The Water Boy
By Reno Bailey
The dirt under the back porch of our ramshackle tenant house
had been fluffed by the chickens until it was as fine as talcum
powder. It was the coolest place a five-year-old could find
to play on a hot summer morning, the perfect place
to make a network of roads for my little toy cars.
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The Water Boy
designing his first website |
By this time in my short life my brain had grown to the size of
a peach seed and my attention span was way up there—at least
10 or 15 seconds. Although I was not the dullest knife in the drawer—
a rising First Grader, I could already read a good many words and
count,well,
pretty high—this day I was not at my sharpest.
I could hear the floorboards creak above me, as Mama
did her house work, causing tiny motes of dust to fall from the cracks
as she moved about the kitchen. The only other sound was the hum
of bees in wild flowers across the dirt road.
Slowly, my developing brain sensed something new. From far off,
wafting on the hot humid air, there came a stream of
indistinct sounds, like wavering syllables of human
speech, so faint their direction could not be ascertained, even by
an intelligent being—had
one been present. It sounded like “...a...no..” something,
something.
I shrugged and returned to my toys...
Wait, there it was again, this time a little louder, a bit more insistent: “..a...no...wa...er.” But
whatever it was, it was too far away to command my
full attention.
Three or four chickens approached, clucking and picking, wondering
what I was doing in their fluffing spot. I scared them away with
a clod. Then I heard it again, a little more distinctly: “..Hey...no...bring...um
....ter.”
Like
Bambi in a forest glade sensing danger, I came to full alert, then
began to put it all together.
-
On the porch above my head
was a quart Mason jar of once-cool water.
-
Down in the field below the crest of a slope and out of sight
was my daddy, plowing our cotton with Beck, grandpa's mule, and no doubt miserable in the withering heat.
-
Over an hour ago he had told me to bring him water every 30
minutes.
-
Oh Lord, I forgot. What time is it? Am I gonna get a
whuppin'?
By now I was out from under the house, my
ears tuned for optimal reception. “Hey,
Reno! (pause) Bring me some water!” It
was a command uttered with more urgency than mere words on paper
can convey. And as I sped across the cotton rows, water jar in hand,
with daddy now in view, I heard a final yell—a criticism really—that
is still burned in my memory: “What do you
think I am, a G... d... camel?”
I don't remember what happened next, but I know now those stinging
words revealed one of the essential qualities of my dad. As mild
and unassertive as he usually was, he could not abide trifling jugheads
like myself who don't carry their part of the load, who don't do
their best at whatever they do. And to this day, thanks to his example,
neither can I.
Byron Bailey, the “daddy” in this
true tale, was a sometime farmer in addition to working in
the mill. Employed by Cliffside Mills from 1936 until the mid 1970s,
he was successively a weaver, loom fixer and second hand. Forced
to retire early due to the heart disease that killed him in
1977, he is buried in Cliffside Cemetery.