Ah, it was a
cool early Saturday morning, particularly – no, exceptionally – clear and
crisp. The air felt lighter, and instead
of breathing in the new season, it breathed me in. The wife and girls back home were frantically
preparing for a family obligation while I, already freshly showered and in my
Sunday Bests, motored off to run a few quick errands.
I pulled into a
shady spot at the library parking lot.
Rolled down the windows, reclined the driver’s seat by twenty
degrees. The library would not open
until ten o’clock this glorious morning, and I had the empty parking lot to
myself for forty minutes.
I opened A Stillness at Appomattox, and as if
stepping through some weird spacetime portal I was on those Virginian fields,
convoying with the Army of the Potomac as it rushed feverishly to beat –
unsuccessfully – Robert E. Lee and his forces to a sleepy crossroads town
called Spotsylvania. And a few pages
after that, poor old General John Sedgwick of Grant’s Sixth Corps, known
affectionately as “Uncle John” to his troops, was tragically killed by a
sniper’s bullet, shot below the left eye, after bragging to his flinching
subordinates that those Confederate sharpshooters hidden in the faraway trees
“couldn’t hit an elephant from this distance.”
I put the book
down and studied the blue cloudless sky, fragmented and framed by budding tree
leaves, and appreciated ever the more this spring day commune.
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