This Was No Ordinary Garden…

A Piedmont Lantern Story

This was no ordinary garden, and Jimmy Matthew knew it the moment he climbed the fence and landed square in something that hissed at him like a Baptist lady catchin’ gossip mid-sentence.

“Don’t move,” Jim Leroy whispered from the other side of the wire. “Whatever you just stepped in sounds like it’s got a temper.”

Jimmy Matthew froze, one boot sunk ankle-deep in compost so fresh it still believed it was part of a larger, living entity. He looked down and sighed.

“Well, it’s fertilizer,” he said. “Which means this garden has already forgiven me, even if the owner ain’t.”

The garden belonged to Miss Callie Brewster, who lived on the edge of Piedmont where yards stopped pretendin’ they were orderly and just surrendered to nature. Miss Callie believed in three things: the Lord, strong coffee, and lettin’ a garden do whatever it pleased as long as it fed somebody eventually.

Her garden was legendary.

Tomatoes grew as big as softballs and leaned toward passersby like they had gossip to share. Squash vines sprawled across the ground like they were tryin’ to escape into the county. Corn stalks grew so tall folks claimed they whispered to low-flyin’ clouds. And somewhere in the middle of it all stood a scarecrow dressed better than most church deacons, complete with a straw hat that still smelled faintly of cherry blend tobacco.

Jim Leroy picked his way through the rows carefully.

“I told you,” he said, “this was a bad idea.”

Jimmy Matthew shrugged, wobbled his stuck foot free with a loud slurp, and said, “It ain’t a bad idea. It just ain’t a well-thought-out one. They’s a difference, you know.”

Their mission had begun innocent enough. Jimmy Matthew had heard it said that Miss Callie’s garden grew things that could cure sadness, conjure warts, and possibly dishonesty if eaten raw. Jimmy Matthew, who suffered from none of those conditions and had great faith in rumors, decided it required investigation.

They crept deeper into the garden as it seemed to close around them. Leaves brushed their arms. Vines snaked across their path. Something buzzed past Jimmy Matthew’s ear, and he swatted wildly, slappin’ himself instead.

“I swear,” he said, “this garden knows we’re here.”

Jim Leroy frowned.
“Gardens always know.”

About that time, the scarecrow shifted.

Not much.
Just enough.

Jimmy Matthew halted.

“Jim Leroy,” he whispered, “do scarecrows usually breathe?”

Jim Leroy stared hard.
“That one just adjusted its hat.”

They stood frozen while the scarecrow looked around slowly, then settled again. After a moment, Jimmy Matthew let out a breath.

“Probably the wind,” he said.

“There ain’t no wind,” Jim Leroy replied.

They pressed on until they reached the heart of the garden, where a single patch had been cleared like a stage. In the center stood a basket full of vegetables so perfect they looked rehearsed. Tomatoes polished. Beans aligned. Peppers shone like they had good news.

Jimmy Matthew reverently lifted a tomato.

“Look at this,” he murmured. “This thing could change a man.”

The tomato slipped from his hand and hit the ground, splitting open with a wet, accusatory sound.

The garden went silent.

Then came Miss Callie’s voice.

“Boys.”

It did not come from behind them.
It did not come from the house.
It came from everywhere.

They turned slowly.

Miss Callie stood at the end of the row with her hands on her hips, straw hat tipped low, expression calm in the way of someone already past anger and parked squarely in judgment.

“How long y’all been in my garden?” she asked.

Jimmy Matthew weighed his honesty options and chose creativity.

“Just arrived,” he said.

Miss Callie nodded once.

“Then you won’t mind just leavin’.”

They didn’t argue. They backed out carefully, step by step, watched by tomatoes, corn, vines, and that damnable scarecrow, which most definitely watched them go.

Once on the safe side of the fence, Jimmy Matthew wiped his brow.

“That garden,” he said, “is alive.”

Jim Leroy nodded.
“And polite enough to warn us.”

As they walked away, Jim Leroy asked, “You get what you wanted?”

Jimmy Matthew thought of the split tomato, the breathing scarecrow, Miss Callie’s all-seein’ eyes.

“Yeah,” he said. “A lesson.”

“What lesson?”

“Never sneak into a garden that already knows your name.”

Behind them, the garden rustled, settled, and went back to growin’ the way it always had.

Patiently.
Watchfully.
And just a little amused.

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