I ambled (the pace my sore back is comfortable with) to the lake, a two-minute trip down a small path surrounded by walls of large moss laden grey squares of stone. In one crevice, four violets and their green tongue-shaped leaves were almost at eye level.
Violets have been my favourite flower since I was a child. The hill outside our backyard would be covered with them. My mother and I picked bouquets almost a foot across and put them in our pewter pitcher. Even at four and five I wanted to absorb the colour combination into my soul.
The lake glimmered blue-grey in the muted sun, a Manet day, not a VanGogh day. The
Yesterday the lake had been dotted with white caps and was Coke bottle green. I learned that the
Ducks swam in the water so clear that I could see the ridges in their webbed feet. At certain angles the heads of the male mallards looked deep purple instead of luminescent green.
A few boats bobbed off shore. On one sailboat, the masts nude, a family ate a picnic. The cries of their baby floated across the water.
I found a place to sit and a small white un-coiffured poodle, Maisie, checked me out, found me uninteresting and moved on.
On a normal Friday, I would have been alone, but this is a four-day weekend and families were strolling up and down.
I found a perch and sat and watched at peace with myself and the world as I smelled the water.
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