The pond was a quarry first, a blast furnace to the colonies where trains ran across its field. “Iron Ore Bed” map points called it. It was left to the rain when it dried up.
When his parents bought the land twenty- five years before he was born, the field was overgrown and the pond was weedy and inaccessible.
Over the next few decades, they cleared the area all around it, diverted a nearby brook to flow through it. It became the center of their life.
It was sixty feet deep with water that was clear and warm. It teamed with small trout, pickerel and bass, shoals of gentleness that passed by him and his cousins as they swam.
Great blue herons, snowy egrets would feast their briefly before their Souh American migration, always mindful of the need for even quick hellos and goodbyes.
In his presence they would dip their wings and then rise majestically over the pond above the beech, birch and ash, vanishing from his sight, beyond the horizon.
And then, always the rain would come, the pond shimmering in the downpour washing the pond mud and silt from his arms and legs, the last streaks of it from his hair.
Afraid he would be struck by lightning, he retreated to the screened in porch, with everyone, out of the rain, playing Monopoly in the coming firefly night.