My story was featured today on CafeLit at:
https://cafelitcreativecafe.blogspot.com/2019/11/the-drive-around-phantom-lake.html
I hope you enjoy it!
I also posted it below.
"Nicki,
look," Frank pointed. Dust billowed as he slowed the car to a stop. Out on
Phantom Lake about one-hundred yards from shore were a pair of trumpeter swans
and their four young. "See how white they are. Big, too. Aren't they beautiful?"
Frank was taking his time driving up
the west side of Crex Meadows, a thirty thousand acre wildlife refuge in northwestern
Wisconsin. He had driven to the area that morning from their home in Long Lake,
Minnesota, a three hour journey, just to see birds in their fall migration. It
was mid September and already the oaks and maples were turning rusty red and
orange.
Frank pointed again, becoming
excited, "Look at all the ducks. I can see blue-wing teal, redheads and
shovelers." He peered through his binoculars and added, "There's also
some common mergansers farther out and a few golden eye. Bufflehead, too."
He smiled, "That's very cool." He silently gazed over the big lake, a
half mile across and a mile long, a well-known stopover for hundreds of thousands
of waterfowl feeding and resting on their long flight south. He was enthralled.
After a while he put the car and
gear and continued at a slow pace, stopping frequently to watch the ducks,
dipping and dabbling in the calm water. Overhead bald eagles and red-tail hawks
soared in a robin's egg blue sky.
A movement to the left caught his
eye, "Look, Nicki, there's a marsh hawk," he pointed, "And a
sharp-shined, too." Both raptors were gliding over the marsh grasses the
area was named for, Crex being short for carex, the grasses common in the huge
wetland and at one time used to make rugs.
He drove on. "You having a good
time?" he asked. The loop around the refuge was seventeen miles of gravel
road and he was enjoying puttering along, moving slowly, pointing out clusters of
sandhill cranes feeding in nearby corn fields, various songbirds, more eagles
and hawks and even some osprey. It took two hours to make the drive and he
loved every minute of it. He was sure Nicki did, too.
The end of the drive took him past a
modern looking visitor center remodeled ten years earlier with donations from
the one-hundred thousand visitors to the refuge each year. He and Nicki had
generously contributed and had become friends with many of the staff.
He parked and walked through the front
door, glancing to the right into a small office. His friend, Bob Jensen, was at
his desk working on a computer. He was the game warden for the area including
the refuge. "Hi, Bob," he called, waving.
Bob grinned and walked out to greet
him. The two men shook hands, "Good to see you, Frank. Beautiful day,
isn't it?"
"Can't beat it. But give me a
minute, will you?" Frank held up one finger and shuffled his feet. "I
need to use the little boys room."
"Go for it," Bob smiled.
On his way back, Frank joined Bob
who was talking to a high school girl running the cash register in the gift
shop. They chatted for a few minutes about the waterfowl migration before Frank
said, "Well, I'd love to talk some more but I've got to hit the road. Long
drive ahead."
"I'll walk you out," Bob
said.
Outside, the scent of pine was
pungently pleasing in the warm, late afternoon sun. They walked quietly until
Bob touched Frank's shoulder and said, "Say, before you leave, I just
wanted to say how sorry I was to hear about Nicole. I couldn't make it to the
funeral last spring, but I was thinking of you both. She was a great
person."
Frank laughed, "What'd you mean, Bob? She's
doing just fine. She's great."
Bob just stared at the old man, bent
with age, withered with not only arthritis but also the years, and decided not
to push it. "Okay, whatever you say, my friend. See you next year?"
"You bet. We'll be up for spring
migration. Maybe even participate in the April sandhill crane count."
"Sounds good. See you
then."
Both men shook hands once more. Bob
watched Frank get into his car and pull away, wondering if the old guy would
even be alive next spring. He'd aged considerably since his last visit. Oh, well.
Bob headed inside to the sound of geese flying overhead and crossed his
fingers, saying a silent prayer. We can but hope.
It was dark by the time Frank got
home. He fixed a grilled cheese sandwich for dinner and fed Hootie his seven
year old tabby cat. The two kept each other company for the rest of the
evening.
He began nodding off while watching
the ten o'clock news so he got ready for bed. Breathing a heavy sigh, he slid
under the covers, lay on his back and stared into the darkness. It'd been a long
day and he was exhausted. He felt Hootie jump onto the bed and make herself
comfortable down by his feet. In a moment he heard her purring. He smiled. She
was a good companion. Then he turned to his side, put his hand on the empty
spot next to him and said, "Good night, Nicki. What a great day we had,
didn't we?" The only reply was the soft purring of the cat.
He pulled the covers tight, happy
he'd made it through another day without succumbing to the crushing loneliness
he'd felt ever since his wife's death. Each day was a challenge. Each day he
did the best he could.
He closed his eyes and drifted off
to sleep. Tomorrow he'd get up and face the day. With Nicki's help, of course.
With her forever and always by his side, he'd find a way. He was sure of it.
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