The rainy season was just barely
beginning. Some nights were still clear and mild, and then some were damp and
chilly. A few desultory yellow leaves drifted down in the Home Clearing and
were tossed around by the wind. It made a pretty sight.
Looking on, Ramona nodded and acknowledged the turning of the year. The children were growing up, and things were changing. She saw that it was good.
Rose was beginning to pick up speech. Like with any child, first she learned names. She was delighted with her own when Twigg showed her a late blooming wild rose in the meadow. Cherry brought objects to Rose’s attention and told her their words. She helped Rose with pronunciation too.
When Cherry rose and drifted in the air, Rose followed her flight with fascinated eyes.
After learning the thing and name words, they all went on to intangible words. Rose learned fast because though in her life in the water she had never spoken, she did sing, so she understood about making vocal sounds. Or maybe she learned fast with a little extra help from Twigg or Ralph.
Maeve also was very involved in the project. It amused her very much to hear Rose utter “evermore.” She also made sure that Rose understood raven and bird.
Twigg hadn’t decided to make any big changes in his living arrangements. He told his mother that he was fine sleeping on the floor near Rose when it was rainy outside, not that rain really bothers the sons and daughters of the forest.
Sometimes on special nights, when the sky was clear and the stars looked down, or the moon took her turn through the sky, Ralph and Twigg would camp out by the fire circle talking late into the night about life, and everything. They left the cave to the girls on those nights. We must assume that they were also chatting about life and everything in their turn.
Ralph didn’t steer his son in any particular direction. He waited, with attention.
One afternoon a tremendous thunderstorm blew in, the big brother of the beguiling summer breeze. It grew dark under the firs. The sound of deadfall crashing out of trees combined with the howl of the wind to make a terrific amount of noise. Rose wasn’t frightened though. She had seen many storms on the Sound and outside the Sound on the great Pacific Ocean. In fact, it pleased her like an old friend’s call. She watched it all with her mouth open and her green eyes shining, remembering her life in the sea.
There were strobe-like flashes of lightning. It lit the mighty trunks of the surrounding trees intermittently. Great drops of rain blew in sideways, rendering everything sopping wet in no time at all.
As Twigg and Rose watched the storm the tips of the firs swayed one way and then the other. Branches whipped in the rushing wind.
Rose stood with the rain in her face, listening and hearing it all. She rose on her tiptoes and called out, “Happy! Happy!” She threw her arms in the air and twirled about, a creature of the tempest.
The storm revealed her essential wildness to Twigg.
The thunder bursts came closer and closer. It rolled and kept rolling. And in the dark flashing sky a mighty creature of flight soared over Twigg and Rose. Bigger by far than Maeve, black, appearing like a raven, wings appearing and disappearing in the flashes of lightning.
It dropped down near the forest floor as if searching. It saw Rose there, enraptured, and called one long harsh call, then wheeled powerfully back into the wind, as if swimming in the very sky.
Rose looked at Twigg and said, “Help me, Twigg! Help me! Oh help me! I must go, Twigg!”
She became bent over with the power of her weeping and her desire. Her body pulsated with sobbing.
So, Twigg gently helped her to stand. “I will,” he said.
He stood her before him and took her hands in his, right on right and left on left. Then he sang a song of his own devising. It was a song of freedom and releasing of bonds, sung into the wind and rain with authority.
Her hands slipped out of his grasp, and she rose into the wind, and was gone, transformed again. She followed the wind and the essence of the storm, rising over the peaks of the mountains.
Twigg walked back to his home cave and stepped inside. For a moment his family could hear the crashing storm, then he closed the door.
“Where is Rose, Son,” said Ramona.
“She wanted to follow the wind, so I helped her, Mama,” said Twigg. “She’s gone.”
“Are you very sad, my dear?” said his mother.
“A little,” said Twigg. Then he smiled again.
Looking on, Ramona nodded and acknowledged the turning of the year. The children were growing up, and things were changing. She saw that it was good.
Rose was beginning to pick up speech. Like with any child, first she learned names. She was delighted with her own when Twigg showed her a late blooming wild rose in the meadow. Cherry brought objects to Rose’s attention and told her their words. She helped Rose with pronunciation too.
When Cherry rose and drifted in the air, Rose followed her flight with fascinated eyes.
After learning the thing and name words, they all went on to intangible words. Rose learned fast because though in her life in the water she had never spoken, she did sing, so she understood about making vocal sounds. Or maybe she learned fast with a little extra help from Twigg or Ralph.
Maeve also was very involved in the project. It amused her very much to hear Rose utter “evermore.” She also made sure that Rose understood raven and bird.
Twigg hadn’t decided to make any big changes in his living arrangements. He told his mother that he was fine sleeping on the floor near Rose when it was rainy outside, not that rain really bothers the sons and daughters of the forest.
Sometimes on special nights, when the sky was clear and the stars looked down, or the moon took her turn through the sky, Ralph and Twigg would camp out by the fire circle talking late into the night about life, and everything. They left the cave to the girls on those nights. We must assume that they were also chatting about life and everything in their turn.
Ralph didn’t steer his son in any particular direction. He waited, with attention.
One afternoon a tremendous thunderstorm blew in, the big brother of the beguiling summer breeze. It grew dark under the firs. The sound of deadfall crashing out of trees combined with the howl of the wind to make a terrific amount of noise. Rose wasn’t frightened though. She had seen many storms on the Sound and outside the Sound on the great Pacific Ocean. In fact, it pleased her like an old friend’s call. She watched it all with her mouth open and her green eyes shining, remembering her life in the sea.
There were strobe-like flashes of lightning. It lit the mighty trunks of the surrounding trees intermittently. Great drops of rain blew in sideways, rendering everything sopping wet in no time at all.
As Twigg and Rose watched the storm the tips of the firs swayed one way and then the other. Branches whipped in the rushing wind.
Rose stood with the rain in her face, listening and hearing it all. She rose on her tiptoes and called out, “Happy! Happy!” She threw her arms in the air and twirled about, a creature of the tempest.
The storm revealed her essential wildness to Twigg.
The thunder bursts came closer and closer. It rolled and kept rolling. And in the dark flashing sky a mighty creature of flight soared over Twigg and Rose. Bigger by far than Maeve, black, appearing like a raven, wings appearing and disappearing in the flashes of lightning.
It dropped down near the forest floor as if searching. It saw Rose there, enraptured, and called one long harsh call, then wheeled powerfully back into the wind, as if swimming in the very sky.
Rose looked at Twigg and said, “Help me, Twigg! Help me! Oh help me! I must go, Twigg!”
She became bent over with the power of her weeping and her desire. Her body pulsated with sobbing.
So, Twigg gently helped her to stand. “I will,” he said.
He stood her before him and took her hands in his, right on right and left on left. Then he sang a song of his own devising. It was a song of freedom and releasing of bonds, sung into the wind and rain with authority.
Her hands slipped out of his grasp, and she rose into the wind, and was gone, transformed again. She followed the wind and the essence of the storm, rising over the peaks of the mountains.
Twigg walked back to his home cave and stepped inside. For a moment his family could hear the crashing storm, then he closed the door.
“Where is Rose, Son,” said Ramona.
“She wanted to follow the wind, so I helped her, Mama,” said Twigg. “She’s gone.”
“Are you very sad, my dear?” said his mother.
“A little,” said Twigg. Then he smiled again.