The Cry That Carries
I hear the mournful call of the loon. The deep, lonely sigh echoes off the mountaintops. Tumbling across the surface of the silk-like water, I welcome its haunting embrace. Waves kiss my feet but bugs are biting now. Still, I stay, waiting for the lonely cry again, while a muted sky stretches before me in purples and pinks, fading into dusky starlight. I search for red eyes floating atop rippling, inky black. Layers of opaque glass shimmer. I am alone.
~
Bathed in the dim kitchen light, the frigid air is a shock against the skin of my naked legs. Twisting my left ankle over my right, goosebumps crawl across a blanket of pale flesh. I curl my toes up underneath my bare feet for warmth. There’s no point in keeping the refrigerator door open. My bed calls to me, but still, my body stays anchored in place.
~
“Ooooh…” a loon wails. I bet it’s a male. The ominous tone varies, the cadence shifts, depending on who they’re talking to and what they want to say. Howling and chatting far away. A tremolo means they’re in trouble. Yodeling to say, “This is my home, back away.” But the final, most beautiful call, a chilling and desperate cry, whispers only to me.
~
The kitchen is bathed in darkness, except for the light coming from behind the milk carton, illuminating the bottle of half drank Sauvignon Blanc. I shift my weight and listen for tiny footsteps pitter-pattering down the front hallway stairs. But there is nothing. Only the quiet humming that comes from the back of the fridge. And the buzzing inside my head.
~
Baby loons are chicks. They ride on their parents’ backs when they are first born, to bond, to seek warmth, to escape the cold or to be far from predators that lurk below. I’ve always wanted to see a chick riding on their mama. I’ve never seen a baby loon before. I wonder if a chick has to learn how to talk.
~
I should go upstairs. To sleep. Crawl into bed beside my babies. They need me. Yet, I won’t stop playing this game. Shivering, my body trembles. It aches. I’m vibrating. I can’t shake the fact that I don’t recall putting any of my children to bed last night. I promised I wouldn’t do this tonight. Not tonight. Not again. Not anymore.
~
Pairs of loons call to one another. They create synchronized duets that strengthen their bonds. They sing back and forth. It’s how they talk and communicate. Crying across misty glass.
~
Inspecting the bottle, I attempt to decipher how much I drank last night. Because I can’t remember. I consumed half of this bottle and the entirety of the one hidden beneath the piles of recycling. Flattened boxes of mac ‘n cheese and empty jars of peanut butter, the Whispering Angel hides within a smushed box of the kid’s favorite sugary cereal.
~
These avian creatures only live for twenty years. That’s it. They never experience the joy of a 21st birthday. But maybe that’s considered a long time for birds.
~
Twisting off the top, the metal cap clicks against the glass brim as I dip my nose down towards the bottle. The pungent scent hits me, sharp and familiar. Sighing, the golden liquid sloshes. Just one taste.
~
I heard once that loons mate for life.
~
Clumsily, I spill some on the counter as it splashes into my glass. I contemplate licking up the puddle. I lift the glass and listen again. He’s not home yet. He won’t know. My lips suck thirstily, making a slurping noise in the quiet darkness. My cheeks pucker at the tartness. I place the cup on the counter. Tapping my foot on the floor, I count to five and then sip. Count to five. Sip. I try to wait, until I can no longer do so. I empty the glass, gulping it down without breathing. I chug greedily, straight from the bottle.
~
The call of the loon means something. It’s the sign of a healthy lake.





