Well I don’t know if they are the first, but they’re the earliest I remember: (circa 1966)
1) I remember being in our kitchen at the ripe old age of 7. My dad was home from the Navy for a while, and he had a friend who had brought home this huge old camera for cheap. This was an old camera even for the time, one of those models that stand up on a huge black tripod with accordion-like bellows between the body of the camera and the lens.
My dad was talking about ‘shooting me’ when the camera arrived and it amused him to make a big solemn thing about it. Acting like being ‘shot’ by a camera was the same as being shot by a gun.
So when the guy arrived with the camera and set up in the living room I wouldn’t come out. I ran and hid under the kitchen table. No amount of threats would make me come out and I was crying that I didn’t want to be shot, I wanted to live! Which my dad and his friend “Santoz” thought incredibly funny. It was probably the only reason I wasn’t dragged out and switched for disobeying. My mother tried to calm me down but I wouldn’t budge.
It didn’t help that I could hear the pop of the flash gun when my parents posed for their photo with my older brother Randy. He came back afterwards and said “Mr. Santoz used blanks when he shot us, but when he points it at you, he’ll use real bullets!” I started wailing again and finally my dad had had enough. He came into the kitchen and dragged me out from under the table and pushed me into a chair. He broke a banana from a bunch on the counter and gave it to me. “Here!” He said “What’s wrong with you? Would I give food to someone I was gonna shoot? No! I’d eat it myself THEN shoot them. Now take your banana and get out there!”
Somehow this made a sort of sense to my youthful brain and I stood in the kitchen doorway, still not going close to the camera while Santoz took my picture. That picture is the earliest one I can remember having taken, and probably set my relationship to cameras and my dad from that day forward.
2) This took place in the same time period, but I can’t remember if it was before or after the photo event. We lived in rural Virginia just North of a place called Newport News. My dad had found us a place to rent in an old farmhouse a long way back from the road and in the middle of low lying ground. So when the rains came that year, I had my first experience with flooding. It was fairly impressive as I remember it, covering the ground several feet deep in the back yard. So much so that the ditches dug between our house and the fields were a raging torrent.
My older brother got the idea of trying to surf on the muddy waves rushing thru those ditches by tossing out a piece of plywood and then jumping onto it before it washed too far away. Years later this would become the sport “Boogie boarding” but what did we know?
He was fairly successful on his initial attempts, but got bored chasing the plywood down, so he said he would let me give it a try if I would fish the board out of the water downstream. I did that and gave it a good ol’ try, winging the plywood out over the water and then taking a run and jumping onto it like I’d seen him do.
Well my feet hit the wood perfectly but the rest of me was about two seconds too slow. The board went skipping out from under me and I went backwards into the water and was washed along like so much dirty laundry. It that hadn’t occurred to me that I couldn’t swim of course, since I had no idea how deep the water really was. I remember being carried under the bridge across the ditches that our driveway was on, and skinning up my arms and knees from the rocks and concrete tubes that run underneath it.
I was carried several hundred feet all told, but eventually I got my feet back under me and jumped out covered in mud and my brother nowhere in sight. So I went running inside to cry to mom. She gave me a good scolding for getting all wet and muddy, and turned the garden hose on me before marching me to the bath. I don’t remember if my brother got in trouble, but we never did it again.
3) That same summer my older brother and I were playing in the ditch line by our driveway, which was now very low and overgrown with grasses. I had found a spot with a seam of very nice clay in it, and was busily digging it out with a kitchen spoon when I heard my brother scream and jump up on the bridge.
He was holding his leg near the shin and started screaming about being bit by a snake. I ran into the house to tell my mother who came out and started doing some screaming of her own. She told me to stay out on the porch, bundled my brother into her arms and ran back inside.
Shortly after that I heard her on the phone calling someone and talking in a rapid fire voice that got higher and higher. I don’t know who she was talking to, but in the part of Virginia we were in the nearest neighbor was about half a mile away. It took me 20 minutes just to walk to the mailbox, so there really wasn’t anyone nearby she could call for help. Time was passing rapidly and I looked in thru the screen door and saw a towel or something tied around my brother’s leg and a huge bump like a bruise just below it. Even at my young age I knew getting bit by a snake was serious and this looked really bad. I didn’t know what else to do, so I went back to the bridge to get his shoe and sock that had been left behind. I saw a snake coiled up on the bridge and ran back to the house screaming about it being after me.
Of course it wasn’t chasing me, but I never looked back. When I got to the porch I head a loud thumping noise from overhead and jumped off the porch so I could see above the house.
There was a large naval helicopter landing in our yard. It was white and had a red design on the bottom with some big black letters. Even before all three wheels were on the ground some men in uniforms jumped out and ran in the back door. They took my brother onto the helicopter and shouted some things to my mother. Then off they flew and I was really scared I wouldn’t see my brother again.
Seeing my mother scared too made things worse and we were both crying and she was back on the phone talking to someone and holding my arm so tight it hurt. The farmer who owned the house came by and took us home where he left me with his wife and kids before driving my mother to the Naval hospital. I seem to recall I was there 3 days.
Nothing was said about it after that, mainly because my father was out in the Med someplace on his tour of duty. A year or two later I remembered the seam of clay in that ditch and asked my dad if I could go get some of it to make little cartoon figures with? He was under his car as usual and said yes just be quiet. And I did just that, having a great time molding funny little heads from balls of clay. Suddenly my dad came running up, jerked me to my feet and started whipping me with a switch. No preamble, no build up, just beating me in a circle while I tried to get away. He was shouting “Didn’t I tell you never to play in that ditch? Didn’t I??” and I was trying to get out that he had just told me I could, but it was no use. Eventually he got tired of switching me and sent me into the house all red and bruised and really indignant that I had asked permission and still got in trouble.
It was years later, decades even, that I realized that the reason he was so mad about my playing there wasn’t because of the clay, or about asking permission, but because it was next to the bridge where that Water Moccasin had bitten my brother. He had nearly died from it and was very lucky the naval base had air-vacced him to their emergency room.
I’m missing the archival features of livejournal, and i don’t blog here often enuff.
had a good ending to my story hit me this am, and i thibnk i need to ramble on a bit and then get to the meat of the story.
i have to mention Dick jervis. Not my namesake. i never knew how he was related.
I’m missing the archival features of livejournal, and i don’t blog here often enuff.
had a good ending to my story hit me this am, and i thibnk i need to ramble on a bit and then get to the meat of the story.
i have to mention Dick jervis. Not my namesake. i never knew how he was related.
“RJ hon! I’m so glad we caught you! Hi Aunt Chrissy, what’s goin’ on?”
LindaKay was 4 years older than RJ but seeing her like this with her parents taking up the front seat made her seem so much younger. The trio bundled out and gave RJ and his aunt hugs. Uncle Bill stole a kiss from Aunt Chrissy and she gave him a critical look and clucked her tongue un-approvingly. LindaKay passed her baby boy to RJ in way of introduction and said “You haven’t met my youngest, Leonard. Come to think of it, you haven’t met any of my kids. We didn’t bring them to the funeral cause they caint be trusted to behave. You know how kids are. Where did you say your kids and wife got off to? Its just tragical they couldn’t be here for your momma’s funeral…”
There was an awkward moment as RJ tried to come up with an answer while juggling baby, blanket, and rattle all at the same time. Uncle Bill rescued him on one point and said “They’re at Disneyland down in Florida LindaKay. I don’t blame them, can’t disappoint the kids just cause someone dies. You’d never hear the end of it, isn’t that right Eleanor?” RJ’s Aunt Eleanor, the eldest of his mother’s siblings looked over from where she was standing with Aunt Chrissy and and said “Lord LindaKay, remember how you and David wailed when you couldn’t go to Busch Gardens cause I had to have an operation? You’d had thought the whole clan had died. Besides, they can stop in and pay their respect on the return trip, can’t they RJ?”
RJ nodded, still holding the child out from him a bit and trying not to drop him. The baby wriggled and squirmed without making a sound, its tiny hand gripping the rattle and banging it rapidly on RJ’s arm. Aunt Edith took mercy on him and reached for the child “Tsk tsk! I haven’t met the man yet who knew how to hold a baby, and here you’ve raised three of them!” RJ smiled his gratitude and passed child and accessories over gladly. Baby Leonard chose that moment to let his rattle fly and it went sailing over RJ’s shoulder. RJ followed its arc too surprised to make more than a half hearted attempt at catching it and braced for the sound of the rattle breaking on the sidewalk.
But before the toy could hit the ancient stone sidewalk Sparky ran out of the tall grass and grabbed it, dancing backward with the rattle in his mouth and leaving the half-chewed red ball in its place. Everyone started calling to to the dog and slapping their thighs, gesturing and even clapping for obedience. Aunt Chrissy used her sternest voice to call him to her without result. Baby Leonard chose that moment to start crying loudly and RJ and his uncle Bill rushed forward in a flanking movement but Sparky was having none of it. He dodged several attempts at recovering the toy, letting RJ’s hands get within inches and then bounding off into the grass. No one could make out where he was but they could track the toy’s rattle. Moments later, Sparky burst from the grass and crouched just out of reach. He shook his head wildly and was rewarded by even more manic noise from the baby’s rattle. Sparky’s eyes shone with the attention this new game was getting him and his tail wagged furiously. It was all great fun as far as Sparky was concerned but not so much for the adults and certainly baby Leonard thought it tragic.
On RJ’s third attempt he got a finger on the toy before Sparky ran the long way around the house, shot back thru Uncle Bill’s legs and then came to a sudden stop just under the porch. RJ walked up speaking softly to Sparky who responded to each step RJ took with a short retreat of his own. Soon the dog’s shiny black coat blended with the shadows underneath the house and RJ wasn’t certain where he was. He caught a glint off the plastic here and there and the sound of the rattle as the dog shook it and chewed on it. RJ paused, not wanting to crawl under the porch after the dog and he looked back to where everyone else stood watching. He looked from face to face but there was no mercy and his uncle just shrugged and said “Looks like you’re elected, though I’m not sure Leonard will want it back after that dog’s been at it.”
RJ braced himself on the stack of cinderblocks that formed one corner of the porch and duck-walked in. He saw remnants of toys and bones that Sparky had brought under there over the years strewn about in the dust or half buried. they all were gnawed and discolored, and only half recognizable. Some of them looked like toys that might have belonged to RJ long ago. RJ remembered playing in the shade under there with plastic soldiers and marbles and bits of plastic packing material as building blocks. He shook the memory from his head and waited for his eyes to adjust, looking up thru the cracks in the porch for hidden cobwebs or spiders. He could hear the dog panting and its teeth clacking on the plastic as Sparky tried to get a purchase on the smooth baby toy. RJ called out and patted the ground encouragingly, but a cloud of dust was all he got for his trouble. He half waddled, half squirmed himself further under the house and said “C’mere Sparky, you dumb dog, I gotta have that toy back!”
Of course there was no answer and RJ’s scalp started itching just thinking about the layers of dust he was now swimming in, breathing. He tried to peer beyond the motes dancing where the sun shown thru cracks in the the porch but it didn’t help him see anything, it just had the effect of killing his night vision. The old house seemed to be exhaling cold damp air right into his face. It reminded him of leaning over the edge of the well in Grammaw Selkirk’s back yard and feeling the coolness from far below wash up over him. But this was getting colder and more uncomfortable by the second. Reluctantly he let one knee touch the ground and leaned further in, inching forward guided by sound alone. Sparky’s panting suddenly stopped and became a growl and RJ froze, squinting and leaning forward on one hand as he tried to make out what was going on a few feet in front of him. Didn’t his aunt say something about snakes living in the rocks at the back of the house? Maybe Sparky scented one under here with them? RJ had heard someplace that a nest of snakes smelled like cucumbers and he took a slow deep breath searching for the merest hint of vegetables in the air. He had decided to back out when the dog made a startled yelp and fell silent. He leaned forward again and softly asked “Sparky? You OK boy?”
RJ was acutely aware of the vulnerable position he was in. He stretched a leg back behind him to get a purchase on the ground before sliding backwards when he saw or thought he saw a point of light and the shiny pink curve of the baby’s rattle. Apparently Sparky had abandoned it and left it lying just a foot beyond RJ’s reach. RJ didn’t want to return empty handed or spend a second longer in this closed in space than he had to so he hefted himself a bit forward and reached for the toy. It moved backwards just out of his reach exactly as it had when Sparky was toying with him out on the sidewalk. RJ cleared his throat and clearly said “Sparky, Stop it!” and made another attempt on the toy, now almost completely stretched out in the dust. His hand again missed, but he thought he felt the dog’s fur this time. He made a mad scramble for dog or toy and tried to pull whatever he touched to him. He heard a grunt of surprise and a second pink point of light appeared next to the first and he heard a soft hissing sound. It sounded like his own words being repeated back to him with a slow, heavy slur; “Ssssparky, sssstopiiiittt!”
RJ made a sound of shock and surprise as he scrambled backwards as fast as he could from under the porch. He tried to call out but all that would come out of his mouth was a noise that sounded like “Gaaaah!” He bumped his head sharply on the porch as he rushed to get out from under there and if he heard a distance echoing repeat of “Ssssparky, sssstopiiiittt” he didn’t pause to make sure. He bolted upright soon as he could and turned around in circles, blinking in the sun and suddenly unsure of his footing. He put a hand out and grabbed a stout limb of the dogwood tree and pulled himself into it, almost hugging the trunk. He tried to call out a warning to his relatives, coughing and spitting while things spun around in his vision threatening to knock him to the ground. He couldn’t see his aunts or his uncle anywhere in the yard but the cars were still there and he took a step toward them. He caught movement back toward the porch and froze, slowly rolling his eyes in that direction, dreading what he might see crawling out into the light.
What he saw was his aunt Chrissy and Uncle Bill sitting in the two rocking chairs on the porch and looking at him owlishly in surprise. They made no effort to help him or even speak to him. He looked at them as if they were cardboard cut outs of his actual relatives and then looked back down the sidewalk where he had last saw them, half expecting to see his real family still waiting for him to retrieve the baby rattle.
“Wha….what the HELL is under that house??”
His uncle looked to his Aunt Chrissy and then looked back. “Nuthin.”
RJ rigidly pointed into the darkness and said “Something just SPOKE to me under there Dammit!”
“RJ!” his Aunt Chrissy snapped back at him. “Mind your language young man!”
RJ blinked and coughed once more, spitting on the sidewalk. “Don’t ‘language’ me, what in God’s name is going here? You must have heard it, you were sitting right over my head!” He took a step forward and then froze, unable to move any closer to the shadowy darkness. The skin on his head crawled and even his face felt tight and hot as he tried to dust himself off as rapidly as possible.
“We heard you hit your head RJ…” Uncle Bill volunteered, “You were under there a while and we thought you were playing with some old toys or something. Sparky came out with the rattle a while back. LindaKay and Eleanor are inside showing the baby to your grammaw. Why don’t you come on in and visit with us?”
RJ’s anger rose at the matter-of-fact tone the two were using with him. He was still trying to clear his head and leaning heavily on the tree. “Wait, came out? The dog came out with the toy?” Aunt Chrissy stood up and held out her arms, gesturing to him. “C’mon on up here RJ, I’ll put some ice in a rag and you can hold it against that bump you’ve got. C’mon on now, don’t be so foolish.”
RJ stepped backwards, she was using the same tone with him she’d used on the dog. He took one more look at the house and the black pool of shadows beneath it and turned toward his car. “No way, I’m not coming near that…that thing, that place ever again! No Ma’am, no way!” He opened the door to his honda and started the engine, the radio immediately squawking at him as he put it in gear. His aunt and uncle were on the sidewalk now but he couldn’t hear what they were saying over “Coal Miner’s Daughter.” He gave the dial a frantic twist and turned around to back the car onto the road. It was a tight squeeze between the end of his uncle’s car and the stones that marked the driveway but he didn’t care. He pulled into the road and lined the car up in the lane without even looking to see if it was clear to pull out. A pickup truck buzzed around him and the driver shouted something rude in passing. RJ gunned the engine and the car leapt forward just as his aunt got to the end of the sidewalk and waved frantically at him to stop. He waved back automatically even as the car picked up speed and sped away from his grandmother’s house. He’d had enough, he’d heard enough, and as his friend Indiana Bill would say, it was time to get the hell out of Dodge.
Aunt Chrissy would not sit at the table with him but nibbled from the stove and tested the bacon to see if it was OK to serve. She even dipped a warm biscuit in the bacon fat, caught RJ looking and laughed as she turned away, blushing. It was probably the first color hed ever seen in her cheeks and he was struck by how pale she was compared to his other relatives. As a child he was confused by the things his relatives did and said in this house and it was hard to ask questions even now. Those quirky things that didn’t make sense were just how things were and left at that.
Granmaw Selkirk remained at the table and make a big show of smelling each item of food as it arrived but she did not take anything for herself. Occasionally she would take a small sip from her coffee, wetting her lips but nothing more, just going thru the motions. RJ thought hard back thru his memories and couldn’t recall a single time he’d seen his grandmother eat anything. It was not tradition in her house to feed the men and the women folk at the same time so it was not unusual for her to have been absent once RJ had sat down. He rolled his eyes over another cup of coffee and admonished himself for getting wrapped up in this bizarre story. If he thought about it, he hadn’t actually met one relative on this trip who was completely normal. But maybe to themselves they were maybe all this superstition and crazy X-file belief system they had going WAS normal for them and it was only because his perspective was now from the outside that he found them so strange. Not for the first time since this visit started RJ found himself wondering what his life would have become if he hadn’t been in such a hurry to leave West Virginia? He dabbed up more gravy with his last bite of biscuit and asked “How do you know of these things if they happened so long ago?”
Aunt Chrissy stopped, the tin dipper from the bucket of well water half way to her lips and looked at her mother. When Granmaw Selkirk said nothing she sat it down slowly and said “We’ve been piecing it together for many a year. There’s no written record, nothing that can be traced back that far but the story has been told unchanged from generation to generation…Orally.” She paused as if the word caused her pain. “The Selkirks have worked these hills as far back as anyone can remember. But much was lost once coal was discovered here.”
Granmaw Selkirk sat quietly drawing circular shapes on the table with a bony finger. RJ watched her her as the silence built up between them, then she abruptly pointed at RJ and asked “Do you know when coal was first discovered in West Virginia?”
“Not exactly, I have a feeling they found coal here even before the Civil War?”
“Close enough. There is a long break in our records like Chrissy said, during the dark times when the Covenant was not observed. Brother Selkirk, he lived a long life and a pious one but eventually he had to die as we all do. Someone took over in his stead but it never really got back up to speed. The indians were driven away and the story of brother Selkirk was lost for hundreds of years. White folk didn’t go very deep under the hills, they found what they wanted right near the surface. And that was coal. And they blew it up, dug it out, and carted it away with no thought that there would be anyone else about to lay claim to it. Since the 1750s a steady stream of coal has been taken from West Virginian hills and its been the death of many a good man like your Grandfather George Selkirk Jr.
“Oh RJ, it was not a good time for them or us. Whole families were lost here and many places in the Below were made unlivable or completely collapsed and cut off by the taking of the coal. The Covenant was long broken and while I daren’t call it a war, a lot of anger was taken out on the coal miners. For those Below thought the very layer of darkness that had protected them for centuries was being stolen away from them. All sorts of evil was worked to drive us away. And by us I mean all of us here above ground.”
Granmaw Selkirk gestured her hands around as if patting the soil, the ground, the land all about her. “Safe mines were made to collapse, clean air was poisoned and even water was re-routed to wash them…us away. But it did no good, we just brought more men, more sticks of dynamite, and machines big as a house to drag off every bit of coal we could get our hands on. No one in daylight knew of Brother Selkirk, or of the Covenant.”
“So how did you come to know it, or hear the story from someone else?”
Granmaw Selkirk smiled a toothless smile and said “My grandfather’s grandfather. Mason Stamper Selkirk. He brought an end to the hostilities, though it cost him his life.”
RJ screwed up his face. “My…Great great great Grandfather…no wait, add another great in there…he did what exactly?”
“He was a coal miner from right here in Dunlow but he moved out and worked the Boss Hosie mine in the southern part of the state where Wayne, Mingo, and Lincoln counties meet. The west fork of Twelvepole has its start right near there and they used a water wheel to pump out the lower levels. He married an Irish girl newly arrived and they settled down. By all accounts he had a good life till the cave-in.
“He was trapped inside that mine with 15 other men and he was the onliest one to come out alive and that was by strange circumstance. See they were closing off a section of the mine–robbing it as they say before abandoning it entirely–and Mason was the last to leave that section. It was the furthest back of the whole mine, a mile from the entrance which was about as far back into the mountain as they dared go in those days. He was looking for his matches and his lamp when the roof began to working and there was a far off rumble followed by the worst sound a miner can imagine. Thunder underground! The last sound many a man ever hears down there.
“When he dug himself out and got his senses about him, he found he was trapped behind 40 feet of mother rock and coal with a broken leg. He had no real hope from that exact moment but he kept his head and felt around to find his pick and there was nothing for it but to say a prayer and start digging. Some men might have lain down to die right then and some would have wept and pulled their hair. But Mason didn’t, he started to dig and sing to keep his spirits up. He sang a merry tune or two and others what he remembered from church or his mother’s side. He dug in the dark, scooting along and singing loud and long maybe hoping he would be heard on the other side. And heard he was but not by the other miners they were all dead. He dug for hours or days, how would he know? He uncovered a horse’s body, one of several that was used in the mine, and it saddened him to the point that he stopped digging and spoke a little prayer over it, dragging it gently aside as best he could with a broken leg and removing the ruined harness. He sank down at the back of the little space he had, sang some nonsense childhood song about a reluctant pony and prepared to meet his own reward.
“The people of Below, they were never far away, and they heard him singing prayers for a dead horse because it was them that had caused this whole mess in the first place you see? Now though they had themselves a problem. As you already know, these people put a lot of stock into song, and there were those among them who had been taught the songs Brother Selkirk had brought with him, songs that they knew the tune of but not the meanings of the words like I said. They began to wonder among themselves if he was a priest too, if he was at long last another Brother Selkirk or a member of his order come back to honor the Covenant? This discussion went on, some taking the side of caution, some wanting to kill him outright. And all the while the air he had was being used up. Ah but then he did something that settled it for them, can you guess what that was?”
RJ closed his eyes and tried to picture himself sitting alone in the dark with a dead horse, a broken leg, and a miner’s pick. He sipped his coffee but found it cold and pushed it away. “Well if I was playing DnD, I’d probably say I eat the horse!” He shrugged and smiled trying to lessen the mental image, but his Granmaw was not sidetracked.
“I see. Well now. Let me ask you this. What’s the one thing that they say you should never ever do in a mine?” Before RJ could form an answer Aunt Chrissy leaned in to take away his cup and plates. She said “Whistle! It’s bad luck to whistle in mines RJ, always has been.”
Granmaw Selkirk thumped the table. “Chrissy! I wanted to hear what the boy would say to that! You already know this story so hush up and let RJ hear it thru, please!” RJ watched his rebuked aunt retreat into the sitting room and snatch up a bible as she headed for her room. He was suddenly glad he didn’t live with a retired schoolteacher. He leaned his head on his elbow and asked half jokingly “What’s wrong with whistling? The vibrations cause harmonics and crack the rock?”
“No RJ, nothing so dire. But remember our family and many many others who came here for work came from Ireland, Scotland, even Wales and they brought their beliefs with them. From the earliest times that men have worked the rock they were advised two things: One: not to bring women into a mine, and two not to whistle lest they drive away the Good Luck Spirit that lives in each mine or rather everywhere underground.
“Uh huh…and these people living in the mine, what did they do when they heard him, Mason? When they heard him whistle?”
“Say ‘Them that live Below.’ They wouldn’t live in a mine RJ any more than you would live in a graveyard. Here’s where luck was on his side. Those priests Brother Selkirk met hundreds of years before, they whistled to each other, no one else among them are allowed to. I think that’s why they took Brother Selkirk to meet their priests in the first place. I don’t know if this prohibition somehow got to the miner’s back home or its just lucky happenstance. In fact I asked that selfsame question when I first heard this tale and you know what they told me? They said ‘That’s neither here nor there.’ The point is, this affected enough of them to decide the issue. They would spare his life, but they would not make open contact. Memories run deep as underground rivers with Them that Live Below and time passes or not at all. I often smile thinking about my great granddad whistling some tune that was more likely ‘Rigs o Barley’ or ‘Devil among the Tailors’ than it was anything of a religious nature and that’s what got him spared.
“They were none too gentle about it though. They let him pass out from lack of air and then came into the mine and took him from Warriormine where the entrance was…that’s down on highway 16 near the state border…clear up here to Moses Fork just a few miles shy of where he was born. And they came all that way underground. That drive’ll take you over 2 hours by car RJ, so you can imagine how long it would have taken to walk. Mason woke to find himself in the crook of a holler, cold and wet, and covered with clay with the cold breath of a cave breathing out over him. But he was alive. All he had with him was the clothes on his back and the broken harness from the horse. So he made a splint from a dogwood tree and worked his way back towards his momma’s house. His father had long Passed Over from the black lung. His wife Louisa was there too and they were all mourning his loss and those other 15 fellas in the mine collapse and you could have knocked them over with a feather when he limped in the door, every one of them!”
Granmaw Selkirk chuckled to herself and began to sing some nameless tune to herself. RJ thought maybe the story was over for now and quietly slipped away to the bathroom. He washed his hands in the cold water basin staring at all the faded and curling photographs tucked into the edge of the mirror’s frame. He had no idea how far back they went, or even if the hilly country in the background of the photos…the mines they showed…were here or back in Ireland, Scotland maybe? He suddenly felt very tired and leaned his forehead against the cool glass. In the reflection he could see back into the kitchen. His grandmother was sitting there hands folded in her lap. She turned her head toward him and reached out for him, gesturing to the seat next to her. The seat was a wooden hand carved bench of some old, dark wood. RJ remembered when both he and his two brothers could fit on that bench. Soon as he was settled his Grandmother began again, her voice softer now, almost conspiratorial. Aunt Chrissy had not resurfaced.
“Mason had been missing for a week and soon as they got him all cleaned up and fed they had a revival right there. Even set up a prayer tent to celebrate his being spared. He got asked lots of questions about how he survived, and some of the folk who lost men in the mine wanted him to lead them back the way he came, but he kept the location to himself and told everyone God had led him out. It was the talk of the year and people said he had a blessed life from that day on. Once things had calmed down and he got his wife and mother alone he told them what he remembered about his escape, about voices and songs and him being carried thru the dark for days on end. He had a vivid memory or vision of someone whistling in his ear over and over, as if calling him back from the edge of death.
“His wife and mother did not agree completely on what should be done, as wives and mothers often find themselves disagreeing on the subject of the husband. His wife Louisa became convinced that he had been aided by the Fey, by the faerie folk that live under all mountains and that he should make some gift, an offering to them as thanks for saving his life. This Mason agreed to do though his mother was one of God’s strong women and advised against it. They took his father’s wagon and told his mother that he would do as God saw fit. But when they got close to the place where he woke up he stopped the wagon and made his way up the hillside to the cave entrance and sat down some goods. Just to be sure you see? He brought with him blankets and a miners lamp, a toy horse and a wooden top, and some good whisky. Remember his leg was broke, and it agonized him sorely to manage these items up the hill. So much so that before he started back down the last time, he decided the faerie folk wouldnt miss a swallow or two of whisky. Ahem! He was a long time on the hillside and his wife who was waiting with the wagon was very worried about him. For a while she could hear him singing somewhere up on the hill and then just a whistle from time to time, and then just silence. But she was still a superstitious girl fresh from a small irish village after all, and she wouldn’t have the courage to go looking for him till the next morning.”
RJ smiled and said “I’m guessing he had more than a swallow of whiskey just then, didn’t he Granmaw?”
“A considerable amount, by all accounts! In fact he passed out and woke the next morning with his wife glaring down at him, angry that he had kept her waiting all night while he put a drunk on. She felt he had made light of her beliefs and gave him a good piece of her mind I’m here to tell you!”
RJ chuckled at this and looked past his grandmother to see Chrissy was standing near the curtains of the spare bedroom, silently listening. She made no sign that she noticed RJ looking in her direction. RJ thought she looked like an actress waiting for her cue to come on stage. The image of her standing there the night before, preventing RJ from bursting out onto the porch came back to him and he frowned and looked away, feeling just a tiny bit manipulated by the whole thing. His grandmother said nothing till he looked back, as if sensing where his mind was wandering to, then she carried on, touching RJ’s hand to keep his attention.
“But then they noticed the blankets and the lamp and the whiskey–what was left of it–was gone! In it’s place there was a rolled up piece of flattened mushroom and a stone carved cane. The cane was intricately carved and made of a single piece of rock, trending up into a crystal where it had a rounded top rubbed smooth enough to see into, and there was a pocket of water trapped inside. No one has seen its like before or since.”
RJ looked back at his grandmother and thought about this last piece of info. “The cane was made of rock, and it had a crystal full of water on the top? That sounds…well unlikely.”
Granmaw Selkirk leaned across the table and tut tutted at RJ “Much of what you’ve heard this night sounds unlikely young man, but this I can prove. That cane was precious to Mason Selkirk, and he carried it till the day he died. Then it passed to his son and so on down to my husband, and it is still in our family, still in this very house!”
RJ stood up and tried to apologize quickly, not meaning to question his grandmothers story, not meaning to offend but Grandmaw Selkirk tossed her head over her shoulder and called out “Chrissy! Bring Mason’s Crutch in here so RJ can see it.”
As Jimmy says:
“It’s a semi-true story
Believe it or not
I made up a few things
And there’s some I forgot.
But the life and the tellin’
Are both real to me
And they run like the rain
All the way to the sea. “
I’ve been trying google analytics, to see if anyone not in my circle of friends is reading the blog, and if not, how to increase traffic to it.
I have a long chapter in draft that I started before my vacation, and hope to get some time this weekend to pull it out and buff it up enough for your viewing.
I thought I’d go back and refresh myself with where I’ve come from, and insert some requested stories to fill it up. I repeat that I’m not writing this sequentially, so you might find reading new entries a bit confusing.
There’s been a request for a return chapter with Roger my crazy roomate in the Hospital, and some wandering about time before the funeral. OR just after…
I’m glad this isn’t a biography, cause I have to make up stuff to fill in the hours 😉