Friday, October 30, 2015

The Trout Pond



The Trout Pond



Listen to this preview

By: Hubert C. Crowell
Jim makes a find in a pond that tears a small Kentucky coal mining town apart. Ron, a stranger in town carrying a secret of the largest crime of the century becomes snared in the Union wars of the 1950’s.
 
 

Fiction by Hubert C. Crowell © 11/27/2015

The morning was cool with a slight breeze coming out of the northwest, as Jim picked up his fly rod, kissed Allie bye and headed down the lane to his favorite fishing hole. It was about a mile walk and he liked to be in the pond before the sun came up. The fish would be more active early in the morning and he hoped to catch enough for breakfast. Allie would have her morning chores done and biscuits ready by the time he caught some fish.

The pond was shallow around the sides, he could wade out about twenty feet with his waders, which he kept in a bucket on the bank. Zip, zip went the line as he placed the fly on the exact spot where the fish were making a ripple on the surface of the water. He loved the outdoors and the time spent on the pond fishing, watching all the wildlife, especially a large eagle that would sometimes beat him to the spot where the fish were stirring up the water.

 Jim had his bag half full in no time at all and was prepared to head home, when he slipped on an underwater log, fell and hit his shoulder on another log. Managing to change back into his walking shoes Jim started for home as the pain increased.

“Jim, are you OK?”

“I may have broken my shoulder; I slipped and hit my shoulder on a log in the pond.”

          “Sit down; while I call the doctor and take care of the fish, you’re not going to try and go to the station, are you?”

Jim enjoyed the fish for breakfast and the pain subsided quite a bit.

          “The doctor is on a house call on this side of town and will stop by later this morning and take a look at that shoulder.” Allie said as she laid her hand on his shoulder and said a prayer.

Jim settled in by the fire and the heat felt good on his shoulder as he turned it toward the fireplace. Allie shoveled up the coal ashes and put a fresh lump of coal on the fire, when she heard the knock at the door.

          “That was fast.” As she let Doctor Boyles in.

          “I was just finishing up my last call when you called the office, good thing I checked in while I was on this side of town, now what’s going on with that shoulder?”

          “I fell in the trout pond and hit a log, however is seems much better now.”

          “Well let me have a look. Raise your arm up, this may hurt a little, I am going to pull and see if it is out of place.”

          “Ouch, that’s a relief it feels like something moved.”

          “I think you will be better now, watch out for those slippery logs in the pond.”

          “Would you like some fresh fish, I have several Bass left?”

          “Allie, put some ice on those fish for the doc and let him take them home. What do I owe you?”

          “The fish will be payment enough, I was already out this way, and I’ll get a few gallons of gas from you next time I am by the station.”

Allie packed Jim a lunch and he rode into town with the Doc and filled his tank at the station.

“You know Doc, I believe that prayer Allie said over my shoulder sure worked, you coming by so soon and all.”

“Your right Jim that was the easiest house call I’ve made in a long time. Have a good day and don’t work too late.”

That evening Jim thought about the long walk home last week in the cold rain and getting hit on the head, then decided that he would close a little earlier this afternoon and go by the trout pond again. Business was slower than usual for a Friday afternoon, and it was not raining. Over the hill and by the Ice plant where Sam was sitting waiting for customers. “Going fishing?”

“Yea, Sam, things are really slow at the station, don’t expect anyone will want gas with the weekend starting.”

“Same here but I guess I will hang around a little longer. Hear you had some trouble last week along the tracks.”

“I got my money back, and don’t think I will be walking this way home after dark again.”

“What’s biting at the pond?”

“Bluegill and Bass mostly, I caught four nice size ones this morning, thought I would see what biting this evening. Put us down for another block of ice in the morning just in case I catch more than we can eat.”

“Will do, I will be by around seven with the truck.”

The barber shop looked empty, so Jim decided to get a trim and shave for the weekend. “Evening John, can I get a trim?”

“I don’t see anyone else waiting for one. Have a seat.”

“Go easy on the back of the head, I still have a bump back there. I was telling Sam, down at the ice plant that I won’t be taking the walk along the tracks after dark again.”

“Yea, I heard about you getting mugged last week on the way home in the rain. I am sure glad you’re alright. Someone needs to clean up that stretch along the tracks.”

School was letting out, and a string of kids were passing by the window. “They are growing up fast, I wonder how many of them will go to work at the mines?” Jim commented.

“If they want to make good money, they will. I understand that Stoney Point Mine is hiring.”

“Yes, my son says they will be working around the clock until they get the coal out from under the river, if they slow down the mine will fill up with water, so they have decided the only way to get that coal out is to mine it fast.”

“There goes Lew Oldom with his wagon and lawnmower, Wonder how many yards he will mow today, he knows more about this town than anyone and talks less than anyone. How long has he been mowing lawns around town?”

“Nobody knows much about him, he just showed up about ten years ago and started mowing lawns for a living, he also collects bottles and scrap iron and sells them to the scrap man up on the hill.”

After his haircut, Jim continued on to the pond. The kids were playing baseball in the field next to the pond and Jim stood and watched for a while, thinking about the times he watched his boys play on the same field. They were all grown now with families of their own. He missed all the excitement of having three boys and a girl running around the house. Allie and He look forward to having them all home on Christmas. As Jim opened the bucket and pulled out his waders, he noticed something odd floating on the pond.

Wadding out to the middle of the pond, Jim could see what looked like someone floating, head down, with no clothes. The body was cold and still as Jim rolled it over, a young man in his twenties and no sign of life. Jim slowly pulled him to the bank, went back to the game and ask one of the boys to run to the nearest house and have them call the sheriff. “Tell them that there has been a drowning out at the pond and to come quickly!”

The ball game ended abruptly, they all started to head for the pond. “Hold on! Stop!” Shouted Jim, “We need to wait for the sheriff to get here. I don’t think it is anyone we know, I know most everyone in town and I did not recognize him.” Jim gathered the boys around in a circle. “I know you boys and I need you to join me in a prayer for the family of this young man.” As Jim was praying, sirens could be heard in the distance, growing louder by the minute.

The sheriff pulled onto the ball field along with two other police cars.

“Jim, what’s this about a drowning?”

“Stay here boys while I show Officer Brown what I found.”

“Are you sure it was a drowning?”

“It looks like he may have been swimming, he doesn’t have any clothes on and I didn’t see any marks on his body.”

“The water is too cold for swimming. Did you recognize him?”

“Never seen him before, Joe, I was fishing here just this morning and did not see a thing. Here he is, I pulled him up here on the bank.”

The sheriff examined the body and rolled him over, checking for any sign of force or injuries. “He looks clean enough, but we’ll know more after the doctor looks at him.”  

The other officers were circling the pond looking for any clues. Another siren interrupted them as the ambulance arrived and two men carrying a stretcher joined them at the edge of the pond.

“Jim, bring the boys down here one at a time and let’s see if any of them have seen this guy before.”

“Ok Joe, be right back.”

One at a time the boys looked at the face of the body now covered to the neck and on a stretcher, as Joe studied their faces for any sign of recognition or fear. None of them had seen him before. They loaded him into the ambulance left with the stranger.

“Jim, we are going to circle the pond again before it gets dark and look for tracks and find out where he might have entered the pond, want to join us?”

“I’ve got waders on, I can go around the edge in the water and see the bank better, and also I will not disturb any tracks.”

“Fine, we’re going to stay back about twenty feet from the bank and look, yell if you see anything.”

Jim started out, as a water snake took off in front of him. The water was clear in front and he could see the bottom clearly. Three turtles and two snakes later, Jim froze in his tracks. “Joe! Come over here, but watch where you step, I have boot tracks, but no bare foot tracks.”

“Jim I can see two sets of deep boot tracks going down to the water and two light sets coming back up from the water. Looks like they were carrying something heavy. Can you see any tracks on the bottom under the water?”

“No tracks, but something has disturbed the mud there.”

“Yea, looks like someone may have thrown his body out into the pond, this pond is not deep enough for someone to swim in anyway. I will have the guys make a cast of the prints.”

Back at the sheriffs’ car, he got a call on the radio, Jim overheard the dispatcher telling him that the doctor did not find any water in his lungs, it was not a drowning! So far they could not determine the cause of death. Joe gave Jim a ride home, surprising Allie when she saw the police bringing Jim home.

“What on earth has happen now Jim, are you alright?”

“I’m ok.” As Joe pulled off. “It’s a long story, I'll tell you all about it over dinner, sorry, I don’t have any fish tonight.”

That night they stayed up late by the fire, listening to the radio, hoping to learn if anyone had turned up missing.

The rooster was louder than usual, or at least it seemed that way after staying up late.

“Sam will be bringing a block of ice by around seven, better fix him a cup of coffee and some eggs, I’m sure he will want to hear about the pond.”

“What are we going to do with the ice? You going to catch some fish today?”

“I was planning on that yesterday, and asked Sam for the ice. I'm sure you can find a good use for it.”

Sam stopped and had breakfast, staying over an hour, wanting all the details from the evening before. “I see quite a few young men coming through town on the train, maybe I had better go down the station and see if he looks like any of them that went through recently. They like to stop and talk while they get some ice to suck on.”

Before Sam left, the local newspaper reporter was knocking on the door. “Morning Jim, could you give me some information for the paper. Hi Sam, did you see anything?”

“No, but I’m going down to look at his face, it may have been one of those hobo’s. Got your headlines for tomorrow’s paper?”

“Yea, we will sell a lot of papers tomorrow, I may be up late tonight running off extra copies.”

“Ray, I can’t give you all the information, the sheriff said to keep some of the information quiet while the investigation was going on. Come on in and have a seat. Sam, thanks for the ice, see you Monday.”

“Jim, so, this was Friday afternoon when you found the young man in the pond, tell me all you can.” As he pulled out his notebook and started writing.

Jim shared with Ray all the details except for the tracks on the bank, the sheriff was getting plaster cast of the two sets of boot prints for evidence and they were still searching the area.

“Do you think it may have been a drifter, Jim, we may never know who he was or what happened. By now I’m sure the whole town knows about the body being found and everyone will be waiting on the paper to find out more. Can you describe him for me?”

“He was about five foot ten with shaggy brown hair. Light complexion, I believe he also had brown eyes, you had better check with the sheriff about that.”

“I'll stop by the station on my way back to the paper and talk with them about it, maybe I can get a picture for the paper while I am there."

 “See you at church tomorrow.”

As they walked out on the front porch, Ray asked Jim about the robbery last week and if he could do a story for the paper on it.

“Sure, sit back down on the swing and I will fill you in”

Ray got his notebook back out and flipped to a clean page, across the top he wrote, ‘The Long Walk Home.’

“Thanks Jim, that’s a great story I am going to also tell about what you do and dress it up a little like a short story, will that be alright?”

“Write whatever you like Ray, I always enjoy the stories you include each week.”

“There may even be a connection between the two events, look for the story on page two, the headlines will be the body found in the pond. I had better go, have a lot of work to get the paper out!”

 
 



Page 2 of the Providence Journal

 

The little gas station was quiet as Jim leaned back in his chair, letting it rest against the stucco wall, and waited for a customer needing gas. The station was small, with room for only two people to stand. Shelves on the back wall displayed oil and parts. Jim only pumped gas and sold just a few other items. He did not repair flats or do oil changes. Even though there was an old car ramp where cars used to be serviced, it was not used anymore. 

          During his seventy-five years Jim had seen a lot, and his customers enjoyed hearing his stories, including the adventures he had during his coal mining days before he ran the small gas station. He enjoyed hearing their latest news as they stopped by for gas, and the conversations helped time pass on a back road of a small town.

The glass above the pump showed one gallon, ready to be pumped up to the amount requested by the next customer. A local farmer soon drove up on his tractor.

“Evening, Jim,” he said. “Five gallons will be all I need today.”

Jim turned the hand crank and pumped four more gallons up into the glass above the pump, then let the five gallons drain down through the hose into the gas tank.

“We may be able to get the hay in before the rain comes,” the farmer said.

Jim looked up to check the clouds moving in from the west. “It does look like we may get wet tonight. I may be late for supper.” Jim knew his wife of fifty-five years would have dinner on the table waiting for him at the end of a long day. Hopefully it wouldn’t be cold by the time he got home.

          Jim and the farmer chatted a bit, then Jim went back inside as the farmer drove off.

          When the daylight began to fade, Jim drained all the pumps and locked them, then removed the cash from the old cash register. He had no outdoor lights at the pumps, so closing time was at dark each day. With everything secure, he put on his raincoat and started home just as a light rain started to fall.

The small town was quiet, and the streets were empty. He was normally home before the sky grew totally dark, but this evening the clouds were bringing on the darkness earlier than usual. He quickly walked over the small hill and past the ice plant, then along the railroad tracks for his shortcut around the center of town. The quarter mile along the tracks was darker than usual, and Jim did not notice the hobo waiting next to the empty rail car.

“Got any change?” The voice seemed to come out of nowhere.

Jim spun around and felt the knife pushing against his belt buckle. The money bag from the station was hidden in his shirt. As Jim reached for his billfold and began to pull it out, everything suddenly went black.

When he woke up, his head was hurting. He was soaking wet and cold. He felt around in the dark and found his empty billfold, then felt his shirt for the money bag. It was still there! Finding his hat, he pulled his aching body up out of the mud and stumbled down the tracks.

As he walked back onto Main Street, he noticed the barber shop and store were closed. He must have been out a long time. The school on the hill reminded him of his boys, two now living in California and one that lived nearby, where he planned to stop.

He walked toward his son’s house, crossing a long hill before seeing the welcome sight of their lamp shining in the window. He climbed the steps to the front porch and collapsed, feeling like he could not go any further. The door opened and his son, Bob, came rushing out with his wife, Helen, behind him.

“Dad! Are you alright?”

“I think so. Give me a hand.”

“It’s two a.m. What happened? Mom called and said you had not come home. I was getting ready to come down to the station to check on you!”

“I was robbed. They got my wallet money, but not the station cash I had in my shirt. My head is sore, but I think I will be alright.”

“Sit down. I’ll get you some water.”

Helen pulled up a chair for him and put a cushion behind his head.

Bob was already on the phone, reassuring his mom that Jim was okay.

“Dad, maybe you should close up a little earlier,” Bob said when he rejoined them.

“That’s a good idea. Maybe I will go through town and avoid walking along the tracks, too.”

Bob grabbed his gun and started for the door. “Where did it happen?” he asked as he loaded the shotgun.

“About halfway down the tracks to the ice plant.”

Helen called the sheriff, and several officers met Bob alongside the tracks near the ice plant. Together they slowly searched the bushes along the tracks. Hobos often rode the train in and spent the night here. A wet box shelter was found where someone had been sleeping, but no one was nearby.

“They could have jumped that midnight train that came through,” said one of the police officers. “I will call the sheriff in the next county and ask him to keep watch for drifters.”

Back home, Bob helped his father into his truck and took him the rest of the way home.

At six a.m. the next morning, Jim was making the long walk back to the small station on the far side of town as though nothing had happened. He was disappointed that he had lost his one hundred dollar bill with his initials; he had been carrying the bill for years. Altogether he lost a hundred and fifty dollars.

Two days later the sheriff of Hopkins County called to tell Jim they had picked up two drifters trying to jump an eastbound freight. They had a lot of cash on them, including the hundred dollar bill with Jim’s initials. Jim just smiled and squinted his eyes, took off his black felt hat and rubbed the back of his head. He had a new story to share at the station. 


New book,
The Trout Pond Order at:
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B018RSH6VC

Back Yards - A Poem


Photo by: Kelly Lynch Smith

Back Yards

Behind each home there is a special place,
to enjoy a walk, or watch the children play.
A place to dream and spend a little time,
a special place you can say, it’s all mine!

Some have grass that you have to mow,
others trees with plenty of leaves to blow.
But when all the chores are finally done,
take a long break and have a little fun.

 Some have places that are neat to explore,
creeks with bridges, trails and much more.
Back yards are where we can go to rest,
plant a garden, or entertain our guest.

Some have small buildings for storing stuff,
it seems like we never have room enough.
A workshop with a porch over the creek,
to build something special and unique.


Quiet and peaceful they are meant to be,
on a swing by the creek under the trees.

Poem by: Hubert C. Crowell

Copyright © 2015 Hubert Clark Crowell

Monday, August 31, 2015

River Hideaway - Short fiction



River Hideaway

A Short Story – fiction




The Shepard family was looking for a second home in the mountains, and a river lot with a house overlooking the water sounded wonderful. Jim and Beverly Shepard drove up to the house on weekends and brought Tiki, the family Yorkie named after Tiki Barber, a player for the New York Giants for ten seasons. Tiki was left in the basement garage whenever the Shepard’s left the house. Each time they returned they found him whining and staring at the back wall of the basement. There were also scratch marks on the wall and floor, as if he had been clawing at them.


Jim thought he better do some research into the house and its surrounding community, so he walked down the river to Colson Miller’s place. Colson was a crusty old-timer who generally thought fish made better companions than people, as evidenced by his habit of spending half the day fishing and rebuffing most people’s attempts at conversation. Yet for some unexplainable reason, Colson had taken a liking to the Shepard family.


Jim knocked on Colson’s screen door, and when there was no response, he walked down to the river and found him fishing. Colson acknowledged his presence with a nod, then reeled in his line and walked to the bank. Sitting down beside Jim, he used the break to change the lure on his line.


“Colson, tell me about the history of these homes.”

“No mystery there. The houses were built along the riverbank by some big city development company looking to make a few dollars.”

“Did anything unusual happen during construction?”

Colson shrugged. “They had to cut back into the hill in some cases in order to lay some of the foundations, but that’s to be expected when you’re building on the side of a big rock like this.”

“What about the mountain? Any unusual history here?”

Colson stopped and thought for a moment. “I remember my grandad telling me that there used to be a mine around here, but I’ve never seen it.”

When Jim got home he told Beverly about the mine. Their conversation was interrupted by the sound of whining and scratching. Jim looked around. “Where’s Tiki?”

Beverly pointed at the basement. “I must have left the door open when I went down to the garage earlier.”

They went to the garage and found Tiki pawing at the wall.

“What is it, boy?” Jim asked.

Tiki responded by pawing even harder.

Jim decided he had finally had enough. Maybe an animal had made a nest in the wall, or maybe Tiki smelled something dead, but Jim was going to open up the wall and find out what was going on.

The next day he rented a mason saw and cut out a four-foot-square hole in the wall. When he broke through the wall, he was surprised to see an opening filled with cobwebs. Tiki growled at the dark expanse, and Beverly scooped him up and carried him upstairs, closing the basement door firmly between them.

Jim shone a flashlight into the opening, but he couldn’t see far. The cobwebs reflected the light back at him. He didn’t smell anything other than dank earth, and he was fairly certain an animal hadn’t been this way or else the cobwebs would have been disturbed. He had no idea what had gotten Tiki so upset.

“Do you think this is the entrance to that mine Colson talked about?” asked Beverly.

“Must be,” said Jim. “You can see the ground would have been flat along here. The builders must have used the shallow opening and placed this foundation wall over the entrance.”

“Jim? Aren’t there bats in caves?” Beverly asked, obviously concerned her house was about to be overrun with bats.

He chuckled. “Well, if it would make you feel better, the first thing I’ll do is put in an access door so nothing from out there can make it in here. I’m not ready to seal this up for good. I think Colson and I would like to do some exploring.”

Jim spent the rest of afternoon building a frame around the opening and installing a small door with a padlock. Afterwards it was time for them to head home, but Jim was already making plans to explore the mine with Colson when they returned in two weeks. Beverly had made it clear she wasn’t going to step foot into the mine.

When they returned two weeks later, Jim carried their bags upstairs while Beverly unloaded groceries from the car. When she was alone in the garage, she heard a knocking on the small door. She dropped the bag of groceries and ran upstairs to get Jim. “Jim! Someone is knocking on that door you installed in the garage!”

 “What? No way! I doubt that old mine has another entrance or someone would have found it years ago.” Jim grabbed the key and went down to investigate, but he did not hear anything. It seemed like a good time to explore the mine.

After a quick phone call to Colson, Jim gathered his best flashlights while he waited for his neighbor to arrive. Colson soon arrived in old grubby clothes and a banged up helmet with a light attached to it, all of which he claimed were remnants of his caving days. Jim unlocked the padlock and cautiously opened the door. His heart was beating fast as he turned on his flashlight and noted the cobwebs were still intact. How could anyone have knocked on the door without disturbing them? Beverly must have been mistaken. Maybe Tiki was just scratching at the door again.

Jim and Colson crawled into the dark, brushing down the cobwebs as they went. They didn’t have to travel far before reaching a room large enough to stand up in. The back of the room had marks on the sides where picks had dug into the dirt and rock. The floor was level, and there appeared to be the remains of wooden tracks leading to the back. The room was about fifty feet deep, and there was no one there. Jim could find no explanation for the noises Beverly heard or for Tiki’s strange behavior.

“Jim? Look at this,” said Colson, handing him a leather-bound notebook. He pointed to a ledge along the left wall. “Someone left it over there.”

Jim handled the notebook carefully so the pages wouldn’t fall apart. “It’s a diary of one of the miners who dug the mine.” He flipped through the pages, reading selected passages to Colson.

 August 26, 1837 - Having won this 40 acres in the Georgia land lottery some years back, and then having to pay the Indians in order to open this mine, we have at last found a quartz vein that looks promising.

 February 20, 1838 – Found out that the Dahlonega mint is now accepting gold. If we could only find enough gold to sell to them, we might be able to keep the mine going longer. Our supplies are running low, and the quartz vein is hardly producing any gold. We will keep digging for another month.

 May 17, 1838 - The Indians are very upset, and there may be war. The government is rounding up the Indians for movement to land west of the Mississippi.

 May 25, 1838 - Giving up the mine. There is no gold, and the Indians in these parts are threatening to attack.

 There were other details in the diary about the mining operation. Jim would take it back with him to the house for further study to see what else he could find out about the mine and the early inhabitants of the area.

Jim shined his flashlight around the area for one last good look, and a bright flash caught his eye. Colson saw it too, and the two of them walked over to the corner where the light was shining. Jim bent over and picked up an old coin, and after rubbing it on his shirt to wipe it off, he realized that it was a gold coin!

He started laughing. “Imagine that! Here they thought there was no gold in this mine!”

In the following weeks, Jim started doing research around the period of the gold rush in North Georgia, and he ran across an old article about a bank robbery where the stolen gold was never recovered.

He thought about the gold coin he had found. Could it be possible that the gold was hidden in the old mine?

The next morning he found Colson cleaning out his tool shed. He expected Colson to laugh at his crazy idea, but instead he picked up a shovel and his old caving helmet and said, “Only one way to find out.”


They spent the rest of the day digging around the mine, and they were just about to call it a day when Jim’s shovel hit something solid in the soft dirt. Clearing off the top he realized it was not a rock, but a metal box.


The two of them carried the box to Jim’s tool bench in the garage, where they went to work prying the box open. They were speechless when they lifted the lid and saw bright and shiny gold coins, looking like they were freshly minted.


Colson thought about the display of gold coins at the mint that were stolen a few years back, “Jim, the old mint building is just not the same without the display of gold coins that were minted there, do you think we could replace the display with some of these coins? They would love that.”

“Great idea! We’ll let them pick out what they want, then we will talk to a coin collector about the rest, we can split whatever money they bring.”

Colson and Jim shook hands in agreement, and Jim had the feeling it was only the first of many adventures they would have together.
After the box of gold coins had been unearthed from the mine, there were no more sounds from the door in the garage, and Tiki no longer scratched at the door.

 


New addition to book,
Short Story Collection


The Trout Pond is now on Audible.com: http://www.audible.com/pd/Fiction/The-Trout-Pond-Audiobook/B06WLMRTH3/

By: Hubert C. Crowell
Jim makes a find in a pond that tears a small Kentucky coal mining town apart. Ron, a stranger in town carrying a secret of the largest crime of the century becomes snared in the Union wars of the 1950’s.

 

 



Thursday, August 13, 2015

Number Five Spot - A Poem


Number Five Spot




The number five spot to catch a nap,
is to snuggle up close or find a soft lap.
In the late evening after treats and play,
tired from all the activities of the day.


Dreams of chasing squirrels across the lawn,
as ears twitch and feet run till it’s gone.
A sound or movement may open an eye,
and sometimes he will let out a sigh.


But until you announce, time for bed,
will he rise or just lift his head.
To the chair you think he became attached,
until you offer him a tummy scratch.


A whimper or whine to let you know,
it’s time to play with a bone to throw.
Chase him around the room a few times,
or else just listen to that pathetic whine.

Copyright © 2015 Hubert Clark Crowell

 
 

The Back Pew






The Back Pew


I was twelve when I accepted Jesus as my Lord, and it was not a minute too soon. Victory Baptist Church was only two blocks from where we lived in Providence, Kentucky. Like most kids, I spent the majority of my time in church on the back pew. I was not even aware that I was listening to the sermon that Sunday, but when the invitation came at the end of the service, I almost ran down the aisle. I knew from that day forward that God would be with me in whatever I faced in the future. Without his protection, I am sure that I would not have made it to age twenty.
     Growing up knowing Jesus helped me from making big life-changing mistakes, but I certainly made my share of the less serious ones. At the early age of sixteen, after I had left home, God placed a special couple in my path encouraging me to join the service. The army provided me with the discipline that I needed at that age. I knew that God was watching over me, and He helped me whenever I was tempted to make a bad decision.
     Everyday God intervenes to protect us. As I backed out of a parking space, a car turning in off the main road almost rear ended me, and only the week before, while following a swerving car, two other cars cut me off trying to get around quickly as the driver crossed the center line several times, and then made a wild U-turn on a red light. Think about all the drivers that are distracted while speeding through heavy traffic, then thank God for watching over you each time you get on the road.
     Are we safe anywhere? While walking our dog in the back yard a bullet tore through the trees, falling at my feet, bouncing off the wooden bridge with a loud bang, and landed in the dried leaves. A second later I heard the gunshot and knew at once what it was. Had not the Lord caused me to pause and knock down a spider web I would have been hit. Close calls occur every day, most of the time we are just not aware of them, or maybe we just ignore them.
     I knew the Lord was protecting me when that bear stepped over me in the mountains of New York. I was on a weekend hiking trip on the northern tip of the Appalachian Trail and arrive at the camp site after dark. It was full of campers, so I continued down a side trail to a clearing with a view over the moon lit lake. I threw a rope over a high limb and raised my backpack, which contain a hamburger, to prevent the animals from getting into it. I did not realize that the pack with food was between the lake and where I was sleeping. I could see the outline of the bear as he stepped over my sleeping bag, snorting, brushing my body as he passed. My life flashed before me as I held the knife at my side waiting for the attack. A strange peace came over me and I dozed back off, only to be disturbed a second time as he stepped over me again. Through the thin sleeping bag cover, I was using to keep the dew off my face, I could see the full moon and his outline as he passed over me again.
     When we drove vehicles out of a burning lot in Germany, I knew that God was protecting us all. A solder refueling his jeep late one night from the large tank truck, caught fire and we were called out to evacuate the motor pool. We had to drive by the burning fuel truck with flames reaching a hundred feet into the night sky, tires exploding, and feeling the intense heat. No one was hurt and only two vehicles lost.
     When the plane I was a passenger on, slid off the runway in Syracuse, New York during a rain storm. I was reminded once more that God was watching, not only me, but all those on that plane.
     At yearly caving conventions we would camp out and everyone would joke about the summer storms and floods that always seemed to hit the camp site during the conventions, knocking down tents, or worse yet, a lake rising to flood the entire camp site. More than once we would return from a banquet late at night to find tents piled up and sleeping gear soaked. Yet I don’t recall anyone getting injured, again God and His angels had to be watching over the saved and unsaved alike.
     All the close calls while caving, at any time, if God had taken his hand off of me I could have died. I look back on the deep pits I crawled around in the mud and the fear that hit me days later about how close I came to death. Falls that could have been disastrous, but only shook me up, tight places where I almost got stuck, and loose rocks that moved or fell when touched. How great it is to not live in fear, knowing that whatever happens, however bad, God is in control, even at the end of this life here on earth, God will provide, and has already provided a better home for us.
     A gun waving drunk stopping my family on the expressway, as we traveled home from Florida. I slowly eased by talking, and trying not to upset him more. Pulling off at the next exit to report it. This was long before cell phones were common. God kept his gun pointed up and protected us as we drove by.
     Shortly after we moved onto our current house, shots were fired in front of our home as an angry wife chased her husband down the street, the back doors of his van swinging open as bullets flew through. He jumped out and dived into the ditch that ran down the side of our property, hitting the foot bridge I had just built that was chest high, falling over the waterfall just below it, while the woman fired shots at him from her car. The policeman who showed up would not even get out of his car for fear of being shot at also, and just talked her into going home to cool off. How foolish to think we can live one hour on this earth without the protection of God who loves us.
     I currently write about how God has watched over us, and how great He is. When I walk past the back pew, I shake their hands and give the boys sitting there a big smile as I remember the time I sat on the back pew.


Copyright © 2015 Hubert Clark Crowell



The Trout Pond is now on Audible.com: http://www.audible.com/pd/Fiction/The-Trout-Pond-Audiobook/B06WLMRTH3/

By: Hubert C. Crowell
Jim makes a find in a pond that tears a small Kentucky coal mining town apart. Ron, a stranger in town carrying a secret of the largest crime of the century becomes snared in the Union wars of the 1950’s.
 

Saturday, August 1, 2015

A Broken Heart








A Broken Heart



 


Short Story – Non-fiction



Bobby was sixteen when he fell in love for the first time. He walked Ruth home after school, took her to the movies, and spent more time with the tall brunette than with his other friends. Bobby was always cracking jokes and having fun, but he managed to stay out of trouble. His father was the preacher of a medium-sized Baptist church, as well as a butcher at the Piggly Wiggly Store. They lived in the small town of Providence, Kentucky, the year was 1956, and everyone knew everyone else.

The center of town was located at the intersection of the two main streets, and it was a common gathering place when anyone was looking for something to do. Bobby went to the intersection one day to meet his cousin, Clarkie. Clarkie and his family recently had moved back from Lakeland, Florida, where Clarkie had his first paying job at a bowling alley setting pins.

When Clarkie met Bobby at the corner, he instantly knew something was wrong. “Bobby, you look like you lost your best friend. Is everything okay?”

“No.”

“You want to talk about it?”

“No.”

Clarkie knew at once that Bobby had broken up with his girlfriend. “You want to do something?” he asked, hoping to take Bobby’s mind off his ex-girlfriend. “We can find the guys and play ball.”

Bobby surprised him by saying, “I feel like getting away for a while.”

Clarkie was fifteen and an experienced traveler. He had hitchhiked down to eastern Tennessee earlier that year to visit his sister, saving the bus fare his parents had given him for the trip. He felt confident that he could travel anywhere. “Where would you like to go? Florida is nice this time of year.”

 “Anywhere, I just need to get away.” His girlfriend had just broken up with him, and he did not want to talk or think about it. Leaving home and running away seemed like an easy way to fix things.

“How much money have you got?” asked Clarkie.

“Five dollars. How about you?”

“Let’s see,” Clarkie said as he searched his pockets. “Fifty cents.”

It was early fall, and a cold snap was coming. Clarkie thought about the weather and said, “Highway 41 is only a mile out of town. If we make it down to Lakeland, I could get my old job back at the bowling alley. There is a lot to do in Lakeland.”

“Okay, let’s go,” said Bobby.

Neither boy considered how leaving home would affect their families; they were only excited about doing something new and different.

The mile walk to US41 took less than an hour. Bobby was quiet as they left town. As they passed beneath the city gate, he looked back at the sign and said, “Wonder if we will see that sign again?”

“Yeah, it’ll always be here,” said Clarkie. “Now comb your hair and straighten your shirt. We want to look good so we can catch a ride.”

Their first ride was with an elderly couple who let them off just outside of Madisonville on a quiet stretch of US41. They only had to wait a few minutes with their thumbs in the air before another car pulled over. The driver of a late model black Ford rolled down the passenger side window and asked, “Where you fellows headed?”

The boys ran up to the car’s passenger side and said, “We’re going down to Nashville, sir.”

“I’m going to Clarksville. Will that help?”

“Sure will,” Clarkie responded as he opened the back door and jumped in.

“I think we should try and get a ride past Nashville. It’s almost impossible to get a ride in the middle of a city,” Clarkie whispered to Bobbie under the sound of the country music playing on the radio. Bobby nodded approval as they continued south.

They planned on taking US31 south from Nashville to Montgomery, then US231 toward Tallahassee. The next ride got them through Nashville, Tennessee, but they were not so lucky in Birmingham, Alabama. The young man driving let them out right in the middle of town. It was a bad mistake since they had to walk south to the edge of town before they were able to catch another ride.

In Montgomery the situation was even worse. They were let out on the north side of town and had to walk all the way to the south side before catching another ride. That night they crossed the Florida line and ended up alone just north of Tallahassee on a dark and lonely stretch of road.

An early cold front had pushed south during the evening. Dressed only in light clothes and without coats, they needed to find shelter to stay warm. After a while they found a parking lot full of school busses with all the doors left open. They picked a bus and tried to sleep on the back seats, but it was too cold.

Back out on the highway there was no traffic, so they tried to sleep hobo style. They laid down head to head and used each other’s shoulder for a pillow. After about thirty minutes they gave up trying to sleep and started walking again. Fortunately they found an old abandoned house sitting on a small hill just off the highway. They built a fire in the fireplace and managed to survive the night.

The next day, cold and hungry, Bobby said, “I’ve had enough. I’m ready to go home.”

Clarkie agreed, and so they started hitchhiking back north. They had good luck with the first few cities, getting rides through to the north side of town, but south of Montgomery their good luck ended. A trucker picked them up and headed north with Bobby sitting in the middle of the seat.  When the driver placed his hand on Bobby's leg, well that did it. Bobby and Clarkie were out of that truck in nothing flat.

“Was that ever freaky!” Bobby said as they watched the truck drive away.

In Nashville their bad luck continued when they got stuck in the middle of town again. They went into a diner and spent the last of their money, except for a quarter, which Bobby used to call home. Their dads drove down that night and picked them up, relieved to have them home safe again. Believing that the boys had learned a lesson, their dads did not punish them.

Sometime later Bobby and Ruth made up, and after graduation they married and had a lovely family. One of his sons even became a preacher, following in his grandfather’s footsteps.


Copyright © 2015 Hubert Clark Crowell



The Trout Pond is now on Audible.com: http://www.audible.com/pd/Fiction/The-Trout-Pond-Audiobook/B06WLMRTH3/

By: Hubert C. Crowell
Jim makes a find in a pond that tears a small Kentucky coal mining town apart. Ron, a stranger in town carrying a secret of the largest crime of the century becomes snared in the Union wars of the 1950’s.