Writing Hardship farm diaries

Terdin

Farmer
I don't like getting inspiration for new stuff, since I've got enough novels to work on as it is, but I got it and writing it out is the only way to get it out of my head.
Here goes...

Prologue:
Some of my fondest childhood memories had been from Grandpa's farm. The wide space where his animals roamed free, trying to help him plant and water seeds by the small river. I wanted to be like him and he taught me how to do some basic stuff. It was a perfect place to play with my brother on our visits, even if we were warned to stay away from the ruins of a greenhouse. Grandma had died there, and he'd never been able to bring himself to rebuild it. We even attended festivals, even if my memory is a bit fuzzy on which ones they were. Mostly we children were running around playing tag, or stealing treats from the tables.

Then there was a time when it seemed like an eternity before I saw him again. Mom said something about a fire and having to rebuild. On our last visit, his house seemed a lot smaller. No kitchen. He had managed to save at least one of his beloved apple plushies though, those that I was never allowed to touch. My parents and my uncle's family each got some of his chests and whatever they contained. My brother got the chest with his mineral collection. Me? I got only a sealed envelope despite him calling me his favorite granddaughter. His exact words about it were lost to me, but I got the meaning, that I was not to open it until I was an adult and desperate for a change. The unfairness burned.
Not long after, he died.

Unable to cope with the betrayal of his death, I couldn't bear to even look at the envelope for many years. Only after I'd got a job, and was made to move out did I find it again. I'd hoped to be able to afford an apartment of my own, but with a low-wage deskjob of handling online orders and customer complaints, I couldn't. I had to settle for renting a room from one of the girls I sometimes spoke with at lunch. After some of my stuff went missing, I made sure to always carry the thick envelope with me. I still didn't want to find out what was in it. Probably just some trite "words of wisdom" supposed to help people go on through a difficult time. But I didn't want to lose it either.

The months, then years, dragged on. Yearly evaluations that seemed designed to keep me at minimum wage, or just above it. While there was a dress code, it wasn't enforced. The guy in the cubicle behind me got no write-ups for the big hat he wore. His occasional grunts and the other sounds coming from him told me that he most likely took extra breaks to watch other stuff, probably on a small window that his hat hid from the cameras continuously monitoring us. I tried to save up for the deposit needed for an apartment of my own, but it was difficult with barely scraping by from paycheck to paycheck, and the sum needed went up every year.

One day, wondering if the rest of my life would be like this or if I should end it myself, I finally decided I could use Grandpa's last message to me and maybe see if it held a life-changing amount of money. So what if they wrote me up or even fired me for reading private stuff during work. P T, the seal read... Patrick Tindall. While I had known his name, I'd always thought of him as Grandpa. No money in it, just a letter, several pages long.

- If you're reading this, you must be in dire need of a change. The same thing happened to me, long ago. I'd lost sight of what mattered most in life... real connections with other people and nature. So I dropped everything and moved to the place I truly belong.

Just reading it made me cry. I could almost hear him speaking those words. Wiping my tears away I continued reading, despite the strange start of a long letter.

- I've enclosed the deed to that place - my pride and joy: Hardship Farm. It's located in Stardew Valley, on the southern coast and the perfect place to start a new life.

I looked at the other papers in the envelope. The deed and all the legal papers to transfer it to me, not a long letter as I'd thought. It felt weird to think the farm had a name, and such an odd one too. I returned to reading.

- This was my most precious gift, and now it's yours. I know you'll honor the family name, my girl.
Good luck.
Love, Grandpa.

P.S. If Lewis is still alive, say hi to the old guy for me, will ya?

Crying again, I wordlessly asked him to forgive me for all the years of thinking my inheritance had been the least valuable, the least life-changing. Despite being at work, I went online to see if I really had all the legal paperworks to take over the farm.

I wasted no time in quitting my job, the two weeks before I could collect my last paycheck went sooner than expected. I also moved out of the shared apartment and my parents allowed me to stay with them "until I found a new place".

"So, why didn't it work out with them?" Mom asked.

"Well, stuff went missing, just small things, nothing valuable, and not often, but kept on happening even after I made sure I knew exactly where I had things and made sure I always put them where they belonged."

She nodded, not fully convinced, knowing how careless I'd been with at least some of my belongings as a child. "How long do you think it'll be until you find a new place?" She asked to change the topic.

"I've already got one, but I need to wait for confirmation first. Grandpa gave me his farm." I showed her the deed. "I've already gone and handed in the paperwork to transfer it to me. He had them all filled in and signed, needing only my signature to complete it. They had some questions as to why the dates for the signatures were so different, but I managed to explain it."

"So that's where it was. We searched his cottage and the farm for it, thinking it might be hidden in a chest somewhere. Even asked Mayor Lewis about it, but he claimed my dad had it. I guess I suspected it might be in your envelope, but didn't want to ask. Didn't want to bring back bad memories for you. But you aren't going to move there, are you? Farming's too difficult for a girl like you. You've been spending the last few years at a desk, you're not fit enough."

"I can do it. I will not give up."

"So you say now, but in a year you'll probably want to sell it and return to the comforts of the city."

What comforts? Dead-end jobs, living from paycheck to paycheck. Always worrying about stuff I couldn't do anything about. I wouldn't be any worse off on the farm, and there were probably more stuff I could do something about, but I didn't say that to Mom.

My parents kept on saying stuff about me not being able to make it, mostly Mom, Dad was occasionally supportive. Then came the day when I was about to leave. I'd made a donation to Yoba and prayed to be relieved of my memories and the skills I'd developed while working for Joja, and I had indeed forgot most of the details. What little I did remember made me sure I never wanted to return to a job like that. I'd also bought some more appropriate leg-wear for farming. Knee-length skirt was good enough for a desk job, but I didn't want crops and other plants sneaking up where they didn't belong. Of course I picked a purple pair of trousers. No reason to not choose my favorite color.

"I've checked the value for the land, Erica. When you give up your attempts to become a farmer next year, you should at least be able to buy a small apartment," Mom said as I packed my few belongings, primarily socks and underwear, and some toiletries. "Don't forget your swimsuit. You might want to take a swim in summer, or maybe visit the spa if it's still there. Come back and visit us sometimes, will you?"

I'd had enough of her negative outlook on my prospects. "I won't come back to visit until I've earned at least a billion G on that farm. Won't give up before then either. You can visit me, if you want." I immediately regretted my words, but I wouldn't give Mom the satisfaction of going back on them. At least it shut her up.

"You should at least try to keep a diary," Dad said. "That way you can see how far you've got since your arrival, and how your progress is going. You should also take some of your Grandpa's tools with you. Sadly, we sold most of his better tools, but you wouldn't get all that far with farming if you had no tools at all."

The tools he brought me looked cheap, more like gardening tools for a back garden than proper farming tools. He was right that they were better than nothing at all, but really. A few rust spots, and dark stains where sweaty hands had gripped the handle for long days at work, revealed their age, but otherwise they were in good condition. I checked the edges, especially on the axe and scythe, and found signs of recent sharpening. At least Dad was quietly trying to help me succeed.

Then I finally boarded the monthly bus to Calico Desert - the closest destination - and asked the driver to drop me off at Pelican Town in Stardew Valley on the way there.

...
To be continued.
 

Terdin

Farmer
Moving in
How to start this diary thing... "Dear Diary" sounds so trite. Maybe best to just write what happened.
Oh my. Didn't expect that. When the bus dropped me off I found a red-headed woman waiting for me, around the same age as my mom but maybe a couple years younger. How long she'd waited for the bus, I don't know. I had emailed the mayor of Pelican Town to avoid surprising them entirely, and it seemed like it caused a bigger stir than I thought it would. I think Grandpa choose to buy lands by that town because it had the same initials as him. Anyhow, the woman introduced herself as Robin, the local carpenter, and she showed me the way to the farm, maybe not knowing it wasn't really needed.

It seemed like a much shorter walk as an adult. Seeing the farm was a shock, even if it shouldn't have been all that unexpected. It had been unoccupied for over fifteen years after all. With that in mind it wasn't all that overgrown with weeds and trees. But the vast open space I remembered from my childhood? Not all that big. Large enough to graze a few animals in, which in hindsight was all that Grandpa had kept. The steps down to the canyon floor was paired had a mate close to the greenhouse ruin if my memory was correct. Seeing it with adult eyes made it clear why Grandpa or someone before him had named the farm Hardship farm. How would I be able to earn the ridiculous sum I'd told Mom I'd get? It would take me all my life to get to a billion G, or at least the rest of Mom's life. No. I would find a way even if large-scale farming wasn't possible.

There were no animals now, and neither coop nor barn nor sheds were anywhere in sight. Robin tried to downplay the weeds, trees and general debris. So this was why Mom had been betting that I'd give up soon enough. Some vague mention of her having driven down here to tend Grandpa's grave around Spirits' Eve rose in my memory. She had seen this. But while she was right that I wasn't fit and hadn't been working out for several years, it wasn't something that would last. Taming my farm would make me fit.

"It's less overgrown than I expected considering how long it's been since Grandpa died. Oh, maybe I should mention that I'm Roxanne's daughter."

Robin paused, searching for words. "Your uncle Richard sold off the animals soon after Patrick died, then asked if I could demolish the extra buildings and pay him for the materials I could re-use. I was new here and he showed me some papers that indicated that he had the right to do that, so I did as he asked. Sorry."

It was my turn to pause. "Not your fault. Better than having a bunch of feral animals and even more ruins to deal with."

She led a few steps closer to the front door. "And here we are, your new home."

An older guy exited the cottage-like farmhouse. He was maybe 5-10 years older than Dad. Mayor Lewis. The guy Grandpa had described as an old guy, probably not knowing how long it would be before I tired of city life, and Robin had said he was cleaning up the farmhouse for me. They must've been good friends if he went out of his way to tidy up close to two decades of dust and cobwebs for the arrival of his friend's granddaughter.

"Ah, the new farmer!" Lewis said. "Welcome! I'm Lewis, Mayor of Pelican Town."

I blinked at the impersonal introduction. "Hello, Lewis. I'm Erica Nilson, Patrick Tindall's granddaughter. My mom, Roxanne, took her husbands last name when she married," I explained. So, he hadn't done it for his friend's granddaughter. Maybe he'd just done it to make sure nothing had been left behind that he thought the new owner shouldn't have. "In the letter Grandpa gave me, he asked me to say 'hi' to you," I added, not wanting to mention anything else about the request since Lewis was obviously still alive.

He looked stunned for a moment. "Oh. You know, everyone's been asking about you. It's not every day that someone new moves in. It's quite a big deal!" He paused. "Well, maybe you're not exactly new, but with a different last name you didn't seem related to old Patrick, so we thought you were just someone who'd bought the deed. So... You're moving into your grandfather's old cottage. It's a good house... very 'rustic'."

Robin laughed. "Rustic? That's one way to put it... 'Crusty' might be a little more apt, though."

"Don't be rude! Don't listen to her, Erica. She's just trying to make you dissatisfied so that you buy one of her house upgrades."

Robin grumbled at having her scheme seen through so easily. Mayor Lewis suggested I go in and get rested up from my journey and then explore the town next morning and introduce myself. His tone indicated I should try to get to know everyone even if he didn't say it. After some prompting, he revealed there were 28 people living in the town if you counted the children too, including the two of them. So, 26 people more to get introduced to. I thanked them for their welcome and went inside.

The inside was different than I remembered. No floral wallpaper, just bare stone walls. I ran a hand over it. No. It was new wallpaper that just looked like stone walls. Maybe just as well. The old wallpaper had probably started to fall off. The fireplace was bare of decoration, and the sign of Yoba had long since been transferred to Mom's room, but the old sign - supposedly from the mines - still hung on the wall, moved to a more prominent position. From a distance, the two crossed pickaxes seemed real, but they were just cut out of sheet metal and painted. A low table, some straw mats on the floor, a lamp, and a TV. Not much in the way of comfort. I checked the crystal on the table. Just a glass imitation with no real value. I left it there, the sole piece of color in the house, and more importantly it was purple, making the house feel a little bit more like it was mine. I left the gift-wrapped box on the floor for the morning, having enough to consider as it was.

Where to start... No. Clearing the farm didn't require much consideration. Around the crop land down by the river, and between farmhouse and the two other paths that led from the farm. While I hadn't been able to see either exit today I knew they should be there unless there had been landslides or rockfalls. That was first priority. After that I could go more by what resource I needed. How to keep my vow to Mom would have to wait until I knew more about what ways there were to earn money here.

Lewis and Robin had been right though. I would need to upgrade the house at some point. A kitchen would make it easier to keep me fed. Raw vegetables and whatever I could forage would grow boring fast.

Time to put away this diary for now and get some sleep.
 
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