topic: NATURE medium: text
There were thinks at the bottom of the river. They told me so. I believe them. Most days I walk the mile from home, down the woods to the place where the water kisses the twigs.
The water was dark and dirty. I could not see past the black rippling surface. I always wondered. I would stand, the cold wind whipping my cheeks, making my nose run and turn pink at the tip. I never felt as though I mocked me. I know many felt it did. They were downright angry at the river. I wouldn’t be surprised if all the river has ever seen is shaking fists and wagging fingers.
“It knows.” they would say. Some had dark eyes; others had heavy weights on their backs. What it is the river knows, they never say.
I figured the river’s silence might have something to do with those fingers people have been wagging at it. So one day I cut the weeds that had grown around one of the small rowboats lined at the mouth of the river. It bobbed loose and waited for me. I stepped in slowly, almost afraid, but not quite. The kind of anxiousness you feel when doing something that feels dangerous but isn’t actually so.
I grabbed hold of the paddles and rolled out slowly a little ways, just out to the center of it. Then I pulled the paddles up and sat there humming a tune to cut the silence pushing pressure in my ears. For good measure, I reached out a hand and stroked the water twice. It rippled far but slowly, as though taking it in and enjoying itself. Maybe it was a wind in the trees, but something sounded a lot like a sigh.
After a bit I paddled back. The water seemed to guide me, to offer me back up to land. I walked home slow, feeling lighter. As though I knew something I didn’t before. But I had no words for it.
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