matter what.”

      I looked at his hands.

      They were scarless.

      Mad Dog stayed longer than he planned.

      He ran down the road

      back to his father’s farm when he realized the time.

      Dust rose each place his foot fell,

      leaving a trace of him

      long after he’d gone.

      April 1935

      Freak Show

      The fellow from Canada,

      James Kingsbury,

      photographer from the Toronto Star,

      way up there in Ontario,

      the man who took the first pictures of

      the Dionne Quintuplets,

      left his homeland and

      came to Joyce City

      looking for some other piece of

      oddness,

      hoping to photograph the drought

      and the dust storms

      and

      he did

      with the help of Bill Rotterdaw

      and Handy Poole,

      who took him to the sandiest farms and

      showed off the boniest cattle in the county.

      Mr. Kingsbury’s pictures of those Dionne babies

      got them famous,

      but it also got them taken from their

      mother and father

      and put on display

      like a freak show,

      like a tent full of two-headed calves.

      Now I’m wondering

      what will happen to us

      after he finishes taking pictures of our dust.

      April 1935

      Help from Uncle Sam

      The government

      is lending us money

      to keep the farm going,

      money to buy seed,

      feed loans for our cow,

      for our mule,

      for the chickens still alive and the hog,

      as well as a little bit of feed

      for us.

      My father was worried about

      paying back,

      because of what Ma had said,

      but Mrs. Love,

      the lady from FERA,

      assured him he didn’t need to pay a single cent

      until the crops came in,

      and if the crops never came, then he wouldn’t pay a

      thing.

      So my father said

      okay.

      Anything to keep going.

      He put the paperwork on the shelf,

      beside Ma’s book of poetry

      and the invitation from Aunt Ellis.

      He just keeps that invitation from her,

      glowering down at me from the shelf above the piano.

      April 1935

      Let Down

      I was invited to graduation,

      to play the piano.

      I couldn’t play.

      It had been too long.

      My hands wouldn’t work.

      I just sat on the piano bench,

      staring down at the keys.

      Everyone waited.

      When the silence went on so long

      folks started to whisper,

      Arley Wanderdale lowered his head and

      Miss Freeland started to cry.

      I don’t know,

      I let them down.

      I didn’t cry.

      Too stubborn.

      I got up and walked off the stage.

      I thought maybe if my father ever went to Doc Rice

      to do something about the spots on his skin,

      Doc could check my hands too,

      tell me what to do about them.

      But my father isn’t going to Doc Rice,

      and now

      I think we’re both turning to dust.

      May 1935

      Hope

      It started out as snow,

      oh,

      big flakes

      floating

      softly,

      catching on my sweater,

      lacy on the edges of my sleeves.

      Snow covered the dust,

      softened the

      fences,

      soothed the parched lips

      of the land.

      And then it changed,

      halfway between snow and rain,

      sleet,

      glazing the earth.

      Until at last

      it slipped into rain,

      light as mist.

      It was the kindest

      kind of rain

      that fell.

      Soft and then a little heavier,

      helping along

      what had already fallen

      into the

      hard-pan

      earth

      until it

      rained,

      steady as a good friend

      who walks beside you,

      not getting in your way,

      staying with you through a hard time.

      And because the rain came

      so patient and slow at first,

      and built up strength as the earth

      remembered how to yield,

      instead of washing off,

      the water slid in,

      into the dying ground

      and softened its stubborn pride,

      and eased it back toward life.

      And then,

      just when we thought it would end,

      after three such gentle days,

      the rain

      came

      slamming down,

      tons of it,

      soaking into the ready earth

      to the primed and greedy earth,

      and soaking deep.

      It kept coming,

      thunder booming,

      lightning

      kicking,

      dancing from the heavens

      down to the prairie,

      and my father

      dancing with it,

      dancing outside in the drenching night

      with the gutters racing,

      with the earth puddled and pleased,

      with my father’s near-finished pond filling.

      When the rain stopped,

      my father splashed out to the barn,

      and spent

      two days and two nights

      cleaning dust out of his tractor,

      until he got it running again.

      In the dark, headlights shining,

      he idled toward the freshened fields,

      certain the grass would grow again,

      certain the weeds would grow again,

      certain the wheat would grow again too.

      May 1935

      The Rain’s Gift

      The rain

      has brought back some grass

      and the ranchers

      have put away the

      feed cake

      and sent their cattle

      out to graze.

      Joe De La Flor

      is singing in his saddle again.

      May 1935

      Hope Smothered

      While I washed up dinner dishes in the pan,

    &nbsp
    ; the wind came from the west

      bringing—

      dust.

      I’d just stripped all the gummed tape from the

      windows.

      Now I’ve got dust all over the clean dishes.

      I can hardly make myself

      get started cleaning again.

      Mrs. Love is taking applications

      for boys to do CCC work.

      Any boy between eighteen and twenty-eight can join.

      I’m too young

      and the wrong sex

      but what I wouldn’t give to be

      working for the CCC

      somewhere far from here,

      out of the dust.

      May 1935

      Sunday Afternoon at the Amarillo Hotel

      Everybody gathered at

      the Joyce City Hardware and Furniture Company

      on Sunday

      to hear Mad Dog Craddock

      sing on WDAG

      from the Amarillo Hotel.

      They hooked up speakers

      and the sweet sound

      of Mad Dog’s voice

      filled the creaky aisles.

      Arley Wanderdale was in Amarillo with Mad Dog,

      singing and playing the piano,

      and the Black Mesa Boys were there

      too.

      I ached for not being there with them.

      But there was nothing more most folks in Joyce City

      wanted to do

      than spend a half hour

      leaning on counters,

      sitting on stairs,

      resting in chairs,

      staring at the hardware

      and the tableware,

      listening to hometown boys

      making big-time music

      on the radio.

      They kept time in the aisles,

      hooting after each number,

      and when Mad Dog finished his last song, they sent

      the dust swirling,

      cheering and whooping,

      patting each other on the back,

      as if they’d been featured

      on WDAG themselves.

      I tried cheering for Mad Dog with everyone else,

      but my throat

      felt like a trap had

      snapped down on it.

      That Mad Dog, he didn’t have

      a thing to worry about.

      He sang good, all right.

      He’ll go far as he wants.

      May 1935

      Baby

      Funny thing about babies.

      Ma died having one,

      the Lindberghs said good night to one and lost it,

      and somebody

      last Saturday

      decided to

      give one away.

      Reverend Bingham says

      that Harley Madden

      was sweeping the dust out of church,

      shining things up for Sunday service,

      when he swept himself up to a package

      on the north front steps.

      He knelt,

      studying the parcel,

      and called to Reverend Bingham,

     
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