Sunday, September 27, 2015

The Orchard by Karin Fitzgerald



Faint tendrils of mist rise slowly from the little lake. Walking through the deep grass covered with dew makes my tennis shoes slurp with each step. My brothers tag along behind me, still sleepy in spite of the big breakfast. As my Father fires up the chain-saw, we three separate and look for a tree to climb. The old apple orchard is so inviting. Scraggly branches offer excellent perches for our adventurous bodies.

The sun warms us and dries the dew. We each stake out a favorite tree and jump, first from the lowest branches into the soft, springy, earthy-smelling leaf mold. So many feet thick, it’s as though we are landing on a feather bed. I scramble higher, but tell my brothers to stop climbing. They’re still too young to be the dare-devil character that I consider myself to be.

The thrill of jumping from higher and higher vantage points makes me want to never stop. I want to do this until the dappled shadows slide across this gnarled old tree and make it hard to see, and my Father shuts off his chain-saw.