Authors: Adele Elliott
Next morning, we had a short service in the funeral home.
Grandpa brought in a Baptist minister to conduct the prayers and recite some generic eulogy.
Fleur would have hated it. She never even went to church. I sat quietly, and didn't complain. This was my grandfather's show. At least he was considerate enough not to drag Clementine to the funeral.
We buried Aunt Fleur in Friendship Cemetery, very near Grandma Belle. Almost no one came to the graveside. I saw a man standing alone, several rows back. It may have been Judge Sanders, but I'm not sure.
I promised to visit her often and bring tea and spread sparkly things over her.
I used some of my inheritance to buy a pink, marble headstone with flowers carved all around the sides. It was engraved with the name Fleur Thomas, 1945 -2015, and the quote,
"There be none of Beauty's daughters
With a magic like Thee"
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Gertrude (Truly)
Moore
graduated from Heritage High School. She now attends Mississippi University for Women, where she is majoring in library science, with the goal of becoming a children's librarian. She and Jimmy-James live in an apartment off-campus. They have a big picture window facing the school's front gate. It is filled with Witch Balls that sparkle in the sunlight. Truly has a cottage business designing personalized Witch Balls for other students. She volunteers at the Columbus Public Library during summer break. Truly goes out with friends from school, but has not met her prince.
Kay and Tommy Moore
divorced soon after Truly graduated from high school. They continue to live together in the same house where they raised their daughter. They have separate bedrooms; neither has yet begun to date.
Kay
is attending evening classes in education at the "W." She and Truly often meet for coffee and reminisce about Aunt Fleur.
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Tommy
took an early retirement from City Hall so that he could devote time to his work as a CASA volunteer. He created a "man cave" in the basement where he lives and writes. Last year, he sold two short stories to E-zines, and one joke to David Letterman. He has not yet started writing a screenplay.
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Eric Alexander
dropped out of college and left Columbus more than two years ago. He has begun to retrace the path of the runaway slaves as laid out in the song "Follow The Drinking Gourd."
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John (Johnny D.) Daigle
served only six months for the murder of Russell Lewis. He still lives in Columbus, and is, for the most part, a recluse.
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Hyrum and Clementine
visit Friendship Cemetery where they put flowers on the graves of Ruby, Belle, and Fleur. On many summer evenings they are seen walking together next to the Tombigbee riverbank. They have never found a two-headed snake, although they fear that they might someday encounter one.
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Sue Ellen Russell
maintains that she knew nothing about her husband's secret life, although many people believe that she was an enabler for a pedophile. She is often seen around Columbus, always accompanied by
Roxanne
.
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The house on 3
rd
Street North
has been on the market since Coach Russell's death. Locals are not at all interested in it. People new to the area sometimes view it, but never make a bid. They say it is too cold, and doesn't feel comfortable. It is now listed with a third realtor, at a reduced price.
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Fred Perkins
was re-elected Mayor of Columbus. Karloss and Kordell continue to get into trouble, but are never convicted of anything.
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Mother Goose
remains the most beloved person in Columbus, Mississippi.
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The murder of
Michael-Ray
was never solved.
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VERSE 1
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(This verse suggests escaping in the spring, and heading North to
freedom.)
W
hen the sun come back
,      (Days are getting longer)    Â
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When the fir' quail call,
          (Breeding season for Quail is earlyÂ
                                                To mid-April, when they are calling
                                                  to each other.)                                             Â
      Â
The time is come
Foller the drinkin' gourd
         (Gourds were used as a water
                                                Â
dipper. This is used in the song as a
                                               Â
code name for the Big Dipper formed
                                                Â
by Polaris, the Pole Star, indicating
                                                 Â
North.)
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CHORUS
                                            Â
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Foller the drinkin' gou'd
,              ("Ole man" is nautical slang for
Foller the drinkin' gou'd
;
"Captain", or "Commanding                                     Â
For the ole
man say                           Â
Officer." The Underground
"Foller the drinkin' gou'd."
               Railroad operative Peg Leg Joe
                                                         Â
was formerly a sailor. He was Â
                                                         Â
one of many "conductors".                                                    Â
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VERSE 2
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The riva's bank am a very good road,   Â
( Describes how to follow the route, Â
                                                                 Â
from Mobile, Alabama north.
The dead trees show the way
,
                The first river in the song is the
                                                                Â
Tombigbee, which empties into
                                                                Â
Mobile Bay. Its headwaters extend
                                                                Â
into northeastern Mississippi and
                                                                 Â
runs right next to Columbus,
                                                                  Â
Mississippi)
Lef' foot, peg foot goin' on,
                      (Joe marked trees and other
                                                                    Â
landmarks "with charcoal or
                                                                    Â
mud of the outline of a human
                                                                     Â
left foot and a round spot in
                                                                    Â
place of the right foot."
Foller the drinkin' gourd
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CHORUS
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VERSE 3
                                                   (Describes the route through
                                                                      Â
northeastern Mississippi and
                                                                      Â
into Tennessee.)
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The riva ends a-tween two hills,
                 (The headwaters of the
                                                                     Â
Tombigbee River end near
                                                                     Â
Woodall Mountain, the high
                                                                      Â
point in Mississippi the
                                                                      Â
mountain Has a twin cone
                                                                       Â
profile)
Foller the drinkin' gou'd;
'Nuther riva on the other side
Follers the drinkin' gou'd.Â
                           Â
(The river on the other side of
                                                                     Â
the hills is the Tennessee,
                                                                     Â
which extends outward in an
                                                                      Â
arc above Woodall Mountain,
                                                                      Â
and proceeds north to the
                                                                       Â
Ohio river border with Â
                                                                         Â
Illinois.)
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CHORUS
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VERSE 4
                                                        (Describes the end of the
                                                                        Â
route, in Paducah, Kentucky)
Wha the little riva
                                           (The Tennessee and Ohio
Meet the grea' big
un
                               rivers come together in
,                                         Â
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