Stillwater Cover by Ada Limon It seemed a furtive magic— sun ricocheting off cresting waves near Stillwater Cove, the soft rock cliffs of sandstone and clay, the wind-tilted cypress trees leaning toward the blue Pacific—and it was only you that saw the whales. A migrating pod of gray whales going northward new calves in tow, shooting a spray of frothy expelled water from their blowholes and making a show of breaching in the clear spring air off the coastline. We’d whine that we never caught a glimpse of a slick back or tail slap, nary a spyhopping head raised above the swirling surface. Too young to look outward for long, we’d lower our eyes toward what lived small, the alligator lizard in the coyote bush, the bracken fern, the orange monkey flower, the beach fly, the earwig, the tick. It was your trick, always a whale as soon as our heads went down, had to have been a lie, they’d come up while we zeroed in on Mexican sage or the monarch. Distracted by the evidence of life at our feet, we had no time for the waiting that was required. To watch the waves until the whales surfaced seemed a maddening task. Now, I am in the inland air that smells of smoke and gasoline, the trees blown leafless by wind. Could you refuse me if I asked you to point again at the horizon, to tell me something was worth waiting for?
I love the last lines: "Could you refuse me if I asked you/to point again at the horizon, to tell me/ something was worth waiting for?"
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