
Most mornings when Emmy awoke, and had some breakfast, she studied
for a couple of hours. She had decided to do home school, and she was
greatly enjoying not taking the long bus ride into town and spending
a lot of each day with just the mechanics of being in school.
This morning felt
different.
The Golden Frog sat
in his tiny green house, but she could hear him whispering about
going out of doors. “It’s spring,” he said. “All the world is
waiting,” he said. He buzzed like a bee in Emmy’s mind.
She
dressed in jeans, canvas sneakers, t-shirt, and a little jacket with
zipper pockets. The jacket was red corduroy and had a hood. Beth had
sewn it for her.
She
put the Golden Frog in the right side pocket, and zipped him in
securely. Her little phone went in the left pocket. Being wise to
herself, she kept it in a zip lock sandwich baggie.
Out
in the kitchen, Beth was drinking coffee and checking things out
online. Jesse had already left for the day. Honda lay under the table
taking a morning nap. She didn’t see Billy, but he was around there
somewhere, probably asleep too.
“Mom,
I’m thinking about taking a walk,” Emmy told her mother. “This
frog won’t stop talking about going outside.” It was something
they frequently joked about, as if the frog did talk.
“Better
eat some of those eggs then,” said Beth, taking her eyes off of the
small screen to look at her daughter. Emmy was not a very big girl
for her age. She had snappy dark brown eyes, like Jesse’s people,
and curly black hair. Those curls are just about all she got from me,
Beth thought. But she was smiling.
Mother
and daughter, had coffee together. Emmy liked cream in her coffee.
She rolled her eggs up in a flour tortilla, with green salsa.
“Take
your phone, Emmy. Don’t wander too far,” said Beth.
“It’s
in my pocket. I’ll have to come back when I get hungry,” said
Emmy.
Billy
turned up, yawning and stretching, from wherever he had been
sleeping. For such a large cat he could hide well. Billy mostly kept
his own council.
“Want
to come with me, Honda?” Emmy said, looking down under the table.
Honda certainly did want to come with her!
Outside,
it was a breezy spring day, cool for Navajo country. Emmy noticed
that the hens were still in their hutch. Jesse fed the hens before
leaving for his shop. She glanced at their water pan just to make
sure. Emmy loved the hens.
Aunt
Julia had loved the hens too.
The
consuming mystery of their lives was Aunt Julia. She was never found,
no matter how hard she was searched for. There were theories, but
people can’t resist making up theories, and Emmy didn’t believe
any of it.
Emmy
and Julia had been very close, and to Emmy she didn’t feel gone.
Not really.
“Which
way shall we go, Honda? River or road?”
Honda
headed to the little stream that Emmy called a river. Emmy followed
slowly, doing a few fancy little walking steps that she had learned
from Julia. It slowed her down, but of course Honda didn’t mind.
The
wind blew a few low clouds in. A little rain splattered Emmy and
Honda.
“Shall
we go downstream?” she said, pulling her hood up over her curls.
There
was a path beside the stream. If they followed it for a mile or so,
it would meet a larger stream. The water was higher than usual. It
always dried up some in the summer.
Honda
dashed in and out of the water, bringing Emmy stones. She put a nice
agate in her pocket with the frog, zipping them both in.
Then
the rain came down. The sky darkened. There was a flash of lightning,
and thunder. Another flash. Honda walked closely with her now. The
thunder bothered him a little.
“There
is something in the water,” murmured the Golden Frog. “Can you
see?”
The
phone in Emmy’s pocket buzzed. It was Beth. “Are you hungry yet?”
“Almost.
I’m getting pretty wet!” laughed Emmy. Meanwhile she was looking
closely into the little stream. Holding a steady position in the
stream was a huge fish.
It
had whiskers! A catfish! Emmy knew he didn’t belong here.
“Are
you lost?” said Emmy to the fish.
“I’m
tired,” said the fish. “A yellow dog told me that if I swam up
here that there was a wonderful lake of still water.”
“Ma’ii
is a liar, Fish. He wanted to catch you in shallow water and gobble
you up!” said Emmy. “There is no lake up this tiny stream.”
“Oh,
woe!” said the great fish. “Now that I am weary, will you capture
me and gobble me up?”
“No,
fish. But I will help you turn around. Then you can swim easily to
where you belong,” said Emmy.
So,
Emmy waded out to where the water was knee deep. She wasn’t sure
how to help the fish turn around, but she was willing. When she
reached him, she saw that his belly lay heavily on the rocks below
him.
While
Honda watched, just in case she needed him, Emmy reached both arms
down into the water, hugging the fish. Then she lifted him and turned
him head for tail so that he was headed back down stream.
“Go
home fish, and never believe a word from Ma’ii!” said Emmy, still
standing knee deep in water.
“May
the Maker of All, always grant you mercy,” said the fish as he swam
downstream.
“You’ve
gotten me and your phone wet,” said the Golden Frog.
“I
bet I did,” said Emmy, carefully walking up out of the water. She
could hardly have gotten any wetter if she dove in. “I may end up
living without a phone for a while. Sometimes those bags leak.”
When
Emmy and Honda returned home, they got all dried off, and had some lunch
with Beth and Billy.
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