Like Trees Walking

By the end of the summer the trees on the bluff by our house will be gone. Not all of them, just the ones at the edge, at the very top, where the ground has started to slip away beneath, and the balance has begun to shift in favor of the fall, and not the ground beneath, and the next big rain could pull them down, dragging too much of our backyards with them. The neighbors tell of the flood of '92, and how they woke up early that Saturday morning and watched their trees slide down the hill. Most likely the end of summer is only thinking wishfully, and instead the first warm weekend will bring the chain saws out.

My mother used to say that my father would sooner lose an arm as lose a tree. When I was five the interstate came through our farm, cutting fields into odd pieces stranded on either side, cutting through the crick and the ravine, through the trees. The Black Walnut trees. The stand I imagine my father had walked from the time he tagged along with his older brothers. You know them, doing that. Like you know your hands. You know the pattern of roots sinking into the ground, which ones are good for leaning against, the smell of their leaves, the path worn between them, how far you need to stretch your head back to see the tops of them, so far your mouth hangs open just a little bit. Who would imagine something like that could ever go away?

And the men from the highway sat at our kitchen table, day after day, until it was done. Funny that I can't remember my father saying a word in all those meetings. I only remember an enormous silence, a stillness that froze his face, and his arms by his sides, and made me stop at the doorway, unable to break through the thickness of it to reach him. That summer the dust from the construction blew in from the east and settled on the tables and windows and the wash hanging on the clothesline.

The next summer we tried, once or twice, to walk through the culvert they built for the crick to run through, but it was long, and wet, not anything like walking under the trees, and my father had to carry me through the deepest part of the water. So we unlearned the boundaries of the woods we had known, and learned new ones. Some time after the last of the big equipment was gone and the first of the cars came, my father climbed the fence and planted trees, enough that years later, driving through, someone looking out the window might wonder what was different about that section of the road. It was only the dog that couldn't stop protecting the boundaries of his territory, slipping through the gaps in the fences on his nightly rounds, until he was hit by a car, and the thing that had been simply ugly became an unimaginable, eternal wound.

Like trees walking, the things we cannot imagine losing march out of our lives. Which is better, learning new trees, or haunting the old ones? And when we make the wrong choice, doesn't our Father carry us anyway? How tenderly my father must have lifted his dog from the side of the road and brought him home.

 

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