Inspirational / Mystery
Date Published: 08-10-2021
Publisher: Elk Lake Publishing, Inc.
Time.
Solomon is running out of it.
A broken and forgotten man fighting the demons of dementia, he longs for the past when both he and his beloved military town of Ginger Ridge once thrived.
When his stooped body collides with the hardened realities of the present, Solomon lies in a coma as an unidentifiable victim of a hit-and-run accident in a faraway city.
With nothing to keep him going but flashbacks of relationships from his past, Solomon has no idea what a difference he will make on the future …
Time.
Solomon was running out of it.
He rarely made wise choices when pressed for time.
He ached to get home in time for dinner. Sweat trickled from
his forehead as he battled the stifling beat-down of the afternoon Georgia sun.
At the ivy-covered iron gates to the cemetery, he shielded his eyes and
considered his options.
From either direction, the route led home. He was sure of
it.
Why couldn’t I find their tombstones today?
Tombstones and rituals were all he had left.
Except for Sadie Beth. I must hurry!
He loosened his bow tie as he thought about a tall glass of
Sadie Beth’s sweet tea. She would be getting worried soon. He checked his
watch. The second hand hadn’t circled the dial in years. Still, he couldn’t
force himself to remove the timepiece. Sadie Beth had surprised him with it
when he’d dropped her off at college.
Always on my mind. Love, Sadie Beth.
He smiled as he remembered the engraving.
As a shiver ran up his spine, he realized the sun had dipped
low in the sky. He wiggled his cap back on his head and gripped his cane, using
his finger to trace the names etched into the handle. Winnie on one side. Silas
on the other. Another gift from Sadie Beth.
Better hurry. Sadie Beth will be waiting.
He winched himself up from the bench and took off at a pace
he couldn’t handle. Soon, each breath brought an intense wheeze.
A shiver ran through him.
The paved driveway led to the street, he knew that for
certain.
At the end of the drive, he expected to see a stop sign to
his left. To the right, down the road a piece, should be the water tower which
boasted the high school football legacy of the Ginger Ridge Eagles, state
champions from 1997 through 1999. Visible from any direction, he trusted the
beacon of the water tower to guide him to Main Street.
But the tower was nowhere in sight.
Solomon chose the road to the right, though it proved more
winding and narrower than he recalled. Still, he felt certain the turnoff ahead
would fork to the left halfway down the hill, past the faded billboard that
read:
GINGER RIDGE – HOME OF FORT BRYCE
WELCOME HOME, SOLDIERS!
WE’VE BEEN WAITING FOR YOU!
Ginger Ridge deserved an updated sign. Fort Bryce shut down
a decade ago.
Solomon’s heart climbed out of his chest, pounding hard.
“I’ve got to get home in time for dinner.” Solomon’s raspy
words dissipated into the weight of the late summer humidity. “Sadie Beth will
be mad as a hornet if I’m late again. I’ll stop at the pay phone on the corner
to call home.”
The last rays of sunlight took a nosedive behind a thick row
of pines. Deep shadows dominated this stretch of road, and darkness was never
kind to Solomon.
He groaned and patted his pockets for the flashlight he kept
with him.
Nothing.
I must have left it on my dresser.
A whimper escaped his throat. He pressed on, his strength
and determination draining with each step.
A rock wedged into one of Solomon’s loafers, biting him in
the foot. He braced himself against his cane to check his shoe. His ankle
cracked, and a couple toes wiggled through a hole at the edge. He pried the
rock out with his finger.
I need to polish these shoes first thing in the morning.
He zig-zagged to the center of the lane and took off as fast
as his gimpy legs could carry him in a desperate hunt for the blasted water
tower.
About the Author
Janet may not have realized she was a writer at the time, but her earliest childhood memories were spent creating fairy-tale stories of the father she never knew. That desire to connect with the mysterious man in a treasured photograph gave her a deep love for the endless possibilities of a healing and everlasting story.
A wife of one, mother of three, and Tootsie to four, she currently write from her quiet two-acre corner of the world near Louisville, KY.
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