I bent over to pick up a small, pink stone
It glittered in the early morning sun,
Speaking a sunrises and sunsets,
A baby’s scalp after a bath
The underbelly of my cat.
I slipped it into my jacket pocket
It’s weight negligible
At the crest of a hill a striated rock caught my attention.
The dark lines, close to the purple of my bedspread,
Seemed darkly ominous
But I didn’t know why.
A stone cannot harm me unless tossed in my face.
It bears no ill-will and harbors no grudges.
Yet if frightened me so much so that I hurried away.
At the bottom of a lake a cluster of green stones called my name.
They were quite lovely, speaking of life and growth and wealth
And health and all things good.
I yearned to take just one.
But if I did, would the pile change?
Would it no longer speak to the next passerby?
I sat on a fallen log, weighing whether or not to slip
The smallest one into my pocket.
Until a scrub jay warned me.
At the top of the mountain, I crossed a plane
Of striated rocks.
What caused the unusual markings?
Fire? Rain? Snow? Glaciers?
Perhaps all four.
I had to touch the smooth surface,
Wanting to know, to understand,
How they came to be.
I closed my eyes, raised my head toward the sky
And listened.
For what I did not know.
I stood there for what seemed like a long time.
When no voice filled my ears, I shook off the feeling
Of foreboding that had come over me.
These rocks, this hill, offered only a sense of
Ill will.
I shouldered my pack and retraced my steps.
Just as I closed my car door, lightning lit up the sky
And thunder roared all around me
As I rubbed the two little stones
Nestled in the warmth of my coat.