The Linnet's Wings Spring 2015 | Page 101

Spring 2015 Out of breath, he walks toward Ruthie and sees nothing but flowers and grass waving in the breeze. He shouts her name and turns in all directions but is greeted by silence. He runs for home screaming with all his might. “Ruthie’s gone. She’s been kidnapped.” Mom, her face chalk white, runs from the tent. She pushes Archie aside and dashes into the meadow. Archie follows as she runs across the field towards the creek. He hears her scream, “Oh my God.” And she disappears over the riverbank. Archie scrambles up the bank and looks down into the creek far below. Ruthie is lying on her back with her eyes wide open. She is on the creek bottom and the water rushing over her causes her body to gently bobble. Mom is fighting through the brush wailing, “Oh God no.” She drags Ruthie into her arms and climbs up towards Archie who screams loudly as he sees the limp, lifeless body: Ruthie is dead and it’s all Archie’s fault. Mom staggers wildly toward home with Archie following and emitting loud shrieks. Mom yells, “Help me, somebody. Oh help me,” as they approach the cookhouse. Old Ralph, his face drained of color, charges down the steps, grabs Ruthie, and carries her inside. He turns a flour barrel on its side and lays her belly down across it. Ignoring the spilled flour, he begins rolling the barrel back and forth while holding Ruthie squarely in the center. Mom, her face scratched and bleeding, walks back and forth wringing her hands and saying over and over, “What are we gonna do now?” Archie stands with his mouth wide open, bellowing, with a torrent of tears boiling do wn his cheeks while watching Old Ralph. “Aaasssahua!” Mom and Archie dash around the barrel and bend over to look in Ruthie’s face; she’s throwing up water. First a scant few choking drops, then a torrent of water pours from her nostrils and mouth. Soon she is crying and the coughing is less violent. Old Ralph hands her to Mom who hugs the now fully crying baby to her bosom and walks in a circle while talking in soothing whispers to Ruthie. *** The cookhouse is deserted one morning as Archie sits at a table eating hot cakes. Old Ralph sits down beside the solitary boy. “Archie did ya know your pa hired a new man?” Archie, chewing noisily, looks up at his new friend. “No. What’s his name?” “Blackie Thompson, a bad man from Oklahoma. They say he done killed three or four sheriffs. He’s as bad as they come. Nobody knows why Cab hired him. I’ll point him out to ya at supper.” At supper for the next three days Old Ralph can only shrug at Archie’s unspoken question; the Oklahoma bad man just don’t come to supper. *** “Come on. Get the hell up.” Archie is jerked off the floor and out of his reverie of the good old days. Cab Cleebo, holding stoutly to his son’s overall straps, slams Archie to the wall and pins him there. “You’re the most no-good stupid kid I ever laid eyes on. If you don’t straighten up I’m gonna kill ya. I’ll kill you and myself too. Look at me when I’m talking to you. I don’t wantcha ta run off like ya always do. You stay here and get this house cleaned up ‘cause your ma’s coming home tomorrow. And I wantcha ta be here when she gets home. Do you hear me?” Archie nods his head and Cab, with a final shove, releases his captive, grabs his hat and coat, and storms out of the house. Archie moves to the window and watches his dad charge up the street. He’s puzzled: how does someone kill his own self? Why would anybody want to kill his self? It just doesn’t make sense: nobody wants to kill himself. He decides it’s all ### The Linnet's Wings