Right To Vote
Situated between majestic Great Lakes and the marshes, Ortonville is much
like
any other small northern Michigan town. It was election day, looking
forward to
a visit to the ice cream shop, I accompanied my grandpa as he
drove the
fifteen-mile tripe into town. Country life offered little
excitement, but that
day an air of uneasiness replaced the usual contentment
I felt while passing
aged buildings, their drabness contrasted sharply by a
few colorful, modern
improvements. Having spent the first of my teen years
here, it was easy to
detect any change in the town's mood. I pondered the
worried expression on the
faces of the few people we saw on the streets. It
seemed everyone was in a
hurry. There were not the usual groups gathered to
exchange local gossip. Most
noticeable was the absence of kids playing in the
near by park. As my grandpa
messed with the radio in our rusted out Chevy, we
approached the traffic light,
greeted-not by flashing red, yellow or green,
but by uniformed police men armed
with guns and appearing much out of place
in such peaceful surroundings. As our
vehicle slowed to a stop, I was shocked
as I saw before me a huge machine gun,
pointed in our direction. A young
officer walked slowly to the truck and
explained, what was going on, "Sorry
Sir, but we'll have to search your
truck, just routine procedure." As the car
was being searched, we learned
the reason for such drastic precautionary
measures. A man whom we knew and who
was a candidate for the sheriff's
office, had been brutally murdered in the
presence of his wife and daughter.
It was rumored that the opposing party was
responsible for the fatal shotgun
blast, and other rumors stated that explosives
would be brought into town to
bomb the courthouse. As this unbelievable
information was being given, I sat
petrified, trying to convince myself that
this was the same town where, only
yesterday, I was shopping here with my
friends, and talking about school.
Where dogs and children had ran freely on the
sidewalks cops now stood with
shotguns. Strangely, all this had changed
overnight, and the preconceptions I
had about my peaceful country and the
glorious right to vote were beginning
to sound as a sour note. Marching through
the streets like ants, the cops
with guns gave the appearance of towns I had
seen in the movies. Towns which
did not know freedom, but captivity. "He'll
probably go home," I mused to
myself as my grandpa began changing the gears
to move on. Surely no one could
be so stupid as to go into that courthouse now!
Thinking how wonderful it
would be to get back to the safety of our farmhouse, I
was somewhat taken
aback when Grandpa parked near the entrance of the threatened
building. The
lines in his face seemed to be carved with determination, and
with
unfaltering stride he quickly mounted the steps to the building. A man
had died
at the hands of those who tried to control a county's right to vote.
That
"right" was now even more precious. Grandpa was going to vote.