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The Old Barn (Part Two) (standard:other, 2036 words) [2/4] show all parts | |||
Author: Kenneth Nash | Added: Feb 20 2006 | Views/Reads: 2651/1909 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Part Two Of "The Old Barn" | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story could see no soldiers. Jeremiah's anger had now turned to raw fear and despair. The old man looked to be about eighty. Skin wrinkled and brown from years of working in the sun, he gazed at Jeremiah with watery blue eyes. “Whut did you say yer boy looked like?” Jeremiah described Luke again. “He was probably wearing an old worn out coonskin cap” Jeremiah almost forgot his fears for a second as he thought about Lucas and the old cap he had won in a rasslin' match with that Deerfield boy. Matthew had told Luke many a-times he was gonna burn that stinky old cap. “Naw, suh, don't reckon I seed him here” the old man drawled. He spit out his tobacco chew, turned, and limped toward the saloon. He turned back to face Jeremiah saying, “ They's a-takin' a lot of boys around the age of yer boy. Mostly, if their pa aint there to sign, they just make up a name and lie about how ol' they be.” “An awful shame, it is, taking kids.” “I tried to sign up but they jes' laughed at me.” He swore, and said, “I caint ride so good no more, but I can shoot dang near as good as I ever could” The sheriff of Bluff City said the troops had left by daybreak in the morning. They were boarding the train just a few miles to the south. “No, he did not know their destination. That was closely guarded.” Jeremiah thanked the sheriff turned his horse west, and headed for home. It was a long ride back to the McCauley place. Too much time to think. He vacillated between hope and despair. Maybe they would find out his age and send him home. He might get frightened and just come back. No, neither argument held water. He knew how desperate the military was for manpower at this point in the war. He had seen the fliers posted all over Hickory Ridge and Bluff. He had heard that boys under sixteen were assigned as drummers, or ammo and flag bearers. Probably the most dangerous assignments in the armies. As for running away. Never! Lucas was fearless, especially when he had his mind set on achieving a goal. For the first time in years Jeremiah wept. He feared for the lives of his two sons. Back at the McCauley farm Sarah, Hannah, and Leah tried to comfort each other. “I just know pa will find him,” young Leah said, choking back the sobs. After Jeremiah's return home with the dreadful news that Lucas could not be found, Sarah and Hannah started writing letters to everyone they could think of that might shed light on which company or regiment Lucas might have been assigned to. Letters were written to the last place that Matthew might possibly be. Maybe he could ask around about Lucas' whereabouts. Communication between soldiers and their families was almost impossible. Letters could take months, or in most cases, never reach the soldier. The McCauley family received two letters from Matthew. He only said in each that he had not received any mail from home, that he was okay, and was sure the war would soon end. He wanted to come home. He was lying in the hospital bed at a field hospital when the letter came. A letter that would change his life forever. It read: “Dear son Matthew;” “We don't know if this letter will find you. We have written so many but, we must try again. As was mentioned in our previous letters we have to tell you that Lucas ran away and joined the army a few weeks after you left. We received word that he was a flag bearer and was killed at the battle of Pea Ridge almost a year after he volunteered. I am sorry you have to find out this way. But we wanted you to know that he felt the same need to defend our land as you did. Luke was courageous and true to his convictions. I know you would have been proud of him. We are anxiously awaiting your return home.” “Love, Ma, Pa, Hannah, and Leah” “There has been so much bloodshed, hunger, thirst, and pain caused by this war but nothing as bad as the pain I feel in my heart.” thought Matthew. “It is my fault that he is dead. If I had not volunteered, he would still be at home with ma and pa.” The scars that were left in his legs, from the bullets and surgeons, would possibly, someday heal. But the death of Lucas and the guilt that filled his soul would remain forever with Matthew McCauley. In 1865 the war ended. Matthew arrived in Hickory Ridge after he was released from the hospital. He was home again! The reunion was bittersweet. He had missed the family and was glad to be back, but it made the absence of Lucas even more poignant. Hannah was now twenty years of age, and was moving to Bluff City to teach school. Leah was fifteen and still writing stories. Her dreams of being a writer were being fulfilled. Sarah and Jeremiah began to sense the change in Matthew. Even as a child Matt had been quiet and reserved by nature. Yet, this was different. He hardly spoke and would never mention the war at all. He seemed to turn all his emotions, and thoughts inward. Matthew could not sleep at nights, often Jeremiah would find him down at the old barn sitting on the wooden corral fence staring at the sky. Even the work on the farm didn't interest him as before. Matthew began to spend more time at Big Ed's saloon in Hickory Ridge than he did at home with the family. Although, he had a few dates with some of the women he knew when they were both children, he would soon break off the relationship. Matthew left the McCauley family and traveled west with a wagon train the next year; it was the last time he would see his ma, pa, and sisters. He worked on ranches in Texas, and Oklahoma. It was in Oklahoma that he married his first wife. A year later he had a son, Jeremiah Lucas McCauley. His wife died the following year; Matthew left the baby with his wife's sister and told her about his family and the old McCauley place near Hickory Ridge. He left and traveled the country working in oil fields, and other odd jobs he could find. Matthew could never find the peace within himself to settle down. He had no more contact with his family. Hannah and Leah had both moved to St. Louis, Missouri. Hannah married a doctor, and was still teaching in the public school system. Leah was never married. She followed Hannah to St. Louis, and was enjoying the fact that she was successful in having many stories and plays published. During the times they visited ma and pa at the old McCauley place the reasoning was always the same. “Ma, get pa to sell the old place and move near us.” “He is getting too old to run it by himself, even with the help of the hired hand that helps occasionally.” Sarah's answer was always the same. “Now girls you know your pa aint ever gonna leave this place. He has cut down on the farming, but wild horses couldn't pull him away from that ol'barn he built thirty-nine (or was it forty) years ago. Jeremiah seemed to age quickly after Matt left. His unruly brown hair had turned to silver. His body showed signs of the hard work that had gone into keeping the farm going. Yet he would never leave his homestead—alive. It was in the fall of 1880 when the “hired hand” found Mr. McCauley. He was lying on the floor of the old barn he built, and loved. Sarah had her beloved husband buried just to the west of his barn. She put the farm up for sale and moved to St. Louis. Tweet
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