Thursday, September 25, 2025

An Excerpt from When Light Comes Unexpected

 

An Excerpt from When Light Comes Unexpected

Book 4 of the Misty Creek Series

 

By John W. Vander Velden


 

When the morning broke clear with an unusual coolness, the residents of Hancock’s Bluff had decreased by one.

It was at that moment Matthew had come to her. Perhaps he had heard the whispers, or perhaps the man who had bound his life with hers felt the need. The instant he entered, Elizabeth rushed to the arms of the man whose face reflected the sadness she felt. Within his embrace she melted, as if her legs could no longer support her. Matthew held her close as she wept. But the tears that fell were not hers alone, for Elizabeth felt her husband’s as well.

***

Those who lived in the wide-open places understood life and death better than some living in what might be called a more civilized world. The mud and blood of life was something each had dealt with. Mr. Welcome Morgan had built a box. A pine casket that he knew his friend would need when the time came.

The time had come.

Mrs. Schoff and another had dressed the dear woman out, and then everyone over the age of ten came to pay their final respects. Nearly all had said their goodbyes to Eloise before her passing, but that did not fulfill the need to pay honor to the woman who seemed to have always been there. Eloise lived at the Bluff before anyone thought to name the place.

It was mid-afternoon of another cloudless day when all was completed and everyone had gathered. Ben told her that it was time.

“No,” Elizabeth insisted.

“But…” he began.

“In the morning Ben. Early, while the dew is on the grass and the lark sings. That would be the time Eloise would want it done. She would want us all to experience the glory of the day’s awakening. To be surrounded by what she called the “wild opens.” The land she loved.”

***

They left the settlement known as Hancock’s Bluff before the sun had risen. Mr. Morgan had hitched his horses to a flat wagon, and the men—Matthew and Nick among them—had carried her out the store’s front door, down the steps, and slid the coffin gently onto that wagon. It was early, with only the gray dimness of the day, when Welcome Morgan eased his horses forward. The wagon was followed by the sad-faced preacher-man, holding his Bible. The pallbearers came next, and behind the six men, Elizabeth and a multitude of those that called the settlement their home. The procession went up the hillside, past the smoke stacks jutting out of the soil. The train of wagon, preacher, and the rest veered to the right, leaving the strips of dirt that passed for a road behind.

How far they had gone, Elizabeth wasn’t certain, but far enough that she found herself surrounded by the open prairie land. The place they approached was no different than other places she had seen on the prairie, except they followed the crest of the bluff. To her right she could see miles of open land, dotted by a sod house and barn here and there. Fields lay below the bluff as far as she could see. Perhaps further. They stopped, surrounded by the near waist-high, dew-covered wild grasses, the blades burnt golden by the summer sun. There was no fence, no row of markers, nothing to separate the featureless grassland from any other, save for the mound of earth and the place from which that soil had come.

A pink blush in the eastern sky caught everyone’s attention as they waited. The day was dead calm, so unusual for the open country. It felt to Elizabeth as if nature itself held its breath in reverence of the moment.

Ben took his place at the grave, here in what felt like the middle of the vastness of Kansas. The way grasslands had been before it was Kansas. A time before any settlers had come. The men set the casket at the side of the grave and Elizabeth, like the world around her, found herself holding her breath as the sheer brilliance of the first rays of the morning sun tore apart the sky.

9-24-2025 (710 Words)