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 Texas : Features : Columns : "Texas Tales"
Which Road

by Mike Cox
Mike Cox
Coming to a fork in the road – literally or figuratively – is one of life’s fundamental metaphors. Do you take the right or left road? If you take one road, what would have happened had you taken the other?

The Rev. J.J. Mason, who spent nearly a half century as a Methodist preacher, never forgot the cross roads that nearly cost him his life back in the early 1900s. Fortunately, he made the right choice.

The chain of events leading to Mason’s critical moment of decision began when two men knocked on the door of his parsonage to ask if he could conduct a funeral at a rural residence. The funeral had been set for 4 o’clock that afternoon, they said.

Looking at his watch, the preacher noted that it was already 5 o’clock. Yes, they realized that. The problem was they hadn’t been able to find a preacher willing to ride out into the country to conduct the services.

Mason agreed and hitched his horse to his buggy. With the two men as his escort, he reached the residence after dark.

“The corpse was wrapped in a sheet and lay on the only bed in the small house,” Mason recalled in “Six Other Days,” his self-published memoir. “There was no coffin. The family was too poor to buy one.”

The preacher provided a service as modest as the means of the grieving family. A couple of “dear old ladies” sang “Sweet By and By,” after which Mason read a few passages from the Bible. Then he made a short talk about the dearly departed and closed with a simple prayer.

On his way home, he got lost. Riding up on a country dance in progress, he accepted an invitation to stay for the night. “Go feed your horse, then feed yourself,” a friendly soul offered. Mason turned in early, but the banjo- and guitar-playing and the stomping of feet kept him up late.

In the morning, somewhat sleep-deprived, the preacher left for his next appointment, still pretty far back in the sticks.

Soon, Mason came to the intersection of two roads. Still not knowing where he was, he stopped to ponder the fundamental question of which road to take.

Fortunately, a substantial house stood nearby. Hoping for directions, the preacher shouted a friendly “Hello!”

Soon a woman’s voice yelled: “Pa, there is that man again.”

At that, a tall, grim-faced man burst out the front door with a double-barreled shotgun in his hands.

“I was near enough to hear both hammers click and to see his eyes looking straight into mine as he aimed the gun,” Mason remembered.

The minister could have said a prayer or talked fast. Having preached that God helps those who help themselves, Mason chose the latter course.

“Sir, I am the Methodist preacher,” he said quickly. “I held a funeral back over here a few miles, and I am trying to get to my [next] appointment, if you will be good enough to give me the directions.”

The man squinted down the barrel of his side-by-side, but something about the young fellow’s voice kept the farmer from pulling both triggers.

“Say them words again,” he said.

More slowly this time, Mason repeated his statement.

At that, the man lowered the weapon and clicked the hammers down. Not one for idle talk, the farmer indicated with a wave of his hand which road the preacher should take.

Mason thanked him and drove off, not yet fully appreciating how close to death he had come.

A week or so later, the reverend figured out what had happened. It involved one of his congregants. One of the men who attended his services could have passed as his double, and often did. But the similarities between the two men stopped with appearance.

It turned out that the other man, though married, had made overtures to the daughter of the farmer the Mason had run into. When the daughter first saw the preacher, she had thought he was her erstwhile suitor and told her father.

“My guess is that my … double stayed away from that place,” Mason later wrote. He added, with understated certainty, “I never had a desire to go back.”

© Mike Cox
October 21 , 2004
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