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Finding my way. |
| My father, of a wintry morn, would cut footsteps in the snow, his feet blazing a path to the spring, where I, at first light, would go for water. Mountain snow would waft deeper than my little legs, and thus, I had to follow his path. My father, having a sense of humor, would sometimes meander over to the pond or drift in waves; the trek longer then and at return, with glass milk jugs of crystal water, one in each hand, I’d wish for a more direct route home. Yet following in his footsteps I saw the deer come off the ridge, watched late geese ski on frozen lake, found little notes tied to a branch with twine: Make a snow angel here. It, I found out later, was a quarter mile to the spring. Older still, I realized, my father could have, simply, gotten the water himself. |