She heard the car door open and shut. Eli hurried toward her.

“What the hell…?” he said, looking up at the hanging man.

“Come up and have some tea,” the man invited. “It’s cooler up here.”

“I haven’t climbed a tree since I was a little girl,” Miranda said. “I’m not sure I still know how.”

The man pulled himself upright onto the branch. “I’ll drop a ladder for you.”

He scrambled up the tree like a monkey. When he reached the tree house, he tossed a rope ladder down to them.

“You’re not going up there, are you?” Eli asked.

“Why not?”

“The guy’s obviously a nutcase. It could be dangerous.”

The whole reason for taking this journey was to have adventures, she reminded herself. She smiled sweetly at Eli. “You’ll be there to protect me.”

He sighed loudly as he followed her up the ladder. “Watch your step. It’s a long way down.”

Inside the tree house, the strange man set three cups on a low table fashioned from part of an old door. An army cot, a folding camp chair, a Coleman stove, a plastic trunk, and makeshift bookcases laden with books and canned food were the only other furnishings.

“Sit, sit,” he said, indicating cushions on the floor. “This is quite a treat for me. I don’t get many visitors.”

“I can see why,” Eli said.

The man seated himself on one of the cushions and filled the cups. “Most people aren’t willing to venture outside their comfort zones.”

Miranda introduced herself and Eli.

“Pleased to make your acquaintance. I’m Freeman.” He noticed Eli staring suspiciously at the liquid in his cup. “Don’t worry, it’s just mint tea brewed in the sun.”

“You still haven’t explained why you were hanging upside down,” she said.

“To get a different perspective,” Freeman answered. “There are things you can see more clearly upside down.”

“Oh, now I understand. I do that sometimes when I’m painting,” Miranda said. “If I turn the picture upside down, I notice things I missed before. When I view it in the usual way, my mind automatically fills in any gaps. I see what I’m prepared to see, not what’s really there.”

Freeman clapped his hands with glee. “Exactly.”

“What are you trying to see more clearly?” Eli asked.

“Myself.” Noticing Eli’s confused expression, he continued. “When we look at the world, we think we’re seeing a reality outside us. But we’re really seeing our inner selves projected outward—the world is our mirror.”

Miranda sipped her tea and contemplated Freeman’s statement. “That reminds me of a quote from Anais Nin: ‘We don’t see things as they are, we see things as we are.’”

“Freeman, is it possible all that blood running into your head while you hung upside down might have messed up your thinking?” Eli suggested.

“Gee, I hope so. That’s the whole point.” Instead of taking offense, the tree dweller grinned as if Eli had said something wise. “Like Miranda said, we only see what we’re prepared to see. Did you know that when Pissaro’s ships came to the New World, the natives who had no conception of sailing ships couldn’t see them?”

A flock of butterflies fluttered in through an open window and hovered above the table. One lit on Freeman’s head, another on his shoulder. He held out his finger and a butterfly landed on it.

“What color is this butterfly?” he asked.

“Green,” Eli answered.

“No, it’s blue. Turquoise, actually,” Miranda said.

“But artists don’t see things the same way other people do,” Eli protested.

Freeman passed the butterfly to her. “Nobody sees things the same way other people do. Ask ten people who witnessed the same event what actually took place, and you’ll get ten different answers. Perception is never objective.”

Miranda examined the butterfly perched on her finger with delight, admiring its delicate wings. “Butterflies supposedly symbolize death and rebirth.”

Eli frowned. “You think these butterflies are trying to tell us something?”

“Why don’t you ask them?” Freeman replied.

Watching the butterfly glide away, Miranda said, “The Druids believed trees have symbolic meanings, too.”

“Many cultures have myths about trees as sources of wisdom,” Freeman added.

“The Buddha gained enlightenment while sitting under the Bodhi tree. The Norse god Odin hung upside down on a giant ash tree called Yggdrasil to gain divine knowledge.”

“Do you think if you hang around in this tree long enough, God will speak to you?” Eli asked.

“God speaks to me all the time,” Freeman said with a smile. “I just have to be willing to listen.”

Miranda finished her tea and nudged Eli. “We really should be on our way.

Thanks for the tea, Freeman. I’ve enjoyed meeting you.”

“Likewise.” As they climbed back down the rope ladder, he called after them, “I hope you find what you’re looking for. You’ll see it when you believe it.”

* * *

“You didn’t seem to like Freeman very much,” Miranda said as they drove through the Atchafalaya Basin. “I thought he was fun.”

The highway, built on elevated pillars, bridged eighteen miles of the desolate swamp. Bald cypress trees, mangroves, and acres of eerie broken, black trunks stood in the brackish water, reminding her of a primordial landscape where dinosaurs might roam.

“He’s a weirdo, for sure.”

“So’s your friend Sybil, and my Uncle Bright,” she reminded him. “I guess it’s all in how you look at it.”

“Now you sound like Freeman.”

“You know, I’ve been thinking we should introduce Sybil to Uncle Bright. I bet they’d get along.”

As she spoke, something akin to a YouTube video of the four of them dancing on a beach flashed through her mind. Where’d that come from? she wondered. I never used to have visions, but now I seem to be getting them quite often. She recalled her strange experience at Lee Golden’s art gallery, when she’d witnessed a past lifetime. I still don’t understand how I could see so vividly something that happened centuries ago. She contemplated her father’s vision of her future husband. Is Eli the one he meant, or have I misinterpreted everything? Past, present, and future seemed all jumbled up, like clothes tossing about in a dryer.

Eli’s voice interrupted her thoughts. “Look, there’s an alligator.” He pointed at a scaly shape floating in the water.

Miranda squinted at it. “I think it’s just a log.”

“One person’s alligator is another person’s log,” he teased. “How will we ever know the truth?”

“I guess we won’t. I’m certainly not getting close enough to find out.” She turned the air conditioner up a notch. “I have to agree with Freeman to some extent, though. If you believe people are inherently good, you’ll usually meet good people. If you think the world is a dangerous place and everyone’s out to get you, that’s what you’ll experience.”

“Yeah, well, I never thought the world was a dangerous place until somebody tried to kill me.”

Miranda remembered the scene she’d viewed inside the crystal she’d found in Uncle Bright’s field. The sense of danger and foreboding welled up in her again, just thinking about it. I still have that crystal tucked away in my suitcase. Maybe I should take another look. She considered telling Eli about it, but rejected the idea. No sense worrying him about something that might only be my imagination.

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