After being expelled from a press conference and his house extended by cruel crankshaft, the father of the murdered teenager Austin Metcalf, however, honored his son by sharing a moving and sincere message on Easter Sunday, almost three weeks after his 17 -year -old son was fatally stabbed during a Texas high school meeting.
He arrived in the song of Country Singer Singer Will Dempsey called “Beat You There” that Metcalf published on Facebook. Hello, he wrote it: “I love you Austin. Happy Easter.”
Bitterweet Opening and Opening Lyrics:
I don’t know why God always takes the good first
And man, I have tried to be strong and continue, but damn it, this hurts
And I just want to be able to speak with you somehow, somehow
Even if it’s for a moment, so I can hear you sayDon’t cry for me, I’m fine
I am better than you know
And this life can be a short trip
So don’t wash sadness
And just cling to those moments
And the memories we share
We both headed to the same place anyway
I just hit you there
Look:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WGMDU5idB34
The high school student Karmelo Anthony is accused of stabbing the duration of the metal metal.
Anthony, also 17 years old, faces a first -degree murder charge, but was returned home and is under the house trial after his family recorded his $ 250,000 union.
The teenager and his family insist that he acted in self -defense.
Earl this week, Metcalf’s father told New York Post He had hoped to pray with the family of his son’s alleged murderer, but he was “missed” when he appeared at a press conference organized by the family of the defendant Slayer and was expelled.
The family defender, a self -written minister that he himself has a criminal record, ventured into the father after Metcalf left, as if he were a son of perpetrator and Anthony and his family were the victims.
Metcalf said he did not take into account the will, but that he simply wanted to “represent Austin” in response to people who belittled online, painting the late adolescent as a violent thug.
However, after the improvised appearance, both Metcalf and his ex -wife sent the police to their houses in “beaten” jokes.
Another set of lyrics in the song, without a doubt, captures Metcalf’s feelings not only around the death of his son, but also the inexplicable attacks to the family of a tragic loved one:
I know they say: “Just give it a little time, you’ll be fine”
That could be true, but it really doesn’t help me today
And we are not supposed to question the man above
There is so much that I don’t understand, it just doesn’t seem fair.
Lowell Cauffiel is the best selling author of Under the line and nine other criminal novels and non -fiction titles. See Lowellcauffiel.com For more.