Thursday, February 12, 2015

Of roots and roosters

It's true that we grew up in the country, but that's still no reasonable explanation why the rooster walked into our front yard. Furthermore, no one would have predicted that one of God's lowliest and most delinquent creations could gain star billing in my own family's folklore. Strange things do happen, sometimes most especially on a day when nothing's happening.

It was the summer of 1979, one of those long hot days when the sparkle of summer vacation had long worn off and tired mothers ordered their progeny to "get outside and play." Back then, that meant literally going outside and finding something to do sans electronics or equipment. I was eight. My nephew, Clint, was spending the day with us. He was four years my junior and more like a little brother then than now. 

It was the shank of the afternoon, and we had already exhausted a half-hearted game of "H-O-R-S-E." Neither of us had progressed past "H." We sat on the fence by the road and bet which color car would pass next; we poked around in ant hills with sticks. Each envoy into the house ended with my mother shooing us out of the cool, lemon-Pledge-scented living room and into the hot, breeze-free outdoors. As the heat pressed down, we finally flopped on our backs in the front yard, bored past arguing and worn out with childhood altogether. Today, two kids lying prone in a front yard would at least illicit a phone call. Back then, it was no biggie.

My dog, Charlie, observed our visitor before we did. Clint and I were, after all, staring at the sky with frustrated eyes and furrowed brows. Mine was a frantic dog, so his sudden stillness was unusual. Sitting up, we saw what interested Charlie, and our uneventful summer ended at once. Had a spaceship landed on the lawn, we could not have been more surprised.

Coming up the driveway with a light snick-snick of talons was an ugly, scrawny mess of black and white feathers, a lopsided red shear of comb and waddle, and two intelligent, spiteful golden eyes. Granted, I have never personally known many chickens in my life, but I don't believe they typically make eye contact with dogs or humans. This one did. Turns out he was a Dominque rooster, which my family pronounced "Dominecker." He might have been a poor specimen of the breed, but what this rooster lacked in looks he made up for in spirit -- a vindictive, fearless spirit.

The rooster highstepped into the short grass and made a beeline for our dog. Although our backyard butted up against a cattle pasture, Charlie had never met a chicken. He was naturally intrigued, provoked to the point of a living statue. The rooster went beak to nose with him, unblinkingly commenced to stare the dog down, then proceeded past him. Clint, who was also typically frantic, sat breathless and sweaty at my side. After a silent moment, the spell lifted, and we both sprang to our bare feet. Charlie seized this opportunity to give chase. 

That summer, my parents had an ongoing argument about our perpetually wet basement. Mom was convinced our house's foundation was cracked. Dad, perhaps sensing the cost and bedlam such a reality would provoke, had shoveled out a spot at the corner of the house to reveal what he surely hoped would be sturdy, solid concrete. A pile of soft earth still stood at the edge of the house; the argument remained unsettled.

The rooster, as though he carried reconaissance information, gathered up his feathers and ran straight for the moist dirt. Charlie followed, but he was outpaced by a chicken, who, once he hit the dirt, began to dig. I'm not talking about the kind of scritch-scratching observed around a coop. I mean digging as though he had tiny spades strapped to his talons. Clouds of dirt flew behind him, blinding Charlie as an afterthought.

Right away, it became clear that, although Charlie held all the cards in this fight, for some reason he wasn't about to attack the rooster: bark, yes; bite, no. When the rooster dug, Charlie dug. When the rooster rested, Charlie rested. My dog was as stunned as we were. Perhaps he didn't wring the rooster's neck because he had been just as bored and didn't want to end the diversion. 

Clint and I ran around the yard like a firecracker had jumped up our shorts, screaming "There's a chicken under the house! There's a chicken under the house!" Elderly neighbors puttering in their yards were either uninterested or stone deaf, for none even glanced in our direction. Mom, inside behind the roar of our single window air conditioner, couldn't hear thunder and so was completely oblivious to the loud, dirty, public display in her own front yard. All the while, dog and chicken burrowed together a long tunnel downward and sideways, along the foundation.

Clint believed adult notification was required, but we were loathe to leave the scene. Finally, as the duo sheared the roots of Mom's azalea bushes, we slammed into the kitchen and screamed our news. "Granny, did you know there's a chicken under your house?" Clint asked. At four, he unfortunately had already earned a reputation for spinning wild yarns. His chicken statement was not beyond his usual narrative realm. Mom dismissed him several times in pursuit of the dirt we'd tracked on the avocado-green linoleum. When Clint's story did not waver after several retellings, she finally looked at me for verification. "Come on, Granny, you're gonna miss it!" Clint yelled as he leaned out the storm door.

Clint and I raced back to the dig site; Mom took her time. Perhaps she believed our boredom had pushed us into the dangerous territory of parental practical jokes. But Charlie, chicken and dirt remained as we'd left them -- all stock still like a picture postcard. The rooster seemed unconcerned; Charlie kept jockeying for a better position from which to do still nothing. Mom was thunderstruck.

She stared at our tableau for a moment, then said not a word and went straight to the house and called my father. His shop was a couple of minutes away, but she seldom called him during the day to intervene into matters at home. Usually, she phoned him only when a situation involved snakes, bats or damage to the car. On this day, an agressive, digging chicken warranted such a call. Sure enough, in a few minutes my dad rolled into the driveway and emerged from his pick-up covered in concrete dust and sweat. No one had to lure him in our direction.

Dad grew up on a small farm. Although his knowledge of horses, mules and dairy cattle was complete, he was no chicken man. Whatever his farming duties had been, they were most certainly not the wrangling of poultry, as we soon discovered. His first theory, that the chicken was in fact dead of a fear-induced heart attack (hence the lack of movement), exploded when the rooster leapt to its feet and commenced to cantering around the yard. 

Charlie followed the rooster, with a great flurry of clucking and barking, and we followed Charlie, announcing loudly to my parents our whereabouts whenever the duo paused: "The chicken's under the clothesline," "The chicken's under the forsythia bush," "The chicken's on the breezeway." That bird seemed to have preternatural knowledge of our property's boundary lines; he never strayed beyond our fence.

During sprints through the front yard, I began to pick up that somehow my parents' best-laid plans of chicken and men were degenerating into a familiar fight about the foundation. She had rejected Dad's suggestion that Mom drop a clothes basket on the rooster while he rushed him into a corner of the garage. The leaky basement was a hot issue on my mother's mind, and a conversational line need not be drawn straight from the chicken to the crack. 

Amid all the shouting and yelling and crowing and howling, my sisters arrived home -- along with most of the husbands in the neighborhood. It was nearly suppertime, and the level of activity at our house had reached a level even the most disinterested neighbors could not avoid. Dad began to follow us about the yard, as if his proximity to the problem would force a sensible solution. No dice, but we did have a good-size chicken train going on by then: one perplexed father, one curious teenager, two ecstatic kids, one spastic dog and one wily rooster. Mom went into the house, and she emerged triumphant that she'd found "a home" for our guest. My grandmother agreed to offer him asylum on their small farm, and Mom was less than thrilled to learn that the bird remained to be caught.

Our neighbor across the road wandered over to offer assistance. Unfortunately, he knew less about chickens than even my dad, but the pair of them brought up the rear of our party. They mulled over blindsiding the bird with a tablecloth over the head or somehow tapping into Charlie's obviously lacking skills as a sheepdog. Finally, they combined prior ideas of herd and capture and decided to arm themselves with brooms, corner the rooster in the garage, then subdue him. They were right to arm themselves; the rooster made it clear by Dad's fifth or sixth try that he would not go quietly into that good night. Finally, Mr. Edwards jumped at just the right time and apprehended our rooster. This would have been the end of the line, except neither Dad nor Mr. Edwards had thought past capture. We had nothing to put the chicken into for transport.

In a display I have never seen repeated, Mr. Edwards voluntarily held onto that rooster while Dad devised a plan. Our neighbor was a small, wiry man with a nervous twitch and a nose-clearing tic. He was already hot and sweaty from catching the hateful bird. Now, he stood dripping from fear and humidity in our tiny, stuffy garage while our rooster beat him with his wings, clucked and bawk-bagawked at him, all the while fixing Mr. Edwards with his ruthless, amber stare. Perhaps a fellow chicken had suggested eye contact could hypnotize humans. It seemed to have just the opposite effect on Mr. Edwards. Although he managed to contain the bird for a full five minutes while Dad scrambled, our neighbor sneezed and convulsed and hopped and twitched, all the while punctuating his movements with the cleanest repetition of oaths he could imagine: "Oh, my stars!"

Since our family didn't own a vessel for chicken transport -- or a cage of any kind -- Dad acted fast. He came back to the garage with a big cardboard box. It had no top, but it was the only box he could find on short order. He overcame the missing top with a series of crisscrossed strips of masking tape. He had opened the bottom of the box, so he theorized to Mr. Edwards that he could drop the box over the rooster, quiet him down, then seal up the bottom of the box. The rooster would think the strips of tape were a cage and wouldn't try to jump out of the box. Done, and done.

Amazingly, the first and third step went without a hitch, and Mr. Edwards quickly went back across the road to retire into a nervous breakdown. However, the bird didn't quiet down. If possible, he grew louder, more furious, and the glee Clint and I had felt at first now coldly progressed into genuine fear. With every crow, he seemed to be looking up at us, saying, "Just you wait until I get out of this box."

Dad put the rooster's box in the bed of his truck, my sister jumped up front, and I hopped in the back. It wasn't far to my grandmother's house, so we all assumed we were in the last chapter of this very odd afternoon. Dad backed the truck around and pulled out onto the highway.

At this precise moment, either the chicken realized the tape was not a cage, or his carefully plotted revenge scheme came to fruition. The rooster jumped straight up into the air through the masking tape and the truck's sliding rear window, then landed on the gearshift just after Dad dropped it into first gear. He slammed on the brakes, and both he and Jayme jumped out of the cab. I cautiously peeked through the rear window and saw the vengeful rooster perched on the round gearshift knob. He had us, or so he thought.

A clever bird brain is still a bird brain, and since roosters have little parental intuition, he could not have known the limits of a father during life's little hiccups. The chicken could not have known how badly Dad did not want to retreat home to my mom and admit that he'd been defeated by a bird, not to mention he would have to go through the whole capture scenario again, this time in the middle of Hwy. 421. 

Dad ordered Jayme to close her window and get in the back with me. Dad got back in the cab, rolled up his window, carefully slid the rear window shut, and proceeded to drive all the way to my grandmother's house in first gear, both hands squarely on the steering wheel the entire way. Since we surely couldn't have been going more than 20 m.p.h., a string of honking cars quickly amassed behind us. Charlie, determined not to give in, chased us the entire way. 

The rooster was oddly silent, his head cocked to the right while he glared at my dad, who refused to take his eyes off the road. This was Dad's last, best chance. We arrived at Momaw's house, and Dad came roaring out of the cab, leaving his door wide open. The rooster didn't leap out and run away as hoped. Dad had to poke him with a garden rake to dislodge his fearsome grasp, then knock the feathers out of the cab so we could make the drive back home.

All summer long, the rooster literally ruled the roost at my grandparents' farm. He was crafty and plotted his "Dawn Patrol" attacks to occur at just the moment our mutual guard was down. On Sunday afternoons, we'd all be out visiting in the side yard, talking about church or something, and out would come the chicken and jump onto anyone who seemed relaxed. He flogged each of us at least once in turn; oh, yes, he got his revenge. The rooster seemed to take particular joy stalking my grandfather. Papaw stooped down to pick green beans, and, wham! Here came the rooster! He stretched out in his lounge chair with a wet hanky on his head to listen to the Cincinnati Reds on the radio, and, wham! Here came the rooster! 

Finally, in August, my grandmother had enough. She was a pink, plump and perpetually smiling bundle of all things sweet and sturdy. One day, she watched from the kitchen window while that cunning bird attacked my Papaw, who was trying to start the lawnmower. Mamaw marched outside, grabbed the old rooster by the heels, swung him head-first onto a maple stump in the yard, and whickety-whack: no more rooster. Like any good farm girl would, she plucked and cleaned the him: waste not, want not.  As a thoughtful gesture, the next time my mother visited, Mamaw pulled a plastic bag out of her deep freezer. "What's this?" Mom asked. "That's your rooster," Mamaw said with a twinkle.

We all knew he had it coming. Mom took the package home and put it in our freezer -- and there it stayed. As much as we all hated that damn bird, none of us could bring ourselves to eat him. It was a dishonorable thing to do. It was enough to destroy such a worthy opponent; there was no need also to devour him.   

Charlie may have held a different opinion.





Thursday, February 5, 2015

Heart-shaped boxes

Ah, here comes Valentine's Day! That clever invention of the greeting card industry designed to turn us romantic, fizzy-headed and loose with our money. This sensation often leaves us despondent with our heads buried in a pint of Haagen Dazs the next day or pirated heart-shaped boxes of mysterious filled chocolates we buy for ourselves when no one's watching. What a holiday! Woohoo! Hang the crepe paper and bunting!

All cynicism aside, I was more than bummed out when I learned Owen's second grade class isn't having a Valentine party this year. I've been saving cool shoe boxes, tissue paper and oatmeal boxes since autumn so he'd have a selection to choose from and build his totally awesome Valentine "mail box." I look forward to making the Valentine box more than scarfing all the chocolates in the world. We have a blast (well, I have a blast and Owen enjoys watching and listening to me have a blast.)

The fact that they're not having a party is also a polite hint that parents are not welcome. That's a damn shame. Despite modern education's attempts to equalize everyone at Valentine's ("every boy and girl must give a card to every other boy and girl") it's still a great sociological experiment watching the kids pass out their cards. Sometimes you can tell from beet-red boys tucking envelopes into a certain box that one or two of them already admire a sweetheart from afar. Some of the girls push sweaty red-and-white envelopes into boys' boxes with hopeful eyes cast down above a nervous smile. 

Owen hasn't announced any potential sweethearts since we moved here, so I was looking forward to watching him for any indication of who the lucky gal may be. Is it my business? Of course not, but I'm a mother. I'm hopeless when it comes to potentially sweet and/or embarrassing moments when my kid's involved. 

Valentine's was a bittersweet time for me every year. Although I was a lovely little girl, somewhere around third grade I blossomed into a tall, hefty gal with broad shoulders and big meat wrapped around big bones. That year, Mother whacked off my long hair -- once long enough to sit on -- into some horrible hairdo reminiscent of 1976 Dorothy Hamill meets 1977 Marie Osmond. 

Needless to say, I was very seldom anyone's boy toy until I got to college. I would watch the pretty, petite girls rack up Russell Stover mini boxes and solid chocolate hearts in elementary school, teddy bears and single carnations sold by the student council in junior high, and florist-delivered roses during class in high school. I learned to play it off with cool detachment and outward cynicism, but secretly I held my breath every Valentine's Day in hopes that someone saw the real me and admired her, for whatever the reason -- at least enough to buy me chocolates.

Although my dad was a slouch when it came to most holidays, he always went overboard on Valentine's Day. My sisters and I would find little heart-shaped boxes of chocolates on our pillow the night before Feb. 14, and the florist always brought Mom scarlet red roses on V Day, whether Mom and Dad were speaking to each other or not. Sometimes he would send us girls carnations, pink and red. Looking back, I think it was his uncharacteristic display of emotion that caused me to secretly root for Valentine's Day, to champion the cause of romance and affection. It was one of the few times he wore love on his cuff, like a drop of rain on the desert.

When Chris and I got married, I instantly dropped my cynicism toward the holiday altogether, smothering him in romantic cards, decorating the house with paper hearts, etc. It took him, a fellow cynic in his own right, a couple of years to understand that I physically need flowers and chocolates this one day of the year above all others. I even told him why.

Now, I welcome the day, no matter who devised it as a money-making scheme or cruel joke on the singles. And maybe my reversal on the issue is why I get so into Valentine's for Owen. Whatever the reason, I'm just relieved I can stop pretending I don't care and join the fizzy-headed throngs crammed into two short aisles at the Hallmark store next week. Sometimes it's a relief to no longer stand out.