In my early days at St. Paul, I often went to Fayetteville, 35
miles away, to buy groceries and wash. Once, I was on the way. When I
passed where a dirt road came into the Pig Trail, an old, old woman
was standing on the roadside, and waved her arm up and down with
authority, as if commanding me to stop, yet I could see fear in her
eyes, as if afraid I would not. I turned around and went back. As she
was getting in, she was saying, "I was beginnin' ta' think, I was
jest' agona' have to lay out tonight." She then went on to say,
She had been visiting kin, and lived in a little community half a
dozen miles back toward St. Paul. When we reached Combs, I believe
the community was, she pointed with authority up the road through
town into the mountains. We passed a couple of young boys I
recognized from school, and when they saw she was in the car with me,
they pointed at us and just died laughing. I thought that was sure
strange. She went on awhile about how those children were always
scaring and annoying her. We passed through the village, but still
she pointed on up into the mountains. A couple of miles into the
hills, she pointed to a side road, little used. We went on until she
pointed to a field, with a couple of bare, old tread marks across. A
path that had not been traveled in a long, long time. Finally, the
ruts came to a spot where a rushing creek cut the trail. I could not
cross it, and I knew no one else had either, in my lifetime. She
didn't say a thing, but I could see confusion and disappointment in
her eyes.
Well, all I knew was to go back to
Combs, and ask around. I began to realize, she was taking me back up
a trail to her past, where she was most likely now living, in her
mind.
When we got back to Combs, we were
passing the spot where we had seen the two youngsters as we came up.
Suddenly, a light seemed to flash on in her eyes. "Why, that
there's my old house!" I let her out, I said goodbye, and she
never said a word. As she went in the door, I headed out for
Fayetteville.
Over the years, I had forgotten
this story. Then it all came flooding back to me a couple of days
ago, as I listened to Anna Hartley, of the Hartley Family Bluegrass
group sing a song she had written, inspired by one of many older
ladies her and her family visits, who had Alzheimer's and was now living
in her childhood.
Whether you like Bluegrass music
or not, you need to know Anna, and her family. People like the
Hartley's are likely to come along only once in a lifetime, and then
only if you are very lucky.
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