A Piedmont Lantern Story
If it hadn’t rained that night, everything would have turned out way different, because Jimmy Matthew and Jim Leroy Cartwright had made plans, and those plans were of the sort that depended entirely on dry ground, clear skies, and good sense, which meant they were doomed before supper was over.
The rain came in quiet at first. One of those polite April rains that taps once on the tin roof like it’s askin’ for permission. Jimmy Matthew heard it while he was sittin’ on the edge of his bed, lacin’ one boot and hummin’ a tune he didn’t know the end of. Jim Leroy was supposed to meet him at the big chinaberry tree near the old logging road, and by then Jimmy had already thrown out three separate lies to cover his absence from home.
That was the first sign of trouble.
The second sign came when the rain decided politeness was overrated. It rattled the roof, slapped the windows, and came down hard enough to flatten the dust in the road like somebody had taken a giant iron to it.
Jimmy Matthew grinned.
“Well,” he said to no one, “that don’t settle nothin’.”
He slipped out anyway.
Jim Leroy was already under the chinaberry tree, soaked to the knees and lookin’ like a man who had made peace with regret early in life.
“You came,” Jim Leroy said.
“I said I would,” Jimmy replied.
“It’s rainin’,” Jim Leroy pointed out.
“Yes,” Jimmy said. “But not on our intentions.”
Their intention, the ill-fated heart of the matter, was to explore what remained of the old drainage tunnel behind the ice plant. Jimmy Matthew had heard from somebody who heard from somebody else that the tunnel led under half of Piedmont and opened up somewhere near Terrapin Creek. Jim Leroy didn’t believe a word of it, which made him the perfect companion.
They slogged down the logging road, mud pullin’ at their boots like it wanted souvenirs. The rain turned the woods shiny and alive. Frogs hollered at one another like they was complainin’ about the weather report. Something large crashed through brush nearby, which Jimmy Matthew announced was either a deer or destiny.
The tunnel entrance yawned before them, dark and breathin’ cool air that smelled like rust and secrets.
Jim Leroy stopped.
“Jimmy,” he said carefully, “if this was a bad idea dry, it’s reached legendary status now.”
Jimmy Matthew crouched and peered inside.
“Rain makes things interestin’.”
Rain had already begun to collect inside the tunnel, turnin’ the dirt floor slick and sendin’ little silver threads of water down the walls. They crept in anyway, talkin’ louder than necessary, which is what people do when they want to pretend they ain’t scared out of their wits.
Halfway through, the rain made its decision.
Water rushed in from behind, not fast, but steady. It was the kind of water that don’t threaten. It just insists.
Jimmy Matthew turned.
“Well,” he said, “that seems new.”
Jim Leroy’s voice went tight.
“How much rain did we get?”
Jimmy thought.
“All of it, I reckon.”
They backed out a lot quicker than they went in, boots slippin’, hearts poundin’. The tunnel murmured and swallowed water like it had been sufferin’ from dehydration. By the time they scrambled free, the entrance had become a mouth full of brown teeth and foam.
They stood there, breath steamin’, rain streakin’ down their faces, realizin’ all at once that if they had gone ten steps farther, the story might have ended up with a search party and a quilt folded on a church pew.

For a long moment, neither spoke.
Then Jimmy Matthew laughed, shaky and loud.
“Well,” he said, “that turned out educational.”
Jim Leroy didn’t laugh right away. He stared at the floodin’ tunnel, rain drippin’ off his hair, and said, “If it just hadn’t of rained…”
Jimmy nodded.
“Yeah,” he said softly. “Everything would have turned out way different.”
The rain eased up by the time they made it back into town. Porch lights flickered on. Mothers called names into the dusk. The world went back to normal with no idea how close it had come to keepin’ a secret forever.
That night, Jimmy Matthew lay awake listenin’ to water drip from the eaves. He didn’t tell anybody how close they came to bein’ foolish past redemption.
Some stories only exist because rain shows up at the right time.
And some lessons arrive wet, muddy, and shaken, but thankful.
If it hadn’t rained that night, there would’ve been a story all right.
It just wouldn’t have been the one anybody wanted to hear.

