The Plover
Looking for a spot to be alone he wandered north
Rocks became a dried crust of mud where trees and grasses accustomed to inundation and summer drought made their home
Bound by the shore of the river he focused downward, not outward
Determining a spot to be, just for a while
He had left work behind, no one knew he was gone. No one would miss him
This will do
A westerly wind blew through the river gorge to the plains in the east shaking the wildflowers in a jubilant dance
He settled into a spot, the flowers becoming a quivering layer of purple and gold at eye level stretching a hundred feet
On his seat he overheard a plover’s cheep
Her dear man replied in kind upon the sand
And the human man faded from this place
On fleeting feet she checked the sand
And peered around the land for danger
And “cheep” called to her man
And with flowers jiggling and plovers peeping the human man un-faded back to this place for a bit and considered the wind blowing and the sun shining
He watched the plovers and wondered why they always filled him with such a strange sadness
Like a sweet red juice leaking from a fruit on a tree. One that had suffered an unexpected cut and had not yet scarred. One no one would eat
A single note, no song, but a call, filled with worrying love. A desperate call saying over and again “I don’t know what I would do without you.” She cheeped to her man
And he called back “I am here my dear, and yes, I don’t know what ever I would do without you”
And they each peered around for danger
The human man watched their feet as they scurry and stop and watched their round eyes as they check for danger. And their cheeps squeezed the juice in his heart as the flowers shook and danced faster than one could ever perceive
He felt the space. The space he had chosen as his seat
He felt the sun and he felt the warm air
And though it blew around him he felt it wrap him and squeeze him tight
He felt what the air was made of exploring the surface of his skin and explore beneath it and explore the sadness in his heart
The delicious sadness that he never wanted to let go of
He wanted it to burst from within and run slowly to the sand, but he never wanted to let it go
He felt the heat of the sun and what it was made of
Exploring the side of his body from the south. Touching the stuff he was made of and making its way in and through as he faded again
He’d taken the path of purple and gold, a blur of jubilance at eye level. And on into a cheep
One which could be considered brief but could be ridden to the source for as long as one could stand from the plover to her man
She called “I don’t know what ever I would do without you”
He called back “Yes, my dear, I am here. And I don’t know what ever I would do without you”