The vacuum wipers of my old 1950 Plymouth slowly swiped the light icy rain
peppered on the windshield late one night as took a co-worker home. Clifton and I talked of
the cold night and possible snow flurries that would create a panic among the
people of Alabama
and especially Chilton
County. We were having a light-hearted moment in Clifton’s heartbreaking
relationship with his wife.
To pacify his wife, Clifton bought her a new red with white
stripes, Ford Grand Torino fastback. It
was a beauty. It was also a gift to
harness his wife’s wandering ways. As we
passed Friendship
Baptist Church,
one I pastored years later, I spotted Clifton’s
Torino underneath the security light of the church parking lot. Whether he knew it or that he acted dumb, we
joked that his wife left it there.
Having an eye for details of automobiles, I knew without a shadow of
doubt that it was Clifton’s
car. I had this empty, wishing I was
wrong, moment. It would become a
defining moment as I witnessed something that will always be etched in my mine.
Clifton
lived just over the hill from the church at the Blacksnake Trailer Park. Ice collected on the wipers as I pulled to
his driveway. Clifton said, “She’s gone
again. That was her Torino.” I waited as he opened the mobile home
door. He motioned for me come to the
door. I saw three little girls, all in
t-shirts and diapers, cuddled up like puppies on a rug at the front door. The oldest little girl said, “Momma is gone.”
My heart broke for these precious little girls and for Clifton. Clifton
had an alcoholic brother who appeared from the darkness. He had tried to open the door, but it was
locked. He waited in shadows and from
the cold underneath another mobile home until Clifton arrived.
These three little girls were ages three, two, and one. They were red-haired, blonde, and
brunette. All three had different dads
and Clifton was
not one of them, but Clifton
loved them as though they were his.
I never will forget the first time I met Clifton.
He had grown up in the same Mars Hill community that I did. He was older than I was, and we had never met,
but since he worked where mom did, and I eventually did, I heard a lot about
him.
He was pale as a ghost when I first met him. He was recovering from a gunshot wound to his
stomach and had a 22-caliber bullet lodged against his spine. Days before, he had escaped, yes escaped,
from a Birmingham
hospital by hiring a cab to transport him to Clanton. He was wearing a hospital gown.
Clifton
claimed that he had accidentally shot himself while cleaning a rifle. Truth was that his wife shot him. Can I tell you that I had lived a rather
sheltered life, and I learned a lot about life in the real world?
Clifton’s
wife was a very loose woman. She was a
little on the trashy side. She loved
men, but Clifton
loved her more. I had never seen a man
that loved a woman as he did her. As the
old saying goes, “He put up with a lot.”
As the energy crisis of 1973 swept the nation, I faced my
first layoff, and it would be the last time I saw Clifton alive. Clifton
kept working and his wife kept running around on him. She was so despicable, that her mother and
father disowned her. In fact, Clifton had moved in with
his in-laws who were helping with the three girls.
A friend called me to tell me that Clifton had committed suicide. The bullet against his spine continued to
cause pain and health problems.
Overwhelmed by the heartache of a wayward wife and a bullet she placed
in his body, Clifton
borrowed his father-in-law’s 410-gauge shotgun to shoot rabbit or squirrel, but
placed the barrel against his heart and pulled the trigger. His in-laws saw him stagger and fall near the
clothesline. Helped came too late.
I attended his wake. My heart was with the three girls. I had not been married very long
and thought about adopting them. As for Clifton’s wife, I was
told that as Clifton
lay at rest, she lay intimate with another man in a Clanton parking lot.
Every year at Christmas, I wonder what happened to the
girls. It was the Christmas season when
I saw them cuddled on the rug cold and shivering. If they are alive, they are
in their forties now.
When I think of Clifton
and them, I think of God’s love for us and Hosea’s love for his wife
Gomer. Love is a powerful force. I could understand the love of Hosea and the
wandering of Gomer a little better when I read Francine Rivers Christian novel Redeeming Love. If you have not read it, you are missing a
great book. I could not put it down.
The beginning of the
word of the Lord by Hosea. And the Lord said to Hosea, Go, take unto thee a
wife of whoredoms and children of whoredoms: for the land hath committed great
whoredom, departing from the Lord. So he
went and took Gomer (Hosea 1:1-3a KJV).
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