From Tel Aviv With Love ©️

The cabin lights had been dimmed to a soft amber. Outside the windows, the sky was velvet—stars blurred into thin silver streaks. The engines hummed like a prayer that had forgotten its words.

Lena: I always get nervous crossing oceans. It feels like we’re borrowing time that doesn’t belong to us.

DH: That’s what I love about it. Up here we’re between days—between languages. We’re nowhere, and somehow we’re closer to everything.

She smiled, her hand finding his under the thin airline blanket.

Lena: Do you think they’ll feel it when we land?

DH: The kids?

Lena: No—the land. The way you talk about it, like it remembers everyone who’s ever looked for God.

DH: It does. That’s why we’re going. You read the stories; I want to see if the soil still glows from them.

Lena: You always talk like the ground can speak.

DH: Maybe it can. Maybe Tel Aviv is just another translation—earth answering heaven in human tones.

For a long moment they watched the faint lightning far below the plane, silent flashes over the Mediterranean.

Lena: You realize this is the first time we’re flying toward my beginning instead of away from it.

DH: And I’m following you this time. You’re the map now.

She leaned her head on his shoulder.

Lena: Do you think our children will understand any of this?

DH: They already do. They dream in both languages.

Lena: And what will we do when we get there?

DH: Walk by the sea until we remember why the covenant was written in the first place.

The captain’s voice murmured through the speakers in Hebrew and English, announcing descent. The city lights began to bloom below, small gold fires along the coast.

Lena looked down through the window, her reflection merging with the stars.

Lena: It looks like the sky fell to earth.

DH: Maybe it did. Maybe this is where heaven lands when it needs a home.

She turned to him, eyes glistening with the first hint of dawn.

Lena: Then welcome home.

He smiled. Outside, the plane tilted slightly toward the light.

Freebird (Slight Return) ©️

The air is cold and crisp, cutting across the mountains like a blade. I rise with the dawn, the world beneath me still wrapped in its gray quilt of mist. My wings stretch wide, every feather catching the sun’s first light, and I push off from the crag, dropping into the sky like a stone before the wind catches me, lifting me higher.

Far below, the river glints like a serpent winding through the valley. I tilt my head, scanning the water’s surface. Trout flash and leap, unaware of my shadow drifting across their world. Pine trees huddle close along the banks, ancient and patient, the wind whispering secrets through their boughs.

A hare darts from one shadow to another, ears pricked, heart thundering. I see the swaying grasses tremble where it passes, but I am not hungry. Not yet. My stomach is still warm from yesterday’s feast—rabbit, caught on the slope where the wildflowers grow. I circle high, content to glide, tracing the ridges and folds of the earth like an old map I’ve long since memorized.

Far off, a rival calls—sharp and piercing, slicing through the morning quiet. I bank left, turn my head, but do not answer. The sky belongs to no one. Not me, not him. Let him hunt where he pleases. The ridge belongs to me. I’ll not waste energy on games today.

Clouds gather on the western horizon, their bellies swollen and dark. Rain will come by dusk. I’ll return to the nest before then, the high branch where the wind can’t touch me. My mate will be there, feathers rustling, our chick already squawking for its next meal. I’ll bring him a fat trout, something easy to catch. He needs to grow strong, needs to know the way the wind bends around the mountains.

A flock of crows gathers below, tearing at some carcass left in the clearing. Bold and loud, they squabble, scattering in every direction when I dive—just a warning, just a reminder. They have their place, and I have mine.

I rise again, carried by the updraft, and watch the world move slowly beneath me. The deer step softly through the grass. A fox slips into the thicket, nose low, tail brushing the earth. My eyes trace the river’s bend, the far edge of my territory, and I know every stone, every shadow.

The sun climbs higher, warming the world, and I drift lazily, eyes half-closed, ears open to the hum of the wind. I belong here—woven into sky and stone and the wide, whispering valley.

When I finally turn for home, the wind cradles me gently, and I let it carry me. I’ll sleep with one eye open tonight, high above the ground, while the rain drums softly against the leaves, and the river dreams its way through the dark.