Tuesday, December 2, 2008

South Dakota - The Sale


                                  The Sale 

Lightning flashes on the horizon in all directions as we land in the last light of day, the wings of the small plane tipping toward the tarmac in the gusty wind, first one and then the other. The rippling flash disturbs the orderliness of the perfectly square, perfectly green, perfectly straight-rowed fields that surround Joe Foss Field in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. It creates shadows where there should be none. It lights uneven shapes in brilliance and leaves others hidden nearby, the flashes rolling like a kaleidoscope.

As always, these perfect fields seem sinister to me, lying in judgment of those whose edges are irregular, whose shapes won’t conform, like mine. And yet there is comfort in their regularity too, like the patchwork quilt you pull around your shoulders on a cold night. They are the shape of my first memories, the cry of emotion that has no name, the edges I push without thinking, the place from which I came out into the world. They are home.

Watertown, a city of 26,000 where my brother and his family live, is 90 miles north on a good highway. Although the sky has just now darkened, it is nearly 10:30 at night, evidence that we are far north where days are long in summer. My boyfriend Wayne and I are driving through the heart of the Sioux Nation, the gathering place of the old tribes. I am at the wheel of our rental car. Buffalo can still be seen grazing along this highway, although tonight they are not visible. The flatness stretches out over the plains and it’s easy to imagine the six-foot-tall grass that once covered it all, waving in the wind like an inland ocean. The night is hot and sticky, and the lightning show continues, shimmering across the horizon, first right, then center, then left, then in a tremendous flash lighting the whole sky. The gods are restless. There are few other cars on the road. A feeling of standing alone in the midst of all this drama falls over me, a tiny being on a pinto pony with a twitching tail disguised as a Ford Escort.

We drive on through the eerie night, maximum speed 75 miles per hour. Our ears are popping continuously although there isn’t a hill in sight—barometric pressure. In the blackness I feel the familiar tug of the past dragging me back into the girl I was. How easy it is to fall into the silence, as if it were normal. As the road sign for Watertown appears on our right—Watertown Exit 2 Miles—the sky rips open abruptly and a roaring flood engulfs our windshield. I hit the brakes, unable to see the road, and Wayne shouts, “I can drive!”

“I’m not getting out of this car to change places. We’ll drown, like turkeys,” I yell back. “I can make it two miles.”

The rain is unbelievably thick, coming down hard in sheets. It’s so loud we think it must be hail, but nothing bounces. I drive slowly, leaning forward as close to the window as the steering wheel will allow, hoping to see the exit through the deluge outside. There it is, and I ease off the dark streaming highway with a sigh of relief. Now there are the lights of restaurants and gas stations, signs of fragile civilization. I turn right and right again onto the county road leading to my brother’s new home on the hill.

From the road we see the house, front floodlights blazing in welcome. We pull into the circular drive and stop the car well in front of the triple garage doors. The rain continues to pound.

“Should we run for the house?” Wayne ventures, peering reluctantly out the window.

“Let’s wait a few minutes and see if it lets up.”

Five minutes pass, our breath steaming the windows, and it seems the roar diminishes. “OK, let’s go.” We throw open the doors and scramble to the shelter of the entry, leaving the luggage behind for now. Should we ring the bell at this hour? They are expecting us, although they normally go to bed early. Wayne tries the door and it gives. It is unlocked. We push it open and spot a large piece of paper, a note, on the floor inside.
 

Welcome, Wayne and Dana!

We have gone to bed. Your room is ready downstairs. There is wine and a snack in the kitchen. Have a good night’s sleep and we’ll see you in the morning!

Love, Marlys & Jim

 
I think of the book In Cold Blood, the innocent rural family murdered in the night by psychopathic drifters. I think of my pretty home in a good neighborhood in Oakland, and know I wouldn’t intentionally leave the door unlocked late at night for any reason. And then I remember we never locked any doors when my brother and I were growing up on our farm an hour and a half east of here.

The rain is now a gentle shower, and Wayne retrieves the luggage from the car. The note doesn’t say to lock the door, but I do and turn off the floodlights as well before we go to bed.

                                                          * * *


            Every year for the past six or seven years, my sister-in-law Marlys has held a garage sale in mid-summer. She says she loves it because her daughters and their boyfriends, then husbands, come to help and it’s a family party. I have never come for the sale, but this year it includes the contents of my 95-year-old mother’s home as well as that of my sister-in-law’s 92-year-old mother, so I have agreed to come from California to help.

Today, the day after our stormy arrival, dawns sunny, hot, and humid. It is the day before the sale begins, and the task of finishing the pricing lies ahead. After warm greetings all the way around and hugs over coffee, Marlys and I arm ourselves with stickers and pens and go out among the many tables, set up in rows to facilitate traffic flow and already piled with neatly stacked and arranged items.

Over the years, the sale has evolved from a one-day event to a three-day extravaganza. It has grown from covering the tops of a couple of tables in one bay of the garage to this year filling the entire three-car garage plus several of my brother’s large equipment trailers parked in front. My nieces and their husbands have cleared out their closets and storage places, and Marlys has emptied her secret stashes of furniture, clothing, games, books, tools, whole sets of dishes and myriad other things she has squirreled away. I know she buys many of these at auctions and farm sales during the year, often at very low prices, thinking her daughters might like this and that or she might use a certain item around the house. I hope she comes out even.

I work on my mother’s dishes and linens. It’s odd to handle these familiar things, these dish towels, these tablecloths, the plates and cups and bowls of my youth. There’s not much I haven’t seen before, although occasionally a surprise emerges. I turn over an old book written in Norwegian, and then another. I carefully unwrap a set of pewter salt and pepper shakers encased in fragile yellow paper. I haven’t seen these before. They are engraved Clara, my grandmother’s name, and I guess they were a wedding gift to my mother’s mother, who died long before I was born and whom I’ve been told I resemble. As I put them in my personal bag, an unexpected wave of regret and something like guilt brings tears to my eyes. My mother and I have had a difficult relationship. I still want to have her love and acceptance, and she is even less able to give that now than she was in younger years. I feel guilty for parting with her treasured things, although her fading mind doesn’t remember she ever had them and her faltering body has no earthly use for them any longer. Perhaps I will keep a few of the most precious of them, like these shakers, as a solace.

In the afternoon, Wayne and I have an errand. His former wife, also a friend of mine, grew up in a little town about 50 miles north of here, near the North Dakota border.  Mary still owns her mother’s home, the home she grew up in, in Rosholt, South Dakota, a town of 600 people. The house is standing vacant and is for sale. Mary left long ago to live in California and hasn’t been in Rosholt for many years, and she has asked us to go see what condition the house is in.

We’re driving the same highway we traveled the night before, which runs straight north and south the length of the state paralleling the border with Minnesota. Fields line both sides of the road in this farming country, although this far north the fields are more prone to be stacked with bales of straw than lined with rows of corn.

“Wayne, look at those huge round bales. When I was a child, they still gathered the hay and straw in shocks. I thought they looked like golden tepees.” I point out the window to a field filled with immense golden sushi rolls of hay.

“I remember seeing rectangular ones,” Wayne says. “I haven’t seen these big round things before. They don’t look like they’d stack very well.”

Right after he says this we pass a field where dozens of the big round rolls are stacked neatly end on end, squared off and in symmetry with the fields, undoubtedly a testament to the rightness and the rectitude of the farmer.

“That reminds me of a field I saw in Minnesota where the rectangular bales were stacked in the most amazing pattern,” I say. “It had empty spaces and geometric outcroppings made with the bales. That farmer was an artist, and brave too. And probably young.” Wayne laughs.

“Yeah, and he was probably from somewhere else too,” he says as he looks over at me. “I’ll bet he eventually had to conform and stack his bales like everyone else, or else he moved to California like you did.”

I nod, remembering how glad I had been to escape.

From the highway, we turn onto the county road leading to Rosholt, seven miles away. Soon we see a few buildings.

Rosholt has the look of all small towns in this part of the world. It looks like the towns around my hometown in southwestern Minnesota, rich in spirit and poor in resources. There are few choices—one grocery store, two gas stations, two bars, two churches (one Roman Catholic and one Lutheran)) and one furniture store whose owner doubles as the town’s undertaker, embalming the departed in the back room. Mary has told Wayne of sneaking into the back room of the furniture store as a young girl to watch the embalming. Entertainment here is limited.

Mary’s house is easy to find; it’s the only red house in town. Mary’s mother had it painted bright red, and she was proud of it. Wayne and I pull up in the driveway.

“I wonder if we should have tried to find the realtor to get the key,” Wayne says, as he turns the car off and opens his door. “Mary says the realtor doesn’t like to come over here because it’s on the bad side of town.”

“How could a town this small have a bad side?” I laugh, as I follow him up to the house.

Wayne tries the side door. It’s unlocked. He pushes it open onto a small porch. To the left is the inside door going into the kitchen. It’s also unlocked and it has a huge hole in it.

“Wow, this is kind of a mess.” The carpets inside the house are dirty and torn. The walls are stained with what looks like water leakage and there are a few empty cardboard boxes strewn about. Otherwise the house is empty. I take photographs all over the house to send to Mary. There is a car, 1970’s vintage, parked in the garage on the other side of the porch. I take photographs of the car, and the open door, and the tilting For Sale sign on the front side of the house.

There are several abandoned houses in Rosholt, including one across the street from Mary’s house. Mary thinks she has an offer for her red house, although it is a very low offer. Now that we’ve seen it, we think she should take it.

“What do you think the good side of town looks like?” Wayne asks.

“Let’s go look.” We giggle as we drive the four blocks to the other side. It looks the same, although there are no red houses. Possibly Mary’s red house, so different from all the others, is what makes her side “bad.”[LH1] 

After 45 minutes in Rosholt, we’ve seen all there is to see. Back on the road, we return to Watertown. The girls and their husbands will have arrived while we’ve been gone, and we’ll all catch up over dinner and then go to bed early. The sale starts tomorrow at 10:00 a.m. and we need a good night’s sleep.

It’s Thursday, 9:00 a.m. It seems most people would be at work on a Thursday at 9:00 a.m. When I look out the window I see this is not true. It looks like most of the people in South Dakota are here in my brother’s front yard. There are cars packed into the circular drive and lined up on both sides of the long driveway leading to the county road. There are cars stopped on the road. There are men walking around with thermos bottles of coffee. A woman calls on the phone to ask if we are allowing early buyers. Marlys is firm that the sale starts at 10:00 a.m. as advertised.

My brother goes out to pull the flat trailers holding the furniture around to the front with his truck. He and Wayne and my niece’s husband Jason stay in the front to chat with the men and to keep people from taking the price tags off the furniture to claim it early.

At 10:00 a.m. sharp, we raise the garage door. Marlys tells of people crawling under the slow-moving door in years past to be first into the sale, but this year the door moves quickly enough and the opening is orderly. We hand out cardboard shopping boxes as our customers enter. Business is brisk and there is soon a line of people checking out, each with two or three overflowing shopping boxes. This goes on all day, in a steady flow. People come from all around, from farms, from towns in Minnesota and North Dakota. It’s a social occasion. The tables empty and we fill them again, re-fold, re-stack, replace. When a group of Hutterite women in long skirts and bonnets enter, their children in hand, heads turn surreptitiously. They are different and viewed with suspicion.

Marlys sits at the check-out desk all day, adding up sales, chatting with customers, evaluating the occasional request to take a check, deciding whether to reduce a price.

 “Would you take thirty-five dollars for that china hutch?” The woman points to a dark wood cabinet with a curved-glass door. The cabinet is marked $55.

“Oh dear. Well now, that hutch is my mother’s and there are a lot of memories associated with it.” Marlys’ expression is wistful, as if she is thinking back over the years that hutch was in her childhood home. “You can see there’s hardly a scratch on it. I don’t think I could let it go for thirty-five dollars.”

“Well then, would you take forty?” The woman looks back at the hutch. You can see she really wants it and has already imagined it filled with her own china. Then she looks at her husband, who is standing just outside the garage door next to the check-out desk.

“I’ll tell you what, I’m willing to split the difference with you,” Marlys smiles. “How about forty-seven fifty?”

The woman looks again at her husband, who nods. With a big smile on her face, she says, “Yes. That will be fine,” and reaches into her purse.

“Have a chocolate chip cookie, and one for your husband too.” Marlys takes two cookies from the plate next to her with a napkin and hands them to the woman as she takes her money with the other hand. In a moment the cookies are eaten and the hutch is on its way to a new home.

  Marlys is a born negotiator, and really seems to love the back and forth conversation with people coming through. My brother Jim has owned an excavation and demolition company for many years, and when a customer is slow to pay his bill, Marlys goes out. She always gets the money, even if she has to stand on the slow-payer’s porch for hours, patiently but determinedly talking through the screen door. It’s good for business in several ways, not the least being it saves my brother, whom I adore, from having to go out and lose his temper.

At 6:00 in the evening I go in to cook for our crew of eight. At 8:00 p.m. we close the garage door and Jim pulls the trailers back into his shop. It has been a full day, and we re-hash it over dinner and drinks before falling into bed.
 

* * *
 

For three days they file through to find a bargain, to find something different, to add something new to their lives. They are a friendly people, but reserved. There is little emotion, and if two women want the same thing, one stands back waiting for the other to politely acknowledge the other touched it first. There are no harsh words, no raised voices, and no children run crazily through the aisles. Children stand next to their mothers. The men for the most part wait outside, standing around talking grain prices and the weather, waiting to be consulted about a substantial buy or to carry a heavy item to the family truck. My brother stands with them. They all know each other. They all depend on each other. They are all customers, providers, diggers of each other’s basements, growers of each other’s food, granters of each other’s loans and credit. They are good people, and for the most part honest and upright.

Still, I wonder if there isn’t something more here, behind the extreme control of emotion. The longer I’ve been away, the more I see it when I return. A hint of it peeks through the careful placidity of these faces and the polite ordinariness of the conversation, the smile, the nod, the reluctance to touch, the prohibition of excess. Who are these people, really? Does the calm surface hide a dark place in the soul of a few, the legacy of Vikings and Huns, the ancient shadow of berserkers, passion, pillage and chaos? I hope so. It would make them more like me. It would help me feel less foreign here, less like an outsider.

Wayne and I leave Watertown the day after the sale is over, rising at 4:00 a.m. to drive back to Sioux Falls on the now-familiar north-south highway. A tornado went through the area just east and south of Sioux Falls the night before.  As we speed by in the dawn, we see tree branches and large pieces of metal strewn along the side of the road.  The people here may be reserved, but the wildness of the weather makes up for it.  It seems a good time to leave.

We board the little plane at Joe Foss Field, and settle in as we push away from the gate and taxi out for takeoff. With a surge of power, the plane pulls up, and the perfect quiltwork squares of the green fields are visible once more as we climb into the clouds. They are beautiful, and I smile at the pleasure I feel as I leave them behind.



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