One of my favorite things about winter in the Appalachians is the juxtaposition of green against white.
Fern and snow on winter Cascades hike near Blacksburg, Virginia. andreabadgley.com
Rhododendron and snow on winter hike to Cascades near Blacksburg, VA. January 2014 on andreabadgley.com
Whether moss, lichen, rhododendron, or fern, there is something hopeful about green vegetation pushed up against a fresh white snow. It reminds me of the persistence of life, despite harsh conditions.
Icicles on winter hike to Cascades near Blacksburg, Virginia. January 2014 on andreabadgley.com
Moss, lichen, stone, snow on hike to Cascades near Blacksburg, VA. January 2014 on andreabadgley.com
Cascades trail sign in snow. January 2014
Ice sculpure in stream on Cascades hike near Blacksburg, VA January 2014
Icicles on winter hike to Cascades near Blacksburg, Virginia. January 2014 on andreabadgley.com
Icicles, snow, and stream on Cascades hike near Blacksburg, VA January 2014
I also love winter in Appalachia for the ice. The fluidity of water is frozen in still form, in crystal sculptures that capture movement, that suspend the liquid nature of water in a solid form that we can walk around and marvel over and contemplate for hours without it moving.
Icicles and snowy stream on hike to Cascades near Blacksburg, VA January 2014
Ice formation on hike to Cascades near Blacksburg, VA January 2014
Frozen Waterfall: The Cascades, January 26, 2014 near Blacksburg, Virginia
Finally, I love winter in the Appalachians for the steaming shower after a January hike. The steaming shower that turns your skin pink, and the fuzzy sweatpants you put on afterwards, and the hot dinner you sit down to, famished after hiking, with your family and friends.
Sunday was a beautiful day for a hike at the Cascades in Blacksburg, Virginia: high in the upper 30s after a fresh snow the night before. The kids packed snow balls along the way, threw them into the creek, and watched the slush drift downstream, taking it’s time to melt in the frigid water. We try to hike the Cascades during every season to witness its changes. For other photo essays from the Cascades waterfall, please see Waiting for Winter and Cascades of Green in Winter.
“No writer should be without a Very Large dictionary.” – Priscilla Long
On a bitter cold Tuesday afternoon when hat, scarf, gloves, and wool coat were not enough to keep the icy air out of my bones, I popped four quarters in a meter in downtown Blacksburg, bent my head to the needling wind, and strode across the Virginia Tech campus. It was my artist’s day out, and I wanted to spend it in the four-story Newman library.
I volunteered in our son’s classroom that morning, and now I had two hours to myself before I needed to be home to meet the bus. After I picked up the books I had reserved – two novels set in Alabama that are not in our county library collection – I bustled, coat over my arm, scarf around my neck but tangled in the strap of my now heavy tote, over to the reference librarian. As they always do when I sit on the oak stool, he smiled at me, delighted to have a visitor.
I smiled back. I read an author once who gushed about his reference librarian, how skilled she was in digging up materials, how he couldn’t have written his novel without her. I thought that sounded lovely, the author-librarian bond, and thanks to that writer’s story, I overcame my fear that I might be bothering a librarian who has more important things to do than answer questions I could (eventually) solve myself. Well, the novelist’s story, and the fact that I have very limited time these days. If a librarian can find something in five minutes that it might take me five days to find, I’ll ask the librarian.
“I have several questions for you,” I said, and stuffed my wool hat into my purse then bent to collect the books that spilled from my tote when I set it on the floor.
“I’m working on a project and I’m trying to figure out the best way to approach my research for it.” He clasped his hands on the desk between us and waited.
“I want to read my way through the United States, and I’d like to read three works of fiction from each state: one by a man, one by a woman, and one by a non-Caucasian author.” He raised his bushy white eyebrows. “I started in Alabama, and finding male and female authors was no problem, but they were both white, and when I tried to find a minority author, I had a really hard time. I mean, it’s Alabama! The population is 26% African American,” (I checked) “so why is it so hard to find an African American author?”
He swiveled in his chair and started typing into his search engine. “Well, you can certainly search by state in our system – just type in ‘fiction Alabama’ for instance – but,” he traced the author names with his finger. There was no telling what ethnicity they were. “You’re going to have to do the legwork with the authors.” I thought as much. Perhaps if I cross referenced with “fiction Native American” or ” fiction African American.” But that wasn’t my main reason for being there, so I moved on.
“What about literary prizes? Do you know of any resource that might have, say, Pulitzer or National Book Award winners mapped out? A map with ‘pins’ in it reporting where each author is from?”
He shook his head. “I’m afraid not.”
“Hmm. Maybe I need to create that resource.”
“Yes, please do,” he smiled, “and then sell it to us.” He reached behind his computer terminal and his hand emerged holding an ecru business card. The card was embossed with a maroon Virginia Tech logo, just like my husband’s card is. “This is our librarian who specializes in literature and the humanities. She may be able to help you figure out a strategy.”
My eyes opened wide, as did my mouth, as I accepted the small card. A literature reference librarian! The resources I was unearthing! I had only recently discovered, thanks to local Twitter friends, that though I am not a student at Virginia Tech, my status as a resident of Virginia grants me access to the University libraries and all of their riches.
I closed my mouth and uncrumpled my list, which had been crushed in the bottom of my tote. “Okay, where might I find literary journals?” I scanned the vast space around me, then moved my eyes to the ceiling, above which I knew there were two more floors of stacks.
“Do you have a specific title you’re looking for?”
“The Georgia Review.”
He tapped his keyboard, told me where to find the current volumes (fourth floor), then turned to me for my final question. The real reason I was there.
“I’m looking for a Very Large dictionary,” I said.
His mouth twitched and his eyes glittered. “Do you want to carry one around,” he swept his arm to indicate the whole of the library, “Or do you want to sit with one?”
I’ve joined a writing group – not a critique group, but a practice group – and our homework this week was to play with words. We are working from Priscilla Long’s The Writer’s Portable Mentor, and the exercise I chose for myself from the first chapter, which covers gathering words, sound-effects, and verbs, was to inscribe a working title on the cover of my new composition book, and before I began sketching ideas, before I began drafting, I was to create a word trap for the piece. I would Find Good Words. I would list 50 to100 juicy nouns and verbs I might want to use in the piece. And I wanted to do that using a Very Large dictionary, which I do not yet possess.
“I just want to spend some time with a big dictionary,” I told him, and rubbed my hand across the cover of my new composition book, on which I had written “Sun on my skin.”
The librarian stood and walked to the shelf behind him. He bent sideways to read titles, then pulled a yellow-bound, 4 inch thick tome. I stood and began slinging bags over my shoulder so that my hands would be free. He held the heavy volume in both hands, and presented it to me like a gift.
“Thank you,” I said, and my arms dipped under its weight.
“You’re welcome,” he said, and smiled again. “Have fun with your dictionary.”
I trudged, laden, to a table barely ten feet away (I didn’t want to waste time hiking all over the library), heaved the huge volume open, then turned the pages in chunks til I got to S. I paged through to sun, read for a few seconds, and began scribbling. From sun I flipped to sun rays, then solar. I read definitions, scanned for succulent words, chicken-scratched into my notebook while my eyes drank the dictionary. Summer, sunshine, sunbaked, sunback. I studied and scrawled and riffled and wrote, lured by the glistening gossamer of word strands. Beach, shore, sand, salt. Grit, splash zone, sandbar, surf. I wrote sunbrowned, ruffled pages to tanned. Became ensnared by the idea of the sun as a tanner. Turned to tawny, hide, leather, skin. Paged to skin and saw epidermis, and – ooh! sebaceous! – then sweat, then swelter, then sizzle, then prickle. Then sunburnt. And blistered. And speckled. And freckled.
I was about to heave back to the beginning of the Very Large dictionary, I was about to leaf to cancer, when my phone vibrated on the table. Wha? Then the telltale sound of crickets.
My phone alarm.
Crap! My meter! I slammed the 4 inch tome shut (taking care to smooth the pages first), dashed it the ten feet to the reference librarian, thanked him again, then tripped over my bags in my rush to re-dress. Hat (yank), scarf (wrap), coat (where’s the damn arm hole?). Shoved spilled books back into tote. Slung bags over shoulder. Jerked my mom’s leather gloves on while my boot heels rapped a staccato on the vinyl tiles.
I clanked open the building’s heavy door and cold air rushed in. I braced myself and launched through the exit. I barely escaped in time.
I found a title set in Alabama by an African American author, Albert Murray, and will soon be moving on to Alaska in my reading adventure. If you know of any great fiction set there, please let me know. I’ve only got one title so far – The Snow Child by Eowyn Ivey. Likewise, if you have favorite fiction set in a specific state, please share your titles with me. I’d love your help with suggestions. Thanks!
I fell asleep last night to the soft sound of our daughter snoring next to me, and I woke up to a small warm hand stroking my back. I turned over under the poofy down comforter to face her, and there was her smiling chubby-cheeked face buried in my husband’s pillow, her swim meet hair snarled all over her forehead and chin and the muted gold pillowcase. “Good morning, Mommy,” she said. Happiness radiated off of her, that she got to sleep in the bed with me. “I love you,” she said, and petted my arm.
This is a big weekend for our kids. Our 9 year old son is off with Dad in Richmond for a soccer tournament. They drove last night, and ate Five Guys cheeseburgers, and watched TV in a hotel room. While our daughter and I lingered this morning in PJs, they got up early and donned fleece hats, thick hooded sweatshirts, coats, and gloves for an 8:30 am soccer game on a crisp, 35 degree morning. You know, father son stuff.
Mom and daughter, on the other hand, sat side by side in a booth at The Olive Garden last night. I people-watched – a young man with delicate bone structure and wearing a suit smiled sweetly at his date; an exhausted married couple leaned over constantly, picking up food and toys that their young children threw on the floor; two silver haired women with bifocals sat on the same side of a table, and after 20 minutes the people they were meeting finally showed up, the woman with spiky hair and tight jeans and high heels, and who placed her phone face up on the table so that she could monitor it during dinner – while our daughter played word games on the kids’ menu. We ate ravioli, then sundaes, then drove home, threw her towels and suit into the dryer, and crawled in bed together to read. You know, mother daughter stuff.
And this morning, instead of layering in winter clothing, our daughter is suiting up in her H2Okies competition swimsuit, a black speedo with a turkey (Hokie bird) footprint on it. The suit is only about 12 inches long for her tiny 7 year old body. She swam a 200 yard individual medley in it last night, the first she’s ever attempted, and though we were able to wake without an alarm clock this morning, and we don’t have to leave for another 3 hours, we’ve already marked her arm for the events of today: 50 fly, 100 breast, and 50 free.
Swim meet body marking: event heat, lane
We will spend all day at the aquatic center, then come home to pizza and a movie. We will snuggle in bed reading, and wake up without an alarm, and mark her arm with another four events tomorrow, while Dad and son bundle up in Richmond for more soccer.
These days are my favorite part of parenting. These days are what it’s all about.
I stood behind my husband in Minnesota, rubbing his shoulders while he sat at our desk, focused on the screen in front of him. He was transferring all my files from our desktop to the laptop I was to take with me to Virginia.
I watched branches sway in the breeze, laden with the heavy weight of broad sumac lives, fingers of blue spruce needles, or delicate walnut leaflets. Our kids and their neighbor friends, the ones they spent eight hours a day with outside, popping in for a popsicle or an apple snack before dashing out again, tromped through the yards, all in a line, singing and pumping their arms like they were in a parade. They reminded me of the lost boys in Peter Pan.
I rubbed my husband’s neck and began, quietly, to cry.
The keyboard clickety-clacked while he loaded programs onto the dinosaur laptop, then stopped when he heard me sniff.
“Are you crying?” he asked.
“Yes.”
He reached up behind him and held my hands on his shoulders. “Because of the kids?” He watched them laugh and parade with the friends they would soon leave.
“Yes,” I said. “And because of the trees.” And the move. And the unknown.
“Why the trees?”
I pointed to the tallest tree on our lot – the one all the neighbors hated because it was tall and gangly and had been carved out in the middle of its crown to accommodate power lines.
“That’s a black walnut,” I said. “It is a host plant for the luna moth.” I wiped my eyes, thinking about yet another move. “I always wanted to have a walnut tree.”
The first time I saw a luna moth was nearly 20 years ago, before I married, before I had kids, when I was an ecology student in Athens, Georgia. It was night, and I had pulled into an empty bank parking lot to hit the ATM before going out for beers. I stepped out of my car, and as I slammed the door, something in the parking space next to me caught my eye. I looked down and there on the ground, two feet from my front driver’s side wheel, motionless with its wings spread flat, was a the largest moth I had ever seen. Luminescent green, it was more beautiful than butterflies. Had it crawled on my palm, its wings would have eclipsed my hand.
I forgot about the bank, forgot about the bar. I cared for nothing but this otherworldly creature on the pebbly black asphalt. The saucer-sized moth was the color of absinthe, and even with me standing over it, even after my feet crunched, and my ton of rubber and steel gravelled over pavement just inches from its body, it did not move. It lay there, basking in the light of a street lamp, as if in a trance. I had never seen anything like it. I stood there in that dingy parking lot, under the street light, in front of a brick bank, the most ordinary, paved over, non-natural setting, and experienced a sacred moment as I witnessed this gorgeous creature who had stopped time and space for me with its luminous glow.
Since that night, almost 20 years ago, I have hoped for the gift to see another. The only time I’ve seen one, besides in photographs on the internet or pinned in glass cases at a science museum, has been in a commercial for a sleep aid. Lunesta. I remember the first time I saw that ad, how offended I was that it had exploited such a special creature for the pedestrian purpose of peddling pills. It was like using God to sell toothpaste.
Ten years after that moth, when we bought a home in Florida, I wanted to cultivate a butterfly garden. I learned that you could attract local species by planting host plants for caterpillars (milkweed for monarchs, parsley for swallowtails, passionflower for frittilaries) and nectar flowers for butterflies (lantana, echinacea, goldenrod, plumbago). After successfully inviting multiple generations of monarchs and swallowtails, Gulf Frittilaries and zebra longwings, after watching the adults drink nectar, and their caterpillars munch leaves, and their chrysalises transform squishy larvae into winged butterflies between the slats of our wooden fence, I one day saw a tremendous, absinthe green caterpillar crawl across the our garden path. Its colossal size (larger than the largest swallowtail caterpillar I’d seen) and its luminous color (it seemed to glow even in daylight) immediately put me in mind of my magical moth, and I thrilled that it could possibly be a luna larva. I rushed in to fetch my camera and field guide, but when I reemerged and got down on my hands and knees in the mulch, trying to follow its trail, I could not find the caterpillar again.
Luna moth caterpillar: photo credit Dave Wagner, 2002
Having seen my only luna moth in the foothills of the Appalachians, it never occurred to me that I might find one in Florida. I researched Actias luna to find the luna’s host plants: persimmon, sweetgum, hickory, walnut. All large specimens. None in our postage stamp yard in Tampa. I searched the neighborhood for these trees but never found them, nor did I find another luna larva.
When my husband accepted a three year postdoctoral position in Minnesota, and it was time to move away from Florida, I made a wish board of what I wanted in our new northern home: 3 bedrooms, a big kitchen, good schools, a yard for the kids, and a host plant for the luna moth. I forgot the board during our rushed two-day house-hunting trip. All we were looking for was a place we could afford in the school district that offered half-day kindergarten. A place we could spend three years and be comfortable. We moved in November, and one month later had our first snow. We didn’t see leaves or earth until the following May.
In September, after ten months in Minnesota, our kids clomped through the mud room one Saturday with their fingers stained black. “What on earth?” I asked.
“There are these things all over the yard – I think they’re coconuts!” our son said.
I walked outside with our daughter and him to find a pile of lime-sized green globes they had collected. Some had tiny fingernail gouges in them, some were chewed by squirrel teeth until a black pulp showed, some were inexpertly shredded by child fingers, and some were broken open like to show fibrous husks like… coconuts.
“Huh,” I said. “I don’t know what those are.”
A few days later I was kneading dough in the kitchen and I heard a THUNK. I looked up at the ceiling where it sounded like something had landed on the roof. I kneaded the bread some more. THUNK. I wiped my hands, THUNK, and walked to the big plate glass window that looked out on the yard. I saw one of the heavy green globes plummet to the ground, THUD, and my eyes traced its path up to a branch in a tree. There, a squirrel nibbled the thick husk of another one and sprayed flakes of the olive green skin from its mouth as it chewed.
I walked over to a neighbor’s house and asked, “What are these things?” I showed her an intact nut. It was heavy in my hand, like a stone.
“That’s a black walnut,” she said. “The kids love to try to tear them open. Be careful, though – the black stain is really hard to get out.”
I remembered the wish board I had forgotten and thought, holy shit, my magical thinking worked: we have a walnut tree.
After I realized we had a host plant on our property, after I realized my wishful intent had come to pass, I thought, “It’s meant to be! I will find another luna moth!” In spring and summer, I searched for luna caterpillars, but the crown of the tree was too high, and there were no climbing branches. I couldn’t see the leaves way up there in the sky. I could not see if luminous larvae ate them. I checked by the porch light at night for adults and walked outside in moonlight through the neighborhood.
Season after season went by, and in the three years that we lived in that house, I never saw a luna moth.
When we left Minnesota and I stood by the window with my husband, I was sad to leave the tree so soon. Sad that I never got a chance to see my moth. Sad to leave what was known. Again.
We moved into our Virginia townhouse in December. The trees were bare when we dragged furniture up stairs and decided which cupboard would hold the plates, which drawer would hold the silverware. After settling in, we sledded in the neighborhood in January, bicycled past pastures in July, gathered words in the horticulture gardens in August. I forgot about the luna moth. Had given up on it. Did not wish for a host plant when we relocated, not (consciously) out of disappointment, but because I had moved on. Because my mind was on practical things: transitioning our children, affordable housing, school districts. Soccer. Swim team. The daily grind.
Summer turned to fall in our new home, and with September came the first day of school. As we did last winter and last spring, the kids and I walked through the park in our neighborhood to wait at the bus stop. We shuffled our feet in the few golden oak crisps that had already fallen, and when the bus arrived, our children looked to the windows and saw friends they hadn’t seen in three months. Little hands stuck through open rectangles, waving. A face popped up with bright eyes and a mouthful of teeth and beckoned them onto the bus. Our kids grinned and said hi to their driver and climbed on the bus with more excitement than they were willing to admit on the first day of school.
I was relieved to see them happy, thrilled to know they had already made fast friends, proud that they had not only survived the transition, but were now thriving in their new, not-Florida, not-Minnesota home. I walked through the park that morning with my hands in my pockets, kicking crunchy leaves, at peace. I was grateful for where we landed. Thankful that our family could finally settle down in a town we loved, in a town we wouldn’t have to leave.
I watched leaves fly fluttering from the toe of my shoe, and then I stopped. There on the ground, next to the curving brick path, among the brown leaves, was a husk. A husk like the ones the squirrels threw from tree tops in Minnesota. The ones that thunked on our roof and littered our yard in September. A husk the size of a lime, but woody like a coconut. I scanned a wider area and spread among the crisp oak leaves, like peanut shells at a picnic, were hundreds of these husks. The earth was littered with black walnut hulls. The park was full of walnut trees. I walked deeper into the neighborhood and saw hickories and sweetgum. Looked out over the Appalachians and realized in our forever home, in the town we wouldn’t have to leave, we didn’t just have one tree, we had a whole forest. Ridges and valleys lush with host plants. An entire mountain range of habitat.
My heart jumped, and I smiled at the trees, and I thought, “It is meant to be.”
I thought about visiting an art museum or strolling in a garden for my artist’s day out*, but what I really wanted to do was sit in a coffee shop, eat pastry, and watch the world go by.
So that’s what I did.
At Bollo’s, a cozy café in Blacksburg, there were a handful of empty tables when I arrived at 11 am – one near the front window, one three steps from the cash register, and three or four in the way back by the wire shelves loaded with flour and napkins. None of these felt right for sitting and watching. I’d be facing other tables head-on, or be bumped by patrons in line, or I’d be stuck with the supplies where I couldn’t see or hear any of the good stuff going on in the coffee shop. If I were planning to do something, to read or write or meet someone, the table wouldn’t matter as much. But for sitting still to watch and listen…
The best of the options was a round table with three chairs by the front window. The plate glass had an 18-inch spider-web shatter mark next to one of the chairs. I set my bag in that seat and then turned to the bakery case to place my order. As I returned with a scone and steaming mug, weaving through the small spaces between laptop-tapping customers, I debated which seat to sit in – did I want to watch the world outside or the one within? I chose the chair that faced the window and immediately regretted it.
My back was to the coffee shop and all of its deep-in-conversation, iPod listening, and keyboard tapping customers. I heard a babble of voices, the hiss of the espresso machine, the ching of the cash register, all behind me where i could not see, while in front of me I watched delivery trucks, dance walkers with earbuds, and students talking with their hands and their mouths, but on the other side of the shattered glass, so that I could not hear. Their world was silent to me was they walked through sunlight, and the coffee shop was obscured to me as it clattered its cacophony behind me. I did not like that my back was to it.
I moved my bags and changed chairs so that my shoulder and back were to the shattered glass, and I faced the environment that I could hear. I watched the cashier take orders from a dreadlocked white woman, from a tall ebony man in tailored pants, from a balding middle aged man in a windbreaker, from a big-bearded man with retro headphones and a WIRED courier bag over his shoulder. I listened to the young man and woman next to me – a couple? I didn’t think so. He was trying to convince her of something, had her read an essay on his phone. She bobbed her head and said, “That’s so cool,” her blonde pony-tail snarling in her purple hood, clinging with static electricity. I think they were only friends, but she might have wanted more.
As I listened, I was conscious of my eavesdropping. I felt very conspicuous, facing the patrons without even a magazine on my table. I pulled out my composition book and a pen to pretend like I was thinking, like I was intending to write, then leaned back in my chair with my hands wrapped around my white mug. I turned my gaze sideways out the window, away from the smooth wooden bench of seats that I really wanted. Those seats backed up against the wall, and if you sat there, you could survey the worlds both inside and out without being pointed directly at either one. I coveted a seat on that polished pew.
I sensed movement from the young man at the small table next to me. He sat in the seat I wanted most. It was at the end of the bench, next to the window, with its back against the wall. It was so close I could touch his table from mine. I could appropriate his cushioned nest with barely a shift of my butt. Yes, he was packing up his laptop. He was bussing his table. I gathered my cup and plate, ready to pounce as soon as he walked away. A man dinged in through the front door in and his eyes went directly to that table. I felt a flush of both guilt and victory when I slid into the seat as the young man slung his pack over his shoulder and walked away. I avoided eye contact with the new customer who had wanted this spot.
I was embarrassed by all the maneuvering that went into acquiring my new seat, but man, the table was perfect. It was everything I had hoped it would be. I could see without feeling obvious, I could recline with a wall, not action, behind my back.
I watched as a brunette woman with a cute bob of curls ordered her coffee and sat down at the table three steps from the cash register. She pulled out her laptop while people stood over her in line. The man who had eyed the cushion I now reclined on set his coffee on my original table, then sat in my original chair, facing the window. He opened a magazine on the round table and drank his coffee. Was it just me, or did he seem uncomfortable? Unsatisfied with his seat perhaps? He left as soon as he drained his final sip.
I sat back, inconspicuous, with a view of everything I wanted to see. The door tinkled open over and over again, the cash register chinged, voices murmered, and crockery clanked as customers bussed their tables into the grey plastic bin by the counter, and I could see it all. I blew on my fresh cup of coffee and opened my notebook.
The man two seats down on the bench – the only other person using pen and paper instead of a laptop – closed his spiral notebook and scooted out from behind his table to leave. The brunette with a head full of cute curls, the one right in front of the cash register, eyed his seat. As soon as he cleared the area, she jumped up and grabbed his table. She set her laptop up, let out a small sigh, and sank into the shiny wooden seat.
*A resolution that came out of my writing workshop was to take an artist’s day out every week. So far I’ve visited an antiques shop that inspired “old rolling pins,” a Barnes & Noble where I tried to read The Woman in Black in a public place, thinking it might not be as scary that way (it was), and this coffee shop. I hadn’t planned on writing about the coffee shop – I had intended only to sit and enjoy – but my notebook and pen, my props, were sitting there on the table and, well…
Orange and maroon are on the move, like a river burbling down the sidewalk, like burgundy water roiling with golden Koi.
From my perch on a grassy hill, I see a sea of wine and oranges, a teeming tide of tee-shirts that streams towards the stadium. I hear the laughter and drunken hoots of Hokie fans. Children run with pom poms rustling. They laugh and lick ice cream and rattle plastic plumes while Dad slips a flask into his sock, or a fake camera with a liquor cavity into the diaper bag. On the way to the game, they – parents and children and college kids alike – are full of excited energy.
As the crowd thins – kickoff is near and the fans have funneled into the stadium like fish over rapids – I hear the hum and the sputter of a biplane in the crisp autumn air. Its hum heightens to a whine as it approaches, then recedes to a buzz as the plane banks towards the stadium. It pulls a banner, flapping like clear tape behind it, advertising pizza or insurance or the used care lot down the road.
The sidewalk is empty now, clean even, and I hear a gathering roar, carried across a mile of blue sky from Lane Stadium. The sound builds – rooooaaAAARRRRR – as football fans stomp and cheer for kickoff. A yellow butterfly floats over a bush near my knee.
After, when the tide recedes from the stadium, it will leave debris, just like the ocean. It will leave behind peanut shells and empty cups, abandoned pom poms and maroon and orange hair bows. If the Hokies won, the party will continue all night, a crash of waves under moonlight.
I wrote this at the beginning of football season in Blacksburg, VA, home of the Virginia Tech Hokies, in response to a writing workshop prompt “orange and maroon on the move.”