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The story of a hidden treasure |
The Stash of Gold Alfred parked his car and stood leaning against it for a minute, looking at his old house. His grandson Jim was struggling to get past the screen door, loaded down with two big packing boxes. âHere, let me help you with those,â Alfred called, striding across the small yard as nimbly as possible. Jim looked up and smiled. âHi Gramps. Itâs okay. Iâve got it now.â He carried the full cartons to the U-Haul in the driveway and stacked them inside. âSay, I need a break. Iâve been doing this all morning. Would you like a cup of coffee? We havenât packed that yet.â âIf youâve got some made, I wouldnât turn it down.â âNo problem. Iâll make a fresh pot.â Alfred followed him into the nearly bare kitchen. âI see the coffee maker, but how about the cups?â âGood point. Take a look in that box on the counter. I think thatâs where I put the mugs and the mug tree. Yeah,â he said, seeing Alfred had found them, âget out a couple of those.â Jim filled the coffee machine and started it up. âI wondered if youâd come over here to say goodbye to the house.â âI thought Iâd better come before the people move in. It sounds like theyâre in a hurry.â Jim nodded. âYes, the buyer starts his new job Monday, and they want to get some painting and papering done before they move in. I guess itâs always a rush like this. Like a line of dominoes, each person pushing the next one out of the way.â Alfred wandered out to the next room, the âparlor,â and on through the house. As he looked around, he saw in his memory the way the rooms had looked sixty years before. âYou arenât mad at us for selling it, are you Gramps?â Jim called. His voice sounded easy, but there was a hint of worry on his face. Alfred drifted back to the kitchen, and back to the present. âNo, Iâm not mad at all. I know you need more space, with the baby coming. Itâs a very small house.â âWeâve loved this house. It was the best wedding present anybody ever had. I donât think we could have made it those first years without it. I never wanted to live in an apartment, and we couldnât have afforded a house.â âI was glad we could do it for you. It made us feel proud, that you didnât mind living in our old place. Bella was so worried that you wouldnât like it.â âGrandma worried about everything, didnât she?â Jim asked, pouring a cup of coffee and handing it to Alfred. Alfred took a sip then held it, warming his hands on the mugsâ sides. He looked thoughtful. âYes, I suppose she did. More than my mother did, certainly, or at least so I could tell. Thatâs one thing I came over for this morning, besides seeing the house.â âWhatâs that?â Jim asked. âI have a story to tell you, that I want you to hear. It wonât take too long. You know some of it already.â Alfred moved a box to make a place on the window seat, and made himself comfortable. âWhen I was a very young boy, my father disappeared. My mother wouldnât talk about him, except to say she loved him and she hoped that she would one day see him again.â âI always thought heâd died young or something,â Jim said. âA lot of people thought that, and Mother didnât ever contradict them. He went west, with the railroad; and whether he just left her, or whether he died, I never knew. âAlfred,â she said to me that day, âour lives are going to change. Your papa has moved away, and we will have to make our own way in life from now on.â âPerhaps you can tell by that quaint old phrase, âto make oneâs own way in life,â that this happened many years ago. Indeed it did. I am old, about to become a great-grandfather, arenât I?â Jim nodded patiently. âPapa left us with this old house, which we lived in from then on-- not the grand house we had once had, not by any means. That was sold to pay his bills. This little cottage had belonged to his sister before she died. It had just the one bedroom, and a pantry, which Mother made into a room for me, first a pallet on the floor, and eventually a real bed of sorts, more like a cot, Iâd call it now. âThe shelves that once had held rows of Ball jars filled with peaches, tomatoes, and green beansâthe summerâs produce stored awayâwere where I put my clothes and small belongings. There was no room for any other furniture, even if weâd had it. This tiny area was tucked between the kitchen, the bedroom, and the back door; and even the ceiling was lower there, slanting down beneath the eaves. â âYouâve done a lot to it, Gramps. Itâs been a good house for us, and we appreciate it. Itâs just that, even with the additions, itâs too smallâŚ.â âI know, I know,â Alfred said, as he patted Jim on the hand. âLet me keep telling my story.â He fell back into his reverie. âMother gave me a quilt that was stuffed with wool, a lumpy old thing but very comforting. Between it and the wood stove on the other side of the wall, I stayed cozy and warm. We were beginning an adventure, she told me; and I believed her. âBefore I was old enough for school, my mother took in laundry to earn money. We had an old wringer washer that barely fit in our small kitchen, but it saw a lot of use. Propping the washboard in the sink, she scrubbed the dirtiest clothes along its crinkled spine with a bar of brown Fels Naptha soap, then put them with the less soiled things, the linens, into the tub. She pumped water in, then warmed it with a kettleful that had been heating on the wood stove. The enamel tub had an agitator, which we cranked by hand. It spread the soap around and shook the dirt out, Mother said. It shook the floor too, and it was hard work for me, but I helped and it was fun. âWe drained the tub into buckets, which we took to the garden to water the squash and potatoes we had planted. Then we filled it up again, this time to rinse. The wringer was the part I liked the best, but it was scary too. You had to feed the wash into the great rollers slowly, and they really pinched your fingers if you didnât let go of a shirt or a sheet in time. âThe very best thing that I owned was a Red Flyer wagon, and wash days put it to good use. It hauled the water buckets to the garden. Then weâd load it up with baskets of clean clothes to pull out to the clothesline. I couldnât reach that high, but I could hand the clothes pins up to Mother as she stretched the wet and flapping garments out across the line. âThe next day would be ironing day, and there was very little I could do to help her then. So Iâd stay in the corner, out of the way where I wouldnât muss the freshly ironed clothes, and we would play games. Mother would say, âSo, Mr. Penrose, what will you be doing today?â And Iâd say, âWell, Mrs. McGurk, I think Iâll take a stroll down to the duck pond, and then go to the millerâs for some flour.â âWhile youâre there, Mr. Penrose,â she would say, âwould you mind picking up some string for me? I have a wee boy who needs to learn to play Cats in the Cradle to keep him occupied while I do up the ironing.â âYou taught me to play that too,â Jim said. Alfred smiled and nodded. âEverything we did was work, but it was play as well. As we dragged the water buckets back and forth, Mother would sing, âTote that barge, lift that baleâŚâ or any other song that came to her mind. âWhen I think of those first few years, I remember the heat of the wood stove that enveloped us, and the steamy water, the strong smell of the soap, the tight twist sheâd make of the sheets to keep them off the floor as sheâd pull them out of the wringer. I can picture her flushed face as she brushed the drops of sweat or a strand of hair off her face with the back of her hand. I can feel her arms around me and hear her voice as weâd kneel to pray at bedtime. âWeâve had a good day today, Alfred. Letâs thank God for it.â âOne hot summerâs night, when I lay restless on my bed, I heard my mother crying. I rushed to the kitchen to find her with her head down on her arms across the table. âOh, Alfred,â she said, âI didnât mean to frighten you. Something bad has happened. Someone has stolen your wagon. I went to get some firewood, and the wagon was not anywhere to be found.â âOf course I was upset, but only when she went on did the true implication of this theft become real to me. Without the wagon, how would we tote the water buckets? How would we get the wet clothes to the line? How would we deliver the laundry to the owners so that we could be paid? ââIt will be all right,â she said, smoothing my hair. âWe always have the gold thatâs hidden away for an emergency, but we must not use it unless there is no other choice.â âShe had gold hidden away?â Jim asked, amazed. Alfred nodded, and put his finger to his lips to signify that he would explain eventually. âI was relieved to know we had a stash of gold, and thought our problems were solved. Just as I began to suggest we get it out and use it to buy a new, bigger wagon, Mother hushed me. âNot yet,â she said. âWe still have other choices.â âTwo days later, a Mr. Withers came to stay with us. It was only on Monday nights, when he had need of a bed in our town because he was a traveling salesman. âHe is Mrs. Hansonâs daughterâs husband,â Mother told me. Mrs. Hanson had a house even smaller than our own, and her daughter had moved to Tennessee. âIt will just be one night a week,â she said, reassuring me. âI will make a little bed on the floor next to you. It will be fine. Youâll see.â âIt was very crowded, sharing a room with my mother, and by then I was seven years old and wanted a little more privacy. âCanât we just use our gold?â I asked. ââNo, Albert, thatâs our courage. We canât give it away.â âI had no idea what she meant, but I pressed on. âHow long will it take for us to buy a new wagon?â I asked. ââNot too long,â she said. âI donât know exactly how she did without it. I was in school by then, and she did the job alone. At the end of the day, there was only the gathering up of the wash to do, and folding it and delivering it. We used a bushel basket that the grocer gave us with his laundry in it. We could keep it till we got something else. âIt seemed forever, but probably within a month, my mother had a new and bigger wagon for me, and I thought that all was well. We could send Mr. Hanson packing, but it wasnât to be. First the roof began to leak. Then after we had fixed that, a stovepipe rusted out and left a pile of soot beneath it. It needed mending too. âEvery Monday night, Mr. Hanson would arrive in time for dinner. When the dishes were done, Mother and I would go to my little room, leaving Mr. Hanson to spend the evening however he chose. Mother brought an extra lantern and placed it on the shelf, and by its light she sat and did the mending. Iâd read to her, and so each Monday passed. âThe line of constant unforeseen expenses never went away. The cow dried up. The heavy rains that lasted all that winter ruined our potatoes. A storm knocked down a tree, and its biggest branch broke through our window. Each time a need came up, Iâd ask my mother, âWhy not use our gold?â ââNo, Alfred. We donât need it yet. We have our strength and our imagination. We wonât use our hope until we need it.â âIn time, Mr. Hanson left our area to take up another trade, and our Monday nights were free again. But Mr. Allen came on Thursdays. They were both kind men, nice enough to me, and seemed to keep their distance from my mother. My eagle eyes were out to check for that. âThroughout the years the pattern never altered much. When we had need, we found a way to meet it. I always wondered, though, about the gold. âJust before she died, I asked my mother where it was. âItâs buried in the yard,â she said, âthree feet exactly from the pump, but please donât dig it up if you donât need it.â âAnd did you ever dig it up?â Jim asked. âI did, Iâm ashamed to say. But I buried it again, and thatâs where it remained, until yesterday. Thatâs why I thought you needed to hear this story, before someone else moves into this house.â âYou buried it again, and dug it up?â Jim was incredulous. âDonât you think we should go get it? We could invest it, make it grow.â âIâm going to bury it again, at your new house, if youâll let me.â âGramps.â He was at a loss for words. âThat doesnât make any sense. How much gold are we talking about?â âIt isnât the amount that matters. What matters is that itâs your courage, your hope. Youâll always have it, if you need it.â Jim stared at him a moment, drained his coffee cup and stood up. Hefting the box on the window seat to his shoulder, he carried it outside to the truck. When he came in for the next one, he just shook his head. âI donât know what to say. Youâll tell me where you bury it, wonât you?â Alfred thought about it as he stood up, his fingers toying with the gold wedding band in his pocket. âMaybe,â he said. âSometime.â 2544 words |