Outside of Chicago, the scenery of what the mapmakers in Grand Marais called The Jungle seemed no different than the rural areas of North Ontario or Minnesota. The land was flatter, and in the March weather, the overgrowth of grasses just started to show green through last year’s dried stalks, and the trees in the distance didn’t glow with green buds yet. The farmland that would have spread for miles in a farm economy sat fallow and grey, drought and the collapse of factory farming ending the land’s purpose to the economy. The highway, with its occasional potholes and washboards, was no different than those I had seen North.
I turned off the road at a ragged road sign that announced a town with a preposterously French name, hoping to hear some stories there. At the bottom of a graceful hill, I heard the sound of a shotgun close by, a warning shot. I spun the truck around and headed back up the hill. Nobody had shot at me in Chicago proper, but here in the rural Midwest, someone shot at me.
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Writing that was almost more fun than killing off my ex-husband in Gaia's Hands.
Thank you, friends, for reading. Now to go write a few thousand words.
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Writing that was almost more fun than killing off my ex-husband in Gaia's Hands.
Thank you, friends, for reading. Now to go write a few thousand words.
I like your specific description of the landscape. It is beautiful. I like the irony that you have in the last paragraph.
ReplyDeleteThis is Lanetta