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Miss Cox's Garden

For the Life Finds a Way dollar challenge

By John CoxPublished 8 months ago Updated 8 months ago 5 min read
Top Story - May 2025
My Uncle Larry (the baby in this story) with my Grandmother, Miss Cox. Photo by Author. in 1987.

I remember the morning I worked in the wet clay of Miss Cox's garden in 1937. It stuck sumptin fierce to my rubber boots till they was so heavy with the red stuff I could scarcely walk. But I straighten'd to see the sun rise above the trees, the clouds surroundin' it lit with fire.

It was one of those moments when there aint no words. I stood a long time, statue-still. I didn't even have the sense to pray.

Ever know a person who has that effect on a body? Love so pure it shines like the mornin' sun?

Such a one is not easily forgotten.

Up afore sunup, I had walked down Proper street and beneath the railroad underpass to the Cox's property on the corner of Wick and Young streets.

Miss Farris had a wicker basket and a safari hat settin' on the porch for me. She was Miss Cox's mama visitin' to help with the baby. I picked up the basket and left the hat, but soon regretted leavin' it when I had to stump back to the porch with my muddy boots for it once the Mississippi sun started to boil the back of my neck.

I hadn't picked vegetables or pulled weeds from a garden since grammar school so I was hopin' for the Good Lord's help to keep from pullin' plants that twern't weeds and vice versa. When in doubt Ella Robertson, I said to myself, better leave it for those that knows what their about!

I didn't pull many weeds, sad to say. I knew them wild morning glories winding about the corn stalks didn't belong, but they was so purty I didn't have the heart to dig them out of the sticky clay.

And I almost forgot! A mocker had a nest in one of Miss Cox's pecan trees and every time I came to the end of a row near them trees it would barrel out and dive at me like a barnstormer at the state fair!

But after a while, we declared a truce and he let me alone and busied his saucy self singin' a different melody every few seconds like it twere a contest to see how many he knew by heart. After almost an hour of his whistling, squeekin' and squawkin' I started to wish he would attack me instead.

After I filled my basket with tomatoes, okra, snap peas and green peppers, Miss Farris came out to see how I was gettin' on.

I asked her how the baby was doin' and she said He's squallin' jus' like a champion hog. I can't tell you how pleased I was to hear it. The poor little fella was born the week before, Miss Cox and her mama movin' heaven and earth to keep him alive another day.

When my husband, Doc Robertson, came home the evening he was born, he tole me, I just deliver'd the nearest thing to nothin' I ever saw. I doubt he'll last the night.

So, I brought a dish of food the next day to see what I could do to help. But seeing that poor little baby, his tiny face pinched and red, I felt a wave of terror roll over me like the angel of death had entered the squalor of their little home.

Where's his daddy? I asked afore Miss Farris gave me a dark stare. Miss Cox was trying to get the baby to suckle. But he kept pullin' away, his eyes squeezed tight, his faint and gasping cries breakin' my heart with fear for his safety.

He had two older brothers and an older sister. The two boys stood together, shoulder to shoulder, the bigger one's hair a tumble of black curls and the smaller a dirty blond, hair ruler straight, pancaked atop his small head. The girl stood close to her mama, her wide, brown eyes starin' at me like a pair of saucers.

Their clapboard shack was scarcely more than four ragged walls with a roof overhead. It had two rooms, one for Miss Cox and her absent husband and one for the three children. It had two little beds, one for the two boys and another for the girl, separated only by a sheet hanging from the ceiling.

Miss Farris tole me later that Mr. Cox had been off drinkin' for a couple weeks. I knew that meant no work and no work meant no money. I was too shamed for them to know what to say.

I soon learnt there twern't no meat nor bread in the house and no flour to even whip up some biscuits. Thank the Good Lord for the vegetable garden, or there would've been nothing to eat at all. One thing leadin' to another, I started comin' by every morning to help as best I could. I brought fried chicken, white bread and self-rising flour the next day.

When they ran out of sorghum molasses, I brought some of that too. The two women were tireless. They had made a makeshift incubator out of bricks that they heated in the oven and used it to keep him warm at night. When I tole Doc Robertson about it, he rolled his eyes and shook his head in disbelief.

Course 'ventually I took leave of my senses and offered to care for Miss Cox's garden and there we were, Miss Farris lookin' at my pitiful results and me wishin' the mocker would attack us both.

She asked me then if I had ever snapped peas. Not since I was a girl, I tole her. Well now, we sat on the porch together on a pair of rockers and snapped peas together for an hour into broad steel bowls. We didn't say much till I finally asked her if she thought her grandson would live.

She paused for a moment or two and looked at me sharply. Have you known Miss Cox long? she asked with a furrowed brow.

No, I haven't. I confessed.

Her two older boys both knocked at death's door and their mama's love called them back. The oldest got bad sick - Diphtheria - during the epidemic in the early 30s. He never got the medicine he needed.

When love has anything to say about it at all, life finds a way.

If you had known Miss Cox, like I know her, you would've never asked. The thought never would've entered your head.

I know it probably don’t need saying, but that little boy who weighed less than two pounds when he was born in that sorry shack, lived. He burned as brightly in life as the Mississippi sun shown that morning I worked in Miss Cox's garden.

Sometimes, there just aint no words.

LoveShort Story

About the Creator

John Cox

Twisted teller of mind bending tales. I never met a myth I didn't love or a subject that I couldn't twist out of joint. I have a little something for almost everyone here. Cept AI. Aint got none of that.

Reader insights

Outstanding

Excellent work. Looking forward to reading more!

Top insights

  1. Compelling and original writing

    Creative use of language & vocab

  2. Easy to read and follow

    Well-structured & engaging content

  3. Heartfelt and relatable

    The story invoked strong personal emotions

  1. On-point and relevant

    Writing reflected the title & theme

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Comments (18)

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  • Angie the Archivist 📚🪶7 months ago

    An inspiring tale, made all the better being based on fact. Love the dialogue.

  • George Machado8 months ago

    That morning in Miss Cox's garden sounds like quite an experience. I can picture the clay sticking to your boots, making it a struggle to move. And that sunrise, it must've been something to behold. I've had moments like that myself, where nature just takes your breath away. I can relate to being unsure about what to do in the garden. It's been a while since I've had to deal with plants, too. I always worry about pulling out the wrong thing. And those morning glories, they do sound pretty. It's hard to get rid of something that looks so nice. That mocker bird sounds like a character. A truce with a bird, that's something you don't hear every day. Did it ever start singing again after that? It must've been quite the concert. Made the time in the garden a bit more interesting, I'm sure.

  • Gerard DiLeo8 months ago

    Well, you did it again! Well done! Beautiful.

  • Lamar Wiggins8 months ago

    Masterful as ever, Sir John. I, like so many others here, felt transported to a time I’ve never known. Really loved the part about the Mocker. And congrats on your TS!

  • Cathy holmes8 months ago

    This is such a beautiful story. Yay for Uncle Larry. Well done and congrats on the TS.

  • A powerfully & wonderfully told story, though a couple of times I noticed you shifted out of her broken brogue to a more formal English. Aside from that, I mighta swored I was a readin' a tad bit o' Flannery O'Connor herself!

  • Back to say congratulations on your Top Story! 🎉💖🎊🎉💖🎊

  • Tim Carmichael8 months ago

    What a great story, and congrats on your top story!

  • D.K. Shepard8 months ago

    Fantastic work, John! this is an incredibly well told story! I love that you chose the doctor's wife for the narrator of this. I think it was a really marvelous choice that let us see your grandmother as others would have seen her. Very well-deserved Top Story!

  • This is a very touching story-- well written and worthy of Top Story!

  • JBaz8 months ago

    Back to say congratulations

  • You have such an incredible gift John...transporting us effortlessly into another time and leaving us feeling better than when we started

  • Heather Hubler8 months ago

    This was wonderfully penned, John :) Haven't had the chance to read for such a long time and so it's wonderful I started with your piece. What a slow and lasting scene you built. Loved how the last line came back around. Really lovely work that feels like it would be part of a collection of short stories :)

  • Sean A.8 months ago

    Extremely well written! Definitely put me in the time and place, and a lovely use of the challenge phrase

  • C. Rommial Butler8 months ago

    Well-wrought! This recalls a brief conversation we had here about Mississippi after I drove through. People overcome hardship every day, largely unnoticed, and this why we're still here.

  • Although the narrator means well, there are just certain questions that shouldn't be asked. Loved your take of life finds a way. Mama's love. So sweet

  • L.C. Schäfer8 months ago

    I loved it all, except the line that I misread, and it made me imagine a boil on the back of her neck. But that wasn't your fault. I managed to properly disgust myself with the mental image ole Brain conjured up 😂

  • Rachel Deeming8 months ago

    Excellent, John. To take a piece of your family history and craft it into this story was a great idea. Loved the voice you created for your "character". Really enjoyed this and good to see some writing from you. I feel like I've not read something of yours for a long time.

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