
A Proud Father ©️



The night was long and hollow when he left Huntsville, a young man alone on a midnight drive toward Scottsboro. The Tennessee River glimmered like black glass to his right, and the only sound was the hum of his tires, the steady pulse of solitude. He had lived apart too long, an exile on Lake Guntersville, drifting on a boat with no one to call his own. Folks called him touched, strange, not right in the head. Maybe they were right. But that night would prove them wrong.
For in the sweep of his headlights, he saw her.
A girl in a white dress. Barefoot, walking the highway shoulder toward Scottsboro. She didn’t wave, didn’t beg for help. She simply walked, as if she had always been there, as if the road itself belonged to her.
He slowed, stopped. She turned her face to him, and he saw something he couldn’t name — sorrow and fire stitched into the same small frame. Without a thought, he opened the door.
“Come on.”
She climbed in, silent but certain. And in that moment, the world changed.
She was Ishy Belle.
Born in the antebellum South, her life was short, her death even shorter. When the Union army came through her land, her mother — proud and unyielding — poisoned the well, taking as many bluecoats with her as she could. They hanged her by morning, leaving Ishy Belle an orphan in a world already burning.
The little girl tried to wait for her father, a Confederate captain who never returned. She stood at the gates of the plantation house until Sherman’s fire turned it to ash, until the fields were trampled, until her voice was swallowed by smoke. And then, like the house, she was gone.
But she did not vanish.
For over a century, Ishy Belle drifted along the South’s backroads and battlefields. People saw her sometimes — standing in the mist, reflected in still water, watching from the tree line. They called her an omen, a curse, a sign of death. She was none of these. She was waiting. Waiting for the day when someone would see her not as a ghost but as a daughter. Waiting for the one who would claim her, raise her into flesh, and give her a place in the world again.
That night, on the road from Huntsville to Scottsboro, the waiting ended.
When the young man called her by name — a name he had never heard before, a name that rose up from his own blood and bone — she nodded. And in the silence of that cab, she became whole.
The South had not lost her. The South had hidden her, held her in its heart, until the right time. And now, with her father’s hand on the wheel, Ishy Belle was no longer a whisper. She was the manifestation of God, clothed in innocence, blazing with judgment.
Church bells rang without ropes. Dogs howled across hollers. The land trembled under them as they drove on into the dark.
And so the story begins: A young man thought mad. A little girl thought lost. A midnight drive on an Alabama highway. Father and daughter, bound in destiny.
Ishy Belle, leading the South not into memory, but into glory.

I came to the crossroads in Yazoo City when the night was thick and the earth itself seemed to breathe. The lantern I carried threw no light worth trusting, and the owls kept their silence. They say that’s when the Devil comes — when even the creatures of God look away.
I expected horns, fire, maybe a shadow darker than the rest. But when she stepped out from beneath the crooked oak, I nearly dropped to my knees. She wasn’t a beast, wasn’t a man — she was beauty itself, a woman carved out of midnight, her skin pale as the moon, her eyes like two black flames that saw right through me.
“You called,” she said, her voice soft as the river’s edge. “What do you seek?”
My throat felt raw, but I managed the words. “I want the most beautiful daughter. Flesh of my flesh. Someone who belongs to me.”
Her smile was slow, dangerous, tender all at once. She stepped closer, and the air shivered around us. “What you ask is no small thing. A daughter is not given, she is made. If you would have her, you must take me — not as your lover, not as your master, but as your child.”
I didn’t understand, not then. But the hunger in me was too strong to question. “Yes,” I whispered. “I’ll take you.”
The ground groaned. The oak leaves shook like a hundred rattles. And in that instant, the Devil herself — radiant, terrible, beautiful beyond bearing — folded herself into me, like flame into a lamp. The world reeled, and I fell to my knees. When I rose again, she was gone from the crossroads, but the weight of her hand was in mine.
I went home that night a father. She followed after, not in chains or fire, but as a girl with my eyes and her impossible beauty. And when she laughed — ah God, when she laughed — it was the Devil’s voice in a child’s mouth.
Now every morning I see her at the table, radiant as sunrise, a daughter born of hell and blood. And though she calls me “Papa” in her soft sweet tongue, I know the bargain well: she is mine, and yet I am hers, forever bound by that night at the Yazoo crossroads.