“Boss! What are you doing up here?” said Maeve, taking a perch on a nearby branch.
“Oh, hi, Birdy. Figures you’d see me up here,” said Ralph, just as his head cleared the last large branch. He blinked because the sunlight was suddenly so bright. Looking around as his eyes adjusted, he could see miles of deep green Douglas Fir canopy below, and the vast blue arc of our planet’s atmosphere above.
“It’s a fine place, Boss,” Maeve remarked, softly as if speaking to herself.
“Did you ever notice that everything sounds different up here, Birdy? Oh, of course you did,” said Ralph. “Down there among the tree’s trunks and all the brush, it’s soft and like cushioned. Up here it’s sharp, wide open and goes for miles!”
“That’s true. If you listen right now, you can hear a train whistle clear down in Milltown,” agreed Maeve. “The crows are all down on the ground somewhere by now, or we would hear them yakking it up too.”
“You see further than I do,” said Ralph.
“That’s true. Do you need me to see something for you, Boss?” said she.
“Well, I wanted to see for myself, you know? Ever since we got that letter from Maurice, I have been feeling that something different is coming in a way. Some kind of change or something. It’s been keeping me awake a little,” said Ralph. “Ramona told me this morning that I had been talking in my sleep.”
“You know I love a mystery,” said Maeve.
“You like to pick a mystery apart, Birdy. I know that,” he said. “Hey, look! Rick just drove off. That means Dexter is in charge today.”
They watched for a few seconds, until Rick’s service vehicle disappeared from view.
“Dexter should just marry that girl, then they could both live in the mobile. He’s there all the time anyhow,” giggled Maeve. “It’s a wonder he gets camp chores done!”
“First, he’s got to talk Hannah into it,” said Ralph, gently. “The worst thing about climbing fir trees is that now I have pitch in my hair, and it’s going to be murder to get it out!”
“I bet Ooog has some kerosene or something. Might cut it. Ramona could comb it out with that and then you could wash the kerosene out,” said Maeve.
“Are you worried about something, Boss,” she said, further.
“No, not worried. I just feel a shift, like when the wind suddenly changes direction and blows the smoke into your face instead of away from you,” he said. “I’ve heard the wind whispering, but explaining nothing,” said Ralph, hefting himself up to sit on a sturdy branch near the very top. “It’s like when a storm is coming. Your ears might pop.”
“Yes, like that. Does it have something to do with Maurice?” said Maeve.
“Maybe. Not sure. I think he’s part of it. Or maybe, he’s just in it, you see?” said Ralph.
“Boss, would you like to come up into the sky with me again?” She cocked a wise eye in his direction.
“I don’t have the feather you gave me! It’s back in the cave at home,” said Ralph.
“Oh, fiddledeedee, Boss, I have all the feathers we need right here!” said Maeve. “Just come with me!”
“I will!” he shouted.
Maeve spread her mighty wings, and Ralph followed her as she lifted off.
Up there, the air was a bit thinner. The sunlight fiercer. There were clouds looming over to the east, further up into the mountain lands. He looked up and thought he could almost see a few of the brighter stars. But that seemed impossible.
The wind blew long, feeling no hindrance.
He looked down, and wept, because of the beauty of it all. There was sorrow too, but he saw that sorrow has an end.
“What do you see, Boss,” called Maeve, from above him.
“I see love spread out, above and below, Blackwing!” Ralph answered.
“So it is,” said Maeve.
“I see that all comes back to the place where it began,” he said. “I see that love has no beginning and no end.”
“It’s easy to see clearly up here,” said Maeve.
Her wing covered Ralph’s eyes for a moment. And when he looked again, he was seated on his favorite log and Maeve was perched on his left shoulder. He had quite a bit of pitch stuck in his hair.
“Wait ‘til Ramona sees this mess,” and Ralph giggled.
“She’ll clean you up somehow!” said Maeve.
“She always does,” he agreed.
At that very moment, he saw Ramona and Cherry, with Blue the white wolf, coming up the path toward himself and Maeve. He nearly wept again because he loved them so much.
When she was near, Ramona said, “I thought you might be up here with Maeve!”
“You’ve found us out!” said Ralph.
“I was trying out a recipe for flat pan cookies, Baby, so we brought you some to try. They have raisins and oats in them, and I cooked them in butter!”
Cherry carried a dozen or so of the new cookies in one of Ooog’s nice wooden bowls.
“I smell spice, Mona,” said Ralph.
“Yes, cinnamon. Thaga says it’s good in cookies,” said Ramona.
So, Ramona took a seat on Ralph’s log right beside him, and Cherry did too, after a little lift off. Blue sat below, and they all sampled the cookies.
“These are so good, Mona! Everything you do is perfect!” said Ralph.
“Evermore!” said Maeve, then she winked!


