By James Bates
tonic and lime on the rocks
I
found my first agate when I was ten on a gravel road in northern Minnesota. A
walnut sized stone with rusty red hues enfolding swirls of white crystals, it
was like holding a piece of magic. Its genesis was eons ago, formed from
volcanic fires in the depths of Lake Superior, and its journey to that rural
road was part glaciation, part mystery. It's hard to find one these days.
They're special, and their value is in their rarity.
After my daughter Jenny's funeral, I
decided to give it to my eight year old grandson. We were downstairs in my
workroom, and I was showing him some of the favorite rocks I'd collected over
the years, getting him acclimated. He'd be staying with us for the foreseeable
future while his father was recovering in the hospital.
"This is so beautiful, Grandpa
Pete," Evan said, visibly awestruck."I love it." It was nice to see him smile
for the first time since the tragic car accident that had killed his mother. I
told him a little of its history as he gently caressed the singular stone in his
small hands, eyes wide with wonder, his thoughts for a moment taken away to
happier times. When I was finished he was quiet. I was, too. What would each of
our lives be like now, now that someone we both loved so dearly was no longer
with us? My Jenny. Evan's mother. After a minute he looked at me hopefully and
asked, "Grandpa Pete? Do you think we can we go searching for more of them
sometime? I'd really like to do that."
His innocence and quiet voice almost
broke my heart. We were both suffering and grieving our loss. Even though the
chances of finding any were next to zero, was it too much to hope that searching
for agates together would help us both to heal? I didn't have to think hard at all.
"Absolutely," I said, instantly
planning a drive north while picturing him cradling a handful of newly found
agates in his cupped palms. "Let's go tomorrow."
About the author
Jim is retired and lives in a small town twenty miles
west of Minneapolis, Minnesota. In addition to CafeLit, his stories have
appeared in The Writers' Cafe Magazine, A Million Ways and
Paragraph Planet. You can also check out his blog to see more:
www.theviewfromlonglake.wordpress.com
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