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Templars - John Aquilla Kershaw
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© 2011 John Aquilla Kershaw. All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or
transmitted by any means without the written permission of the author.
Published by AuthorHouse 07/10/2020
ISBN: 978-1-4567-2329-3 (sc)
ISBN: 978-1-7283-6661-6 (hc)
ISBN: 978-1-4567-2320-0 (e)
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PROLOGUE
A missive from the darkness
T he mist hung low over the Snake River. As I looked around I saw hieroglyphics, carved in stone by the ancient ones. The spirits of the lowland natives swirled around me. How could I read from those rocks when even the great Chief Joseph couldn’t explain those hieroglyphics?
I was dressed all in white as I took my position. John the Baptist questioned his worthiness when Christ came to him for baptism. John said No, my Lord you should baptize me.
Then he baptized the Savior of man. I, like John the Baptist, questioned my worthiness as I stood there in the mist.
I could hear the roar of the rapids of Hells Canyon behind me. The sight of Christ standing in the boat with his hands outstretched came to me as he calmed the Sea of Galilee. It was like He stood there on those rocks and calmed this sacred pool for his salmon to rest in as they got ready to challenge the rapids of Hells Canyon in their circle of life.
I looked to the shore, and you stood there all dressed in white waiting for me to beckon. I glanced at the high priest who had positioned himself to witness full immersion. He smiled. I turned and put my hands out to you. You looked like a Celtic Princess all dressed in white as your feet mingled with the misty water and you floated into my arms as we started our journey to the veil.
You were eight years old and I was sixteen, as I bent over and whispered in your ear, Sunny, am I worthy to do this holy thing?
You looked up into my eyes and said, You hold the Priesthood of God and I know your heart is worthy to do this holy thing, now baptize me in these sacred waters of the Lamanites.
I raised my right arm to the square and called on the Father and the Son and the Holy Ghost. My arm came down and I immersed you in the waters just below Hells Canyon. Then I pulled you up to me. You put your arms around my neck and asked that the promise of the Holy Ghost never leave you and that I honor my priesthood forever.
Cancer eats at your body now as my son anoints you with consecrated oil. I lay my hands on your head and ask Father in heaven to remember the promise of the Holy Ghost to comfort you. As our hands rest on your head your hands entwine with ours. There are tears. I call for all the blessings of heaven to come to you. Then the Holy Ghost takes the pain away.
All the clans are there, Sunny, as the veil entwines with the wind. Then you dance to the Celtic moods in the Celestial sphere, as now you have passed through the Veil into Grandpa’s arms. Like the day the angels rolled the stone back from the tomb of Christ, the whole earth dances in the Celestial sphere.
DEDICATION
To David O. McKay the prophet
that dedicated my uncle’s grave
and at the same time held my aunt
Sadie’s hand and blessed our family
Also
Marybeth
Dawn
Helen
Megan
Mimi
Britney
Emily
Rachel
Lisa
Bree
Emita
Raquel
and last but not least my beloved Kathleen
CONTENTS
Prologue
Sorrow In the Bitterroots
Jackson
Maggot
Silver Wings
Alma
Blackjack Creek
Sadie
Nine Dragons
Point
Epilogue
SORROW IN THE
BITTERROOTS
34568.pngI guess my dad decided that he had to go farther in his search of the answers to the questions he had about this thing called mortality. It seems that’s what war doe’s to men, when the fighting’s done they spend the rest of their lives looking for answers to questions they can’t understand. So after we left Union Oregon we caught a train in Portland and didn’t get off until we got to the big sky country of Montana.
There he got another job on a big diary farm. I remember that he had to milk one hundred and twenty five head of cows twice a day. I don’t know why I remember that, it’s just one of those things that stick in my mind
We didn’t live on the farm this time, the farmer didn’t have enough housing for all of his hired hands. So dad found us a house in town. I can still remember so well all of the neighbors and everyday I still think of the school I went too. I still remember so well that town we lived in 45 years ago.
The dairy processed it’s own milk, bottled it and sold it to stores and delivered to peoples homes. My brother and I would get up early in the morning with dad and go out to the dairy with him. He would go into the cooler and get us all a little cold bottle of chocolate milk, man what a treat that was. Then we would go up to the big barn and watch dad as he milked all those cows. My brother and I were always amazed at how each cow seemed to get into the same stall each day. Dad had a name for each one. Is all he had to do was point and the cow he was pointing at would do what he wanted. It was almost like dad would just think what he desired and that’s, what they would do. It seemed like dad was a conductor up on a podium and he would wave his hands and the whole herd would move as one, as they filed into their stalls. Then he would play this old record player and milk his cows and gently talk to them, as the sounds of the classics drifted through the barn. One of dad’s favorate songs was a classic named Home. I learned later in my life the it came from the Fatom of the Opera.
I would lay up in the hay loft and watch him for hours, I guess it was because I had never seen this side of him before. Now that I look back I believe dad may have started to put that war in the Pacific behind him. As he moved among those cows and at times even sang to them, it seemed like he would change into someone else. Maybe the man he was before he went to war, the man us kids never knew.
Then one day all of our lives began to change and we didn’t even know it. We were standing in the corral near the barn when I saw this pretty blond girl running towards us. Dad said that she was the bosses little girl. She jumped up on the fence and with a huge smile, said hi! All summer we played, she showed my brother and I every secret hiding place on that dairy farm. She knew all the cows by name and could ride a horse like she was part of the horses main. One morning she came to the barn real early and found Larry and I watching dad as he conducted his symphony. She never said a word just laid down beside us and looked down at him and listened as he sang the Old Rocking Chair and then turned on the classics. He always told us that the cows gave more milk if they listened to good classical music.
My brother and I both fell in love with that little girl. After a long day of playing she would sneak into the bottling plant and get us all a cold bottle of milk. We would slip off to one of her hiding places and just lay back and drink that wonderful chocolate treat. What a summer that was, but it just ended to soon.
One day my brother and I stayed home to go shopping with mom for school supplies. It was in the early afternoon when dad came home and he looked like the day I saw him walking down the ramp of the Blackball ferry, on Bainbridge Island up in Washington, the day he came home from the war in the Pacific. He wouldn’t tell mom what was wrong, he just went out on the back porch to the big easy chair he used to sit in to watch the sunset as it slipped behind the Bitterroot mountains and faded into the western sky.
Mom went next door and used the phone to call the dairy and find out what was wrong. When she came back she was crying real loud, she picked my little sister Anita up and went into her room and closed the door. It was days later that mom finally told us what had happen. Our little girl friend had been playing in the hay loft of the big barn. She was coming down from the upper level and jumped into a hay stack on the lower floor and onto a pitch fork and died.
My dad was the one that found her and blamed himself for not seeing the pitch fork laying there. He wasn’t the one who left it there, one of the farm hands had, but he still blamed himself.
Dad sat there on that back porch for weeks, looking out over the fields towards the mountains. It was like he was looking for that pretty little girl to come running up and say hi! Our little girl friends dad (the owner of the dairy farm) sat and talked to dad for days trying to get him to come back to work. He pleaded with dad to please believe that it wasn’t his fault, but nothing moved him.
Then one day he just came in off the porch and said he was going to find a job. My father lived to be seventy years old and just before he died we talked about what we had seen in the two different wars we had fought in. The World War two he was in and Viet Nam where my brother and I had served. But he never talked about our little friend and I know that bothered him more than any thing that ever happened in his life.
In the Bitterroot Valley of western Montana there are springs our little friend called desert springs, that come right up out of the ground. My brother and I would be looking for a place to fish and all of a sudden there would be this beautiful clear cold creek coming right up out of the earth. It was just suddenly there and then it would make it’s way down through the valley until it disappeared into the Bitterroot River.
It seems to me now as I ‘m older and can reflect on the past with a different mind set, that our little girl friend was like those desert springs. She just suddenly appeared into our lives and then tike the little sparkling creeks created by those mysterious desert springs, she just seemed to disappear into eternity.
When I visit my brother Larry three or four times a year, I kneel down beside his bronze headstone and gently drive a little American flag into the ground. I look at his name cast in yellow iron and then my eye’s focus on the word (Viet Nam). I believe I may have found part of the answers to the questions my father, brother and I have had about this life. I believe the questions we struggled with for so many years have to be grouped into two parts. The first group is our questions of our own mortality and how easy we can die and that no man is promised another breath,we can die in a second. The second group of questions are questions of morality and how easy it can be to pull the trigger without an after thought, when the madness of war is all around. It seemed that in the madness we went mad too. Then when it was over we were thrown back into the world of the sane. That’s when the search for answers to that two part question started. I believe that the answers were so hard to find because we needed to separate them first. The search is over for my father and brother, but I know I’ll keep trying to clarify them until the day I pass through the vial.
I now feel at