He cut two forked
twigs and trimmed them into two Y’s of the same size. Oliver had
been very particular to have the cross-bar round and smooth, he
remembered. A wild cherry grew half-way up the bank. He climbed
it and cut a twig as even as a polished pencil. He selected a
palm frond and cut two strips of the tough fiber, an inch wide
and four inches long. He cut a slit lengthwise in the center of
each of them, wide enough to insert the cherry twig. The strips
of palm frond must be at angles, like the arms of a windmill. He
adjusted them carefully. He separated the Y-shaped twigs by
nearly the length of the cherry cross-bar and pushed them deep
into the sand of the branch bed a few yards below the spring.
The water was only a few inches deep but it ran strongly, with
a firm current. The palm-frond mill-wheel must just brush the
water’s surface. He experimented with depth until he was
satisfied, then laid the cherry bar between the twigs. It hung
motionless. He twisted it a moment, anxiously, helping it to fit
itself into its forked grooves. The bar began to rotate. The
current caught the flexible tip of one bit of palm frond. By the
time it lifted clear, the rotation of the bar brought the angled
tip of the second into contact with the stream. The small leafy
paddles swung over and over, up and down. The little wheel was
turning. The flutter-mill was at work. It turned with the easy
rhythm of the great water-mill at Lynne that ground corn into
meal.

Jody drew a deep breath. He threw himself on the weedy sand
close to the water and abandoned himself to the magic of motion.
Up, over, down, up, over, down—the flutter-mill was enchanting.
The bubbling spring would rise forever from the earth, the thin
current was endless. The spring was the beginning of waters
sliding to the sea. Unless leaves fell, or squirrels cut sweet
bay twigs to drop and block the fragile wheel, the flutter-mill
might turn forever. When he was an old man, as old as his father,
there seemed no reason why this rippling movement might not
continue as he had begun it.
He moved a stone that was matching its corners against his
sharp ribs and burrowed a little, hollowing himself a nest for
his hips and shoulders. He stretched out one arm and laid his
head on it. A shaft of sunlight, warm and thin like a light
patchwork quilt, lay across his body. He watched the flutter-mill
indolently, sunk in the sand and the sunlight. The movement was
hypnotic. His eyelids fluttered with the palm-leaf paddles. Drops
of silver slipping from the wheel blurred together like the tail
of a shooting star.
1 comment