After my father had passed away I began to look
through his personal belongings and found some
thing I hadn't seen since childhood: his compass.
I was twelve when we went hiking to a forest about
an hour out from the nearest town. We started
early in the morning and walked until our hunger
forced us to eat. We ate some of the trail mix my
mother had prepared along with a can of beans.
Green and brown covered everything. The rays
of light coming through the forest canopy made
me feel like we were in church, not the phony
church everyone goes to on Sunday mornings
because they have to but, church as it was meant
to be. Aside from the sounds of our steps all
you could hear was the wind, creatures scurrying
at our encroachment, the bird songs calling back
and forth. As night began to fall I asked my dad,
"Are we going back home now that its getting
dark?" He said we were since we didn't bring
anything to sleep in. "As soon as I find my
compass we'll make our way back." He dug into
his pockets and into his bag, his movements
became frantic. "Do you have it?" I asked. "I'm
sure I do. Let's not worry about it. We'll make
it back just fine, I'm sure of it." We started back
in the kind of silence that you can only find in
the forest. New sounds surrounded us in the
coming darkness. Every stick and twig that was
trampled underfoot sounded like the cracking
of bones. We founds ourselves back at the car
beneathe the full gaze of the moon. I had never
felt so relieved. I fell asleep as he drove us back
home. When I woke up the next day I asked him
if he ever found his compass. He placed the brass
object with a cracked lense in my hands. As I looked
more carefully at it I saw that the arrow had broken
free and sat uselessly on the face.