By James T. Morrison
We named Ellwood Bluff after the elementary school across the street, spending our afternoons among the mustard flower, wild fennel, and eucalyptus forests. The stalactites of beating Monarch butterfly wings dripped from the trees, tens of thousands of them, creating the illusion that the entire thicket was breathing—a deep, burnt orange shot through with sun, a thick canopy shattering the light to pieces on the dirt. As construction encroached on their habitat, the collective lungs grew smaller each year. Monarchs just stopped coming.
We went to war for that bluff, against the tract of starter-castles, against the Bacara Hotel, and we won a slice, all that beauty reduced to a “preserve,” a footpath to R Beach, where we threw keggers at sixteen, wagons dragged through gullies and gulches, over snaking roots, so heavy the rusty bottoms of Red Flyers threaten to bust, and then what?
Roll the beast along, roll it down the crumbling asphalt path to the beach, hope that there’s more light lager than head, hope we don’t get raided, cops rushing the bonfire.
Watch us scatter, watch us spread like spiders’ legs across the sand, the incoming tide means jutting bluffs are impossible to pass without getting very, very wet, but let’s go, a midnight swim is better than being thrown around and cuffed-up by five-o. Watch us wade to our waists, watch as we take the deepest breath, and then vanish like Monarchs from the bluff.
James T. Morrison is a writer, editor, and visual artist based in California’s Central Valley. He currently serves as both the managing and nonfiction editor for The Normal School. His work has appeared in Diode, Slate, Fugue, and elsewhere. www.james-t-morrison.com/
Image by Ernesto Reiez courtesy of Pexels
I remember southern California from long ago with its healthy eucalyptus forests, and migrating butterflies. This is a beautiful eulogy for childhood, and monarchs.
Thanks James. I especially like the stalactites of Monarch butterfly wings, going to war for the bluffs and the disappearing teens.