A Gathering of Angels

I raced an egret down the levee road yesterday.  The line of its wide wings caught the airstream  to rise over the path of a crow.  As I slowed for the dogleg next to the inlet where the old crane stood for so many years, the white bird banked and made the turn with me.  I pressed down on the gas and my car cruised past the Stars & Moon Park, beyond Brother’s Island, to the point where I ran out of public road.

I crossed over the slough by Owl Harbor, glancing towards the sun in the eastern sky just in time to see the egret cut over the road and begin a slow glide.  It skimmed the hyacinth and disappeared into the brush between the private part of Brannan Island Road and the public stretch of Twitchell Island.  I lingered until I lost sight of its shadow in the tangle of vines on the surface of the water.

In the southwestern sky, Mt. Diablo rose to keep watch.  A group of farmworkers stopped their work trucks on the road bisecting the fields between the levee and the Sacramento River.  I continued my drive, as the road narrowed and wound in front of houses and worksheds along the slough.  Through the low branches of trees, I could see light hit the pale flowers on the stand of water.    There had been tiny swans huddled between their parents in the undergrowth here just a few weeks ago.  I strained for some sign of them.

Around a curve, I slowed to peer through the branches at a long open stretch of water.  Then I saw it:   The meeting which the egret must have been eager to join, to fly so low, so fast, with such determination.  I glanced in my rearview mirror for oncoming cars, then stopped, shifted to park, and watched.

The group seemed quiet. Once in a while, a bird  would rise from the branches, flutter, and shift position.  Mostly they just held their pose, waiting, still.  A call came from within the trees, perhaps the morning convocation,  summoning  others not yet landed.  Another sound, shriller now.  A ripple moved through the group. 

It was me, I knew; or the sound of my motor.  I had no right; I did not belong.  One of them turned a regal head upon a sinewy neck.  Although I could not see that far, its gaze seemed to hold mine.  Whatever that egret might have been thinking, I took its meaning.  I closed my eyes and worked the gear shift.  A long involuntary breath expanded my lungs.

When I opened my eyes, the banks had cleared.  I studied the unbroken, vibrant green for a long minute; and then continued on my way.  Around the next turn, I saw again the gathering of angels, settling for roll call, unconcerned with the passage of a small human along the levee road.

Mugwumpishly tendered,

Corinne Corley

The Missouri Mugwump®

 

 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *