Golden
leaves drifted to the ground as my daughter and I walked through the family
cemetery. I’d always loved coming up here, walking among the aging stones on
the quiet hill overlooking our family farm. These stones had character, they
told stories that I thought were missing at the modern cemetery out on the
highway. Someday, I’d be buried here, as would Sadie and her children.
We stopped at the
foot of a pile of dirt with dying flowers piled on top of it. Two weeks had
passed since my mother’s death, but the metal
marker left to temporarily mark her grave still hurt to read.
Billie Shea Moore, 1932-1997.
‘You were so young,’ I whispered.
Sadie squeezed my
hand. ‘It’s okay, Daddy.’
‘I know. Let me just walk around some, I’ll be fine.’
‘I’m gonna stay with Mamaw.’
While Sadie sat on
the bench I’d put by Mom’s grave, I
walked through the cemetery, looking at names and remembering stories. A white
marble marker stood for Great-Uncle Jack, a revenue agent during the
prohibition. He’d been the only honest one in Appalachia if Uncle Mark was to
be believed. Mark was here too, his bronze marker two rows down, next to Aunt
Meredith.
Going further, I
found the old Civil War graves, some Union, some Confederate. The stones were
starting to fade and crumble. These were the grand monuments of previous
generations, ornate obelisks and towering pillars that made old cemeteries like
this unique. When I was little, Mom sent me up here with paper and pencil to
make rubbings of these stones. They were still down in her house, waiting for
my sisters to come help me clean it out.
I’d walked down the hill to a newer section of
the cemetery when a small hand slipped into mine.
‘I’m ready, Daddy.’
I’d expected tears, but Sadie’s blue eyes were
clear as the wind pushed her blonde hair around her head.
‘Okay,’ we climbed back up the hill and walked toward the gate,
stopping along the way as Sadie sounded out the names on headstones.
‘Who is Suh-Mur,’ she asked, pointing at a headstone a row away.
‘Samir,’ I corrected automatically, leading her toward the stone.
‘I don’t remember anyone in our family named Samir,’ she said,
looking down at the stone.
I squatted next to
her. This was one more of those teaching moments you’re never really prepared for as a parent. There’d been a lot of
them the last few weeks, as Mom faded to nothing, then as Sadie learned about
loss and the emotions that came with it. ‘Well, he wasn’t in our family.’
Sadie looked
confused. ‘But this is our
cemetery! Why is someone else here with Mamaw and our relatives?’
She’d put emphasis on ‘our,’ making it clear she
thought this grave was an invasion. Sometimes I wished the world was as black
and white as it was through my daughter’s eyes. ‘Because Uncle Jim saw a chance
to help someone in need.’
Uncle Jim
ran the county’s only wrecker service, and I’d been working for him since I was
tall enough to reach the pedals on the wrecker. I’d been on call that night,
when the Highway Patrol reported a wreck out on the Bristol Highway. It ran
through our county as a winding, two-lane mountain road, but the wreck had
happened on a small straightaway.
I pulled onto the
shoulder behind the Patrolman’s car, and walked to
where he was talking to the fire chief.
‘Fool kids, racing on this road. Ned Wilson is lucky he didn’t go
like this one,’ the trooper pointed to a car tangled in a barbed wire fence on
the edge of the road.’
Ned had been in my
high school class, and I wasn’t surprised to hear
he’d been racing. ‘Who was in the wreck,’ I asked.
‘Some kid from the University, I think it’s an exchange student.’
The trooper walked away, leaving me with Chief Britton.
‘Bad way to go,’ the Chief said. ‘Ned’s all tore up about it, he’s
the one who pushed the dead guy to race.’
I nodded. ‘What happened?’
Britton pointed at
the hill behind me. ‘Ned said they came off
the hill there dead even, but there was a truck coming up through here. He
slowed down to give the victim room to get over, but Ned reckons he didn’t see
the truck until it was too late and spun the wheel a little too hard. Went
rolling down the shoulder until he stopped in Lee Anderson’s fence.’
‘Damn mess,’ I muttered, as the trooper whistled and gestured for
me to bring my truck over.
I’d barely made it home
when I got a call from Uncle Jim.
‘You get that car from out on Bristol Highway?’
‘Yes, sir, just finished putting it in the lot.’ I tossed my keys
in the bowl as Connie appeared in the living room, rocking Sadie in her arms.
‘Need you to do something for me in the morning.’
‘Okay,’ I moved the phone away and kissed Connie, then Sadie.
‘Go up to our cemetery and dig a grave in my section. You know
where that is, right?’
‘West side, near the pine trees.’
‘That’s right,’ he said, his southern drawl revealing nothing. ‘I
been talking to the family of the boy that died in the wreck. He’s from
Pakistan, and their religion says they got to bury him quick, no embalming or
anything like that. They asked me to work with the funeral home to get him
taken care of, and I told them I’d do what I could.’
I checked the clock
on the wall. The sun would be up soon, in about as long as it would take me to
brew a pot of coffee and grab my tools. ‘Alright. I’ll call you when I’m done.’
‘Thanks, son. Say, you know four or five boys could help us out as
pallbearers?’
I knew of one for
sure, and figured I could round up a few more. ‘I’ll get it taken care of, Uncle.’
‘Good, bud. We’ll see you in a bit.’
There were
no Muslims in our area to conduct the funeral, but Uncle Jim did the best he
could under the circumstances. He talked Mae Frazier into opening up the
library, and came out with a copy of the Quran and a book on funeral practices
of the world. Aunt Laura was soon missing three of her best bedsheets, and an
hour later the old black hearse wound slowly up the gravel road to where I was
waiting with Uncle Jim and the pallbearers.
Ned Wilson was the
first to step to the back of the hearse. Since there was no casket, the
undertaker had strapped the body to a plastic board to hold it steady and make
it easier to carry. Four pallbearers carried it across the cemetery, to where
uncle Jim was waiting by the grave I’d
dug.
Two of us climbed
down in the hole, and the others passed the body down to us. Laying him in the
bottom, we climbed out and stood with the other pallbearers.
Uncle Jim stood at
the head of the grave. ‘The book I found wasn’t
very detailed about how the ceremony should be, but I reckon reading some
scripture over the body would be appropriate.’ He opened the borrowed Quran,
then shook his head. ‘Trust Ol’ Mae to give me a book in a language I cain't
read. Well, boys, let’s all recite the twenty-third psalm, then I’ll close with
a prayer. Reckon that’s appropriate enough, and our God and the Muslim God can
sort out any errors in translation.’
Ned filled
in the grave himself, his tears mixing with the dirt. Jim and I stood at the
cemetery gate with the undertaker and watched. Finally, the old hearse rolled
slowly away, and Uncle Jim clapped Ned on the shoulder.
‘It’s done, boy.’
He nodded, but the
look in his eyes told another story. As Uncle Jim walked away, I stayed with
Ned, guiding him to a nearby bench.
‘What happened, Ned?’
‘What do you mean?’ He looked scared, like talking about what
happened would break him. I’d talked to his girlfriend when I’d called about
him being a pallbearer, and she said he hadn’t slept all night, had sat out in
his garage staring at his car. The breakfast she’d taken him was untouched, and
I figured his lunch had been too.
‘I mean, you have to put it into words,’ I said. ‘Everyone in the
world can tell you it’s not your fault, but until you actually tell your story
and let people tell you why it isn’t your fault, you’ll never believe it
yourself.’
He sighed, then
nodded. ‘You’re right. Well, I
was down at the county line, and this kid blew in with some other college
folks, talking about his car. He bragged a while, and I finally got fed up and
told him speed wasn’t worth a lick where I came from, you had to have skill.’
I nodded. ‘That’s true.’
‘Well, he didn’t like that too much, he said he had all the skill
he needed and then some, so I challenged him to a race from the County Line to
our courthouse. He accepted so fast, I didn’t know if he heard me right. We
lined up and took off, and about the time we got to Connors Creek, I could tell
he was out of his element. I eased off the gas so he didn’t have to run as
fast, but he jumped ahead and took off.’ Ned shook his head. ‘Damn, that was
hard to watch. His lines were all wrong,
he was using the wrong damn angles and approaches, I knew eventually he
was going to wreck.’
I nodded. ‘Wasn’t anything you could have done. He got in
over his head, you gave him a chance to back down, and he didn’t take it.’
Ned nodded, tears
still falling. ‘I know you’re right,
but it don’t feel like you’re right. I’d just caught up to him, was trying to
signal to him to pull over when he flipped. As soon as I saw him rolling down
the road, I knew he was gone.’
‘It still don’t mean it’s your fault, Ned. Pride goeth before a
fall, and pride also goes before rolling down a highway shoulder because you
get in over your head.’ I put my arm around Ned. ‘It sounds like you done
everything you could to ease him back.’
He nodded. ‘I did. God, I wish I’d succeeded.’
‘Sometimes all you can do is try, and whatever happens is what’s
meant to happen.’
‘You reckon that boy, his parents, they understand that?’ Ned
looked at me, and I could tell this was the question he needed answered the
most.
I thought for a
minute. ‘I reckon there ain’t
many that do, but if anyone does, it’s them.’
Silence
fell as I finished the story. Sadie knelt next to the stone and ran her fingers
over Samir’s name, thinking about what I’d told her. ‘I guess it’s okay he’s
here, then,’ she finally said.
I smiled. She was so
young, she acted like her approval was the final word on the matter. ‘I’m glad you think so.’
‘What’s this at the bottom?’ Sadie brushed away some fallen
leaves, revealing an additional inscription.
‘Something his family said when they were talking to Uncle Jim. He
thought it’d be a good addition to the marker.’
Sadie leaned over and
slowly read, ‘Samir was never one to
back down from a challenge.’
About the author
Joe Stout is an east Tennessee based writer. His work has been published by the Non-Binary Review and Literary Cocktail Magazine. When he’s not writing, he enjoys exploring the mountains and spending time with his children. You can follow him on Facebook at Joe Stout Writing or Instagram @joestoutwriting
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