Over the
past seven years, I’ve shared lots of stories from my past, some funny, some
sad and I’m sure, a few boring. My childhood was pretty boring, but on July 6,
1980, I came to appreciate how uneventful my life had been up to that point.
It was a
Sunday afternoon. I was sitting at our kitchen table trying to figure out my
class schedule for college that fall. Mom was at the kitchen sink under the
kitchen window, cleaning strawberries. She watched a car drive by.
We heard a bang, bang, followed by ping, ping, ping, ping. It was the
Fourth of the July weekend. We thought nothing of it. The car driving by must
have thrown firecrackers out the window.
Mom’s sister
came over later and after we all had eaten supper, the two of them took a walk
around the yard. From inside the house, I heard one of them shout something.
Dad and I ran out to the driveway where Mom and her sister were standing next
to Mom’s car. The back of it had been sprayed with fine shot. We immediately
realized that the noise we heard earlier had been gunshots.
While Mom
ran in the house to call the police, the rest of us walked around the yard. Dad
found a bullet hole in a pine tree in the front yard and two more bullet holes
in the house, one right above the kitchen window where Mom had been standing at
the time.
As freaked
out as I was – we all were – we figured it was just the kids in that car,
pulling a sick prank. We didn’t think anything else was going to happen.
The next
day, Mom called me at work to say the house had been shot at again. This time
the person had come through the woods behind our house and fired two shots into
the house. One had actually gotten through the wall but was stopped by the
metal radiator in my bedroom. Dad had been sleeping in his recliner in the
living room just on the other side of my room. Had the shot come into the house
a few feet higher, it could have hit him.
The cops
were called again. We found shotgun shells in the trees across the road from
the house, so ruled out the car we had seen drive by the day before. By then,
Mom was starting to suspect who it was.
At this
point as I am writing this account, I had to consult my journal from that year.
A lot more happened after that that I didn’t remember so clearly.
Mom ended up
in the hospital because of the stress. The shooter went up to the hospital and
confronted her. They moved her to a different room, next to the nurse’s station
so they could see if he came back.
I spent one
night up at my aunt’s house, but then slept the rest of the time with my sister
in her room above our garage (as if being in the garage five feet away from the
house guaranteed my safety).
Friday, Dad
and I went in to see Mom at the hospital. On our way home, my uncle flagged us
down as we drove by, to say that the shooter had been at our house nosing
around. Everything looked fine around the house. Dad was calm, as always, not
rattled, but I made him go back up to my uncle’s when I went to work in the
afternoon.
Shortly
after I got to work, Mom called to say that it was over. The man had fired more
shots at the house, then went back up to the hospital. He went in the room Mom
had been in before and when he couldn’t find her, he slipped back outside. The
police tracked him down and arrested him in an alley.
As much as
this event remains vivid in my head, I’ve not been able to share it before. The
man died quite a few years ago. He had a disease which affected him mentally as
well as physically. Mom always said, “he’s not insane.” But he wasn’t always in
control of his decisions or his actions. That summer, he had his reasons for
having a grudge against Mom (reasons I don’t feel I have the right to divulge).
I don’t remember if he was ever charged with anything, but I know he never went
to trial. His mom passed away this spring and my mom passed in February, so I
feel I can at least now share this story, if not all the details.
The reason I’m
telling you any of this right now is because of a shooting in my little
community last night. A shooting which wasn’t as personal as the one in 1980,
but still too close for comfort - I was at work a block away when this happened.
I think
you’ll understand why I have a fear of guns. But even so, I don’t believe that
guns kill people. People kill people. And if they don’t have a gun, they can
kill or maim with a knife, a bomb, a car, a paperclip, their words.
What
happened in 1980 was an isolated incident for those times. Not so anymore. This
world has gone insane. I don’t know what’s in people’s heads and I probably
don’t want to. I don’t have any brilliant answers. I think people should get to
church, read their Bibles, have faith in something bigger than themselves.
Study what Jesus taught, learn to forgive. It’s not much, but it’s what I
believe.
That’s all I
got this Friday morning.
3 comments:
I think the answer to your last paragraph can be found in the first part of the verse of John 10:10. It makes perfect sense to me. Thanks for sharing your scary account of that incident years back.
I'm speechless.
Barb, you are so right.
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