and held it horizontal. âGot it,â I said.
He went over the plan. The house, like every grass-having house on our block, had two front lawns: a bigger one separated from a smaller one by a driveway. The bigger side was three times the size of the smaller one, about 170 square feet. What he wanted was for the entire smaller side to be dug out and turned. He was going to fill that small side with cement, to extend the width of his driveway by five or so feet. That would take me a day or two, tops, he said, and weâd start there. The next step in the plan was to dig out a circleâten feet in diameterâfrom the bigger side of the lawn. To the best of my ability, I was supposed to center the circle in the yard. Iâd have to measure it and mark it off somehow. Then Iâd get to digging.
The job seemed more complicated than what Iâd signed up for, what with all the calculations. I told him so.
He scoffed. âYou think I was going to give you fifty bucks to turn grass into mud? The money is for the precision.â
âI donât know,â I said. Fifty dollars wasnât as much as people made it out to be.
âThe problem here,â Mr. Reuter said, looking me in the eye, âis that youâre not used to being entrusted with things you could easily mess up. Is that true?â
It sounded true. I didnât think too deeply about it, and said yes.
âItâs a shame. Itâs the death of a young man, not being given the opportunity to earn trust. The opportunity, you know? Just that. Itâs bigger than anything. Oh, youâll find ways to make fifty bucks here and there. Thatâs not really what you want out of this. I can tell. Itâs not every day you get the chance to point at something youâve done and say, âI could have ruined the shit out of this, but I pulled it off.â You donât think I couldâveâif I really wanted toâdone this myself? Hell, it wouldâve saved me a lot of time, not to mention the fifty. But I see you mowing lawns around the neighborhood, itching to make your mark on something. Grass, though, it grows back quickly, doesnât it? Not even a couple days later, all your work is invisible. Itâs gone. Youâre trying, and I give you credit for that. But thisââ He grabbed the shovelâs handle between my hands. ââthis is permanent. Youâll see.â
I asked if I could say something.
âSure,â he said.
âIâll do it for seventy-five.â
V. SOME REALITIES OF MY FIRST DAYS DIGGING
It took two full days of digging to finish the smaller side of the lawn. I didnât really have a strategy. Starting in the middle, I stepped the shovel into the ground as far as I could (about two inches) and pulled. In layers, I moved back until I reached the perimeter.
Mr. Reuter spent most of the time inside the house. At the beginning of each day, he placed a full pitcher of water and a cup on an oil stain in the driveway. The first day, I drank all the water in a couple of hours. When I got thirsty again, I went to the front door and knocked. Mr. Reuter answered, holding the telephone to his ear with his shoulder, carrying the holder and its wires around with him. With a look of disappointmentâhis glasses seemed to sink lower the unhappier he gotâhe took the pitcher from me and said heâd bring more water out in a bit. I went back to work. He never showed up with more water. Some time later I took a break, crossed the street, and drank as much water as I could from home. In a strange way, I came back with a feeling that Iâd failed. I hadnât made that pitcher last, and had to run home for help. The next morning, when I saw that a full pitcher of water had once again been placed on the driveway, I made a point to drink nothing more.
As I worked, so did the heat. In the desert, the idea of spring was a myth from another culture. It went
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