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An excerpt from Stories from Mesa Country: "They are coming back
from the burial ground. I can see them walking, two abreast, along
the narrow track by the wash. Tom has his head down, his hands in
the pockets of his black suit. Beside him, Reverend Sherman is
talking, waving his arms, trying, I'd guess, to comfort. Behind
them come Enid and Faith, square shapes in best blue dresses, and
then Seth and Arch, leggy as colts, uncomfortable in Sunday suits,
in the shadow of tragedy. Now a space, long seconds passing before
I see Luisa. She is alone, walking slowly. She is crying. I know
that, even from this distance, from my bed beside the window. She
wipes her eyes on her apron. Her shoulders heave. She has been
crying for three days. "I wish I could shout so they could hear me.
I wish the Reverend would go to her, assure her of her place in
heaven and in our house. I wish one of them, Tom or the children,
would take her by the arm, lead her home. Instead they act as if
she is not there at all, perhaps thinking that if they ignore her
she will vanish and with her this house, these three days, the
newly turned earth in the far field. "Well, they are wrong. None of
it will disappear. We'll live with it, tiptoe around it, make
excuses and blame each other. And who is to blame? Tom, for coming
here to homestead at the foot of the red rock mountains? For
begetting children upon my body? Sons to inherit, daughters to
marry? Or I, in my -- not innocence, that's not the word I want --
my cocoon, my shroud of womanhood that brought me here, a continent
away from home to wifehood, motherhood, acceptance of death as a
part of life? Birth and death are what I see and take for granted.
Life comes and goes with the seasons, with the years. There is a
violence in this soil, in the people who labor on it. Perhaps it is
only the truth of the earth, and one accepts it or goes down in
defeat."
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