Chapter Two - Ecstasy
The next morning, bleary eyed from lack of sleep and surly as ever in my new personality, I barely tolerated Mom's presence as she made breakfast. I must have given her a nasty glance at one point because she ripped off her apron and strode purposefully out of the kitchen exclaiming "Fine, fix your own damn breakfast!" So I finished poaching the eggs, then sat and ate them with toast that now tasted like ashes. I heard a car door slam, Mom's engine come to life and gravel peppering our house as she blew down the driveway. Things were certainly not getting any better.
Finally I got up, put my work clothes on and headed for Laura's. Her car wasn't there, so I went out to the area I was working on, thankfully one of the few remaining thickets needing attention, and got at it. I was so into destroying what was in front of me and my mind so occupied with conflicting images, that I did not hear Laura's car drive up nor her steps as she neared.
"Hi Aaron!" She called from about 15 feet away
Startled, I turned my head, stepped back and tripped over a branch and fell backwards β the ax flying from my hands. I must have struck my head as the next thing I knew I was hearing my name "Aaron, Aaron are you OK? Aaron!"
Groggily, I sat up. "I think so," I said. However when I went to move my foot into a better position from which to stand up, pain shot through it and up my shin.
"Oww, I think I may have twisted my ankle or something."
"Oh Aaron! I'm so sorry, I didn't mean to startle you," Laura cried. "Let me help you up."
I straightened my leg and felt around my ankle and foot with my hands. Nothing seemed out of place, but I could feel a little swelling just below my ankle. "I think its OK, but there is a little swelling."
Laura held out her hands and steadied me as I rose. It hurt to put weight on the injured foot, so she took my arm and placed it around her neck and with her support I hopped over to a tree trunk I had felled earlier.
I sat down and Laura knelt in front of me taking my foot in her hands. She removed the shoe and it was obvious the swelling was starting in earnest. "I don't think we'll get to the house walking," she said looking around. The tractor was pretty close by. "How about if we get you on the tractor."
"Ok." Laura helped me up again and together we did a three legged hop to the tractor. I crawled up and onto the seat.
"Can you drive this over to your car?" Laura asked.
"I think so," I replied. But when I tried to press the clutch, excruciating pain shot up my leg and involuntarily, I gasped.
Laura saw the pain and said "What can I do?"
"I think you will have to operate the clutch," I said. The tractor we had was one of those old Fordson models from the 50's. It was a great acreage tractor, with a three point hitch and the gearing to pull small implements, but it wasn't made for two people. It had one of those old steel seats with the holes drilled through it, held up by a leaf spring.
So the only way this was going to work was if Laura sat in front of me, and drove. I could see her hesitate a little, but then she began to look determined and climbed on, positioning herself at the front of the seat while I did everything I could to avoid contact.
"How do you start this thing?" She asked.
"Turn the key in the ignition and press that button," I said, forgetting that the tractor was in gear and that Laura may not realize it. "The throttle is that lever," I said, pointing.
The tractor lurched forward a few inches, then stopped suddenly. Laura was initially thrown back against me, then me forward against her as the tractor came to a rest. So much for decorum.
I said "Shit, I'm sorry, I should have told you the tractor was in gear!"
"If I'd been thinking, I would have realized that," Laura replied. "Its not like I haven't driven a standard before, where there is a clutch there are usually gears."
Laughing a little, Laura pushed the clutch in and started the engine. "Where should I set the throttle?" she asked.
"Maybe just a little above idle. You'll have to let the clutch out slowly."
Laura let the clutch out and the tractor started moving ahead, then as the clutch was fully out, was suddenly moving faster than she wanted. The tractor was bouncing over the rough ground and trees were coming up quickly. She panicked a little trying to steer out of the way."
"Press the clutch," I yelled. "Press the clutch!!"
She looked down, found the clutch with her foot and the tractor rolled to a stop, gently coming to rest at the base of a tree.
"Whoa," we both breathed.
"I'm sorry," I gushed. "I should have given you way better instructions. Why don't you turn it off for a second and I'll talk you through it."
With that she turned off the ignition. I could see she was shaking. "Are you OK?" I asked as I placed my hands on her shoulders to steady her. Unexpectedly she leaned back, resting against me and said "Yes, just give me a few seconds."
With my hands resting awkwardly on her shoulders those few seconds turned into what seemed like minutes. Silence descended upon us. Time seemed to dilate and all was right with the world. My mind was a complete blank and I didn't care. I wanted this moment to go on forever.
At some point, the silence was pierced by the calls and songs of birds and the wind rustling through the leaves above us. Laura shook her head, sat forward and said, "We have to get you to a doctor before your foot swells up like a balloon. What do I do?"