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Fiction

The heavy summer heat seeped into the Pawlik family kitchen, sticky and inescapable, adding tension to an already volatile situation. Lisa Pawlik stood by the counter, her hands gripping the edge as if it were the only thing keeping her tethered to sanity. Across the room, her husband, Samuel, sat at the dining table, his arms crossed and face hard as stone. Their teenage daughter, Melissa, perched awkwardly on a chair, her eyes darting between them like she was bracing for an explosion.

The source of the argument? The lemon tree in the backyard.

The tree had been planted by Lisa's father decades ago, a spindly sapling brought over from his childhood home in Italy. Now, it stood tall and proud, its golden fruit a testament to his care. But Samuel hated it. The tree’s roots had begun to creep under the fence, disrupting the neighbor’s patio, and its sprawling branches blocked sunlight from the tomato plants he was so meticulously cultivating.

“It’s a hazard,” Samuel said for the third time, his voice rising. “The neighbors are threatening to sue us over their cracked tiles. You think that’s going to come cheap? We need to cut it down before it costs us thousands!”

Lisa glared at him, her voice like ice. “That tree is part of my family’s history. My father planted it. He watered it every day. Do you expect me to just chop it down like it’s some weed?”

Samuel shot up from his chair, his temper getting the better of him. “History doesn’t pay legal fees, Lisa! What’s more important — a tree or our finances?”

Melissa winced at her father’s sharp tone. “Why don’t we just... I don’t know, trim it or something?” she suggested weakly, trying to defuse the tension.

Lisa shook her head firmly. “Trimming it won’t solve the root problem. Cutting it down is like erasing my father’s legacy.”

Samuel let out an exasperated laugh. “Legacy? It’s a tree, Lisa. Not a museum exhibit!”

The shouting escalated, bouncing off the kitchen walls like cannon fire. Melissa shrank further into her chair, her hands pressed over her ears. The argument had stretched into its third day, and neither side was willing to budge.

It wasn’t until a knock echoed from the front door that the shouting stopped.

“Who the hell is that?” Samuel muttered, striding to the door. He yanked it open to reveal a man standing on the porch.

He was old — older than old, with a face like weathered bark and eyes that glinted like polished stones. His clothes were simple, almost outdated- a faded button-up shirt, suspenders, and a wide-brimmed hat.

“Afternoon,” the man said in a voice that rumbled like distant thunder. “Name’s Randall. I hear you’ve got a problem with a tree.”

Samuel blinked, his anger momentarily overshadowed by confusion. “Uh, who sent you?”

“Word gets around,” Randall replied cryptically, tipping his hat. “Mind if I come in?”

Before Samuel could refuse, Randall stepped inside, his boots clunking against the hardwood floor. He surveyed the room, taking in the tense faces and the oppressive silence that followed his arrival.

“I don’t know who you are,” Lisa began, her tone wary, “but this is a private matter.”

Randall turned to her, his gaze steady. “Ma’am, I’ve been mediating disputes like this for longer than you’d believe. Sometimes it takes an outsider to see what folks on the inside can’t.”

Lisa and Samuel exchanged skeptical glances, but before either could object, Randall clapped his hands together.

“Right,” he said. “First things first, let’s take a look at this tree.”

)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=

In the backyard, the lemon tree stood tall and majestic, its branches swaying gently in the breeze. Randall approached it with the reverence of someone entering a cathedral. He ran a hand over the bark, closed his eyes, and inhaled deeply.

“This is a fine tree,” he said finally, his voice low. “Strong roots. Good fruit.”

“Tell that to the neighbors,” Samuel muttered, folding his arms.

Lisa stepped forward, her voice trembling with emotion. “My father planted it when I was five. He used to say the lemons tasted like sunshine. It’s the last thing we have of him.”

Randall nodded, his expression unreadable. Then he turned to Samuel. “And you? What’s your stake in this?”

“My stake?” Samuel snapped. “My stake is avoiding a lawsuit and saving my tomato plants from being strangled by this thing’s shadow.”

Randall scratched his chin thoughtfully. “Hmm. Both valid points.”

Melissa groaned. “So what’s the solution? We’re stuck, and no one’s giving in.”

Randall grinned, a glint of mischief in his eyes. “Oh, I’ve got a solution. But it’ll take some work — and trust.”

Samuel raised an eyebrow. “What kind of work?”

Randall didn’t answer immediately. Instead, he pulled a small, leather pouch from his pocket and sprinkled a handful of what looked like seeds onto the ground beneath the tree. He murmured something under his breath — words that sounded ancient and melodic, like a song sung by the earth itself.

“What are you doing?” Lisa asked, her voice sharp with suspicion.

“Giving the tree a voice,” Randall replied simply.

Before anyone could question him further, the ground beneath the lemon tree trembled. The roots seemed to shift and twist, and the air grew thick with an almost electrical charge. Then, to the shock of everyone present, the tree... spoke.

Its voice was deep and resonant, like wind through a canyon. “Why have you brought your quarrel to me?”

Lisa gasped, her hands flying to her mouth. Samuel took a step back, his face pale. Melissa just stared, wide-eyed and speechless.

“You’re... alive?” Lisa whispered.

The tree’s branches swayed as if nodding. “I have always been alive. And I have always listened. But now, I am asked to speak.”

Samuel shook his head as if trying to clear it. “This is insane.”

“Perhaps,” the tree said, “but so is tearing me down without hearing my side.”

Lisa stepped closer, her voice trembling. “What... what do you want?”

The tree was silent for a long moment before answering. “I want to grow. To provide fruit and shade. To honor the man who planted me. But I do not wish to harm.”

Samuel crossed his arms, his skepticism returning. “You don’t wish to harm, but your roots are ruining the neighbors’ patio.”

The tree seemed to sigh, its leaves rustling softly. “I cannot control where my roots wander. But perhaps there is a way to guide them.”

Randall, who had been watching silently, finally spoke. “What the tree’s saying is true. There’s a way to redirect the roots without cutting it down. A trench, some barriers, maybe some clever landscaping.”

Samuel frowned. “And the sunlight on my tomatoes?”

The tree’s branches shivered. “Prune me. I will endure.”

Lisa's eyes filled with tears. “You’d let us do that?”

“I would, if it means I may continue to stand.”

Randall clapped his hands together, breaking the heavy silence. “There you have it, folks. A compromise. You dig a trench, prune the branches, and the tree stays standing. Everybody wins.”

Samuel hesitated, glancing at Lisa. “And what about the cost? Who’s paying for all this?”

Lisa placed a hand on his arm, her voice soft. “I’ll cover it. I’ll do whatever it takes to keep this piece of my father alive.”

Samuel sighed, his shoulders sagging. “Fine. We’ll try it your way.”

A small, satisfied smile spread across Randall's face. “Good. Now, if you’ll excuse me, my work here is done.”

Before anyone could thank him — or question him further — Randall tipped his hat, turned on his heel, and strode out of the yard.

)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=)@?=

That night, as the family sat around the kitchen table, there was a noticeable shift in the air. The argument that had nearly torn them apart seemed distant now, replaced by a tentative sense of unity.

“You know,” Samuel said, breaking the silence, “this might actually work.”

Lisa smiled, her fingers brushing against the lemon she’d plucked from the tree earlier. “I think it will.”

And outside, the lemon tree stood tall and silent, its branches swaying in the night breeze as if in quiet gratitude.

November 26, 2024 17:55

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1 comment

Mary Bendickson
21:12 Nov 27, 2024

A peaceful solution.☺️Well spoken.

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