Authors: Sharon Creech
After spending a morning over at Birchmere Farm where Beat and Zep let us help as they trained and groomed their cows, we returned to Mrs. Falala's, eager to practice what we'd learned.
No sign of Mrs. Falala when we arrived, but Paulie the pig was snorting in a mud hole behind the barn and the parrot was squawking from the barn roof. The fat cat stood watch over a bush, its head darting left and right,
tracking something. No sign of the snake.
Zora was standing in the shade beside her favorite bush on the far side of the pasture. I wondered if Zora got tired standing around all day. Was she bored? Was she lonely? What did she think about?
Hey, Zora!
I called.
I'm back! Did you miss me?
We climbed the fence rails and dropped to the other side and crossed the pasture.
It wasn't until we were within five feet of her that she suddenly let out a
           Â
loud
                   Â
bellowing
                              Â
Mooooooooo
startling us so that we stopped in our tracks.
Zora?
Another
           Â
loud
               Â
belligerent
                           Â
bellowing
                                 Â
Mooooooooo
and with that she turned around and butted Luke with her enormous head and knocked him to the ground. She then butted her head at me, knocking me backward.
           Â
Mooooooooo. Mooooooooo.
She swung that big head from side to side, turned her back to us, and moved off.
We tried once more to approach her, but she whipped her head around, swished her tail like a whip, butted me in the stomach, and bellowed angrily.
           Â
Mooooo, mooooooooo
           Â
Mooooo, mooooooooo.
Luke had attached himself to my arm.
Come
on, Reena, let's go back to the barn. Please, Reena?
Please?
We stepped slowly away from Zora, backtracking across the pasture, keeping our eyes on her the whole way.
When we reached the barn, Mrs. Falala was standing in the open doorway.
So
, she said,
how's your little Zora friend today,
mm? Not so friendly?
I was mucking out Zora's stall
scooping up manure patties
and
        d
             u
                 m
                      p
                           i
                                n
                                     g
them in the wheelbarrow.
Luke and Mrs. Falala were sitting
                   Â
side
       Â
by
       Â
side
on a hay bale
with their notebooks open.
When Luke drew, his small hand moved
                   Â
f a s t
his pen gliding across the white paper.
When Mrs. Falala drew, her gnarly hand
crept along
           Â
s l o w l y
so very very
           Â
s l o w l y.
For three days she had been drawing
                   Â
the head of a cowâ
at least that is what I thought she was drawing
but there was not enough of it to be sure.
Luke's lines flowed smoothly.
There was movement in the figures.
Mrs. Falala's lines were stiff.
Maybe the cow was dead.
Along the roads
the lupines grew
tall spears of color
pink and white and blue
and beyond lay vast carpets
of buttercups
and up and down the roads
we rode our bikes.
Hello, lupines,
hello, buttercups,
hellooooo, Maine,
we love you.
What were these tiny black things
that flew into your eyes and ears
and slipped up your sleeves and
down your socks
and
           Â
BIT
you?
They were not mosquitoes
they were barely visible
but when the day was still
when the wind was calm
these tiny black bugs
sssssswwwwwwwaaaaaaarrrrrrrmmmmmed
and bit
and then you
           Â
ITCHITCHITCHITCHED!!!
We were covered with red welts
and we
           Â
SCRAAAAAAAATCHED
all
day
long.
One day I succeeded in haltering Zora and was trying to comb her with the sturdy metal comb that Mrs. Falala had shoved into my hands when we arrived. I thought Zora might like the feel of the comb through her fur, and for a few minutes it seemed that she did.
And then I hit a snag,
a tangled, matted knot of hair
and pulled hard and
that big head swung toward me
and knocked against my arm
scolding me
as a wide swath of mucus
dripped out of her nose
and down my sleeve.
Her wet slobbery tongue
slapped against my wrist.
She lifted her tail
unleashing a wide, steamy stream
of
urine
       Â
s
 Â
p
               Â
la
   Â
sh
                              Â
i
 Â
n
 Â
g
my pants and boots.
Oh, that's good!
Luke called from the fence.
I'm gonna draw
that
!
About that time, along came Paulie the pig. He dashed toward and beneath Zora, who kicked at him, and, missing him, Zora got me instead.
That pig! What good is that pig?
I yelled.
Mrs. Falala poked her head out of the barn door and said,
Paulie eez part of family. What if
someone ask your mama what good are
you
?
On my bike
riding to Mrs. Falala's
Luke ahead of me
bobbing his head
and singing a song
he made up as he pedaled:
           Â
Gonna ride, ride,
           Â
gonna fly, fly,
           Â
gonna zip, zip . . .
And I felt lucky
that Luke was with me
that I wasn't wandering
this new town
alone.
We pulled into Mrs. Falala's drive
stashed our bikes
put on our work clothes
and found Zora
still in her stall
standing against the rail
her head hanging low
and
something popped in my chest
sending bubbles floating up to my brain.
Luke
, I said,
Zora is
lonely.
Aw
, Luke said.
Aw, poor Zora.
I entered the stall
and approached Zora slowly.
Gently I stroked her neck.
You're lonely, aren't you, girl?
Zora moved her head
toward me.
She rested her head against
my arm.
That day I told Mrs. Falala
that Zora was lonely
that Zora needed company
that she must be very sad
to be all alone.
Mrs. Falala mashed her lips
together and said,
Zora eez not alone.
I am here.
Paulie the pig eez here.
So eez Cat, so eez Parrot,
so eez Edna Snake.
I said,
But there are no other cows.
No one for her to lean against.
No one for her to talk to.
Mrs. Falala said nothing.
She turned around and
walked back to the house
that long white braid
swinging slowly
left to right
right to left.
Down to the harbor
early one Saturday morning
Mom and Dad and me and Luke
before
           Â
the tourists swarmed
before
           Â
the stores opened.
Soft, gray
           Â
fffffffog
           Â
hovered
           Â
over the water
masking the moored boats.
We climbed down to the small
           Â
stretch of beach
seaweed and mussel shells
splayed across the rocks.
Fish smell and salt air
mast creaks and rope jangles.
And as we stood there
the fog rose
slowly, surely,
revealing first the hulls
and then the masts
of wooden vessels
their sails
           Â
rolled
           Â
into
           Â
cocoons
and lobster boats wave-rolling
and red-blue-yellow buoys bobbing.
My mother said,
Oh!
Did you ever see anything
like that
ever
in your life?
And I was thinking that
I never saw anything like
everything
I was seeing
never saw anything like
those everythings
ever
in
my
life.
Sometimes I had to
close my eyes
to rest them from
all the new everythings
pouring in.
At night I dreamed of Zora
of her wide furry body
and her giant head
and her huge black eyes
and in the dreams
I combed her
and talked with her
and she was warm
and comforting
and I smelled the sawdust
in her stall
and felt the softness of her fur
and in the dream
she talked to me.
She said
Yes, I am lonely.
Yes, I am.
So I stroked her
and combed her
and told her
that I would find
some company
for her.
I was nervous, nervous, but I geared up my courage and talked first to Beat and Zep and then to the owners of Birchmere Farm. I was afraid they would laugh at me, but they didn't.
Of course
, they said.
She needs to be around other
cows. Of course.
They said that I could bring Zora to their farm where there was plenty of room and plenty of other cows, as long as I took care of her.
Zora comes from a long line of Grand Champions
, Mr. Birch said.
Did you know that?
No, I did not.
And she should show well as long as you can keep
that temper of hers under control.
Beat and Zep would help me train Zora and they would train me, too, so that I would know how to show Zora at the fair.
A long line of Grand Champions!
That sounded impressive, didn't it? It sounded like a perfect plan, right?
Mrs. Falala was not so excited about the plan.
Move Zora? Take my Zora? That eez not happening.
But she would have company
, I said.
Lots and lots
of company.
Mrs. Falala waved my words away with one hand.
I
am the company of Zora
, Mrs. Falala said.
Me
and Edna and Paulie and China and Crockett. We
are plenty company.
Mrs. Falala sat on the hay bale that had become her regular seat for drawing with Luke. Patting the bale next to her, she opened her notebook and looked up at Luke expectantly.
But,
I persisted,
look how sad Zora seems. Look
how she hangs her head. Listen to those sad moos.
That eez not sad hanging head!
Mrs. Falala snapped.
Those are not sad moos. Those are
normal cow moos and normal cow heads.
I said,
I hear Zora comes from a long line of Grand
Champions.
Mrs. Falala clicked her tongue and tapped her pencil on her notebook.
You want to see Grand
Champions?
she said.
Go look in barn, past the
halters, go on, you go look,
Luke and I have drawing to do.
Along a wooden rail
at one end of the barn
near the halters and ropes
and rakes and shovels
and buckets and barrels
hung a row of photos
the images clouded over
with dust and cobwebs.
With a rag, I cleared away the glass.
In each was a Beltie
and a young woman
holding a medallion and blue ribbon:
           Â
Grand Champion.
I looked closely at the women and wondered if maybe they were all the same person, growing older.
I returned to Mrs. Falala and Luke, their heads bent over their notebooks.
That's you, isn't it?
I said.
In those photographs
with the Grand Championsâthat's you.
Mrs. Falala said,
I lie down now
. Abruptly, she stood and returned to the house, calling behind her,
Don't take my Zora.