Within Close Range: Flying

I dream of flying.

Lifting off the edge of the bluff

and rising quickly 

toward the fat, lazy clouds

hovering over the great, grey lake.

Circling the nearby harbor

where scattered sailboats bob, 

I swoop and dive

like the swallows nearby,

but seek out more familiar forms

hidden back among the trees,

just far enough 

from the crumbling bluff

to put Dad’s mind at ease.

To the glowing kitchen window

and the figure of Mom 

in her pink, plaid apron.

Ever regal.

Ever busy

in her blue and yellow kitchen.

I hover there,

in the cool lake air,

listening to the happy clinks and clanks

of pots and plates.

And try to imagine what’s cooking

by what’s wafting through the windows.

Until a strong breeze 

lifts the aroma 

and me

back over the lake.

Past the sunken, old pier

where giant carp spawn 

year after year.

Past the rocky harbor walls

standing hard against the waves.

Until the house 

and the cottage 

and the beach 

disappear,

and I begin to really soar

over endless stretches 

of dark and deep.

Unhappy to find my bed

and solid ground beneath me 

when I wake.