I wanted to see it move, that one. - joneworlds@mailbox.org I noticed a sour smell in the clearing above after the leaving the path. I must go down to the river for the soothing movement heals the holes in me for a bit, I hope. Here, this reach is calmer, almost placid are the green waters here. They remember their roiling rolls they passed through, now resting, though, the roar remains there. I throw resentful little rocks, in envy of its grandeur. Must I make my mark, even here? It takes them all, my tiny angers, with ease, pebbles plopping, heard, felt, and gone. Again I long to speak with the river-king. But I have nothing to say. Finally, the birches are turning. This one lets go over this left bank a leaf in yellow and orange, like the setting sun through smoke, falling ashes of another ancient other out of sight, out of mind, burning all those hard won hundreds. Ages, now dust. That leaf falls to the water. Slowly starts to move. Caution, tentative, pausing, hesitance, each nudge a tick further, winding between and around the stones it goes. I'm watching calmly, waiting for that moment when it finds its way out and into the flow, the journey of a lifetime beginning even in its twilight days. But now, oh, no, it's stopped. Rocks blocking its way, stopped dead in its tracks, stuck. And was I so silly as to root for a tiny leaf? Did I see my own aging head in its face? It took all I had, not to bend down and free it. Right then, I wanted to feel a sob, a tear to fall, for the river to carry and lose, but none came. Besides, I saw another by the bank across, falling speeding, surging, and it disappeared out from my view ahead, while my first leaf sat, wondering why. And barely beyond my feet, many more Of the same fate. It's no sadness, I know. I guess I just wanted to see it move, that one.