"The Cave"
I could smell the cedars as I stopped along the rolling brook, the water tasting sweet as I swallowed. Normally, I would never drink directly from a stream, but I knew that the source of this stream was pure, pouring from the mouth of a cave no more than a mile upstream.
I turned, excited to see the yawning cavern for the first time. It was something I'd always meant to do, despite the warnings from a few friends to stay well clear of Mooring Cave.
Being an adventurous sort of girl, I found the idea too much of a temptation. Having filled my camelback with the crystal-clear water, I continued, knowing I was only a few minutes away from my goal.
I would have a clear view of the entrance, at least according to the map. The stream ran straight from the base of an imposing bluff from which it surged. Pleased, I spied the cliffs rising from the horizon as I rounded a crook in the valley.
What I didn't expect was the line of smoke rising in a single line from the blackness of the cave. I was disappointed, as I wouldn't have the solitary experience of exploring the cave alone. Disregarding any danger that might lurk thereabouts, I continued.
The closer I came, the more acrid the scent of the smoke became, and I wondered just what the kids might have been burning. Of course, I had only assumed they were kids. Who else would light a fire inside the entrance to a cave? By the time I recognized the smell, it was too late.
"Who the hell 'r you?" A male voice scolded from above on the left bank of the stream. "Y'all shouldn't be up here."
Realizing that what I'd stumbled into was a moonshining operation, I went to leave, when someone grabbed me from behind. "Hey, let go!" I screamed.
"Let'r go Clive. She ain't gonna tell on us, are ya, pretty girl?"
"Y'all know the rules, Vernon. Ain't nobody to know 'bout this still. Ma said..."
"Well, Ma ain't here, 'n' this'un looks like trouble. Let'r go Clive." The pressure from the man's grip eased, but he didn't let go.
"I promise I won't say a word. Please let me go." I begged. I looked at Vernon, who seemed a bit older than the man who held onto me. "I just wanted to see the cave. I didn't know..."
"See that Vern, she wants t' see the cave. I say we show it to'r." Clive chuckled his breath stinking of rotgut whiskey as he peered over my shoulder.
"She ain't seen nothin' Clive. Y'all take'r up there'n she's all yours to deal with. What the hell'r you gonna do with a city girl, anywho?" Vernon chuckled, no longer seeming concerned over my well-being.
"Oh, I kin think on a few things I might git up to." Clive chortled, pushing me ahead of him towards the now ominous cave entrance. All I wanted to do was get away, to forget all about this place. Now it seemed I was going to be their guest, and that seemed like a horrible idea. "Who'all knows yer up here?" Clive asked, gruffly.
I had to think if I'd actually told anyone where I was going. I knew a few of my friends might think of this place, even though it had been a few days since we talked about the cave. I decided it would be safer for me if I let them think I'd be missed. "My friends know I'm up here, and they know where it is," I warned.
"Ya' see Clive, trouble." Vernon sighed, unable to convince whom I assumed was his brother to let me go.
"Aw, we'll let'r go, but not a'fore I have a bit 'o' fun with'r though." Clive laughed. I was certain whatever he considered fun, would be a nightmare for me.
'I'd Been Warned'
The smell of corn alcohol mixed with a strong syrupy smoke inundated the air as we approached the impressive entrance to Mooring Cave. Under any other circumstances, I would be overjoyed. Just then, I was terrified something awful was about to happen.
Just inside the entrance, I could see their operation, the copper coils of the still spiraling down to an older man, who looked up shaking his head. "What the hell r'you boys up to, n'who the hell is that little'un?"
"We found'er pokin' around outside, Paw." Clive was quick to answer, his hand still forming a vise around my upper arm. I was certain I'd have bruises, but that was the least of my worries.
"What the hell ya bring'er in here fer?" The old man scolded. He looked closer at me as Clive pushed me down the muddy slope that led to the business end of the still. "You two ain't got the sense that god gave a gnat, dag nab'it!" He took over for his son, his grip much tighter and a lot more forceful. "Y'all go over'n set on that rock, yonder." He ordered, releasing me with a push in the direction of a small ledge.
I imagined I just might make a run for it, but he interrupted the thought. "If'n yer thinkin' 'bout runnin', think agin, girlie." The old man grumbled. He leaned over and lifted a double-barreled shotgun from behind the still, just long enough to show me, before setting it back.
He took his sons just outside the entrance and started screaming at them in a tongue that was just barely discernible as English. Obviously, they saved the fancy speaking for me, because I swear I barely recognized a word.
The three of them walked back into the cave, single file, Vernon and Clive obviously having had an earful of their father's wrath, the old man pressing up behind them.
"Soon's we're done here, missie, y'all'r gonna have to talk t'Ma. 'Magine she'll know what's best fer ya." The old man hissed. "Whaddya wanna poke 'round here fer?" He asked, under his breath.
"I just wanted to see the cave." I managed, still terrified but at least confident that nothing horrible was going to happen to me at the hand of his son, Clive. I was fairly certain the old man had at least some scruples.
I think I sat there on that ledge for hours before they announced to me that they were heading out for the day. Another man, considerably younger than the other two arrived just as they were packing up. I assumed he was the night shift. He was more than amused over my predicament, laughing as Vernon filled him on the day's events, using the backwoods dialect that I was struggling to understand.
"Give'r one them jugs, Vernon. Might as well git some use outta her." The old man handed his son a large earthenware jug which the man immediately handed off to me.