Dove studied the harrow she'd been loaned. It was a wide grid of nine wooden bars, with rows of wooden fingers jutting down like a giant rake. Each finger was held to its bar by a tiny wooden peg that came in at the side and went through both bar and finger. She ran her hands along the bars, hit a peg that stuck out a bit, and winced. She shoved it back in, hard, so that she wouldn't lose any harrow fingers in the field itself. Well, with any luck, she wouldn't - but when had luck ever favoured her? Better to take care and make sure. She went over the harness too, not entirely sure of how it should look, but looking for any obvious flaws all the same. The hefty piebald horse twitched under her fingers as if they were annoying flies, and she patted its neck before she took up the driving reins and shook them gently. The horse plodded forward. This was at least smoother going than the ploughing had been but whether it would stay that way once they got into the field remained to be seen.
She walked steadily, navigating her way down the road between fields. The field she was looking for was two fields in, on the left, so she counted off the four fields on the left, turned into the fifth one, and negotiated her way along the headland, past another farmer working there, and on beyond it into her own assigned field. She stopped on the headland for a moment and looked around to figure out which way the field had been ploughed. From where she stood, the plough furrows ran straight ahead, veering a bit to avoid a battered scarecrow in the middle of the field, and then straightening up again. A pole stuck up above the scarecrow's head, and the shredded fabric haning from the pole whipped and snapped in the chilly breeze.
Dove turned the harrow, making sure it and the horse were at right angles to the existing plough furrows, and then urged the horse on. As it began to plod forward, the harrow bumped its way down off the headland and onto the turned soil. Then as they continued to move forward, and Dove braced herself to deal with the bumps and jolts of the rough ground, the raking wooden fingers of the harrow dragged soil off the high part of the furrow to cover the low part of the furrow, where the seeds had been sown. That actually made it a smoother walk than she'd expected, and certainly not as hard as ploughing had been. Then again, with the harrow, she only had one set of steering to manage rather than two. The harrow had no handles for her to hold, which made sense as it didn't need to dig as deep as a plough. Most of the soil moving was covered simply by her working across the existing plough furrows rather than along them.
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