Dark Mountains

Home > Nonfiction > Dark Mountains > Page 1
Dark Mountains Page 1

by Amanda Meredith




  Dark Mountains

  Amanda Meredith

  ISBN-13: 978-1490955315

  Dark Mountains

  Copyright © 2013 Amanda Meredith

  CreateSpace First Print Edition

  All Rights Reserved

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events or locales is entirely coincidental.

  To my husband, children, family and friends for inspiring me to follow my dreams. You have all taught me to never give up on a happily ever after.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  About the Author

  Prologue

  Lynch Kentucky 1984

  The woman cried out as another flash of lightning lit up the black night. Thunder crashed, echoing off the mountainside, shaking the windowpanes of the old farmhouse. The woman was alone, left by her husband as she labored to bring her child into the world. There would be no hospital and no doctors to help her if anything went wrong. She screamed again as another contraction ripped through her body. It would be soon now. The instinct to bear down was growing stronger even as she was growing weaker.

  She had everything ready for the birth. She’d read all the books she could find from secreting into the library when she went to town for groceries. She’d known he wouldn’t let her go to the hospital. He’d beaten her so badly the night before that the doctor would’ve taken one look at her bruised and battered face and called the police.

  Another contraction hit and unable to resist the urge, she began to push. She cried out as the pain washed over her and she swore she was being split in two. Thunder crashed again, rattling the house. Rain pelted the windows and the wind screamed through the trees as she brought her baby into the world.

  The tiny red-faced infant screamed as loud as the wind was howling as the woman began to clean her. Pain still wracking her body, she clamped the umbilical cord and used the scissors to cut it. She wrapped the baby in clean towels and collapsed back onto the bed as her body continued to labor. When the contractions began to subside, she picked up her daughter and held her close to her breast.

  The infant’s blue eyes opened and stared at her mother’s bruised and swollen face. The woman tried to smile when the small hand wrapped around her finger but she was so consumed with fear that her lips only quivered.

  Tears fell from her eyes as she realized that her daughter would grow up in that fear as well. She’d never know the love of the man that was her father, only the cruel and vicious hand of a man that was twisted and evil. She cried when those innocent eyes looked at her with trust. She cried because though she would do everything in her power to protect her daughter, she could do nothing to save either of them from the darkness.

  Chapter 1

  2007

  I sat by the hospital bed listening to the monitors beeping and humming. I watched the line showing her heartbeat bounce up and down, rhythmic and steady. I was holding her hand, knowing that she might never wake up and squeeze it back. She was in a coma and they had told me that it was uncertain if she’d come out of it. I cried and begged her to wake up, told her that I loved her but she hadn’t moved and I’d run out of things to say. The room was too quiet and she had always liked the noise and the busyness of life. So I began to talk.

  At first, it was just whatever was floating around in my head but then I began to tell her a story. It was one she would know, one she would love hearing again and again. I began at the beginning; back where it had all began. I told my story as her chest continued to rise and fall and her hand remained still.

  August 1987

  I remember when I was four years old, already knowing my way around the woods that surrounded the base of the mountain. I threw a fit when my momma told me I couldn’t play outside in the mornings anymore.

  Preschool.

  I hated the sound of it. Anything with the word school tied to it had to mean trouble. My baby sister, Emma Lou, had cried, saying she wanted to go with me. I couldn’t blame her for saying something so stupid. She was only two and a half and didn’t know any better.

  I guess my hissy fit didn’t work because the next day I was cleaned up and riding the worn-out school bus to school. I was still mad about going but what had made it worse was that the school was in our church’s basement. Now don’t get me wrong, I didn’t have anything against church, but as a four-year-old boy who was used to having a free rein, going to church more than the expected Sunday was too much for me to handle.

  Until I met Libby. Her name was really Elizabeth Michaels but with the heavy Southern drawl I’d known since birth, Libby was just easier. I knew she was different from most girls the moment I saw her. She was pretty, with shiny brown hair that curled lightly around her pixie-like face. She sat in the last seat with her thumb in her mouth, staring out the window like a frightened rabbit.

  To me, girls were an annoyance, destined to be teased and bullied with frogs and spiders. When I first met her, I’d had a lizard in my pocket. Momma hadn’t thought to check before I left the house and I’d managed to keep it out of sight from the bus driver. When I saw the only available seat next to her, I smiled and reached into my pocket with evil intent.

  I sat down next to her, feeling her flinch and pulled the lizard out of my pocket, expecting her to scream and burst into tears. Much to my dumbfounded surprise, she just smiled. She pulled her thumb from her mouth, reached into her ratty, faded jeans and pulled out a baby corn snake. I really had to fight not to jump back from her with a shriek. Not because of my pure shock that a sissy, little girl would have a snake in her pocket but because I’d always been afraid of snakes.

  The summer before, I had accidentally stumbled on a rattlesnake in our back yard. I think I must have screamed because Daddy had come running out of the house. Seeing the snake curled up on the ground, he grabbed a shovel and promptly cut off its head before it could strike. He picked me up when I started sobbing and carried me into the house. He had sat and rocked me for two hours while I sucked my thumb and cried. When he had to leave for his shift at the mine, Momma took over, rocking me until I’d fallen asleep. The next day I was back to myself and out playing in the yard again.

  So once I got over my shock of meeting my first tomboy, I befriended her; breaking every unwritten rule that boys are supposed to follow concerning girls. That first day, I had asked Libby to come home with me to play. Momma was waiting at the door when we stepped off the bus. She gave me a hug and kiss before asking who she was.

  “This is Libby, Momma,” I told her excitedly. “She’s my bestest friend in the whole world! I told her to come over and play.”

  “Does your Momma know where you are, honey?” She asked Libby with a soft voice. Libby just shook her head and looked at the ground. “Well, that won’t do. Yo
u should always tell your Momma where you are.”

  “Momma won’t mind,” Libby whispered. “Honest, she won’t.” Momma raised her eyebrow and smiled.

  “What’s your full name?”

  “Elizabeth Michaels,” she whispered, looking at the ground again. I heard Momma suck in a breath. I gave Libby a sympathetic look before giving Momma my best puppy-dog face.

  “Go on out back and play,” she told us after a moment. “I’ll call Libby’s Momma.”

  “Oh no!” Libby cried, suddenly clinging to Momma’s legs. “Please don’t call. Papa might be home.” Momma’s hand flew to her mouth as she watched Libby begin to cry. She shook her head and looked at me with a sigh. She knelt down and turned Libby’s face towards hers.

  “Honey, your Papa’s still at the mine, don’t you worry. I’ll talk to your Momma.” Libby just whimpered into Momma’s shirt. “Go on now. It’ll be okay.” Taking advantage of the temporary permission, I grabbed Libby’s hand and pulled her towards the backyard.

  “Don’t worry, Libby. My Momma fixes everything,” I shouted as we ran around the house. We didn’t see Momma shaking her head before she walked inside.

  Papa came home later that night, after the sun had already sunk behind the mountain. Momma was just getting dinner set on the table and papa raised an eyebrow at the extra setting. Libby and me were at the sink, washing our hands as we listened to Momma and Papa arguing in the dining room. Libby had a blank look on her face, like she was blocking out whatever she was hearing.

  “You told her mother she could stay every day after school? Are you crazy?” He shouted as he slammed a hand on the table.

  “Tim, you know what that man is like. How can I make her go home if I have a choice not to?”

  “But Sheri, we can’t afford to feed another mouth,” he told her, his anger disappearing.

  “I just picked up a few more orders,” Momma argued. “We can make it work.” I tried to pretend I wasn’t listening but I couldn’t help but scoot closer to the dining room. Momma tailored people’s clothes for extra money. It’s how she was able to stay home with us instead of working.

  “I don’t know,” Papa argued. “I don’t want to be the cause of any trouble over there.” He glanced cautiously at Libby and me.

  “Don’t worry, Tim. Carol Ann promised me it wouldn’t cause any problems.”

  “I still don’t think it’s a good idea.”

  “It’ll be fine, honey,” she answered kissing his cheek. “Besides, they’re best friends already. I couldn’t split them up now.”

  “Aw, Sheri,” Papa ran a hand down his dirty face and eyed his wife wearily.

  “It’s only right to try and help her out,” Momma whispered. “No one else has ever bothered. I saw the bruises on Carol Ann’s arms last week at the grocery store, Tim. Do you really want to tell that little girl that she can’t come over here after school?” Papa sighed, knowing that he’d lost the argument.

  “You’ve got a soft heart,” he whispered, wrapping his arms around her.

  “And yours isn’t as hard as you’d like me to think,” she retorted with a quick smile.

  So that’s the way it was for the rest of the year. Libby always got off the bus with me and stayed for dinner at our house. She began to open up more with my parents and before long, she was like an extension to our family.

  When summer came, we spent all day together. Although Libby had to be home by dark, we made the most of our days, exploring the mountain and discovering new things. Every day was something new; like the streams that ran down the mountain. You could step into the exact same spot you just stood in but it would be a different stream already; it never stayed the same.

  I knew me and Libby would be friends forever; of course, every young kid thinks that exact same thing with every best friend they have. But with Libby and me, it was different. We spent our summers exploring the mountain that we called home, getting into trouble almost every day.

  The summer we turned ten, we discovered a small lake left untouched by the mining company. It was deep, cool and full of the clearest mountain water we’d ever seen. There was an unusual outcropping of boulders off the shore that jutted out into the water. The last big rock hung over the lake, creating a perfect diving board. We’d swim in the cold water whenever the temperature was warm enough and would sit on the last rock, drying in the sun. When it was too cold to swim, we’d sit on the ledge in silence, never needing any words between us.

  We ran like heathens on that mountain whenever Momma would let us. We’d show up at the back door, covered in mud, our elbows scraped and hair in rats. Momma would take one look at us and just shake her head. Our family was a long way from being ‘well-off’ and Daddy worked hard to put clothes on our backs and food on the table, in addition to all the band-aides and soap we went through. Wasting things usually meant a whoopin’ but we had come up with the best solution.

  We showed up looking like we did with Momma spitting mad but we were ready. We’d spent half the afternoon picking the prettiest bluebells we could find and just when we thought Momma was reaching for the wooden spoon, we’d pull out our flowers and give her the best puppy face.

  “But Momma, we were just pickin’ you some purty flowers ‘cuz we thought you’d like ‘em.” I’d say in the best Southern twang I could muster:

  I suppose we’d figured out early enough that most women, Momma’s in particular, went soft over flowers, because Momma would smile and make each of us take a bath before dinner.

  “You’d better scrub good because no amount of flowers is gonna work on your Papa.” She’d tell us as she sewed up our torn clothes while we scrubbed. We made it a habit during those hot summers and Libby became more of a fixture in our family. Momma treated her like a daughter and Emma Lou saw her as a big sister.

  We never spoke of the family that Libby returned to before dark but I saw Momma’s sympathetic looks as she watched Libby walk down the gravel drive that led to her house. It took me a few years to figure out why she felt so bad for Libby having to go home.

  Chapter 2

  I learned early on that Libby’s pa wasn’t a nice man. He didn’t even make an effort to hide his true colors from the people around town. If he was having a bad day, when he came to town, the streets looked like they belonged in a ghost town.

  The year we were fifteen, I discovered why Libby seemed so afraid of him. We’d been romping in the woods all day, like we usually did every summer. It had stormed the day before and my mom had ordered us to stay in the back yard. The next morning, the sky was the color of a blue jay and I knew Momma wouldn’t care if we went out in the woods. It was cooler than usual but that didn’t stop us.

  It was getting close to suppertime when we found a new ravine that had been washed out from the heavy rains. The trees were casting longer shadows on the damp ground so when Libby suggested we explore it, I balked.

  “Nuh uh, Libby.” I said, shaking my head. “It’s getting’ too late. We’ll do it tomorrow.” But Libby’d already started climbing down the roots that were dropping over the edge.

  I was about to object again when I heard a nasty sucking noise. The root that Libby was hanging on was shaking. The whole tree began sliding towards the ravine, the other roots snapping out of the soggy ground. Before I could even open my mouth to scream for her, Libby was already sliding down the steep wall, grasping at anything she could. The dirt she dug at became an avalanche, sliding over her arms faster than she could move them. The entire side of the gully lurched toward the bottom, gravity pulling it into lightning quick speed.

  Before anything could register in my shocked mind, Libby was at the bottom of the gully, half buried in sludge. The tree she had been clinging to lay over her legs. I scrambled to the edge, leaning over as far as I could without falling in.

  “Libby, are you okay?” I cried, searching her for cuts. She nodded quickly, not speaking. “I’m coming down after you!” I called out, searching for a way down. P
anic flew to her eyes as she struggled to get out from under the tree.

  “No, Cole!” She yelled, finding her voice. “We’ll both be stuck down here if you do.” She pushed even harder on the tree.

  “Can you get out from under there?”

  “I think so,” she answered as she pulled her legs free.

  “Anything broken?”

  “No, just sore,” she answered, searching the sides of the gully for a way to get up. “There’s no way out of here!”

  “I’ve gotta go get help, Libby,” I called, trying to think of how far the nearest house was.

  “No,” She answered, still looking for a way up.

  “What? Libby I gotta find someone. We gotta get you out of there.”

  “No,” She repeated, sitting on a large boulder.

  “Libby, what are you talking about?” I yelled to her.

  “If my pa finds out…” she trailed off, trying to rub the mud of her legs. “He can’t know, Cole. He can’t know.” I didn’t know what she was talking about and I started to argue with her but the sheer look of despair on her face had me swallowing my tongue. I’d never seen Libby look so defeated. I rocked back on my heels, looking down at her. It took me a few minutes to figure out what to do but I made up my mind and leaned back over the edge.

  “My dad’s got a deer blind about a mile from here. He always keeps a few supplies there. He’s got rope in there, I’m sure of it. It’ll take me a while to get back but I know I can pull you out.” I looked at her for an okay. Instead, I saw flash of fear in her eyes.

  “Hurry, Cole. It’s getting’ dark. I’m supposed to be home by dark.” She looked back up at me and for a moment I thought she might cry but she shook her head and looked back at the ground. Libby never cried.

 

‹ Prev