Tuesday, March 10, 2026

IMAGINE THAT

 



As we rode through the long olive hills of Kentucky a while back, I glimpsed a lady at the mailbox, comfortable in a yellow sleeveless blouse and jeans, putting in a handful of envelopes and swinging the small red flag to Attention.

So insignificant and so everyday was that small, familiar gesture, that I imagined her day there in that green spot, that immaculate yard with its baskets of petunias swinging on the porch, as she went back into the house, into the orderly rooms smelling of breakfast.   The Dawn bubbles in the empty sink are long-gone, along with their kin from the Purexed single wash-load, gurgled out and down into the faraway ditch in the field.  The almost-done clothes are now perfuming the hall with warm Downy air from the dryer.

She’d washed up the the few dishes “real quick,” except for the black skillet where she’d fried the bacon.   It’s sitting still on the stove, gleaming with bacon grease, for the supper cornbread she’ll bake later.   She’d written a few checks with her first cup of coffee, sitting there at the table in her duster and slides, and soon as she was showered and dressed, she’d run out to the mailbox to get all the bills in before the carrier comes by. 

She’s completed all her little morning rightenings---beds made, yesterday’s Bluegrass Press, well read before supper and folded in the can, and her long shelves of African Violets given their weekly feed of Miracle Gro beneath their blue-light awnings.   Her husband rode off early after his third cup of Folger’s, away to the Co-op to check out those new butterbeans that cook up like speckled ones, into a big pot of purple-brown pot liquor and soft, rich old-fashioned beans.   He’ll be back with the seeds, and probably a lot more, and put the hills in before suppertime, coming in smiling and muddy-handed, pants-legs wet up the shins, from giving the rows a good drenching with the hose. 

Marlee has done all the chores with the TV on louder than usual, for she’s been following along with that awful trial way out there in the West.   She’s followed it all the way through, missing in only a few places when she had to go out to help with the Missionary Luncheon, or the days she takes her Mama to the doctor, and she’d give anything to haul off and slap the smug smirk off that murdering hussy’s face.  Her and her "apostle" boyfriend and their unforgivable spree of mayhem---Marlee's just had about enough of the primping and smiling and lying, and she broke down completely yesterday when the family spoke about their lost brother and friend.  

Marlee is a good Christian woman, and does right by everybody, but she knows, sure as she knows her shoe size and all the grandchildren’s birthdays, that SOME FOLKS just Pure-D need killin’.


6 comments:

  1. OH boy, that Marlee! I love to create stories of people I pass on trips, even people in houses when I used to go for a walk. You really make her come alive!!

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  2. I can see her as well as my own reflection in the mirror---that slender gold chain with the seven 10 m add-a-beads, and her one canted eye-tooth which makes her smile so memorable. She's really good with their finances and her daybooks from the seventeen years of their marriage are lined up on the bookshelf handy to "her" chair, easy to index out to check whether the warranty on the generator has one or two more years to run.

    I cannot help describing people, but I love them too much to give them any really bad traits, habits or luck. I've decided to make her one of my Paxton People; I hope she'll like Mississippi as much as she does Kentucky.

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  3. Oh, this is so charming. The house, Marlee, the details you have created of her life. Yes, I often do as you did, but not, I think, with as much intricate detail. It's rather magical!

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  4. AWWWW!! TWO Fellow Imaginators in one day! It's so lovely to have friends with such like hobbies! It's as good for me as if I could embroider (tried so many times, and had a Hope Chest with such feeble attempts, but we used them for YEARS til the colors were almost worn away) or create elaborate paper flowers, and we all had that gift and could gather to discuss and craft.

    In fact, My Mammaw Jessie did so many exquisite trims and elaborate crocheted edgings on all the dozens of pillowslips I got at my wedding shower, I made a decades-long habit of painstakingly removing each one from the worn-out linens over the years, and stitching them carefully onto a fresh pair. So we have quite a few with 1960s edging still in the linen-press upstairs. Some of the glossy old Coats-and-Clarks is limp as real silk, and has that elegant feel between your fingers. Surely some of the five Granddaughters will love these like I always have.

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  5. What a delightful story of sweet Marlee and her simple and charming day…your writing surely can put me right in that car ride with you…I can just about see her at that mailbox …. and helping out at the Missionary Luncheon…and I think I’d be her friend for life, seems like my kind of people. Thanks for the observation and imagination and thoughtful story. Best, Virginia

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    1. And you're MY Kind of People, Virginia!! You know good folks when you see them, and the others you navigate around with such a soft, quiet ignoring that they don't even notice you're not listening. I people my mind, as I always have my life, with good ones, and it's so lovely to have you drop in with such kind words and similar thoughts. I'm humming Irish tunes today, as two of my own Lovies are in Ireland today, seeing our ancestors' footsteps, and playing their music at a concert today and the St. Patrick's day Parade this coming week.

      It's always lovely to see you here!

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