They aren’t here yet.
But they will be. The
grandchildren, I mean. Already I can
hear them: their sweet laughter, their calling.
“Nonni, come outside!
Let’s play!” Okay then.
I decided to get the garden ready. You better have portals to fairyland
established if you wish to entertain Those Able To Go There. You should have a place where action figures
can launch themselves so that they can save the world. There should be a roving elf, who is in a
different place each time they come. And
crystals in the dry stream bed?
Obligatory!
First we made a dry stream bed out of rocks, and I’ve been
collecting rocks from our travels. There
are rocks from King Arthur’s castle at Tintagel in Cornwall, England. There are rocks from the Koenigsee, Germany,
where one can see the alps and imagine knights on horseback defending the
realm. There’s rocks from the North
Cascades mountains, where Hudson’s Bay mountain men trapped and explored. There’s one from the Middle Fork of the
Salmon River, Idaho, where I got swept under a waterfall and lived to
tell. Magic? Yessiree.
In case they want to go mining for crystals, I brought back
bags from the gift shop of the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, MT. Pink and purple crystals that they can find
and hold up to me and say, “Lookit what I found, Nonni!” “That means you get three wishes!” I will
say. It will be taken home to live on
their bookshelf. Formulating lifelong
wishes with it in the dim glow of their nightlight, who knows what might come
true?
There are special flat rocks there in case we are called to
have tea parties some soft summer day.
We can learn about hospitality and being kind. We’ll sit on the rocks with our teddy bears
and talk about who we might want to have visit us and what we will share with
them.
Of course there is a cliff built into the riverbank if some
action figures need to jump off it, swim down the river and save the
world.
We can learn about bravery, bullying,
and fears and what we can to do banish them from our kingdom. What the word integrity might mean.
There’s a stump from a loved birch tree that one can stand
on and be transported into lands I’ve never even imagined. I’ll let them tell me where, who inhabits it,
and what the rules are. If any.
There’s daffodil bulbs planted, because in their bells are
where the fairies live. Don’t believe
me? I have it on the best
authority. A kindergarten boy I knew
once told me. We have lily of the valley
too, because those ring. Ears that can
hear Santa’s sleigh bells can certainly hear white coral bells.
The two gnarly apple trees in the backyard have faces
pounded into them. The moss even now is
growing around them. One is an Old Man of the Woods who smiles knowingly, and
the other is an Enchantress. The little children
who live next door love to look at them and point them out every time they come
over.
I can’t wait for the grandchildren to come over too. It will be awhile. We only found out recently they are
coming. Here’s a picture of the
moment. A bit blurry, because
Father-To-Be who took the picture was jumping around. The Mother-To-Be is in the middle of the
couch. The due date is November.
The fairies told me they are excited too.