Nature

Waiting

The wind whispered through the long grass, blowing it gently into a lullaby of soft sounds. The grass rustled and the lake stirred as the setting sun dripped down the sky and below the stretch of trees that marked the horizon. The stains it left were stunning. Pinks and oranges smeared across the sky. They dripped lazily down the great sky, leaving behind a vast carpet of deep blue, intense and enveloping. As a myriad of stars became visible and bewitching with their bright twinkles, a little girl walked down the pathway to the dock. She pulled her hair back from her face and let the wind lift up the ends of it and toss it playfully. She was a very small girl, about five years old or so, with long red hair and freckles dotting her face. She had green eyes that shone like the tops of lighthouses, beckoning and beaming with a welcoming glow. Only today her eyes had lost their glow and the color in them had been washed away by tears. She sat on the edge of the dock and dipped her toes through the clear water. She looked up at the sky and watched the last rosy finger of the sunset disappear under the tall pine trees. She sighed heavily. It figured. Things were always disappearing before she got to them. Like the horse that she had wanted to ride at Holiday Acres, up the highway. Her mother had finally consented to the idea, and, grinning, the little girl had skipped up to the stables. The rustic smell of horses had filled her nose, tickling it with this new aroma of hay and wet hair. She rushed up to the large horse that stood tall above her, grinding hay between his strong jaws. He was handsome, brown dotted with white spots along his rump, as though some careless artist had waved a paintbrush over him, leaving him speckled. Then a young woman, flushed with heat and excitement, grabbed the horse’s halter and led him out of the ring. The little girl watched and saw another little girl, rosy with excitement and delight at her first horse ride, get lifted up and patted gently on the back; she was settled into the saddle. The horse tossed its head haughtily, though one could tell it was really his pleasure to be trotting off into the wooded trails with the little girl on his back, bobbing up and down and shrieking happily with each bump. The little girl sat on the dock and dipped her toes into the water. She slowly kicked them back and forth, back and forth, gently easing them into the warm lake as she contemplated it all. The other little girl probably wanted to ride the horse as much as she did, if not more, and was probably aching to for a while, just as she had. And suddenly, it didn’t matter, missing out on the horseback ride, for another little girl’s terrible want and longing had been fulfilled. The little girl sat back and thought some more. She was usually not very thoughtful; she was often too playful to think too much. But now, as the sun’s light sank out of view and the stars crept into the night sky, she thought about everything. Why was it that things disappeared before she got to them? Why did the sun set at night? Why were the stars scattered about the sky? Why did we have to wait until morning for the sun to smile again? She rushed up to the large horse that stood tall above her, grinding hay between his strong jaws And suddenly, all her thoughts were about waiting. Waiting for all the stars to twinkle, waiting for the pearly disk of the moon, waiting for the sun to rise up once more. Waiting for her mother to come home from her business trip in Milwaukee. Waiting for her chance to do something that usually disappeared before she reached it. Why did they have to wait? She thought hard about it, and unconsciously her mouth twisted into a little pout of concentration. Why did they have to wait? Waiting was not a thing, or an action, it was a state of being, she decided. A dangerous state of being. It was a time when people could become enveloped in self-pity, shrivel into a ball of nothingness. It was a time when doubt and deception could easily take control of the minds of people who were scared and alone because they were waiting, just waiting, for someone to come, or someone to go, or someone to stop and give them a hand because they needed one . . . And suddenly it wasn’t fair, all this waiting. It wasn’t right, it wasn’t tolerable, it wasn’t fun and it wasn’t safe. Maybe it would be better not to be waiting at all, so you wouldn’t have to feel the pangs that were thrust into you when you wanted something badly. Maybe it would be better not to be alive at all. This thought struck wonder and fright into her. But if she were just a canoe she could see water, fish and flowers. She could see ospreys and eagles, the three islands in Lake Katherine, the trees, the water lilies. The boathouse, the dock, the hydro-bike and the water-skiers. And she wouldn’t have to wait. But canoes had to wait too. Canoes had to wait for a chance to skim the surface of the lake. Canoes had to wait for passengers. Canoes had to wait for good weather. Did canoes feel tired and heavy when waiting so long? Did canoes feel sad about people forgetting about them? Did canoes feel as though things disappeared before they got to them? Almost desperately, she searched her mind for things that didn’t have to wait. Trees? No, a tree waited for rain so its roots could suck up water like giant straws. It waited for children

On the Beach

Sally walked slowly across the long stretch of brown sand, tripping over small pebbles blocking her path. She scurried down to the rocks, dirtyblond hair flying as she went. Casually, she brushed back her hair with a quick flick of her hand. She spied a blue blob among the rocks. She loved looking for long-lost tennis balls, Superballs and dog toys. She scampered hurriedly to the resting place of the blue blob. To her great disappointment, a Pepsi cup stuck out. She ignored it and darted between the rocks, peering between, in and around the rocks and crevices. Suddenly, a bright green ball caught her eye. “Fleepo!” she called, whistling for her brown mutt. The dog, long tongue, floppy ears and huge brown eyes, greeted her with a yap loud enough for the whole world to hear. She summoned her dog over to the green ball. Easily reached, she freed the ball from its nook between two large rocks. Sally grinned and threw the ball in the air. Fleepo sped across the rocks to catch the wild green blur. She snapped it up in her mouth and returned it to her owner. Sally threw the ball far out toward the water and watched as the small puppy dipped in to retrieve it. The pup, now covered in mud and water, dropped the ball proudly at Sally’s feet, ignoring the other dogs sniffing at her. Sally petted each new dog and let the ball fly. Each dog sailed down to the water and splashed up water almost reaching Sally. She laughed as they clambered over each other and waited until they returned the ball. As the ball took another trip through the air, Sally smiled and thought, Only dogs can make me happy that fast. He noticed his sister testing the water and sank under, planning his attack Jordan watched as a light brown lizard crawled carefully around the rocks. He grimaced as his loud brother stomped his way over to him. “Hi, Jordan.” His small brother collapsed into a heap of a large T-shirt and skinny legs. Jordan sensed a sadness in his brother’s tone of voice and turned. Sure enough, a glittering tear dripped down his brother’s face. Jordan patted his brother gently on his head. “What’s wrong, Parker?” His brother let both eyes roll down to his shoes and mumbled, “It’s Pete’s Sake. He’s gone.” “What happened?!” Jordan’s mind supplied thoughts of drowned dogs and paws sticking up in the air. He grimaced for a second time and stared at his brother. “I lost ‘im.” Jordan smiled to himself. You could not lose a dog in this park. All the dogs stuck together in here, either darting between rocks or soaring through the air to catch a ball. Jordan took his brother’s small hand and led him up the rocks. He peeked around the hills, pointed out good hiding spots of most of the dogs, and headed across the bridge. Still clutching his brother’s hand, Parker scanned the small hills around i8 the park. Sure enough, Pete’s Sake was romping around with two other dogs on a hill. Parker grabbed Jordan around the waist. “Oh, Jordan! Thanks so much! I was major worried!” Jordan smiled and led his brother back to the rocks. He showed him the former resting place of the lizard and continued searching for more. He didn’t even mind his brother’s pounding feet; suddenly lizards and noise didn’t seem that important anymore. On a sudden instinct, he grabbed Parker’s hand and took in his brother’s deep smile. Jordan just grinned back and didn’t let on the deep thought going on in his head. Only Parker can make me happy that fast, he thought, and skipped over three rocks to catch an escaping lizard. Solemnly, Rita crawled down to the rocks and pulled off her shoes. A glint of bright metallic light suddenly caught her interest, but she brushed it away from her mind like a piece of lint. She wiggled her toes slowly, disgusted at the dirt clodding her big toe. She scraped it off with a stick and watched the waves float in the sea. She heard her cousins discussing her bad mood and planted herself deeper into her foul feeling of disgust. The metallic glint caught her eye again and this time, to avoid and surprise her cousins, she got up to examine it. As she grew closer, a shiny seashell came into her view. Handling the shell like a cracked egg, she brought it close to her glowing eyes. Since it was abandoned by its previous owner, Rita claimed it and tucked it into a make- shift bag, giving her bandana to the cause. Suddenly, it seemed like the whole beach was shining. She collected shell after shell, passing brother, uncle and cousins on her way without even a mean glance. Finally when her bag was full, she carefully placed them into her basket, now unloaded of its earlier package of picnic food. She unwrapped the bandana and quickly skipped back to the damp sand of the bank of the ocean. Before she knew it, Rita was letting water tickle her toes as she reached for a large, shimmering red shell. Without full notice, she had rolled up her shorts and was thigh-deep in ocean water. She laughed as the water tickled her legs. Forgetting all about her foul mood, she gleefully showed her now interested brother about the shells. Soon, speckles of children could be seen, each slowly picking up fragile shells and placing them in bandana-bags. Rita delicately placed another shell in her bag and smiled, thinking, Only seashells could make me happy this fast. She helped her cousin carry up his bag without noting her kindness and climbed back down to the ocean of shells below her. Todd flicked an ant off his toe and rolled his eyes. His sister was flirting with two boys and he was disgusted. Finally, too bored for anything else, he left the

Foxes and Frogs

I’ve always loved to explore. Sometimes I’ll just put on my roller blades and go, turning onto the paths I know so well and trying to turn around corners I haven’t turned around before. Usually I only find more houses, but sometimes I’ll come out by the forest, which kind of looks all the same, but I don’t really think about that. The other day, when I first met Ally, I was skating over to the reservoir where I saw the fox a few weeks ago. The reservoir is in the middle of a huge, flat field covered with wild grass and prairie dogs and, of course, the reservoir. I saw the fox trotting over the stones to get a drink of water, clean, fresh running water that was spurting out of the wall. The fox had silky, fluffy, long fur and ears that pricked up at everything, and a sandpaper pink tongue like cats have. The tip of its tail was bright white like snow. Anyway, I guess Ally’d seen the fox too, because there she was, sitting on the stones of the reservoir, admiring her handful of dandelions and talking to herself. I sneaked up behind Ally like I had sneaked up behind the fox, as if she were an exotic specimen that could only be observed under silence. “Hi,” I said before I knew what in the world I was doing, and Ally didn’t jump three feet in the air like I would have, she just turned around and said “hi” back to me. “Hi froggy,” I mumbled, stroking its head “I’m Ally,” she told me, and tucked her stringy brown- blond hair behind her ear. “Who are you?” “Jessie.” I slowly sat down on the rocks. “What are you doing here?” “Oh . . .” Ally sighed dreamily and looked up at the sky. “I don’t know. I just felt like coming here. I like to do whatever I feel like doing.” I’d never met anyone who just did something if they felt like it. More often than not, someone did something because it seemed sensible and productive and interesting. It sounded like a nice life, doing whatever you felt like doing, not really caring if it was weird, maybe even useless. “I came to look for the fox,” I explained to Ally, feeling that if I asked her what she was doing, I had to at least say what I was doing myself. “That’s OK.” Ally twirled her hair around her finger. “Some people come down to shoot it, not to look at it.” “They do?” “Yep, the woman from the museum comes every day, to see if Foxy’s died during the night. I guess she doesn’t shoot it, but she wants it to die.” I noticed for the first time how hot it was that day. It was the middle of summer and Mom had said it was ninety-six degrees that day. “Do you want to go swimming?” Ally asked me brightly. “Swimming? Where?” “Here!” Ally took off her Tevas and walked down to the water. “It’s nice and cool, you know.” The water did look kind of inviting. “Are you sure we’re allowed to?” “Well, there aren’t any ‘No Swimming’ signs.” “Good point.” I slowly took off my socks. Mom always made us wear socks in the summer. I tiptoed over the rocks, burning my toes, to the water. “Don’t slip,” Ally warned me, but before I knew what was happening, I did slip. Right off a rock into the water. “Eek!” I squealed as my feet sank into the sand. I started to tilt backwards to the rocks. Ally grabbed my arm and pushed me back up. “Thanks.” Ally nodded. “I fall in all the time, and my mom gets angry at me. I wouldn’t want you to get in trouble too.” The fox! It stood on top of the rocks, staring hypnotically at the mountains The water was ice cold. I took a deep breath and slowly walked further into the water. When it was a few inches below the bottom of my shorts, I stopped. Ally walked in behind me. I wasn’t sure what was so interesting about standing in a reservoir, but Ally knew what to do. “Look for little splashes,” she told me. “There’s a frog over in this corner of the reservoir.” In a few minutes Ally had caught the frog. She held her hands together, her fingers twitching, then slowly opened up her hands. There sat a frog, looking like a short, oval-shaped pickle. “Here it is,” she said. I smiled down at the frog. “Hi froggy,” I mumbled, stroking its head. I’d always expected frogs to be slimy and gross, but this one felt like . . . well, it felt like a frog, if you know what frogs feel like. Ally dropped the frog back into the water. “Isn’t this fun?” I nodded. “It’s like . . . I don’t know, it just seems more like summer down here in the reservoir.” “Look!” Ally suddenly pointed behind me. I turned around slowly, and when I saw what it was, I gasped. The fox! It stood on top of the rocks, staring hypnotically at the mountains, its ear twitching just the slightest bit. It had a black nose and that fluffy fur, and white on the end of its tail, looking as bright as snow. Ally and I watched it for a few minutes until the fox left. “Wow,” I whispered. “Do you see her a lot?” “Yep.” “Amazing.” “Everything is amazing,” Ally said in a casual tone. “So if you want to see miracles, just go ahead. You shouldn’t let people stop you with that kind of stuff.” Everything was amazing. This seemed like a genius idea. “That sounds about right.” “It is.” Ally turned and looked right into my eyes, smiling. “It’s OK. Better than OK, even.” Then she turned away, walked up the rocks, and started to leave. Before she rode