The Only Thing Mac Could Never Explain…

The Marshallville Chronicles…

(Vingette from “119, as narrated by John Thomas McElheny, Jr. in remembrance of J.T. ‘Mac’ McElheny, Sr. of Marshallville, GA)

…  As a young man growing up in Monticello, Georgia, in the 1930s, Tom’s father, ‘Mac,’ worked on the farm after school and on the weekends. Sometimes it was near dark when he finished his chores. The shortest route to his parents’ house was through a large erosion gully whose tall clay embankments were topped by an occasional small tree, seasonal field grasses, and low undergrowth. Most evenings, Mac’s friendly collie, Laddie, would lie in wait for Mac to walk by so he could jump down in ambush on top of him. It was part of a little game they played. The next part was the race to the kitchen steps once they reached the backyard gate.

REAL SPOOKS © 2012

The Gully

One bright, moon-lit evening, as Mac walked through the gulley, he spotted a white shape on the ledge. It looked like the underside of his dog as it paced him, so he pretended to ignore it, but kept his eye on it all the same.  As usual, he was planning to spot it before it jumped, so he could grab it, but soon found he was having to quicken his steps just to keep up with it.

“Hey, boy!” Mac whistled. He was hungry and tired and ready to get home. “Come on now! I see ya!”

He slowed his gait, but the shape continued to wind through the undergrowth, almost as if it were ‘scooting or gliding’ like a mechanical rabbit on a dog track. It made no cries or sounds.

That’s odd, Mac thought, and he stopped.

Several yards ahead, the silent shape also stopped as if it were waiting. Mac watched as it slowly turned a rote body his way. Two gleaming eyes peering from the strangely perched head, locked dead-on with his, … and blinked.

Just as Mac thought he’d imagined this, he felt something cold and wet on his hand. Startled, he looked down. It was Laddie, licking vigorously and wagging his tail. Mac took off yelling and leaped down the gully as fast as his legs would carry him, and didn’t look back. He and the collie reached the gate together, but Mac beat the dog to the house.

In coming years, Tom’s father would tell this story many times, always prefacing it with the same, “That was the only thing I ever saw that I couldn’t explain,” and he meant it. He never encountered the strange shape again, though he passed through the gully a thousand times and always looked for it. He also made a point to entice Laddie down from the embankment early on, so he could make sure the collie was by his side the rest of the way home.

* * * * * *

Copyright 2012 – 2024, Real Spooks – Cynthia Farr Kinkel

* * * * * *

7 thoughts on “The Only Thing Mac Could Never Explain…

  1. IMHO, the ghost was alerting Mac to pay attention and enjoy the here and now in this earthly world, the existential, as Jesus advised, “grant to Caesar…” and be aware of spirits beyond our material world. But, worship the heavenly Father, not hubristic humanity and not this material, existential world. 

    Liked by 1 person

    • Yep. So appreciate your comment!

      Whatever it was, ‘ghost, spirit, cryptid,’ etc., it definitely got his attention, but it didn’t stop him from regularly traveling through that gully after the incident, though he did remember the encounter and recalled it with wonder. In truth, and as a believer, Mac seemed to take it in stride. IMHO, a knowledgeable awareness of Jesus’ advisement to “grant to Caesar” concerning the existential, non-material world includes paying attention to the fact that our heavenly Father, the one Creator God who made all creatures great and small, is also Lord of All, regardless of whatever or whomever makes their presence known to us. Apparently, that’s how Mac viewed it. That’s how I view it, too.

      Like

Leave a reply to Tidewriter Cancel reply