information about Jedidiah and Mary Elizabeth Bodean. Have you heard of them?â
âThe Bodeans!â she parroted. âLands, yes! One of Guthrieâs first families. Jedidiah made the run in 1889 and claimed himself some prime real estate in what is now downtown Guthrie. You see, because of the lawâs governing townships in the new territory, Guthrie at that time was divided into four sections: Capital Hill, West Guthrie, Guthrie Proper and East Guthrie.â She batted a hand, chuckling, and sent the chair rocking again. âBut you didnât come here for a history lesson, did you, dear?â
âOh, no, please. Itâs fascinating.â
âYes, it is. But, then, I love history. But you wanted to know about the Bodeans. Now, what exactly can I tell you about them?â
âEverything. I wasnât even aware Mary Elizabeth had married until I saw the tombstone.â
âMy, yes, she married. Such a romantic tale. As the story goes, Jedidiah courted Miss Sawyer for over a year before she agreed to marry him. Jedidiah was a bit of a rake. Had his hands in all kinds of businesses, a few of which some of the townspeople didnât approve,â she added, arching a knowing brow at Callie. âThere was also another complication. You see, Miss Sawyer believed she was in love with someone else, then along came Jedidiah and swept her off her feet.â She tipped back her head and laughed merrily. âAlthough Iâm quite sure Jedidiah wouldnât agree with the term âswept,â being as it took him over a year to convince her to marry him.â
âDid they have children?â
âNo.â She shook her head sadly. âNot together, anyway. Elizabeth had a child before they married, but the child died at birth. Times were hard then. No doctors or hospitals to speak of. Usually women helping women through the births.â She knitted her forehead in concern and leaned toward Callie. âDid I say something to upset you, dear?â
Callie scraped the heels of her hands across her cheeks to swipe at the hot tears. She tried to smile, but couldnât. She was too damned mad. âNo, itâs nothing you said. Itâs just that Mary Elizabeth Sawyerâs son, the one everyone insists died at birth, is my great-grandfather.â
Mrs. Barker reared back, her eyes wide. âGreat-grandfather?â she repeated.
Callie dug in her purse and pulled out the faded paper on which Papaâs birth was recorded. âThis is his birth certificate,â she said as she passed the paper to Molly. âContrary to popular belief, William Leighton Sawyer is very much alive and lives in a nursing home in Dallas, Texas.â
Molly placed her reading glasses back on her nose and studied the document. âIt looks real enough,â she murmured.
âI assure you,â Callie replied indignantly, âit is.â
Molly leaned to pat Callie on the knee. âIâm sorry, dear. I didnât mean to infer that you werenât honest. I just donât know what to make of all of this.â
âNor do I.â
Molly passed the document back. âMakes a person wonder if there wasnât foul play of some sort.â She sighed. âI guess weâll never know.â
âOh, yes we will.â
Molly raised a brow. âBut that was over a hundred years ago. How will you ever unravel it all now?â
âI donât know, but Iâm not going back to Dallas until I find out the truth.â
âThat kind of research will take time,â Molly warned. âCan you be away from your family and your job that long?â
Stephen came to mind, if only briefly, but Callie quickly discarded the thought. âFamily isnât a problem.â Her thoughts shifted to the statue sheâd been commissioned to sculpt for the new womenâs wing at a hospital in Houston. The deadline for that silently ticked nearerâyet
Gary Pullin Liisa Ladouceur
The Broken Wheel (v3.1)[htm]