“We need twenty-four posts, 12 ten
foot 2x4s, 6 sixteen foot 2x4s, 36 eight foot deck boards, 10 ten
foot deck boards, and 8 2x6x8s.” “Wait a minute. How many posts?”
“Twenty-four.” “I ain't digging 24 damn holes. That auger will
kill me.” “It's only 16 holes, 8 are on concrete.” “It's 9:30
and already 91 degrees. Somebody ain't gonna make it through the
day.” They loaded the posts last and as he laid every one on the
trailer they seemed to come to life and taunt him. The auger laid in
the back of the van, the dull blade laughing. “Is that it?” “We
need 16 bags of concrete.” “What size?” “80 pounders.” “For
the love of Jeff.” “Who the hell is Jeff?” “Nobody. Will you
drive, please?” “Sure thing.”
They headed down the interstate and he
slowly fell asleep. He dreamed the same dream that kept him from
sleeping at night. He was stuck in the middle of a huge crowd, there
were people everywhere, bumping into him and keeping him from going
anywhere. He couldn't move, he couldn't see, he couldn't breathe.
Somewhere in the sea of people she was out there, separated from him.
He would catch a glimpse now and then. He could always spot her face
even if he couldn't keep track of her for long. He could feel
something about to happen. It was palpable. Alive. He saw her again,
she was looking in his direction but not at him, he waved his arms
and yelled. The crowd was too big. Suddenly it all turned to chaos
and it was no where near controlled. She was gone, swept away in the
sea. He heard someone calling to him, “Wake up.” “What?”
“We're at exit 42, you want a drink?” “Sure do.” “You were
dreaming weren't you?” “Yeah.” “It was bad, huh?” “A big
crowd, got separated, couldn't get close again.” “Sorry.” “It's
just a dream. Doesn't mean anything. Let's get a drink and head on.”
About an hour later they had their
lumber and tools unloaded and set up. He looked around and wondered
why there was never any damn shade in the ghetto. “What's the
temp?” “It says 96 degrees.” “It isn't even noon yet.” “You
want the auger or the post-hole diggers?” “Well I got asked this
morning how come we've been through 5 pairs of post-hole diggers.”
“What did you say?” 'I told him because I've been digging holes.”
“What did he say?” “What would you have said?” “Nothing.”
“Give me the auger.” “You sure? You're down 0 to 2.” “It's
a battle of attrition. I'm gonna win, eventually.” He took the
auger, primed it, flipped the switch to choke, and pulled the cord.
Once, twice, three times; he pulled the cord.” “Turn it on.”
“Shit.” He flipped one switch to on and the other from choke to
run; and pulled once more to start the auger.
The sun beat down on his shaved head
and the sweat slowly dripped into his eyes. He had a death grip on
the handles. On hole done, two, three, four. He stopped for a moment,
left the auger running, and drug it across the ground like he'd drag
some wannabe out the door if he was still in his twenties and 80
pounds heavier. He grabbed a gallon of water out of his cooler, took
a nice long drink, and went back to digging. Five holes done, six,
seven, eight. Halfway there. “I'll finish.” He looked to his
left, made a face, and shook his head. “That auger hasn't done a
damn thing to you.” “The hell it hasn't!” “It's an inanimate
object.” “It's the damn devil. It's the stumbling block. The
auger and I are at an impasse.” “You're crazy.” “So.” Nine
holes done, ten, eleven, twelve. The engine sputtered and almost
died. There was plenty of fuel. “Hey, there is something wrong with
the auger.” “There's something wrong with you.” “I'm
serious.” “The blade is dull.” “The damn blade has been dull.
That's normal. There is something different.” “I don't know. Has
it got fuel?” He nodded his head and went back to his work.
Thirteen holes done.
He started on the next and about a foot
into the dirt the auger let out a whine, it started to smoke, a bead
of sweat fell onto the exhaust and sizzled away into something beyond
steam. He pushed the auger down harder and held the throttle as fast
as it would go. The blade twisted and corkscrewed down another foot
into the earth. “Let it cool off!” He didn't hear the warning, it
wasn't for his benefit anyway. He pushed with his arms, laid his
chest against the engine, gritted his teeth. He bent his head in
close to the auger, “You're done.” He pushed the throttle down,
the engine whined again, the smoke was as black as night. Six more
inches to go. He finished the hole and pulled the spinning blade out
of the ground as the engine caught fire and died. He reached out to
his right and took the post-hole diggers that were waiting for him.
“That's the only pair we have, there's two holes left, try not to
murder those before you're finished.”
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