Lady Daisy, ch. 1

by: Sarah Stodola

**Even a girl can belong… if she gets a chance.**
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LADY DAISY

“Hey, look at this!” Daisy Duke bounded down the stairs, hair flying behind her. Her dark blue eyes were shining with excitement.

“What?” her Uncle Jesse smiled, looking up from the peas he was shelling for dinner.

The slender young brunette was clutching a large leather-bound book, which she put down on the table. “I was looking through the old trunks up in the attic, to see what we could send to the church rummage sale, and look what I found!” She opened the book, running her hand over a plastic-covered page.

Jesse took the book, staring at it, then slowly smiled. “It’s the old picture album, from when you kids were just little tykes.”

“Uh-huh!” She brushed hair out of her face, and bent over his shoulder. “Look, there’s when I first came to the farm. Didn’t I look silly?” she grinned.

Jesse couldn’t help but smile. The photograph pointed to was of a small, very serious-looking girl, looking a bit uncomfortable in faded jeans and a blue plaid shirt. “You were somethin’ else,” he agreed. “A little lady to the core.”

“Yeah. And look here.” She pointed to another photo, one of two boys, one dark-haired and one blond, struggling with a large fish. “I didn’t know what to do when I caught that thing. Remember, it pulled me into the pond?”

“Luke and Bo had to fetch both it and you out,” Jesse recalled.

She looked a bit embarrassed. “I couldn’t do anything right, could I?” she admitted.

“Well, that depends on the point of view. To your Aunt Roseanne, you did everything right.”

Daisy made a face. “Yeah. I sure remember that. At least I didn’t stay that way.”

Jesse chuckled. “Yeah, you got real country real quick-like. A fact your aunt didn’t appreciate one bit.”

She shuddered dramatically, purposely overdoing it. “I sure do remember that. I thought I’d never get back home to the farm.”

“You almost didn’t. It was just thanks to those two cousins of yours that you did.”

“Yeah.” She hugged her uncle, smiling fondly. “But I’m sure glad I did.”

A roar-growl from a powerful car’s engine sounded from outside, and the two looked up from the old album. “Speaking of which, I think they’re home,” the farmer commented.

After a few seconds, the sound of the front door closing came to their ears, and a tall young blond man wandered into the kitchen. “Hi, everybody,” he said cheerfully, making a snatch at the bowl of peas. “What’s for dinner?”

“Get out of that, Bo.” Jesse batted his hand away, but not before his nephew had managed to grab several pods. “Those are for dinner, and it won’t be ready until I’m done here, so why don’t you all either help or get out of the kitchen?” He handed Daisy the picture book. “Why don’t you show them this? Out there,” he pointed.

“Show us what?” Bo asked, peeling one of the stolen pea pods open as he and Daisy went back out into the living room, and popping the peas into his mouth.

“An old album I found in the attic,” she replied, handing it to him and sitting down on the couch beside her other cousin, a tired-looking dark-haired young man older and shorter than Bo. “Move over, Luke, so we can all sit here.”

“What?” He scooted himself up from his slouching position and moved over, taking one of Bo’s pea pods. The blond cousin sat down on Daisy’s other side, and both boys looked over her shoulders as she opened the book to the first page.

Luke chuckled. “What a little lady you were,” he pointed to the first picture.

“Yeah,” Daisy admitted. She turned the page, and grinned delightedly.

“Hey, look, there’s the tri-county fair hayride!” Bo announced the picture she pointed to. “You got so mad at Tyrone Miller when he knocked me off that you tried to punch him out, ‘member?”

She blushed, embarrassed. “Yeah. If it hadn’t been for Luke, I would have been in serious trouble. That kid was twice my size!”

“At least it proved you had some honest Duke spirit under all that city-girl stuff,” Luke commented, grinning. “Boy, was your aunt mad when she saw how you’d changed!”

“I remember.” She looked up from the photo album, her gaze unfocusing. She remembered it all…

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“Hey, comin’ your way!”

“Move it!”

“Stop them!”

“Gotcha!”

“Enos!! The game’s over here!!”

“Sorry…”

Loud chatter and shouts rose from the gang of boys fighting for possession of a rather beat-up looking basketball. There were at least fifteen boys there, maybe more. It was hard to tell, just as it was hard to tell who was on which team. They were all just too quick, too confused as well, to keep track of.

Finally one blond boy managed to get his hands on the ball, and he ran for the opposing team’s hoop, uncoiling himself into the air and throwing the ball with all his young strength. It went through. Both teams screamed, one in victory, the other in frustration at losing.

A whistle blew, the only indication besides uniforms that this was at least a somewhat official game. “For once,” the announcer smiled, “Chickasaw loses!”

The losing team, decked out in yellow, shook fists in the air angrily, and their coach could be seen to toss his hat to the ground and stomp on it. Chickasaw County was a poor loser.

Of course, the other team, dressed in red, was pleased as punch. They hardly ever won a game. They leaped into the air, screaming for joy. They almost drowned out the announcer, who was saying, or at least trying to say over the noise, “And Hazzard County wins!”

Needless to say, the festivities were wildly triumphant, and the boy who’d thrown the winning ball made much of by his team, until he wandered away, blushing.

Another boy, a little taller than him and dark-haired, ran up behind him. The first glanced back, then took off sprinting. The other followed, then leaped in a tackle that sent both sprawling to the ground, where they rolled around in the dirt, laughing as they wrestled, rough-housing as only two energetic boys can do.

The man watching them sighed, and pulled the note out of his pocket once again, wiping tears from his eyes as he read one more time the news of his late brother’s wife’s death. Now he was the only Duke left. Except… His eyes wandered again to the playing boys, and he smiled, then shook his head. They were the future. Not only for him, but for the whole clan. But, then again, that didn’t really matter. What mattered was them having a family to grow up with. The two boys had both been orphaned at early ages, and their uncle had proudly raised them. Now, it looked like he would have yet another child to bring into the fold, now that Henry’s wife had followed him.

Jesse Duke sighed. But the boys would not be pleased when they found out who it would be.

###

“A *girl* at the farm?” Ten-year-old Luke Duke grimaced. “Are you kidding? Does she have to come *here*?”

“Yeah,” grumbled his two years younger cousin Bo, kicking at the ground. “A girl will spoil everything.”

“Pick up this, be nice to her, keep her safe.” Luke’s jaw clenched in stubborn, youthful anger. “A girl!”

“Hey!” Jesse’s angry voice quickly pierced through their grumbling. The two boys looked up almost as one, and Luke swallowed, stepping back a little. “Look,” his uncle demanded, “I took you in! How can I do less for your cousin?”

“But she’s a *girl*,” Bo attempted a last protest, which was silenced by Jesse’s stare. The blond boy looked down and away.

“She’s a Duke,” Jesse said, as if that settled everything. “You will watch out for her and take care of her, if for no other reason than that she’s family. And,” he added, a sudden twinkle hidden deep in his eyes, one that Luke almost missed, “you might find that she’s not so bad after all.”

“Fat chance,” Bo whispered to his cousin, who privately agreed with him.

This was going to spoil all their fun. They wouldn’t be able to go fishing or climbing, or jump in the pond with their friends. They’d have to take care of a little girl! The two boys’ dark blue gazes met, both saying the same thing — *This is gonna be one boring summer.*

###

Alone. She didn’t want to accept her mother’s death, but she still knew it to be true. But she didn’t want to believe it. Life was so much better if she didn’t.

She bit her lip, hard, and curled tighter into the chair. She squeezed her eyes shut, trying to shut out the world around her. But it was no use. She *was* here. And her mother *was* dead. Gone. Forever.

A hand touched her shoulder, and she jumped, glancing up with wide dark blue eyes. The lady who ran this orphanage — the girl didn’t know her name — smiled gently. “Your uncle’s here.”

She nodded, slightly. She wasn’t sure if she wanted to go with him. She didn’t know her uncle; she’d been raised in the city on a fancy manor, and he lived all the way down in farm country.

“Come on,” the lady chided kindly, crouching down on her level. “He seems a kind man. And he is your guardian according to your father’s will, so you sort of have to go with him.”

The girl stared at her. “You…” she managed, “you sure it’ll be nice, living on a farm? I don’t know anything about farms.” Her mother’s family had wanted her to be a part of their society, and not a “hillbilly”.

“You’ll love it,” the lady assured her. “From what I hear, you have a couple cousins there, too. About your own age.”

The girl brightened a little, uncurling slowly. “Any girls?”

“Well, I don’t know. Maybe.”

The girl thought about it, then finally nodded, slowly. “Okay. I’ll go.”

“Good girl.” The woman patted her shoulder, then stood, holding out her hand. “Shall we go meet your uncle?”

“Okay.” She climbed out of the chair, looking up at the other. But she didn’t take the proffered hand. She preceded the lady out of the room and down the stairs.

Jesse turned as the door squeaked open. The woman who ran the orphanage came through, then turned and beckoned. “Come on,” she encouraged. “It’s okay. Hey, you can’t stay here,” she said lightly.

The farmer raised his eyebrows slightly. Then a small hand came around the edge of the door, and a young girl peered out, obviously nervous. Wide eyes flitted around the waiting room, then up to meet his. Jesse smiled. She had dark blue eyes, just the same as he and the boys.

“Come on,” the lady encouraged again. The girl finally stepped around the door and to the center of the room, stopping a little ways away from her uncle and looking him up and down. He was doing the same.

She was pretty. Very pretty. Long brown hair was neatly combed and tied back, but a few curls strayed out of the smooth ponytail. She was wearing a blue dress, probably a Sunday one. She was slender, maybe even as much as the boys, and maybe about the same height as Bo. From what he’d been told, she was the same age as his younger boy, too, eight, though a couple of months younger. Her eyes came up to meet his, and he saw fear and pain there, but an undying curiosity, too.

The woman smiled and put a hand on the girl’s shoulder. The girl looked up at her. “This is your uncle Jesse,” she said softly. Then, looking at Jesse, she told him, “And this is Daisy Mae.”

Jesse glanced back down at his young niece to see her staring up at him, very seriously. Then something seemed to break through the mask of the perfect young lady, and she ran for her uncle. Jesse caught her as she leapt into his arms, and picked her up, hugging her. “Hello, Daisy,” he said gently, fighting back tears.

She buried her face in his shirt as he let her slip back to the ground. “Uncle Jesse,” she whispered.

###

Daisy Mae watched the scenery go past, eyes wide with amazement. She’d never seen the country before, at least not country like this. She’d been on picnics in the local meadows, sure, but this was wild land. Forest grew up around the road, which had turned to dirt some time ago. It made for a bumpy ride, but it was fun, too, in its very difference from all she’d known. They rattled over a bridge, and she looked down to see a creek running swiftly over rocks; the water was so clear that she could see to the bottom. She saw a fish leap out of the water, and jumped back involuntarily. Then she spun to grin at her uncle. “I saw a fish!”

“Yep,” he smiled. “There’s good fishing ’round here.”

“Are we almost there?”

He nodded. “Almost.”

“Then I’m really going to live out *here*?” She couldn’t keep excitement out of her voice if she tried, which she didn’t.

“You don’t mind?” he smiled, seeming to tease, much as a friend of hers, the gardener at the manor, had. A friend her aunt had disapproved of, saying he was below their rank’. But he’d been fun to be around.

“No! It’s so… so pretty!”

“Yes, it is,” he said softly, and she glanced over to see him unobtrusively wipe tears out of his eyes. She wondered why he would be crying.

Daisy Mae finally shrugged slightly, trying to regain her composure, and turned to look back out the window. She saw horses running free, and a boy called a goat out of the road just before they drove past. The mountains were starting to lower into hills, and there were more open spaces. She could see fields behind the line of trees that went on either side of the road. They were in farm country now, and she felt excitement bubble up inside of her again, despite herself. She was almost to her new home. She wondered what her life would be like now.

Then the pickup turned to follow a dirt road that went off to the side. They went up the road, then around a corner, and she saw a medium-sized house, not very large, but nice-looking. There was a porch, and the door was covered by a screen, so fresh air could come in but insects could not. Off to the side, a swing made out of an old tractor tire hung from a tree.

They stopped in the middle of the large dirt yard. No grass here, but high weeds and wildflowers sprung up all around. The girl turned to her uncle. “Uncle Jesse, is this it?”

“Yep.” He nodded and undid his seatbelt. Daisy Mae copied his actions, then something caught her eye. Actually, someone.

Just coming out of the barn was a dark-haired boy a bit older than her, carrying a pail of something… she thought it was milk. He stopped halfway to the house and put down the bucket, straightening to stare at the truck. Then he turned and put two fingers in his mouth, letting out an ear-piercing whistle that made Daisy Mae wince.

In response, a dog came running, a mutt that looked at least half hound. Right behind the dog was a blond boy, leaping over the bushes as he ran out of the field. Fascinated, she watched him come. He was bounding almost like a deer, maybe the fastest runner she’d ever seen, not that too many people had run at all back at the manor. She noted the dirt coating his faded jeans with almost wicked delight. She’d never been allowed to get really dirty back at home.

She looked around for any girls, and was slightly disappointed not to see any. She’d hoped. Now she opened her car door, when she realized that her uncle wasn’t going to do it for her, and slid down to the ground, bending over to try to straighten her dress.

Then she stood up again, and met two sets of dark blue eyes, just like hers. It surprised her a little; her mother had said the color was unusual. The boys’ eyes were just as nervous as hers, but there was hostility there, too, and she backed toward the truck. Why didn’t her cousins like her?

The girl was wearing a dress. Luke noted that with a frown. She was a city kid, that was obvious. So what was she doing out here? He could just imagine it — she wouldn’t want to get dirty by playing in the woods, or go swimming or fishing, or anything. Just great.

Bo came up beside him, panting from his run. “Oh, wonderful,” he grumbled.

“Yeah, I know.”

“Hey, boys.” Uncle Jesse came from the other side of the pickup with a small suitcase, and the girl moved toward him. He put an hand on her back. “Bo, Luke, this is your cousin Daisy. You’ll need to show her around, cause I’ve got to go into town.” He looked both in the eye, warning them to be nice.

Luke nodded, kicking at the dirt, and Jesse squeezed the girl’s shoulder, putting down her luggage, then turned and climbed back into the pickup. The truck did a tight U-turn and headed back down the road.

Luke met his new cousin’s eyes, studying her. She studied him, too, unashamedly. Then he looked her up and down, noticing first her dress, then her long, nicely-brushed hair. He couldn’t keep from smirking a little, feeling a bit superior. “First,” he started, “you’re gonna have to lose the clothes.”

Her eyes flashed.

“I mean,” he backtracked, trying to obey his uncle and be nice to her, “a farm is no place for a dress. You’re gonna have to get some other clothes for out here. You could still wear nice stuff in town, if you wanna.”

“Oh…” She frowned, slightly. “But nice things are all I have.”

Bo rolled his eyes toward the sky, and Luke elbowed him. “You’re sk… not real big,” he noted. “Maybe you could wear something Bo or me’s outgrown.”

“Maybe.” She looked toward the house. “Want to try?” She sounded almost eager. Maybe there was a real person under that city-girl get-up after all, Luke thought. But he wouldn’t hold his breath on it.

“Yeah. Come on.” He turned around and started for the porch. He heard a put-out sounding sigh from behind, and risked a quick glance backward to see her pick up her suitcase and come after him. Apparently she’d thought he’d carry her stuff for her!

Hah! he snorted to himself. Not! She was going to carry her own stuff, and do her share of work around here, just the same as him and Bo. Daisy Mae Duke might be a dainty little lady, but she’d have to learn to be otherwise! ‘Cause he wasn’t going to cater to her!

###

“Luke! Wait up!”

He turned, groaning, to see his little cousin bounding up behind him. Her brown hair flew out behind her, loose and tangling in the breeze. Her hair was shorter now, just to below her shoulders. Jesse had had to cut it when she’d gotten it caught in the ice cream freezer. She also wore a shirt and pair of jeans that Jesse had had Bo give her, as she was certainly skinny enough to wear boys’ clothes. Which did cut down on costs, their uncle had reminded Bo when he’d complained about giving up what was his.

She skidded to a halt, eyes shining as she looked up at him with what seemed almost adoration. “Where are you going?”

It was almost a week since Daisy had come to live on the farm, and she’d been getting more annoying every day, always following him around. And his patience was about to snap. “It’s none of your business,” he told her. “Go home.”

“Why?” She scowled. She sure had the Duke temper down right, Luke thought.

“Look, I’m gonna go fishing with my friends, and I don’t need a girl cousin followin’ me around, so beat it!”

“Why?” she persisted stubbornly. “Uncle Jesse said you have to let me play with you.”

“Why do you want to play with a bunch of boys, anyway?” Luke demanded. “Go home! Find some dolls or something!” With that, he ran away, knowing she couldn’t keep up.

“Luke!” she called, and he glanced back to see her trying to chase him. Then she tripped, and fell into the mud of the newly-plowed field. He made his getaway before she could get up and try again.

Stupid girl! he thought angrily. Why couldn’t she just find some other girls to be friends with? Why follow him and Bo around?

Daisy picked herself up out of the dirt, sniffing back tears as she tried to scrub the mud off her face. Why didn’t Luke like her? She knew that her cousins weren’t really happy with her being there, but Bo at least was nice to her, sort of. But Luke…

She watched him run off, then turned and trudged back to the farm.

###

Jesse came in from the fields to wash his hands for lunch, and noticed the mud smearing the kitchen sink almost immediately. “Oh, Lord, what have those boys gotten themselves into now?” he muttered, half to himself, half to God. He studied the mess and saw no blood stains, so apparently no one was hurt.

So all there was was a big clean-up job. But why hadn’t the boys cleaned up after themselves? Sighing, Jesse reached for the dish towel to dry his hands. And that was when he noticed that it wasn’t where it should be. It was lying in a crumpled mess on the counter, mud on it as well. His eyes flashed. What had gotten into the boys to leave this in such a mess? They knew better!

He turned and climbed the stairs, stalking down the hall to the boys’ room. But something caught his attention before he got there. The sound of a child crying. Jesse opened the shut door to his niece’s room, more worried now than mad.

Daisy looked up as he came in, and sat up, wiping her eyes with the back of her hand. Her hair was wet and tangled, and she was wrapped tightly in a towel.

“What happened?” he instantly wanted to know.

She shrugged, looking away.

Jesse went over to the bed and sat down beside her, reaching out a hand. She didn’t move for a second, then scrambled over, forsaking the damp towel for her uncle’s hug. She was really crying now, softly, not in pain but more… heartbroken. “What is it?” he asked gently.

She shook her head wordlessly, not looking up. He leaned back and raised her chin with one hand. Her eyes finally flitted to his, and he was struck once again by how pretty she was. *Just like her mama*, he thought sadly.

“Daisy, you aren’t hurt?”

She shook her head, sniffling. “No.” He smiled slightly to himself. She’d acted surprised at first at the shortening of her name from Daisy Mae to just plain Daisy, but she’d taken to the change like a duck to water.

“Here.” He handed her his handkerchief, and she wiped her face and eyes, still biting back tears. “Now, what happened?”

“I… I can’t tell you,” she sniffed.

He took her shoulders in his hands, staring at her firmly. “Tell me.”

She looked away, then whispered. “I can’t. Luke would get mad at me, and I don’t want him to get mad at me.”

Jesse’s eyes widened slightly. He had a sneaking suspicion what this was about. The girl looked up to the two boys almost to the point of hero worship. He also knew that Luke’s patience with his little cousin was wearing thin. “Did Luke hurt you?”

“No, not really…”

“What *did* happen?” he asked. “Tell me. That’s an order.”

She shivered. “He… he went fishing with his friends.”

“And?”

“I wanted to go too, but he wouldn’t let me.”

“How’d you end up covered with mud?”

“I… fell down.”

“Fell down?” he asked sharply. If the boy had pushed her…

“Yes. He ran away and I was chasing him.”

Jesse relaxed slightly. “Well, Daisy, maybe he doesn’t want to always play with a girl, did you think of that?”

“Well, sort of, but…” She trailed off.

“But what?”

Daisy’s dark blue eyes met his again. “Uncle Jesse, why not?”

“Huh?”

“Why wouldn’t he want to play with me?”

“Well…” He thought, then smiled, just a little. “It’s just sorta a boy thing, Daisy. I guess he feels that maybe his friends will look down on him if he brings a girl with him when he goes places. But that still doesn’t make leaving you behind right.”

“I just want him to love me, Uncle Jesse.”

Her sad plea tore at his heartstrings. He hugged her close and ran a hand through her hair, gently starting to untangle the knots. “I know, baby. I know.” Then he sat back a little, brightening. “Maybe Bo will play with you.”

“He went swimming. I couldn’t go because it was just the boys.”

“Oh.” Jesse understood. He’d been on more than one skinny-dipping trip to the creek himself when he was a boy. Then he frowned a little, curious about something. “Daisy, why don’t you find some girl friends? I’m sure some of the girls in town would like you just fine. Especially once you start school.”

“Yes. But…” She bit her lip, looking a little embarrassed.

“What?”

“I… I just want to play with Bo and Luke,” came out in a sudden rush.

“Why?” he smiled.

She shrugged a little. “Their games look like a lot more fun. I… in the city, I’ve always had to be careful, be a lady.” She made a face, the first time that Jesse had ever seen her express discontent with her old life. “You know. Walk, don’t run; play quietly; don’t get dirty.”

“Oh?” he said carefully, suspecting that he was getting ready to see into the tight-locked heart of his young niece.

Daisy nodded, her eyes meeting his seriously. “Yes. Those have been my aunt’s rules ever since Mama and I went to live with her. She wanted me to be a lady. I’ve always done girl things, played with dolls and stuff. When I came here, you said you’d let me play in the fields, or climb trees. You let me wear pants, not just pants but jeans. And Luke and Bo could teach me to fish, and to play baseball… I wish they would.”

“I think I get the picture,” Jesse said softly.

She nodded, hard, the words now pouring out of her. “I’d like baseball and fishing and stuff. I’d like playing with their toy cars, even. It just seems… that boys have so much more fun.”

“Well, honey, that’s not always true in Hazzard,” he said slowly. “This ain’t the city, mind you. Girls can play rough here just as much as boys can.”

“But I just want to play with Bo and Luke.” Her voice and eyes were earnest.

Jesse sighed inwardly. She had her heart set on making her cousins her friends, and she had her teeth into the idea as stubbornly as any Duke could, despite her ladylike demeanor. “Well, maybe Luke just needs time.” Then, remembering why he’d come up in the first place, “But you shouldn’t leave a mess like you did.”

“Huh? Oh.” She bit her lip. “I’m sorry, Uncle Jesse. I was trying to clean up… I guess I forgot.”

“Well,” he stood, “if you come down and clean it all up, we’ll just consider it not done, all right?” He had too much work of his own to do; she had to clean up her own messes. He couldn’t coddle her, any more than he could the boys.

She scrambled to her feet. “Okay. Just… Uncle Jesse?”

“What?”

“Don’t tell Luke I was talking to you about it, okay? I… I don’t want him to call me a tattletale.”

Jesse shook his head, smiling slightly. Sometimes he could just not understand the logic of children. “Well… all right.”

“Thank you.” She ran out the door.

And ten minutes later, as she picked up the last of the dirty towels that she’d used to clean the counter with, carrying it and the others off to the laundry room, he smiled slightly. Daisy was a one-of-a-kind girl, that was for sure. The way things were going, the perfect young lady from Atlanta just might be a rough-and-tumble tomboy before the year was out!

Homework

by: Sarah Stodola

NOTE — This vignette happens not too far before “Lady Daisy”. It actually started out as a little homework assignment of my own! 🙂

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HOMEWORK

“Leave me alone!”

I mock-scowl to hide a smile and put my fists on my hips. I love teasing my older cousin. “Why?”

He snatches the paper I hold clenched in my fist away and points toward the bedroom door, eyes flashing annoyance. I bite back a little bit of a giggle. This is fun, bugging him. I don’t really want him to get really mad, but I do want him to chase me. He ignores me unless I annoy him, sometimes. “Get out,” he repeats. “I’m trying to do my homework!”

I make a face and flop down on my stomach on my bed. “Aw, c’mon, you gotta be done by now!” He seems to spend *forever* working on his homework nowadays. He never has any time for me anymore. I miss the times when we would have maybe an hour of homework after school and then go running off through the woods to go swimming or fishing, or just to play some game. But lately, all he ever does on weekday afternoons is schoolwork, it seems. And then on the weekends, he takes off with his other friends. He used to be my best friend, but now he acts just like all the other older kids — he doesn’t seem to want to be around me. It bothers me, a lot.

“Well I ain’t, so get.” He smoothes out the paper I was holding away from him.

“What’s that?” Maybe I can at least get him to talk to me about *something*, even it is the dreaded H-word. Homework, that is.

He doesn’t even look at me, just sits down on his bed, across from mine, and puts a book in his lap to write on. “The start of a paper.”

“What about?”

“Why do you care?”

I sit up, scowling like only a lonely, somewhat angry seven-year-old can. “Cause you never do anything with me anymore.”

“That’s not true. I do stuff with you all the time.” He sighs hard and looks up at me, anger starting to tint his light blue eyes now. “Look, just go away, why don’t you? I’ve gotta finish this for tomorrow, and it’s gotta be two pages!”

“What’s the problem?” I ask. We’ve had to write reports that long before. We always do it together; that way, it’s more fun and doesn’t take as much time. “Can I help?”

“First, the problem’s that I don’t know what to write about!” Frustrated, he balls the paper he just smoothed out up and tosses it in the trash can by the head of his bed. “And second, I don’t need your help! You’re just seven! Now just take off, will ya!”

I clench my jaw, eyes burning with anger and hidden tears, and get up to stalk out the door and down the hall. Just seven, huh? Like ten is so old! I force a smile for Uncle Jesse, who smiles back as I go through the kitchen where he’s sitting, but once outside, I swipe the back of my hand across my eyes roughly. I will not cry! Not! That’s a silly, girlish thing to do.

But sometimes I just really want to. I jump down off the porch without bothering with the steps. I stuff my hands in my pockets, shivering a little at the cold October air, and kick at a rock aimlessly as I wander across the yard. Ever since the first couple of weeks of school, Luke’s been too busy to play with me. Either he’s doing homework or he’s off running around with his other friends. It’s just the two of us, no brothers or sisters, so I have nobody to really do anything with. I don’t talk to most of the kids in my class at school; I don’t want to do something silly and get called a baby. Which is what they call me whenever I let my emotions go. Problem is, I don’t find it near as easy as my cousin does to hide what I’m feeling, especially when I’m hurt. He never used to care, and I’d be pretty much happy as long as he and Enos would play with me.

But Enos went with his parents out of town for a couple of weeks visiting kin, and Luke’s too busy. And I got nothing to do.

I finally sit down on a hay bale in the barn and scratch behind Bonnie Goat’s ears when she gently butts my leg. “You’re my friend, ain’tcha?” I whisper.

“Maa,” is all she has to say, waggling her tail. I try to sniff back tears, but all of a sudden I can anymore, and I slide down the side of the bale to hide my face in my hands and cry quietly. My older cousin doesn’t understand. He just doesn’t. I feel so alone… like nobody really cares about me anymore. I know that’s not true; Uncle Jesse does. But Luke doesn’t, not anymore. I’ve lost my best friend, my big brother I could always look up to, and it hurts very deeply.

It seems like forever that I sit in the barn, alone except for Bonnie and her baby. The sky darkens slowly, and I curl up around myself, shivering. I don’t really feel like going back indoors yet, even though it’s getting cold. I don’t want to face Luke and let him know that I’ve been crying. Cause he’ll know. And the way he’s acting right now, he might not care. That would hurt as much as his yelling at me in the first place. Maybe even more.

Suddenly I hear footsteps. “Bo?” a familiar voice calls softly. “You in here?”

I grit my teeth and don’t answer. I don’t want to give him the satisfaction.

“C’mon, little cuz, I’m sorry. Come in; it’s cold out here.”

I swallow, trying to keep my anger and not answer. But my shivering is making it harder and harder. Especially when I imagine warm food and a lit fire.

“Bo?” Then Luke comes around the hay bale I’m hiding behind, and sighs in what sounds almost like relief. He crouches down next to me. It’s too dark to see the emotion in his eyes, but I can hear that he’s been worried. Why? He was the one who threw me out. He puts a hand on my shoulder. “I’m sorry, okay? I didn’t really want to hurt you. I was just… frustrated.”

“Lemme alone,” I finally mumble. But the truth is, I don’t really want him to leave me all alone again. I don’t like being alone, usually. I always want someone with me. I fight to stay mad at him, but I can’t. I’m cold, and hungry, and lonely, and miserable.

He starts to back off, slowly, unhappily, but then I finally give in and turn to him, flinging my arms around my older cousin’s neck and burying my face in his shoulder. He hugs me back wordlessly.

“Don’t leave, Lukas,” I whisper. “Don’t leave me alone. Not again”

“Again?” He pauses, pulling back a little. “You think I’ve been leaving you alone?”

“Yeah. You have.” I sniffle, tears threatening again. “You’re always too busy to talk to me or play with me. You always go off with your friends and leave me alone. I don’t have anybody else to play with, Luke! You’re my best friend!”

“I’m sorry…” He hugs me tight again. “Honest.” He actually sounds like he means it. “I didn’t know… I didn’t mean to ignore you.”

“I ain’t mad.” It’s the truth, I’m not mad anymore. “Just… don’t leave me alone anymore. Talk to me. Let me go with you when you go places. Something!” I’m about to break down again, and I do, sobbing like I normally would only with Uncle Jesse. All the loneliness and hurt of the past weeks comes out all at once. Around the other kids, I would feel embarrassed to cry like this, but not with Luke. He knows how I am inside. He understands. Except for lately.

We just sit there together in the hay for a while, silent, holding onto each other, then finally he clears his throat hesitantly. “Bo? You… you wanna help with my paper? You got a good imagination. Maybe you can come up with an idea for a short story.”

I sniff and rub my hands over my eyes. “…Yeah. I guess so.”

“And look, why don’t we go fishin’ tomorrow after school, okay? Just you ‘n me; nobody else.”

I can’t help the wide grin that spreads across my face. Everything’s gonna be all right now! I just know it. I can’t say why, but I just *know* it. So there! “Yeah, sure, Luke. Sounds like fun.”

I can hear his smile in his voice. “Come on. Let’s go in.”

Arms around each other, we walk out of the barn and toward the house, where Uncle Jesse stands in the warm, welcoming porch light, smiling and waiting understandingly for his boys.

END

The First Hello

by: Sarah Stodola

NOTE — This is an alt-universe story that happens before Daisy comes to the farm. It does not happen in the “Cousins” universe either, but in one all its own. It’s also based in its entirety on a song. I wrote out the chorus, but if you tend to listen to country music, I suggest you pay attention to the verses, too. (1st verse – Bo, 2nd verse – Luke.) A little disclaimer – the song’s by Kenny Chesney; I claim no rights to it whatsoever!

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

**THE FIRST HELLO**

You had me from hello
I felt love start to grow
The moment that I looked into your eyes
You owned me
It was over from the start
You completely stole my heart
And now you won’t let go
I never even had a chance, you know
You had me from hello

*******************

I was sitting on the front porch the first time I saw him. I was whittling, with my brand-new knife Uncle Jesse had given me for my eighth birthday four days ago, carving out what would be a car once I sanded and painted it. But first I had to shape it roughly, and that was what I was doing at the moment. I set my work down and straightened as my uncle’s familiar white pickup pulled into the yard and up to the house.

He had gone to Atlanta to pick up someone. I wouldn’t be alone here anymore. He was four years older than me, but it didn’t matter, in my opinion. He was another kid, another boy. We could go fishing and swimming together, and talk and run and play. We could share a room and talk late into the night. He could maybe even help me with my math homework. I was terrible at math, and Uncle Jesse and I had to struggle through it every evening after supper. My older cousin could be like my big brother, Uncle Jesse had said. I’d been unhappy for a bit about the thought of having to share him, and the farm, with anybody, but after thinking on it a bit, I’d decided I was dang-blasted *happy*! Now I couldn’t wait to meet my cousin. I hoped he’d be as glad to meet me.

Uncle Jesse was the first out of the truck. I sat still on the porch for only a couple of seconds, then I couldn’t stand it any longer and jumped up to greet our new arrival. “Steady, there,” Uncle Jesse chuckled at me, coming over and putting hands on my shoulders. “He’s been injured, remember. He won’t want you climbin’ on him.”

Oh. Yeah. Uncle Jesse had said that he and his family had been in a train wreck. He had been one of the very few survivors. His parents hadn’t been. He was an orphan now, like me. “Oh, okay,” I sighed, wanting so badly to run over to that truck.

Uncle Jesse motioned for me to stay put, and I sank back down on the steps with my chin in my hands, sighing again and blowing my too-long bangs out of my eyes. Oh, darn. I’d forgotten I couldn’t play with him right away. He had to have time to heal. I just hoped he wouldn’t be too grumpy because he was hurt. Sometimes I got like that, like the time I broke my leg and couldn’t move around much for a week. I guessed I’d have to tone down my normal energy and activity level for a while.

Then the door opened and he jumped down. At first his back was to me, but then he turned to shut the door with the arm that wasn’t in a sling, and glanced over at me. Our eyes met for the first time, and strangely, something about him grabbed me from that very moment. I wasn’t quite sure why… but I liked him.

“Bo,” Uncle Jesse was saying, “this is your cousin Luke. He’s twelve. Luke, this is Bo, and he’s eight. He’s lived here since he was four; I bet he’d show you around. Probably even if you don’t ask him to,” he chuckled. “He’s pretty energetic. Ain’t that right, Bo?” I nodded vaguely, but I was too busy just looking to really answer.

His eyes were ice blue. The kind of color that you just don’t see in people’s eyes, only in coloring pencils, a real contrast to my own almost midnight blue. They were also wary, cautious, and I couldn’t help but smile, to try to make him feel better. A few seconds passed, then an answering smile slowly flickered through his eyes. His face didn’t move at all, but I could see the smile nonetheless. It made my heart leap, though again I wasn’t sure why.

Then I somehow managed to tear my eyes away from his and stand up, to glance over the rest of what he looked like. City clothes concealed a build that wasn’t near as light as mine. He was either muscular or stocky. But I didn’t care which at the moment. He was my cousin. And hopefully my friend. He had dark hair that was combed, obviously with water, on top, but around his ears and neck it showed its true nature in curls that looked as though nothing could quite tame them. The only evidence that he’d been in an accident was a square bandage over his left eye, and the sling his right arm was in. He held himself with a defiant confidence that in itself betrayed his uncertainty, but I knew that once he’d settled in, he would be much more the leader than I. Somehow, I didn’t mind at all. I would love to follow him, anywhere.

I finally brought my eyes back to his, to find him studying me with as little manners and as much curiosity. Smiling a little, I turned a little away, toward the house, and tilted my head enough sideways so that I could peek out at him, feeling almost shy, from under the tousled thatch of blond hair that predictably fell downward. I could feel his eyes on me, seeing my rough, somewhat dirty jeans and oversized shirt, proof of a rough farm life. “Hi, Luke,” I finally spoke up. “Welcome to Hazzard.” And to my life, I thought happily.

He just stood still for a few seconds, then a real smile slowly slid across his face, and the ice in his eyes softened incredibly. “Hello.”

His voice was soft. Not the same way mine was, not quiet, and lower pitched than mine too. It was soft in a different way, a way I couldn’t quite explain. *Hello.* With that single word, I knew I’d found a friend for always. “Come on,” I greeted my cousin, going over to put my hand on the screen door handle. I looked back at him and smiled widely. “Why don’t we go inside?”

I took one of his suitcases and he took the other, and Uncle Jesse followed us into the kitchen. I watched Luke as he looked around, eyes open with interest. “I… I’ve never been on a farm,” he admitted. “This is nice.”

I leaned against the kitchen wall, still grinning like an idiot. “Well, you’ll love it! It’s a whole lot of fun. I like to play in the hayloft and the open fields, and fish and go swimmin’ and…” I trailed off and shrugged. “I can’t wait to show you everything!”

He smiled briefly at me again. “Okay. That’d be nice.”

He talked city. Not as casual and improper as I and Uncle Jesse did. But I was sure that would change soon. “Okay,” I finally echoed. “Wanna see where you’re gonna sleep?”

He shrugged. “Sure.”

“C’mon.” With a quick grin at Uncle Jesse, I carried the suitcase I’d taken into the house through the living room and down the short hall to my room. I hesitated in front of the door. “I thought you wouldn’t mind sharing with me… we do have another room, if you’d like-”

“No,” he interrupted me. “It might be neat to share a room. I don’t really want to be alone.”

“I guess I understand that. I hate being alone for a long time too.” I shoved the door open with my foot and led the way in. Uncle Jesse and I had taken the top bunk off of the bunk beds, and all my junk off it, and made it up into a real bed, across a short space from my own. I’d even cleaned up the closet and everything, to make room. I’d been excited about having a cousin living here from the day I’d first found out he was coming. I turned to look at him. He was gazing around at everything. “So, what’d’ya think?”

“Nice.” His serious eyes flicked across mine, then he put down his suitcase and went over to look out the window. “Which bed is mine?”

“This one,” I gestured. “As for nice,” I added mischievously, “it probably won’t last. I cleaned the room before you came.”

“So you’re a bit of a… well, not slob but…” He groped for words.

“Casual?” I supplied, grinning.

“Yeah.”

“Uh-huh. Uncle Jesse says too much. But…” I shrugged my lack of care about that. “So, want any help unpacking?”

“No…” he replied, “but thanks. I guess I’d just like some time to think, okay?”

I paused a minute, then nodded. “Okay.” Heading for the door, I gestured around. “This side of the closet and the bottom drawers of the dresser are yours.”

“Right.” I waited for him to say something else, but he didn’t, so I finally just started out into the hall. But then he spoke. “Bo?”

I spun around, maybe too eagerly, I realized after the fact. He didn’t seem to notice, though. “Yeah?”

He smiled, slightly. “Thanks. Cousin.”

My grin could have lit up the town. “Sure thing.”

I turned again and headed back to the kitchen to talk to Uncle Jesse, heart more light than I’d felt in as long as I could remember. I didn’t see him at first, but then, as I turned around, frowning, I noticed a red cap outside on the porch, and followed the beacon it was. Only Uncle Jesse had that hat.

He turned and looked at me as I came outside. “Luke gettin’ settled?” he asked.

I nodded and skipped across the porch to land on the steps next to him. “Yep. He wanted some time alone. I guess to sort things out. He’s just so serious!”

He nodded, looking out across the yard again and nibbling on a piece of straw. “He has a lot to sort out. Suddenly orphaned at twelve…” He shook his head. “It was real hard on him. Still is. Don’t expect too much all at once, Bo.”

“I won’t,” I promised. I could wait forever to gain his friendship. It would be worth it to me.

Then Uncle Jesse looked at me again, and I saw something in his eyes, something that bored right through into my soul, laying all my feelings bare. “You like him a lot, don’t you?”

I nodded. “He’s my cousin… and even more, he’s nice. We’re gonna have so much fun…” I grinned honestly. We would, I was sure. Having another boy around to play with would be a dream come true. “And there’s somethin’ special about him… I just want to be his friend so bad…”

Uncle Jesse stood, and held out his arms to me. “I know, Bo, you’ve wanted a friend for a long, long time, haven’t you?”

“Uh-huh.” I came forward into a hug, then stepped back, lower lip between my teeth thoughtfully. “Uncle Jesse?”

“Yes?”

“When do you think Luke will be normal, stop hurtin’ so much? Could I do somethin’ to help?”

“Give him time, Bo. Just give him time. What he needs right now is gentleness, understanding. Okay?”

I nodded vigorously. “Sure thing!”

“Then just let him relax, get over his grief and shock. He’ll be your friend. Just give him a chance and a reason. Now,” he smiled, “why don’t you go back in there and tell Luke dinner’ll be ready in a few minutes.”

I nodded again. “Sure thing, Uncle Jesse. And… thanks.”

“Thanks?”

I hugged him. “Just for lovin’ me so much.”

“Oh, Bo, I couldn’t ever do anything but. You’re my little boy.” He hugged me back, then shooed me off with a light slap on the rear. “Now go.”

I went back into the house, then wandered down the hall to my — no, our — room, not only to carry the dinner message, but also to see what Luke was doing.

I hesitated outside the door, frowning. I almost thought I heard something… I knocked lightly. No answer. I knocked again.

“Luke?” I called softly. “You okay?” When I still got no answer, I turned the knob. I knew I was supposed to leave him alone, but… it was my room too, after all. A moment later, compassion almost overwhelmed me. Without thinking twice, I ran in and knelt down beside my cousin’s bed, putting a hand on his shoulder. “Luke?”

He threw an arm over his eyes, just barely too late, not wanting me to see his tears. The movement belied just how fragile he was right now, at least emotionally, despite his show of stubborn strength. “Go ‘way,” he mumbled, turning over to face the wall and curling up even tighter.

“No.” I stubbornly got up and sat on the bed beside him. “Tell me what’s wrong.”

“What’s wrong?!” He flipped over so fast that I jumped. I saw a mix of pain and confusion and fury burning in his eyes, so hot it almost scared me. “You wanna know what’s wrong?!”

Swallowing, I lifted my chin and nodded. That look unnerved me… but I felt I had to stick this out.

Luke sat up, swiping angrily, embarrassedly, at his eyes. I guess he thought he shouldn’t cry in front of me or something. “My mom and dad are gone. Gone forever! Ain’t that enough reason?”

I looked at the floor and bit my lip. “I lost my parents too,” I whispered.

“But you were so little! You probably didn’t even know what happened, did you?”

I shrugged, determined to bear the onslaught and reach the hurting boy underneath. “I knew my mommy and daddy weren’t there any more. I knew I was being taken in by somebody else. When I came here, I was kinda scared and hurt, and I didn’t want nobody but my mom, not even Uncle Jesse. But I’ve learned to love him so much, and the farm, and now I wouldn’t trade my life for nothin’.”

“I would!” he snapped fiercely. “I would do anything to have my parents and my life back.”

I frowned. “Once you get to know this place, and Uncle Jesse, you wouldn’t.”

“Would too!” He drew his knees up under his chin and hugged them close, squeezing his eyes shut. Tears leaked out of the corners despite himself.

I hesitated. I had an incredible urge to reach out, to show him that life could be special here, but I was afraid to. He had so many barriers up against the outside world… I didn’t know if he’d push me away. But then I looked at my cousin, curled into himself, quivering with the fight to not cry, and I couldn’t not do anything. I put a hand on his shoulder, and he tensed, but before he could pull back and scowl again, I leaned forward and put my arms around him in a hug.

The position was awkward, but the act felt so right. I wanted to be here, with him, for always. I wanted him to always be there, as my friend, my brother… I barely even knew him, yet I felt this so strongly! It almost scared me.

“I want to be your friend, Luke,” I whispered. “Won’t you let me? Please?”

He didn’t move for a bit, but then, slowly, he unwrapped his arms, even the injured one, from around his knees and slid them around my shoulders. Sighing, I leaned my head on his shoulder and let him cry, constantly murmuring words of understanding, of friendship. It felt weird, acting suddenly so… adult. I was surprised when he finally answered me, his voice rough and shaky. “Why, Bo? Why?”

I sat back, smiling, and touched a hand to his eyes to wipe away the tears. Surprise and a slight amount of awe was directed toward me right now in those eyes. “Because I care about you. Because you’re my cousin. We’re gonna live together and play together, and I wanna be your friend. Maybe even your best friend. That’s why.”

“Me? You don’t even know me.”

I gave him one of my looks, the one that Uncle Jesse said made me seem older than I was, but in a gentle way, not a superior one. “I want to. Please?”

“But…” He suddenly tensed and jerked away, shoving my shoulder and hiding his face behind his arms. “Go away, Bo! I don’t need a little cousin to tell me what’s wrong with me!”

“I’m not,” I whispered. “I just want you to talk to me. I can keep a secret, even from Uncle Jesse, if you’d like.”

Luke peeked out, slowly. “Why?” he half-demanded. Yet, behind the rough, defiant tone, I could sense that he really wanted to believe me. “Why’d you do that for me?”

“Because I care,” I said again. “Because everybody has to have somebody to talk to. And,” I added with a quirk of humor, “I think we two are stuck with each other.”

Our eyes locked, and we just sat there for what seemed like forever. Finally he cleared his throat and reached out one hand. It was a small gesture, but one that I knew meant I had made some progress. “Th… thanks.”

I only smiled back, and squeezed the hand given to me between both of mine. “Uncle Jesse’s going to have dinner ready real soon,” I suggested. “Why don’t we go eat?”

He nodded, slowly. “Okay.” Then a miracle happened. He smiled. It was slow, uncertain, vulnerable, but it made my heart sing. I couldn’t help but throw my arms around him the moment he stood up, and hug tight. He froze and tensed for a second, but then slowly brought his arms up to hug me, too. I couldn’t hold back my happy grin even if I’d wanted to.

Uncle Jesse eyed us as we came into the kitchen, almost close enough to touch, but he said nothing besides, “Hey there, boys, why don’t you set the table?”

I looked to Luke, eyebrows up, for confirmation. His eyes widened. “What?”

“You’re older,” I said, as though that explained everything. I knew it didn’t really, but I still wanted him to be the leader.

He sighed, but finally looked at Uncle Jesse and forced a smile. “Sure thing.” We went to the job side-by-side, with a will born of working together. I guess he could feel my eyes on him, because he turned around a couple of times and smiled.

After dinner and a dishwashing detail, Luke took off to our room again. I started to follow, but Uncle Jesse stopped me halfway through the living room with a quiet, “Bo.”

I turned and gave a questioning look, walking back toward him. “Yes, sir?”

He set his paper down, then took his reading glasses off and looked at me from his chair. “Bo, you remember the talk we had earlier?”

I didn’t understand. “Yeah.”

“You remember I told you to lay off of Luke?”

“Yes, sir.” I looked him in the eye. “But he needs a best friend, Uncle Jesse. Somebody to always be there for him.”

“Is he having trouble? I know he hardly said a word the whole way here from Atlanta.”

“Well, he talks to me,” I shrugged. I thought a bit, then added, “Maybe he’s not scared by me cause I’m littler than him.”

“Smaller, Bo, not littler.”

I shrugged. I didn’t care about grammar, but Uncle Jesse expected me to try to stick to some of the rules at least some of the time. “Smaller, then. But you know what I mean.”

He just looked at me for a while, then slowly smiled and held out his arms. “Hug?”

I grinned and leapt forward to land in his lap and into his arms. “I think I love him, Uncle Jesse,” I confided. “Like a brother. A big brother.”

“I’m glad you two get along… but you didn’t answer my question,” he sobered. “Is he having trouble?”

“Sorta,” I admitted, twisting around to sit sideways in his lap and looking up into his eyes, as dark blue as my own. “It hurts him a whole whole lot, his mom and dad being gone. More than it hurt me.”

“Well,” Uncle Jesse sighed, “he’s a whole lot older than you were, too. You hardly even remember your parents, do you?”

“Not much anymore. Some. But mostly I remember you.” I smiled up at him with all the love in my heart.

He smiled in return, and rubbed my back. “I love you too, Bo,” he understood what I hadn’t even said. “And I care about Luke, too. He’s going to need some time to heal, maybe more emotionally even than physically.”

“Yeah. I can tell that.”

“He’s gonna need a friend.”

I looked at my uncle again, who was so much more like my father than anything else, with a mixture of love and fervency. “That’s what I said. And I’m gonna be his friend. His best friend. Maybe even like his brother.”

“Yeah,” he slowly smiled. “Maybe his brother.” Then he seemed to shake himself out of a half-dreaming state and boosted me up out of his lap, sending me off toward my room with a pat on the back. “Good night, Bo.”

“Good night, Uncle Jesse.” I shot him one more grin and ran down the hall. I burst into the bedroom at high speed, and Luke jumped visibly, spinning around from where he’d been looking at something. One-armed, he tried vainly to hide it behind his back.

“What are you doing here?”

I pulled a silly face. “It’s my room too, you know.” Then I craned my neck, trying to see. “Whatcha got there?”

“None of your business.”

“Sure it is.” I darted around him and snatched the framed photograph away before he could guard it. I ignored his half-angry protest, studying what I’d found. It was a picture of a dark-haired couple, young and happy, with Luke in the middle, grinning up at the man. “This your family?”

He scowled and crossed his arms, as best as he could, anyway. “Yeah. So what?”

“I have a picture of my folks too. Wanna see it?”

He hadn’t been expecting that. He hesitated before answering, “Sure.”

I handed his photo back and crossed to the little table between our beds. From the shallow top drawer, I pulled out a picture and gave it to him. Luke studied it closely.

“What happened to them?” he finally asked.

“They were killed in a car accident.”

“A lot like my parents, huh? You were pretty little, though. You remember much about them?”

“Some. But I don’t think about it much.” I shrugged, sitting down on my bed and patting the space beside me invitingly. “I guess I love Uncle Jesse more than I do their memory.”

Luke looked at me with an unreadable expression for a few seconds, then slowly came over and settled beside me. “You really love Uncle Jesse a whole lot, don’t you?”

“Yeah. He loves me too much for me not to. He’d love you too, if you’d let him.” I hesitated before saying the next. “So would I.”

He met my eyes, visibly fighting to hide tears again. “You would?”

I nodded, slow and sure. “I bet you’d love him too, if you tried. He’s real easy to love.” Then, slowly, honestly, I told him, “I already love you, Lukas. And I ain’t lyin’.”

He swallowed, hard, and swiped the back of one hand across his nose. “Honest?”

I nodded, and dug into my pocket to hold out my handkerchief. “Honest, Lukas.”

He took it and wiped his eyes and nose, and blinked. “Why do you keep calling me that?”

“Cause I like it.” I tilted my head to better meet his eyes. “You mind?”

“Umm… from anybody else, I think I would. But for some reason, not from you.” He slowly started to smile. “You can call me that, Bo. But just you. I… I kinda like you, too. Really, I do. You’re somethin’ kinda special, little cousin. Different… but special.”

I couldn’t hold back the thrilled laugh that burst out of me. I leaped to my feet and clapped my hands in sheer joy, then leaned forward and grabbed his shoulders in my hands. “Promise?” I demanded ecstatically. “Promise me we’ll be together forever?” For some reason, I wanted to stay by his side for the rest of my days. I wasn’t going to try anymore to figure out why, though; just enjoy this.

Grinning for the first time since I’d met him, he nodded. “Forever, Bo. I promise.”

I couldn’t hold back any longer. Landing heavily on the bed, knocking him backwards, I flung my arms around him and held on tight, burying my face in his shirt. After a brief, startled moment, he also wrapped his arms around me, and with everything that was in me I whispered a promise that I would keep until the day I died. “Forever, Lukas. We’ll be best friends forever. I swear.”

And I knew we always would. Somehow… I just knew.

THE BEGINNING…

Remembering You

by: Sara

I cant believe that Luke finally gets to come home today!, Bo said excitedly to his cousin Daisy and his Uncle Jesse.

I know Bo, its been a long four years, and I cant wait to see him again!, Daisy exclaimed giving Bo a hug.

It had been four long and painful years for the Dukes, but especially for Bo. When Luke
joined the Marines during the Vietnam War, Bo felt as lonely as he did when first came to the farm. That all changed when Luke befriended Bo and they promised to be friends forever.

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Echoes From the Past

by: Sara

“Come on Bo, we’re gonna be late!”, Luke yelled to Bo, who was in the farm house.

The two were going to the Boar’s Nest to meet up with Cooter and his cousin Dieter and
then got see Uncle Jesse in Atlanta Community Hospital.

“If ya don’t hurry up I’m comin in to getcha and things won’t be pretty.”

“Alright, Alright, I’m right here so ya don’t have to come and get me and can I drive?”.

“Hey guys, wait up, Dixie ain’t starting and I don’t have time to check it out. Can ya’ll
take me to the ‘Nest?”, Daisy called, runnin to the General Lee where Bo and Luke were gettin ready to climb in.

“Sure Daisy, hop in. And I guess since you’re in a hurry I can drive!”, Bo said and sped
off with a big YEEEEE-HAAAAA and Luke and Daisy joinin in.

Little did they know that somethin BIG was gonna change their lives.

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