Saturday, August 21, 2010

Listen ...Sabbath's House



SABBATH'S HOUSE by Marilyn Celeste Morris
Available in Print and All Ebook Formats


Prologue

1890 – Ames, Texas

Emily Harris smiled contentedly as she put the last stitch in her embroidered pillowcase.

Emily could hear her three children playing in their attic playroom; every once in a while a shriek pierced the silence of the house, indicating the boys were once again teasing their little sister.

She smiled, set down her needlework and moved to the kitchen where she began supervising dinner preparations. Cyrus would close his office soon and the children would no doubt be hungry within the next hour.

In the attic playroom, Ben and Lewis were indeed torturing their little sister.

“Come on, Lucy. Don’t be a sissy little girl,” Ben taunted. He pulled a large steamer trunk from its place in the corner to where Lucy was standing.

“Here, Lucy. Stand up on this. This is the Outlaw’s horse.”

At ten years of age, Ben’s stature allowed him to dominate most other children, and he took advantage of his size whenever possible. Especially when he towered over his siblings. Now, he easily grabbed a rope dangling from the beam above.

“Yeah, Lucy,” Lewis echoed. “Come on.”

Lucy eyed her brothers with suspicion. Her five-year old instinct told her this was not a good thing for her to be doing; yet she didn’t want to appear a baby in their eyes. Her brothers were not only her playmates, but also she idolized them as being the smartest, best looking children on the block, and she was eager to please them.

She climbed up on the trunk and stood, eyeing the rope Ben held in his hand.

“You mean you want me to put this rope over my head?” She asked Ben.

“Yeah. Put it on, Lucy. Here, I’ll help you.” He moved behind his sister and looped the rope over her head. “We’re playing Outlaw. And how can we play Outlaw if we don’t have somebody to be the Outlaw?”

“Girls aren’t outlaws,” Lucy bargained.

“Yes, there are some girls who were outlaws in the West,” Ben informed her.

Lucy considered this, coming from her smart brother, Ben. If Ben said so, it must be true.

“Okay,” she conceded. “I’m the Outlaw.”

Lewis snickered, mainly to impress his older brother. “Yeah, an outlaw. A girl outlaw, in a prissy blue dress.”

Ben ignored him, as he always did. “Good. Okay, we don’t have a rope hanging from a tree, just the ceiling beam, and you’re not on a horse, but this trunk can be your horse.”“

Lucy’s blue eyes rounded in curiosity. “What’s gonna happen now?”

“This is your horse. You know, the way they did it in the olden days. They would string up the outlaw on his horse, and then they’d whack the horse and make him bolt, and the outlaw would die by hanging.”

“Uh….I don’t know,” Lucy’s voice quavered.

“Sissy girl,” Ben countered.

“Yeah, sissy girl,” Lewis echoed.

“But won’t that hurt?” Lucy’s stance wavered.

“Naw. We’re just pretending. You can pretend hurt, if you want to. You’re a real good pretender, right?”

Lewis nodded at his brother and they both pushed the trunk out from under Lucy’s slipper-clad feet.

“Okay, you outlaw,” Lewis shouted, taking off an imaginary hat and dusting his trousers with it.

Lucy moaned softly, then came a gurgling noise. She raised her hands to her neck, flailed her slipper-clad feet while her eyes screamed in terror.

Lewis, surveying his sister’s plight asked Ben, “Should we cut her down? It looks like she’s not just pretending.”

“Naw. She’s a good pretender. Remember how she got you last week down in the cellar, when she pretended to trip over a box and hurt her knee? She cried real hard, and pretended like she was really hurt, bad. She’s good at that.”

“Well… if you say so.”

Lucy flailed her feet harder, no doubt with her last conscious thought hoping her feet would connect with the trunk, but it was far removed. Her hands struggled with the rope for a few seconds, she continued to make noises, and then her eyes closed and she was still.




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