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Blaire's Bridge
The Novel
IMPORTANT: This excerpt from Blaire's
Bridge is protected by copyright laws. Any saving, retrieval, distribution
or publication of this material is strictly prohibited. Violators will be
prosecuted. All Rights Reserved. © 2008 Webster Falls Media
BLAIRE’S BRIDGE by Mark Grady
CHAPTER ONE
As I stood in front of the man I had known all of my
life as Uncle Larry, I felt a major lump form in my throat and wasn’t
completely sure why – yet anyway. Uncle Larry was telling everyone
within earshot the story of the bridge pretty near half the town was
standing on or around right now. He was near the beginning and it was
already an amazing, moving story; but that was not why I was shaking. I
had this consuming feeling that the climax to this story would change my
life - or complete it. Whatever turn Uncle Larry’s story was heading
towards, I was convinced it would not only explain the magic of this
simple bridge the entire town loved; it would also mean something to me
personally. But why?
I braced myself while I listened intently to my
favorite uncle tell the story in his usual calm and gentle demeanor. And
as I listened, my mind seemed to reflect on the past several years of my
life - the great satisfying, fulfilling ups; and the year-old event that
almost caused me to give up on life, people and hope. I knew the
significance of what I was hearing only makes sense if you took
everything my family has experienced lately into account.
It’s not that I’ve ever taken for granted how special
the place I live is. I’ve had friends and family from other parts of the
state and even the country tell me how lucky I am to live in Clayton,
North Carolina. I’ve always agreed with them. Being halfway between the
state’s fantastic shoreline and our majestic mountains seemed perfect,
especially for me. My teenaged daughter, Cathy, loves the beach and I
fancy myself a mountain man. From here, it’s easy to head to either
destination, depending on the time of year and whose turn it is to pick.
So, being a special place wasn’t surprising. It’s just I had no idea how
much an inanimate object, specifically an old bridge near the place I
live, has played in my life until now.
This isn’t the first time I’ve heard Uncle Larry tell
stories about bridges. He loved them. He designed and built them all of
his life for the Department of Transportation. It was the link that had
brought him and my aunt Blaire together. She loved bridges, too. Or,
should I say she really loved a bridge, a covered bridge near the
community of Archer Lodge. The bridge was torn down when she was a
little girl. She missed that bridge so much that Uncle Larry built this
replica of the old covered bridge for her. He donated the bridge and the
area around it to the town to use as a park when she died. Until now,
that’s all I knew about the bridge and Aunt Blaire. I just remember
being told she died when I was very young and Uncle Larry never married
again.
Having Uncle Larry nearby all my life, I always assumed
everybody liked bridges as much as my family did. I mean, I knew people
journey from all over the country to see the Golden Gate Bridge in San
Francisco. The largest arch bridge in the country, over the New River in
West Virginia, even has its own day set aside when thousands come to
walk across the bridge. Some even parachute off the thing. I heard that
some folks cried when they took down the original Cooper River Bridge in
Charleston, South Carolina.
When I was a kid, I remember insisting on walking
across any bridge, or anything that looked like it might be a bridge,
near a playground or park. I’m pretty sure my first ever construction
project was a little bridge I made to take my Matchbox car collection
through the little town I created in my attic. My Uncle Larry brought me
over a huge bag of Popsicle sticks. I had no idea how he came across
such a great find, but I had to find some way to put it to use. Then it
hit me.
“I got it Uncle Larry!” I said. “I’ll build a bridge
like the one you built over Swift Creek.”
“Sounds good to me,” my always meek, quiet uncle
replied.
I put a piece of construction paper in the middle of my
Matchbox city, colored a section of it blue for the water and spent most
of that afternoon gluing Popsicle Sticks together. At eight years old I
didn’t have the patience to draw or plan a bridge; I just started
building. It took a few frustrating times of pulling some sticks apart
before the glue dried, because it just didn’t look right, but I finally
finished my little bridge. Uncle Larry sat quietly and just watched me
with what I know now was the epitome of the “patience of Job” until I
completed my masterpiece span.
“Now that is one great bridge,” Uncle Larry said.
I was proud of it and Uncle Larry seemed just as proud
of it.
Now, standing at the edge of the real bridge he built,
I was about to find out why he seemed so proud of me that day. Uncle
Larry’s story would reveal a lot about him, me, and my Mom and Dad. Most
importantly, I was about to hear the most amazing love story I had ever
heard. So amazing, I want every one to hear it. But before this
life-changing story can make any sense, you have to hear all that’s
happened, especially over the last year, that has led to the
significance of today being the day Uncle Larry told us his story.
By the way, my name is Clark Worthington. I’m just a
simple high school English teacher who has had a fairly easy life –
except for the past year. It was a year I almost lost hope, and I wasn’t
alone. Darn near the whole town had been through an epidemic of despair
the past several months. And while most had suffered silently, putting
on that public front we all are guilty of, I was about to see an
incredible miracle take place. I was about to watch Uncle Larry’s story
change not only my life forever, but heal just about everybody in town
of their loss of hope.
©2008 Mark Grady All Rights Reserved
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