I worry that Motherās not in the hospital. A few days ago I heard Aunt Nolie tell Mother, āElnora, itād be a whole hellova lot safer if ye had that baby in the hospital like ye did Cono.ā They talked about the Great Depression that sat on our shoulders and wouldnāt get off. They said it makes us hungrier than usual and poorer than weāve ever been.
āHospitals cost money, Nolie. We donāt have no money fer a hospital.ā
Motherās folks, Ma and Pa, say itās because of President Hoover that we donāt have no money. Others say itās because we aināt had rain in a coonās age. That all the crops; cotton, corn and maize have turned into a dust that you could just as easy blow away like a fly acrost the lonely couple of peas sitting on your plate. A farmer and his family, like Ma and Pa, canāt live on dust and since thereās no money around to gamble with, a man like my father canāt collect none.
I hear another scream from the bedroom. Dad shifts his weight from one foot to the other. Itās hot out, so he keeps rolling up his sleeves even though thereās nowhere else for them to go. He wonāt take his shirt off though. Even though weāre not in town, he says that taking your shirt off in public is āuncouth,ā no matter how hot it is. Whatever āuncouthā means. He lights another Camel. I stir a little faster.
I start thinking that unless they figure out how to catch up with me, Iāll always be older than the baby coming out of my mother. I like that. I like the idea of being older than somebody. It makes me feel bigger and more important than what I am. Also, I donāt need nobody else telling me what to do.
Just before I start feeling too big for my britches, I hear the huff and whirl of an engine pulling in. I must have dozed off for a while. I open my eyes and squint into the headlamps of the familiar flatbed grain truck. The engine stops. The headlamps turn off. Aunt Nolie jumps out of the driverās side and walks over to us. Sheās still wearing the red dress she left in a few hours ago. I look for Uncle Joe. I hear him before I see him. Heās stretched out in the back of the truck; sucking in hard air and trying to force it back out again.
āAny word yet, Wayne?ā Aunt Nolie asks Dad, tussling my towhead at the same time.
āNah.ā
āIāll jesāt go on in and check,ā she calls over her shoulder, as she wiggles and waggles her rear end off to Motherās bedroom.
Aunt Nolie is a tough booger and itās good to have her on my side. She can kick anybodyās ass from now into tomorrow. She said one time that sheād rather fight than talk, but she does plenty of both. Sheās not quite as skinny as Mother, her hairās not as black and sheās not nearly as pretty. But she speaks her mind so you donāt have to guess whatās on it.
I stir the dirt some more. Dadās still staring at something in the dark, something far away that I canāt see. Iām only two and a half years old, so Iād much rather be stirring at something I can see, than staring at something I canāt. āDoodle bug, doodle bug please come outā¦..ā
I keep twirling my stick, the one thatās magic and will make doodle bugs come out; the stick that will show me a magic place and will grow me a baby brother or sister.
Before I have time to get comfortable again, Aunt Nolie comes outside and kneels down beside me. She stares her watery eyes into my tired ones saying real quiet-like, āCono, ye got yerself a baby sister.ā
I feel my eyes pop out and my chin drop down. Iām not real sure what to do next, seeing as how Iāve never had a baby sister before. Stuff is stuck in my throat, way in the back, where I canāt get to without choking.

Cono and his baby sister, Delma
Excerpt from No Hill for a Stepper by C. Dennis-Willingham
Daily word prompt: Anticipate