SacrificesA Story by Luna Evangeline“Get
out of my house, you damned woman, and don’t come back!” This was the cry that drove Margaret
Edwards from her own home on the night of June 4th, 1934. Even after
she had darted out of that door, with her husband’s outraged bellows echoing
after her, and even after she’d mounted her prized black stallion and taken off
across the plain with plumes of dust billowing after her, she’d heard that
venom-filled cry pierce her ears again and again, she’d seen Eddy’s flushed face
in her dreams, and she’d felt the growing sense of despair festering like an
infected wound inside her. She lies on the ground, an injured
lamb, mud and sweat caked on her skin. The terribly humid night air is a
smothering blanket, choking her every breath, but the water in the air was no
match for the torrent of tears flooding her cheeks. ~Margaret~ I
can’t see my toes anymore, and there’s something growing in my womb that was
not invited to be there. I don’t want to become huge and swollen like an
overinflated balloon. I don’t want to waddle around, I don’t want to cry for
foolish reasons, and I most certainly do not want to leave my bakery. Most of all, I just really, really,
do not want a child. I’ve run away, but what good will it
do? This unwanted being within my body is growing ever larger, and surely at
some point Eddy will demand that I return home. Oklahoma is not where I want to
be. There is nothing there, nothing but barren fields that cough dust into the
wind and an endless road of sweltering days doing housework. The only serenity
I can find anymore is my nights at the bakery, where the kneading can soothe my
nerves and work out the terrible knots that have found their way into my back,
but even then the sun must rise (all too quickly, may I add) and I must return
home to do work alone and think over and over again that my life has been
forever ruined by the one thing that most women desperately want. A stinking, vomiting, little slug
that does nothing but wail and mess his diapers. The doctors say I have four months
left. Four months until all that I’ve worked for will be dust in the wind, and
nothing more. And here I lie alone, whimpering to no one, dreading every second
that wastes away until my privacy is invaded by a doctor and nurses and a child
that will be placed in my arms, and it will shriek and cry, and at that point I
don’t suspect that I could get any more miserable, since I’m supposed to look
down into that thing’s watery blue eyes and expect some kind of motherly love
to twine me to the child’s heart forever. Perhaps Eddy’s sister would like to
adopt a child. She’s got three of her own but she’s that kind of irritatingly
charitable woman who would do it because “God’s will must be done.” That’s what
I’ll do. I’ll have the thing and send it off to Edna. Eddy may be angry but
he’ll be able to go visit the kid. That should be good enough. There are spidery purple lines
weaving their way across my stomach. The doctor told me they would appear. Although
I know it will do absolutely no good I scrub the marks every night with a bar
of soap until they’re raw and stinging. Every morning I wake up with a sort of
stupid hope that they would be gone, yet I open my eyes, eagerly take off my
sleeping gown, and see them still there, little violet lines tangled across the
growing bulge of my abdomen. I am doomed. I used to be standing
on the very edge of a cliff, but now I am falling, plummeting like a rock to
the churning waters below, and unless God may think to give me wings I will
crash and drown in the waves eagerly rising to take me. I’m not ready for this
responsibility, this womanhood, this human being that needs love and care,
which I don’t have. Over the following months,
Margaret’s stomach grew bigger, bigger, and then bigger yet. She made friends
with the man who owned the barn in which she had taken refuge"Jack was his
name, and he had a frosty beard and spoke with a faint wheeze"and she had made
no effort to contact Eddy. Jack brought her meals of chicken, potatoes, and
carrots, and gave her books to read aloud that his wife had once read while
expecting, many years ago. One particularly old book, Mother Goose’s Nursery
Rhymes, sparked a fondness in Margaret that she was regretful to have. When
Jack had given it to her, she’d felt something, a soft, almost unnoticeable
anticipation of nights by the candle reading to a small, sleepy child tucked
into the nook of her arm, but the image was gone as fast as it had come, yet
every time Margaret’s fingers brushed that old leather cover, there was a
stirring warmth in her abdomen. It terrified her. She began to enjoy quiet nights
alone in the barn, where no one spoke to her but the wind that wound its way
cleverly through every crack and fault in the walls, and where the dawn and
dusk sent little splinters of sunlight slanting through those cracks like a
blinding, golden wink, and where she was not at home but felt more welcome than
she ever had anywhere in her life. The life inside of her started to
make its presence known, with little nudges here and there, a sharp kick, or a
sudden pang of hunger. She would begin to rub her belly, humming a tender
melody that came from seemingly nowhere, but then she would stop and scowl and
remind herself that she was not a mother. She was a baker. And no matter how
angelic the face of her baby was, she would not raise him. Not because she
didn’t want to but simply because she couldn’t. She had no instincts to kiss a
scraped elbow, or to brush a lock of hair off of a sweaty brow after he had
awoke from a nightmare. Those feelings were not there. ~Margaret~ I had a dream last night that made
me wake in uncontrollable shivers. I was in labor, screaming, crying, damp with
sweat, but when the doctor reached between my legs he did not reveal a child
but a loaf of bread. He looked at it and laughed, then tossed in the trash with
a wink and said, “You won’t be needing that anymore, Margaret.” I was sobbing,
tears blurring my vision, and I rolled myself out of the damned hospital bed
onto floor and crawled to the wastebasket, but when I lifted the lid the loaf
was already stale, mold-coated, useless. Now I am curled into a ball on the
ground, having rolled off of my bed of hay in the night, and I cannot stop
bawling. I have a terrible feeling that I know what the nightmare meant, but I
don’t want to speak it or even think it. Bringing it into words would make it
real. Homesickness
is wrenching at my heart and I think of my bakery, shuttered and quiet, waiting
for me. It’s too painful of an image so I stand up shakily, make an attempt to
brush the dirt off of my dress, and head out into the field. Jack is standing there, looking
morosely into the sky as a hot summer wind sweeps by and takes with it a train
of dust. I pat him on the shoulder. “Morning, Jack.” “Mornin’.” His voice is but a grunt
as his faraway gaze travels lazily over the horizon. “You likin’ it out there
in that barn?” I nod enthusiastically. “Really,
Jack, I do love it. It’s so nice to be alone out there for a while. Thank you.” He is quiet for a moment, eyes
shaded by wrinkled folds of skin, staring hard at the ground. Finally he
speaks. “Just like Edna, you are. That woman
would always want to sleep in a dirty ol’ barn rather than our house.” He
shakes his head slowly, and I can see in the taut lines of his face how much he
misses her. “‘Come sleep in the barn with me tonight,’ she’d say. I don’t get
it. Musta liked the feelin’ of bein’ closer to nature.” I pat Jack’s shoulder again gently.
I don’t say anything, but I don’t need to. We have a quiet companionship, and
although neither of us say much, our friendship is one of the strongest, since
we’ve both lost something huge in our lives. “Coffee?” Jack mumbles. I can easily
see that he wants a moment alone. “I’ll go get it,” I say cheerily. We
take turns bringing out the morning coffee. Jack has a limp leg so I offer all
of the time to do it, but he’s a stubborn old man. The house is about a two minute’s
walking distance from the fields and the barn. I am walking along a well-beaten
path, stamped into the ground by the wife, children, animals, and farm-hands
that Jack used to have, my mouth clamped tight against the gusts of
dust-polluted wind that keep rushing into my face. It’s a beautiful morning,
warm and flawless, but the barren land offers no beauty to accompany the sunrise.
Jack has no crops in this year and I have no idea what he is going to do. I’m not even ten yards from the
house when I feel a sudden rush of liquid between my legs. For one wild,
hysterical moment I think that I have suddenly urinated on myself, but then I
realize what is happening to me. A horrible, searing pain shoots up my back,
and I drop to my knees. More stabbing pains bombard my spine. I crazily think
that I’m dying. “Jack,” I cry feebly. “Jack…” I dive in and out of consciousness
on our way into town. The pain is horrendous. I am lying in the seat of Jack’s
car, writhing in agony. There’s no words, there’s no feeling, nothing except
pain. Terrible pain that sends me diving into the blackness again… The
infant placed tenderly in Margaret’s arms is slimy and slick. His watery blue
eyes peer up at her almost shyly, with a sense of wonder that Margaret’s sure is
reflected in her own. His tiny fingers quiver, and he lets out a loud, piercing
wail, but she only smiles and gently strokes the small tuft of hair upon his
head. Something in the back of her mind reminds her of how ugly babies are, and
of how she never wanted one in the first place, but all she can think of was
the small spark of love unfurling like a flower in her chest. She’s never felt
like she could die for something before, but now she’d beg a murderer to set
her own wretched self on fire rather than even thinking of bringing harm to her
angel. He has thick, chubby limbs that he flails feebly, but she only laughs with
a carefree grin. She leans down to lightly kiss the boy’s sweaty forehead and
brushes aside any lingering feelings of remorse which she once held for the
miracle that squirmed restlessly in her arms.
Margaret can feel his heartbeat, fluttering like a hummingbird’s wings
as she flits from feeder to feeder, and she can see within the twin pools of
his eyes the man that he will grow to be, and even though the doctor’s alarmed
cries begin to echo in her ears and her vision begins to blur, her last slurred
thought is that maybe she truly will die for her newfound heart-holder. She can
feel the blood pouring out of her body, she can feel her heartbeat slow, and
she can feel her arms’ strength give way beneath the tiny weight of her baby
boy. ~Margaret~ My soul is lifting, floating up like
a wistful sigh, descending glistening stairs. I feel weightless, carefree, just
an afterthought that life has discarded. But then I remember. And I look
back. Beneath the glistening stairs, I see
a woman’s body. My body. Her arms are empty, but I know there should have been
something there. The body"me"I am dead. But I must go back. Because I remember. I race back down the stairs and
fling myself into the air"I fall and fall, clouds whipping by, until I land
with a terrible slam in my body. I breathe. I blink. I feel as if I’m a
balloon, desperate to float back up into the sky, but I hold on. I cough. There
are surprised gasps"“She’s alive!’’"but I ignore these things. Because I
remember. I remember my baby. I whisper, “Name him John. John
William.” And then… My soul is lifting, floating up like
a wistful sigh, descending glistening stairs. I feel weightless, carefree, an
angel sent to Heaven to love from above like no one has ever loved. To love the
most unbreakable love, to love without fail. To love like a mother. © 2013 Luna EvangelineAuthor's Note
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Added on July 15, 2013Last Updated on July 15, 2013 Author
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