(This is an entry for the
Summer Lovin' Story Contest 2023
. [Please rate and comment.] So it really bothered me that in my stories, there's an unequal relationship between men and women. For better or worse, this is my attempt to make them equal. Please tell me what you think!)
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It was a scorcher of a summer day, and there were no clouds in the sky, no potential relief from the unrelenting heat. Ivy Garner sighed and continued weeding her award-winning garden. The summer cucumbers were ready to harvest so she could make her prize-winning pickles.
Last year her pickles had received rave reviews at Iowa's Wapello Country Fair but failed to place. (She suspected the mayor's wife and the wives of two city councilmen had won out of nepotism. That's the way life was in a small town, and Kirkville, Iowa, only had 137 people.)
Ivy's "secret" was to pickle the cumbers in rum and hot red peppers alongside radishes for a week before pickling them in vinegar. It was prizewinning, but her recipe was a highly coveted secret. All her neighbours were jealous!
This year Ivy hoped to go to the Iowa State Fair and win the pickle competition. Her pickles were delicious, and Ivy's recipe was a highly coveted secret, which all the neighbours begged her for. In typical stubborn Iowan fashion, Ivy was happy to give them the pickles but NOT the recipe!
Des Moines, the state capital of Iowa, was quite the drive from Kirkville (population 237), where Ivy lived. Still, if she placed in the pickle competition, Ivy would like to go to Des Moines. Des Moines wasn't Paris---hell Des Moins wasn't even Chicago, which was the biggest city "relatively" close by. Des Moines was still a long way from Kirkville, and it was the capital of Iowa. Ivy thought lots of exciting things must happen in Des Moines, at least more than in Kirkville.
Travelling the long distance to Des Moines was especially difficult since Ivy didn't have a car. Her husband, Denis, had died in the Korean War, leaving Ivy a widow with a five-year-old daughter and a mortgage. She'd gotten a job at the Corner Cafe---but it was just enough to cover expenses. Ivy couldn't afford anything fancy like a car or one of those newfangled TVs her now teenage daughter Monica had been pestering her for.
Ivy thought enough went on in Kirkville, no matter how small it was! She didn't need a TV to get nightly news from far-off places like Boston or San Francisco. Ivy got her news from the Sunday paper or Ottumwa movie theatre's News of the World, which she frequented every Friday. Also, Tate brought her all the salacious gossip from his route.
Tate delivered soda for the Coca-Cola company. His "territory" was south-eastern Iowa. He'd stock grocery stores, gas stations, vending machines and cafes like the one Ivy worked at. Tate had seen more of the world than Ivy could imagine. He'd been born in Denver and stationed in Frankfort, Germany, during the Korean War. (Someone had to protect US army bases from potential Communist uprisings---not everyone could actually fight in Korea.) Tate spoke German, so it was a natural fit.
Tate would tell Ivy about his adventures in Europe and across Iowa. Slowly, Tate and Ivy built a friendship. Neither dared take it "further" that friends, despite wanting one another, thinking and afraid an "adult relationship" could ruin that.
On Wednesdays, when Tate stocked Coco-Cola in Kirkville, Ivy would make sure that the Corner Cafe served German chocolate cake and grilled cheese, his favourite. The two would talk over lunch and cigarettes. Many townspeople objected to Ivy serving German chocolate cake since it had coconut, but Ivy served it anyway...for Tate.
Ivy knew that her daughter, Monica, would be going to college in a few years. Ivy was proud of her daughter for that. Ivy hadn't graduated high school. Steve had been drafted, they'd gotten married, and she'd gotten pregnant with Monica. It had all happened so fast that Ivy hadn't had time to get her diploma. It was something she always regretted, but despite not having a high school diploma Ivy got by. Her daughter would be going to college soon and hoped to be a nurse. That made Ivy proud.
Ames, Iowa, where Iowa State University was located, was a long way from Kirkville, especially since she didn't have a car. She wanted to be near Monica and help her in any way possible. Des Moines seemed as good as any place to live, even if it was a big city!
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Tate Treiber pulled the truck up next to Kirkville's Corner Cafe. He wondered if Ivy would have German chocolate cake and grilled cheese sandwiches today. They were his favourite! It had been a long hot summer day, and he'd had to change a tire along the road. Another day, another dollar, so it went...
Tate knew you had to work if you wanted to get by. It was one of the reasons he'd admired Ivy so much. After her husband had died, Ivy had gone to work. She hadn't wanted any assistance, and she hadn't cried about her misfortunes. Ivy knew she had a five-year-old daughter to take care of, so Ivy had to Sally-forth and got a job.
In some ways, Tate felt sorry for Ivy. She just had her daughter to come home to, a daughter who would soon be leaving to go to college. Ivy would be alone! Still, Ivy had her job and hobbies...she was happy even if she wasn't a Rockefeller.