At the County Fair

By Sadie Stein

Our Daily Correspondent

An illustration by Garth Williams for Charlotte’s Web.

To a little kid, the county fair was pure enchantment. There was a puppet show and a 4-H cake booth and animals and gardens. There were kiddie rides, too, and a man who made wonderful charms out of molten glass. My favorite activity was the “fish pond,” in which you were handed a fishing rod, dipped the hook into a wading pool, and came out with a toy. I liked that it required no luck, no skill, and no courage. 

I still have pictures of that day: my grandmother neat and ladylike in a cardigan and carrying a large beige handbag. We had attended the Lion’s Club pancake breakfast in the morning, and later I was allowed to get a doughnut because the proceeds went to helping children with Down syndrome.

I was at a stage in my life—the summer between second and third grade—when it seemed important to bring all subjects out into the open in the interest of radical honesty. Only a few days prior, I had scandalized the Sunday school day camp she’d put me in by raising my hand and announcing, apropos of nothing, that I was half Jewish. Not to have spoken up would have seemed a lie of omission.

Abortion was particularly on my mind, I don’t know why. I had always known—in the way one knew everything in my immediate family—that my parents had terminated a pregnancy shortly before they conceived me. Lately I’d been dwelling on this fact. “I owe my life to abortion,” I would say urgently when we saw pro-life protesters at a nearby clinic. The phantom sibling was a source of guilt to me, too; in my mind I somehow endowed it with all the virtues (the way one might idealize a partner’s ex) and imagined that I had somehow taken the place of a better, smarter, less weird version of my own mediocre self. I lay in bed thinking about this, saying “I’m sorry, I’m sorry,” over and over again. I had a small mechanical pencil that I associated with this line of thinking. I carried it with me everywhere and squeezed it in my pocket as a reminder. It had become a morbid obsession.

“Do you know that my mom was a little bit pregnant when my parents got married?” I asked my grandmother as we walked to the garden tent. I had planned my wording carefully so as not to shock her.

“I did, yes,” she said. 

“Do you think that was wrong?” I said. “I mean … about the other one.”

I remember she told me about “quickening,” and how long it took before a fetus could live outside the belly of its mother—but also when a sort of spiritual shift took place. Until that time, she believed, a baby was not a baby. I knew she was uncomfortable. She spoke awkwardly. But she also said, “You know … when two people love each other … that … sex … can be a very wonderful thing. I think it is why God created us.”

This gave me a great deal to think about. I clicked my mechanical pencil. And then we were at the fish pond. The old man handed me the makeshift rod, and I dipped it into the hole. The hook failed to catch anything, so the old man waded into the pool and manually attached a prize. I pulled out my prize: a small, maybe-six-inch bear. I remember my grandmother’s expression when the toy emerged from the pool. There was a flicker of—something. But I was so thrilled, so proud, that I guess she couldn’t stand to ruin my pleasure. The old man removed the hook. The bear was wearing a small T-shirt with a slogan: MY PLACE OR YOURS?

Sadie Stein is contributing editor of The Paris Review, and the Daily’s correspondent.

Author

Editorial Team

Our editorial team is dedicated to delivering accurate, timely, and engaging content. With expertise across various domains, we strive to inform and inspire our readers.