Summer Cutting Grass
The mower had always seemed too large for him before that summer. It sat in the shed with its smell of gasoline and warm metal, a serious machine belonging to fathers and older boys with sunburned necks and callused hands. But that morning, his father wheeled it into the yard and stopped beside him with a kind of quiet ceremony. The grass stood high from three days of rain, thick and shining in the heat. “All right,” his father said, handing him the pull cord like it was permission itself. The boy felt something shift inside him then, some invisible border crossed without trumpet or parade. He planted his feet and pulled. The engine coughed once, then roared awake so suddenly it startled birds from the power line. The mower pushed harder than he expected. It tugged against him like a stubborn animal, rattling his arms until his hands went numb, but he would not let go. Long green rows opened behind him, neat as fresh pages. The smell rose around him rich and wet, cut grass and gasoline...