Marah
twists her son’s dog tags in her hand and collapses against Breck,
who fights tears. “I’m sorry, ma’am,” the soldiers say as they dismiss
themselves. Breck holds his mother long after the
official car drives away.
Breck
helps Marah towards the house. Mitch follows. As they
get to the front door, Breck sighs, “How do I tell
Katie Nick’s never coming home?” They go inside.
Katie’s stomach lurches towards
her throat and then down to her buckling knees. She waits until they are inside
and then climbs out of the bushes. She runs to the gravesite, crying out loud.
She clutches on to Bear’s tombstone. She holds her key chain tightly, rubbing
her thumb across Nick’s class ring.
When
Breck and Mitch are done searching the house, Breck tells Mitch, “You check the guard shed, I’ll try
Pappy’s grave.”
As Breck jogs down to his father’s grave, he feels weak
himself. It was an absolute that Nick would come home. This possibility
never occurred to him. Nick gone! His stomach thrusts with the urge to vomit.
Now, now the war is real to him. He tries to comfort himself – missing in
action is not dead.
He is still a good way off when
he sees Katie draped on the tombstone. He turns away to gain his own composure.
Finally, he goes over to her. They don’t say a word. He sits down next to the
tombstone. She curls up on his lap, leans against his big strong shoulders and
she cries.
After
Marah and Katie are safely asleep, Breck goes through the house to turn the lights off. When
he reaches to turn the study light out, he sees the stack of letters Katie had
written in the guard shed. On top he finds the letter addressed to Nick. Breck lays his head on his desk.
When
the morning light streaks through Breck’s window, he
rolls over in serious rebellion. He hadn’t gotten to bed until very late. Then
he couldn’t sleep. He really needs sleep. It is Mitch who opens the door. “Breck, time to get up.
Newspaper’s here, they’re interviewing Katie. I tried to stop them.”
Breck bolts up from bed and throws clothes on fast. He’s
panicking. “Why? What does the newspaper want?”
“He’s
a small town kid, big news, one of our own.”
“No.
Katie and Mom don’t need this. Where are they?”
Mitch
smiles a genuine smile. “At the grave. Katie is doing
a memorial service, a sunrise service, and invited all the guys in bunkhouse
two. One of the guys thought it was a great statement about Nick and called the
paper. She was going to invite you and Marah, but
wasn’t sure you would understand.”
Breck rolls his eyes as the two men dart down the steps and
out the door. Breck buttons his shirt en route. They
run all the way to the gravesite.
Thirty
rugged cowboys sit cross-legged on the hillside, paying attention. Katie, in
her ballerina dress, stands next to Bear’s gravestone and reads from a Bible.
Actually, she just holds the Bible open and tries to remember what was said at
Bear’s funeral. “Ashes to ashes, dust to dust, from a dirt ball he was made and
now he’s a dirt ball again.” Sorrow-filled faces laugh.
“We
will miss our comrade,” the weak voice adds.
Mitch
turns to Breck with a half-crooked smile, “She’s
special, and I think the John Wayne movies need to stop.” Breck
laughs.
Breck’s
eyes cast down and then open wide. Next to Katie’s feet is a little parade
flag. She has broken the bottom part of the stick off halfway and then taped it
to the top. The material of stars and stripes is in the middle instead of at
the top. Nick’s dog tags are around it. She saw to it that Nick has a flag at
half-mast.
Breck
looks away.