again. âWe plant it in the fall and let it grow for a couple of weeks until the cold makes it go dormant. If winterâs not too bad, then in spring, the wheatâll come alive again.â
But Iâd long lost my initial curiosity about farming. Now I had to pretend to be interested. âHow will you know?â
âIf we get a lot of snow, it protects the plants like a blanket. But if winterâs cold and dry,â he said, shaking his head, âtheyâre lost.â
I grabbed a plate and picked out a chicken breast. âIs it worth the risk?â
He looked surprised. âOf course it is. That wheat could feed a lot of folks.â
I found myself staring at the oily indentation across his forehead caused by wearing that old hat of his all day long.
He finished eating, then leaned back in the chair. âWhere were you today?â
It wasnât a demand. I took one bite. âSightseeing,â I answered.
He rocked forward. âThe truckâs not for sightseeing. We get gasoline to move workers and do our business.â
Of course, he was right. Because of gasoline shortages and war needs, most everyone frowned on pleasure driving, and at one time, the government had banned it altogether. In January of 1943, the government had tried making pleasure driving a punishable of- fense, but with enforcement nearly impossible, they lifted the ban later that same year, in September.
I said, âThen thatâs what I did.â
Ray started on his dessert, stale cake from Mrs. Pratt. âItâs not just the gasoline, but the tires, too. Iâm using a tractor with steel wheels âcause you canât get tires nowadays. And every fall after harvest, I have to take the tires off that old wagon hitched behind the barn and put them on the truck. Otherwise, the truck tires would be worn out, and all I could buy is reclaimed ones that donât last a hundred miles.â
âThatâs illegal, isnât it?â
Ray gulped.
âSwitching out tires? Keeping more than one set?â
âI do it âcause I need to.â
âWell, I needed to transport farmworkers.â
âWhoâd that be?â
âRose and Lorelei.â
He looked baffled, and then a flash of recognition crossed his face. âThe Japanese girls.â
âTheyâre American.â
He chewed with effort. I think the man hadnât a clue what I meant. âOkay. The American girls who look Japanese.â
That chicken wasnât such a good idea after all. I shoved my plate away. âDo you dislike them because of Pearl Harbor? Because of Daniel?â
He gave me a hard look. âIâm not as stupid as you think. I know theyâre not the same people who bombed Pearl Harbor. And theyâre great people, good workers. Theyâve kept our harvest going over the past few years.â
I slumped back. âI never said you were stupid.â
Now Ray looked at his dessert instead of eating it. âAnd I never said I disliked them. I just said they were Japanese, is all.â
âAnd you keep your distance.â
âI have a lot to do around here.â Ray wiped his face with a napkin. âI got to keep this farm going pretty much on my own. I donât go into the fields to socialize.â
Eating with him now was out of the question. I got up from the table and went outside to the porch without slamming the screen door. I sat in my chair and listened to the sounds made by crickets in the night while I tried to slow my breathing. He left me alone for close to an hour, then before he went to bed, he stepped outside.
The breeze that night came in from the direction of the creekbed, and although it ran dry, the ditch always held a pocket of cold air that chilled me each time I walked the bridge that crossed it. Rayâs looming, boxy shape blocked the moonlight but not the cold air coming up from the creekbed. A chill ran up my bare forearms,
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