The woods begin where the backyard ends. When my brother and I go to the woods, we are not brothers anymore. We are kings.
Or explorers. Or astronauts. Or spies.
In the woods, we are anything we want to be. In the woods, we forget about school. We forget about homework. We forget about time.
The path through the woods is narrow. We walk single-file between the trees and brambles. Later, we’ll pull the leaves from our hair and compare the scratches on our arms, the places where are clothes have torn.
If we walk deeper into the woods, across the train tracks, and turn around, we can see the roof of our house above the treetops.
Below the train tracks, a shallow creek waits. The rocks are tan and smooth; they skip across the water like insects. Mud comes in many forms; we know them all.
The weather in the woods is not like weather anywhere else. When it rains in the woods, we hear the drops falling before we feel them. In the woods, sunshine is a treasure that dissolves in our hands. Snow is a white map.
If you go with us into the woods, you have to be quiet. You have to watch out for wolves. And bandits. And quicksand.
Sometimes it feels like we could stay in the woods forever. Sometimes we race through the trees with our eyes half-closed, daring the woods to contain us. And sometimes we hide in the woods for hours, waiting for what we know will come: the clang of a bell being rung from the back porch: the sound of our mother calling us home.