Mid-quarter. Classes tomorrow. Marge
sighed heavily.
She was sitting on the narrow hard bed in her rented room. Her heavy brown hair was loose on her shoulders, and she was wearing a yellow flannel nightgown printed in juvenile motifs, for the fun of it. She looked down at her knees and frowned thoughtfully.
It didn’t seem right.
“I don’t really belong here,” she told the room, listening to her own voice.
She thought of her friend, Twigg, then she smiled. She enjoyed thinking of what her classmates would say if they knew her secret.
There was a vertical slice of shiny black window glass where the curtains parted. In the middle distance were street lights and a few other lit objects and signs. Inside the room there was a simple small table and a chair. Her laptop and phone lay on the table next to a cheap lamp. Its cylindrical shade glowed dully She looked around the room, surveying her belongings. There wasn’t much and she kept it that way. The greatest bulk of it, besides some clothing, was her supplies for art classes.
A bathroom shared by three other female students was down the hall.
“I need to get out of here,” she said to the walls. The walls didn’t argue against it.
Eventually Marge lay down and covered up and went to sleep with her lamp still switched on.
During the night she dreamed of the forest. In the dream she walked a path between first growth giants. The air was complex with bird calls, insect voices, and subliminal influences. A scent rose from the forest floor, ancient, known, speaking of both birth and death, decay and newness. A fungal note to it, but also a resinous backnote.
As
she walked she touched ferns, salal, huckleberry foliage. She laid her
hands on fir bark and stood listening. Yes, there was something there.
There was a wind too. It turned things this way and that, as if to say, “look here!” She didn’t know the names of the flowers she saw, but they gazed up at her trustingly, vulnerably.
Further along, a mountain cat paced before her. Before turning around a bend in the trail, the cat turned and looked at Marge with wise yellow eyes.
She began to think that she was actually there to meet Twigg, but he was being hard to find.
Suddenly a huge black raven drifted through the atmosphere between the trunk and vanished.
She awoke with a sharp intake of breath. When she realized where she was, she cried.
That didn’t last long. Marge was a decisive girl.
She grabbed her phone and called Enid, her mother, who was paying for everything, tuition, food, rent, supplies and gas.
“Mom, this isn’t working. I have to do something else,” she told her mother.
“You woke me at 5AM to tell me you’re dropping out?” said Enid.
“Not just dropping out. I want to work in the forest, maybe be a forest ranger or something,” said Marge, expecting trouble.
“Look, before you do anything, you’d better do a lot of research. I’m not sure art majors are a natural for the forest service. I mean, think about it. They want science types,” said Enid.
“I will, don’t worry, Mom,” said Marge, already opening and waking her computer.
A lot of research is what she did, and she found out that Enid was correct about becoming a ranger, but that there were volunteer jobs, that paid less money, but enough, and that volunteer programs could lead to ranger positions, possibly. She could do trail maintenance, or host a camp. The more she looked into it, the better she liked it. The information she found online suggested that she go to a Forest Service ranger station and talk to the ranger about volunteering.
Saturday coming up was her usual date to visit Twigg.
She worked her way through the week’s classes, as she normally did.
Saturday morning came. She needed to talk to Twigg and maybe even Ralph, before blowing her whole deal out of the water.
She was sitting on the narrow hard bed in her rented room. Her heavy brown hair was loose on her shoulders, and she was wearing a yellow flannel nightgown printed in juvenile motifs, for the fun of it. She looked down at her knees and frowned thoughtfully.
It didn’t seem right.
“I don’t really belong here,” she told the room, listening to her own voice.
She thought of her friend, Twigg, then she smiled. She enjoyed thinking of what her classmates would say if they knew her secret.
There was a vertical slice of shiny black window glass where the curtains parted. In the middle distance were street lights and a few other lit objects and signs. Inside the room there was a simple small table and a chair. Her laptop and phone lay on the table next to a cheap lamp. Its cylindrical shade glowed dully She looked around the room, surveying her belongings. There wasn’t much and she kept it that way. The greatest bulk of it, besides some clothing, was her supplies for art classes.
A bathroom shared by three other female students was down the hall.
“I need to get out of here,” she said to the walls. The walls didn’t argue against it.
Eventually Marge lay down and covered up and went to sleep with her lamp still switched on.
During the night she dreamed of the forest. In the dream she walked a path between first growth giants. The air was complex with bird calls, insect voices, and subliminal influences. A scent rose from the forest floor, ancient, known, speaking of both birth and death, decay and newness. A fungal note to it, but also a resinous backnote.
There was a wind too. It turned things this way and that, as if to say, “look here!” She didn’t know the names of the flowers she saw, but they gazed up at her trustingly, vulnerably.
Further along, a mountain cat paced before her. Before turning around a bend in the trail, the cat turned and looked at Marge with wise yellow eyes.
She began to think that she was actually there to meet Twigg, but he was being hard to find.
Suddenly a huge black raven drifted through the atmosphere between the trunk and vanished.
She awoke with a sharp intake of breath. When she realized where she was, she cried.
That didn’t last long. Marge was a decisive girl.
She grabbed her phone and called Enid, her mother, who was paying for everything, tuition, food, rent, supplies and gas.
“Mom, this isn’t working. I have to do something else,” she told her mother.
“You woke me at 5AM to tell me you’re dropping out?” said Enid.
“Not just dropping out. I want to work in the forest, maybe be a forest ranger or something,” said Marge, expecting trouble.
“Look, before you do anything, you’d better do a lot of research. I’m not sure art majors are a natural for the forest service. I mean, think about it. They want science types,” said Enid.
“I will, don’t worry, Mom,” said Marge, already opening and waking her computer.
A lot of research is what she did, and she found out that Enid was correct about becoming a ranger, but that there were volunteer jobs, that paid less money, but enough, and that volunteer programs could lead to ranger positions, possibly. She could do trail maintenance, or host a camp. The more she looked into it, the better she liked it. The information she found online suggested that she go to a Forest Service ranger station and talk to the ranger about volunteering.
Saturday coming up was her usual date to visit Twigg.
She worked her way through the week’s classes, as she normally did.
Saturday morning came. She needed to talk to Twigg and maybe even Ralph, before blowing her whole deal out of the water.
🍃
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