I saw the second Hunger Games movie this week. It made me reread "Catching Fire" which I did in about 24 hours, even with granddaughters here!
The movie 'watches' like the book 'reads'--which is downhill all the way at a speed that is just beyond comfortable.
And Jennifer Lawrence, well, what can you say about her?
One thing I can say is this: she is not a 'sex symbol' in any way though she is beautiful and sensual and only 23. What she is is this, a girl women would want to have as a friend and men as well. She is like 'the girl next door' melded into 'the friend you want to have'.
She is a remarkable actress. Probably the best since Merell Streep and a decade younger that when we first met Merell.
Read the book. See the movie. Preferably in that order--but the movie is so faithful to the book it would most likely enhance your enjoyment of the novel as the novel enhances your enjoyment of the movie. Just do it, ok?
(Also saw Frozen with the girls and Josh and Bern. Absolutely 'must see', even if you're an old coot like me. Great animation, profound and wondrous moral, astonishing story. Go see a movie or two soon--my recommends are the two above....)
Saturday, November 30, 2013
Friday, November 29, 2013
Where I'm from....
Thanksgiving and the day after is over. Sherry and Jack and John and Robbie came and went. Tim and Mimi left today. Kathy came today and will leave tomorrow with the girls--her dad has been in hospital and kept her in Baltimore until today--Josh will stay for his 20th High School Reunion on Saturday (how did that happen...that a child of mine graduated from High School two decades ago???)
For some reason today I've been pondering where I was 'from' and how that formed me in so many ways. Part of it was because the people around me, except for Bern, were 'from' other places and formed much differently than I was.
I'm from West Virginia, the southern most county of McDowell. Those who are 'from there' say it in 2 1/2 syllables--MACK-Dow-ell. One of the few words we say (those of us from the Appalachian place) that doesn't have the accent on the last syllable. We say "tor-na-DO" and "Merry Christ-MAS"
and end all sentences on an upbeat that makes the simplest thing sound like a question: 'lovely day to-DAY" we'd say.
Where I grew up, when you met someone you'd ask them "Where are you from?"
And they'd say 'Pageton' or 'Welch' or 'Crosier Holler' or 'Little Creek' and you'd know volumes about them just from that--who their 'people' were and how they showed up in the world. Knowing where someone was 'from' was knowing them pretty well.
In New England I have to remind myself to ask strangers "what do you do?' because that's the operative question up here.
Being 'from' West Virginia, especially McDowell county is formative in a myriad of ways. First of all, you don't think you're as good as most people and you enter any encounter as an underdog. Secondly, you have to be twice as smart to be noticed. Thirdly, you have trouble dealing with people who are 'well off'. It's just like that. Really. And always.
Being an Appalachian means starting with a 4 handicap. It just does.
In just less than seven decades I've pared some of that away, but in some ways yet, I'm just a boy "From" McDowell County, with all that entails. Try as you might, where I come from, you can't escape 'where you come from'....
I'm OK with that, it's just the way it is.
For some reason today I've been pondering where I was 'from' and how that formed me in so many ways. Part of it was because the people around me, except for Bern, were 'from' other places and formed much differently than I was.
I'm from West Virginia, the southern most county of McDowell. Those who are 'from there' say it in 2 1/2 syllables--MACK-Dow-ell. One of the few words we say (those of us from the Appalachian place) that doesn't have the accent on the last syllable. We say "tor-na-DO" and "Merry Christ-MAS"
and end all sentences on an upbeat that makes the simplest thing sound like a question: 'lovely day to-DAY" we'd say.
Where I grew up, when you met someone you'd ask them "Where are you from?"
And they'd say 'Pageton' or 'Welch' or 'Crosier Holler' or 'Little Creek' and you'd know volumes about them just from that--who their 'people' were and how they showed up in the world. Knowing where someone was 'from' was knowing them pretty well.
In New England I have to remind myself to ask strangers "what do you do?' because that's the operative question up here.
Being 'from' West Virginia, especially McDowell county is formative in a myriad of ways. First of all, you don't think you're as good as most people and you enter any encounter as an underdog. Secondly, you have to be twice as smart to be noticed. Thirdly, you have trouble dealing with people who are 'well off'. It's just like that. Really. And always.
Being an Appalachian means starting with a 4 handicap. It just does.
In just less than seven decades I've pared some of that away, but in some ways yet, I'm just a boy "From" McDowell County, with all that entails. Try as you might, where I come from, you can't escape 'where you come from'....
I'm OK with that, it's just the way it is.
Monday, November 25, 2013
Monday and Mimi
The Thanksgiving holiday began early when Mimi came from New York on the train at noon today.
We'll have her alone until Josh and the girls arrive tomorrow evening.
Mimi alone is devoutly to be desired. She is so much fun. Bern and Mimi and I watched 'The Voice' together. We talk about it almost weekly since all three of us are huge fans, but watching it with her was a joy.
Bern and Mimi both have almost perfect pitch. She certainly got that gene from Bern! They can tell when someone is flat or sharp and when harmony is off. I actually thank the music gods I can't do that since it never interferes with my enjoying music....I'll be really enjoying someone on the show and I'll see Bern grimace. Sounded fine to me, but not to her. Even when the show is this late into the season--only 8 singers left and they all sound wondrous to me--I saw a grimace or two from the two of them.
Mimi does yoga and even scheduled some classes in Southington while she's here. She told me since she's gotten serious about yoga, her joints crack a lot. "I guess that's good," she said. Though I'm not sure how it is. I guess it has to do with limberness. I'm so stiff nothing of mine ever cracks and if it did it would probably be a compound fracture.
Cathy might not come until Wednesday since her dad is in the hospital in Baltimore. Tim comes Wednesday too, on the train, as Cathy will.
Cathy and the girls will leave Saturday morning. Josh is staying for his 20th high school reunion that night and then will leave Sunday Morning. He'll have to go with Bern to the train in her truck.
I'm not sure when Mimi and Tim will be leaving...(and it just occurred to me that these travel plans are of less than no interest to any of you....Sorry.)
It's just that these are people I love so, so much, I think everyone should care.
I hope you have people you love that much and they're with you this week....
We'll have her alone until Josh and the girls arrive tomorrow evening.
Mimi alone is devoutly to be desired. She is so much fun. Bern and Mimi and I watched 'The Voice' together. We talk about it almost weekly since all three of us are huge fans, but watching it with her was a joy.
Bern and Mimi both have almost perfect pitch. She certainly got that gene from Bern! They can tell when someone is flat or sharp and when harmony is off. I actually thank the music gods I can't do that since it never interferes with my enjoying music....I'll be really enjoying someone on the show and I'll see Bern grimace. Sounded fine to me, but not to her. Even when the show is this late into the season--only 8 singers left and they all sound wondrous to me--I saw a grimace or two from the two of them.
Mimi does yoga and even scheduled some classes in Southington while she's here. She told me since she's gotten serious about yoga, her joints crack a lot. "I guess that's good," she said. Though I'm not sure how it is. I guess it has to do with limberness. I'm so stiff nothing of mine ever cracks and if it did it would probably be a compound fracture.
Cathy might not come until Wednesday since her dad is in the hospital in Baltimore. Tim comes Wednesday too, on the train, as Cathy will.
Cathy and the girls will leave Saturday morning. Josh is staying for his 20th high school reunion that night and then will leave Sunday Morning. He'll have to go with Bern to the train in her truck.
I'm not sure when Mimi and Tim will be leaving...(and it just occurred to me that these travel plans are of less than no interest to any of you....Sorry.)
It's just that these are people I love so, so much, I think everyone should care.
I hope you have people you love that much and they're with you this week....
Saturday, November 23, 2013
Mamaw Jones
For some reason today I've been thinking about my grandmother--the only one I really had since my father's mother died before I could know her. Lina Manona Sadler Jones was her name. Her husband, my maternal grandfather was Eli Jones, no kidding. What a great name, though Lina Manona isn't 'shabby' (as we'd say back home as a compliment).
I remember an enormous amount of things about her--probably more than I remember about my mother, if that's fair. She was such a character.
The thing I remember today is having dinner around her kitchen table with some group of first cousins. As dinner was winding down, invariably, Mamaw Jones would say to one of us--and we all wanted it to be us!--"Have you had enough?" And we would proudly answer, "I've had sufficient."
Then she would say, "You went 'fishin'?"
And which ever one of us it was would say, "I've had plenty."
And she would say, "you caught 20?"
And we would say, since all of us were involved by then, "We're truly full!"
And she would reply, "so where are those fish?"
Then we'd have dessert--raspberry sticky buns or chocolate cake or, best of all, lemon meringue pie.
It always went that way--that call and reply, that Greek chorus, that take-your-breath-away funny exchange with Mamaw Jones. Everytime.
Maybe I'll try it out at Thanksgiving. As you know we're having 14. I bet I could get Morgan and Emma and Tegan into that give and take.
And remember Mamaw on a day when food is King.
I remember an enormous amount of things about her--probably more than I remember about my mother, if that's fair. She was such a character.
The thing I remember today is having dinner around her kitchen table with some group of first cousins. As dinner was winding down, invariably, Mamaw Jones would say to one of us--and we all wanted it to be us!--"Have you had enough?" And we would proudly answer, "I've had sufficient."
Then she would say, "You went 'fishin'?"
And which ever one of us it was would say, "I've had plenty."
And she would say, "you caught 20?"
And we would say, since all of us were involved by then, "We're truly full!"
And she would reply, "so where are those fish?"
Then we'd have dessert--raspberry sticky buns or chocolate cake or, best of all, lemon meringue pie.
It always went that way--that call and reply, that Greek chorus, that take-your-breath-away funny exchange with Mamaw Jones. Everytime.
Maybe I'll try it out at Thanksgiving. As you know we're having 14. I bet I could get Morgan and Emma and Tegan into that give and take.
And remember Mamaw on a day when food is King.
Friday, November 22, 2013
To be surrounded
There was no escaping it today--the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President Kennedy. You would have had to have been in a bomb shelter to not know what day it way--away from TV, print, Internet, radio--any way to communicate outside yourself--to not know.
I listened to several people talk about how America lost its collective 'innocence' that day. What bullshit that is.
We had black slaves stolen from Africa for decades. We refused women the vote until the beginning of the last century. We fought a Civil War, two world wars and Korea before JFK was killed. We had a Great Depression.
There was nothing 'innocent' about us--our hands were covered with blood from all that and more.
We were no more 'innocent' in 1963 than we are now--when we cut food stamps and teach to 'tests' rather than 'knowledge' and argue like 12 year old's on the playground about making sure everyone has health insurance and disguise overt racism toward the president as policy disagreement.
Who knows what would have been different had Kennedy lived and had four more years as President? I believe this, the progress against poverty and for civil rights under President Johnson would have been hard to match if JFK hadn't died. And the space program Kennedy promised us came true without him.
We are not 'innocent' and never have been. We might, in the 50's, when I grew up, have been sheltered and naive. But never innocent.
And we are not now. People in the wealthiest country in the history of the world are hungry. People in the country admired for equality are not equal, not at all. Though 'white' Americans will soon be a minority, black and brown and Asian Americans, still, for the most part don't share the 'dream'. Immigrants, which we all were at some point, still struggle to have a taste of the Dream. Women and GLBT folks are still, in spite of all the progress, in harms way in many places in this country.
Don't tell me America 'lost its innocence' 50 years ago today. We have never been 'innocent' and will never be until 'tolerance' becomes 'equality' and wealth is truly shared among all.
I miss him and his brother, after all these years. But let us honor them for who they were, not for who we imagined they would become.
50 years is a real chunk of time. But I remember the day so vividly, so completely.
Ponder, if you are old enough, what this day on a Friday in 1963 was like for you.
That's my gift to you this day--the gift of memory and pondering.....
Be well and stay well, beloved.....
I listened to several people talk about how America lost its collective 'innocence' that day. What bullshit that is.
We had black slaves stolen from Africa for decades. We refused women the vote until the beginning of the last century. We fought a Civil War, two world wars and Korea before JFK was killed. We had a Great Depression.
There was nothing 'innocent' about us--our hands were covered with blood from all that and more.
We were no more 'innocent' in 1963 than we are now--when we cut food stamps and teach to 'tests' rather than 'knowledge' and argue like 12 year old's on the playground about making sure everyone has health insurance and disguise overt racism toward the president as policy disagreement.
Who knows what would have been different had Kennedy lived and had four more years as President? I believe this, the progress against poverty and for civil rights under President Johnson would have been hard to match if JFK hadn't died. And the space program Kennedy promised us came true without him.
We are not 'innocent' and never have been. We might, in the 50's, when I grew up, have been sheltered and naive. But never innocent.
And we are not now. People in the wealthiest country in the history of the world are hungry. People in the country admired for equality are not equal, not at all. Though 'white' Americans will soon be a minority, black and brown and Asian Americans, still, for the most part don't share the 'dream'. Immigrants, which we all were at some point, still struggle to have a taste of the Dream. Women and GLBT folks are still, in spite of all the progress, in harms way in many places in this country.
Don't tell me America 'lost its innocence' 50 years ago today. We have never been 'innocent' and will never be until 'tolerance' becomes 'equality' and wealth is truly shared among all.
I miss him and his brother, after all these years. But let us honor them for who they were, not for who we imagined they would become.
50 years is a real chunk of time. But I remember the day so vividly, so completely.
Ponder, if you are old enough, what this day on a Friday in 1963 was like for you.
That's my gift to you this day--the gift of memory and pondering.....
Be well and stay well, beloved.....
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Imagining tomorrow tonight...
There are few events where people remember exactly where they were and what they were doing across decades. Some are personal and some are communal.
9/11, certainly. I was listening to Imus in the morning, for God's sake, though I loathed his politics I found him amusing. And he started talking about a plane that had crashed into the World Trade Center. I wandered upstairs and started brushing my teeth until I remembered both my children were in New York City and went into the TV room just in time to watch the second plane crash live. My mouth was full of toothpaste and my toothbrush was in my hand as I stared, not knowing what to think, when I heard Bern's truck careen into the driveway with screeching of tires. Then, after a moment, she was beside me, staring at the TV. "Josh and Mimi" is all she said, "where are they?"
And when my father called early on a Wednesday morning in April of 1973 and told me my mother had gone into a coma and I should come, come now. Bern was in New York City acting in an off-off Broadway play and I was in our apartment in Morgantown, about ready to go to work for the West Virginia Department of Welfare as a Child Protection Specialist. Instead I drove unsteadily to Trinity Church after calling Snork Roberts, the Episcopal Chaplain of West Virginia University to tell him I had to talk to him before I drove 5 1/2 hours (yes, Virginia, it takes that long to drive from a county in West Virgina bordering on Pennsylvania to the southern most county in West Virgina bordering on South western Virginia). Snork came and dressed in full Eucharistic Vestments to give me communion and anoint me in the tiny chapel of Trinity Church. It was one of the oddest experiences of my life and, I am convinced, gave me the ability to drive 5 and 1/2 hours to my mother's hospital bed without killing myself and others.
The Bay of Pigs standoff is etched into my brain because Woodrow Wilson (I kid you not!) our bus driver to Gary High School from Anawalt, pulled off the road at a marker for some Indian battle in the middle of, I guarantee you, nowhere, and started reading to us the evacuation bus schedule if the missiles started flying from Cuba and the US and Gwen Brooks started to freak out and ran to the front of the bus and pushed past Mr. Wilson and tried to get out of the bus, which she couldn't, but she could scream and wail endlessly until Woodrow took her in his arms and she passed out from fear. How could that not be etched in my mind?
Then there is tomorrow. On November 22, 1963, I was a junior in high school and at about 2:45, the assistant principal came over the intercom to tell us that the President had been assassinated. It was last period, school ended at 3, and I was in English class with Miss Stacks, the strictest teacher at Gary High School. But she dissolved into tears, astonishing me since I'd assumed she was a Republican, and all the girls in the class fell apart as well. I was feeling misty myself about that dashing young President and his perfect wife but all the girls were needing hugs and support and most of them had never given me a glance, but now I could hold them and say soothing words while feeling bodies I would never have felt otherwise.
The 18 miles from Gary High to Anawalt were ridden for the first and last time in total silence on Woodrow Wilson's school bus. We were too young to opinions that would matter about JFK being killed and too old to not know we were in a moment of history that we would remember forever.
And tomorrow that will be 50 years ago. Half-a-century. And, like the other moments I will never forget and tell you exactly where I was and what I was thinking (my wedding day, my mother's death, my father's death, both my children's birth, my ordination, my retirement Sunday, a few others you'd most likely not understand) the day Jack died is imprinted on my soul, indelible, frozen in amber.
I won't even trouble you with my ponderings of what would have happened if that hadn't happened, though I have some--although I think LBJ got lots done JFK might not have--but tomorrow will be a day when, about 2:45 pm, I'll take a deep breath and ponder my life.
I'd recommend that for anyone. Even if you weren't alive in 1963.
I talked to one of the guys in the package store who's two years older than me about the story I'd just heard on NPR about the Boston Symphony Orchestra which was in an afternoon concert on 11/22/1963 when the news came. They took a break, made the announcement and played the "Funeral March" from Beethoven's 5th Symphony from the sheet music without a rehearsal. Then they took and break and argued about whether or not to preform the second half of the program. Finally the President of the Board of the Symphony came on stage and told the audience that he had gone to a concert the day his father died and found great solace in the music. And assured the audience that the second portion of the concert would provide them solace as well.
The applause after that announcement was deafening....
John in the Package Store was involved in the Weathermen Underground for a while until they were planning to blow up the George Washington Bridge. That passed a limit he told me and he walked out of the meeting and spent a month in the woods of Maine.
Had that plan--to blow up the GW bridge--happened, it would be a moment when I remembered where I was.
John and I grew up in interesting times....
9/11, certainly. I was listening to Imus in the morning, for God's sake, though I loathed his politics I found him amusing. And he started talking about a plane that had crashed into the World Trade Center. I wandered upstairs and started brushing my teeth until I remembered both my children were in New York City and went into the TV room just in time to watch the second plane crash live. My mouth was full of toothpaste and my toothbrush was in my hand as I stared, not knowing what to think, when I heard Bern's truck careen into the driveway with screeching of tires. Then, after a moment, she was beside me, staring at the TV. "Josh and Mimi" is all she said, "where are they?"
And when my father called early on a Wednesday morning in April of 1973 and told me my mother had gone into a coma and I should come, come now. Bern was in New York City acting in an off-off Broadway play and I was in our apartment in Morgantown, about ready to go to work for the West Virginia Department of Welfare as a Child Protection Specialist. Instead I drove unsteadily to Trinity Church after calling Snork Roberts, the Episcopal Chaplain of West Virginia University to tell him I had to talk to him before I drove 5 1/2 hours (yes, Virginia, it takes that long to drive from a county in West Virgina bordering on Pennsylvania to the southern most county in West Virgina bordering on South western Virginia). Snork came and dressed in full Eucharistic Vestments to give me communion and anoint me in the tiny chapel of Trinity Church. It was one of the oddest experiences of my life and, I am convinced, gave me the ability to drive 5 and 1/2 hours to my mother's hospital bed without killing myself and others.
The Bay of Pigs standoff is etched into my brain because Woodrow Wilson (I kid you not!) our bus driver to Gary High School from Anawalt, pulled off the road at a marker for some Indian battle in the middle of, I guarantee you, nowhere, and started reading to us the evacuation bus schedule if the missiles started flying from Cuba and the US and Gwen Brooks started to freak out and ran to the front of the bus and pushed past Mr. Wilson and tried to get out of the bus, which she couldn't, but she could scream and wail endlessly until Woodrow took her in his arms and she passed out from fear. How could that not be etched in my mind?
Then there is tomorrow. On November 22, 1963, I was a junior in high school and at about 2:45, the assistant principal came over the intercom to tell us that the President had been assassinated. It was last period, school ended at 3, and I was in English class with Miss Stacks, the strictest teacher at Gary High School. But she dissolved into tears, astonishing me since I'd assumed she was a Republican, and all the girls in the class fell apart as well. I was feeling misty myself about that dashing young President and his perfect wife but all the girls were needing hugs and support and most of them had never given me a glance, but now I could hold them and say soothing words while feeling bodies I would never have felt otherwise.
The 18 miles from Gary High to Anawalt were ridden for the first and last time in total silence on Woodrow Wilson's school bus. We were too young to opinions that would matter about JFK being killed and too old to not know we were in a moment of history that we would remember forever.
And tomorrow that will be 50 years ago. Half-a-century. And, like the other moments I will never forget and tell you exactly where I was and what I was thinking (my wedding day, my mother's death, my father's death, both my children's birth, my ordination, my retirement Sunday, a few others you'd most likely not understand) the day Jack died is imprinted on my soul, indelible, frozen in amber.
I won't even trouble you with my ponderings of what would have happened if that hadn't happened, though I have some--although I think LBJ got lots done JFK might not have--but tomorrow will be a day when, about 2:45 pm, I'll take a deep breath and ponder my life.
I'd recommend that for anyone. Even if you weren't alive in 1963.
I talked to one of the guys in the package store who's two years older than me about the story I'd just heard on NPR about the Boston Symphony Orchestra which was in an afternoon concert on 11/22/1963 when the news came. They took a break, made the announcement and played the "Funeral March" from Beethoven's 5th Symphony from the sheet music without a rehearsal. Then they took and break and argued about whether or not to preform the second half of the program. Finally the President of the Board of the Symphony came on stage and told the audience that he had gone to a concert the day his father died and found great solace in the music. And assured the audience that the second portion of the concert would provide them solace as well.
The applause after that announcement was deafening....
John in the Package Store was involved in the Weathermen Underground for a while until they were planning to blow up the George Washington Bridge. That passed a limit he told me and he walked out of the meeting and spent a month in the woods of Maine.
Had that plan--to blow up the GW bridge--happened, it would be a moment when I remembered where I was.
John and I grew up in interesting times....
Wednesday, November 20, 2013
The Moon, the Moon....
There's been a big honkin' moon the last few days, tonight wrapped is scarves of clouds. Every time I see a full moon I'm reminded of the (I guess you'd call it a novella) I wrote a few years ago. I may have posted it before but, being awash in linear time, I can't remember. So I'll do it again, just in case anyone would like to read a magical tale about a Princess and a Sailor.
The
Princess
and
The
Sailor:
A
simple tale told True
Jim
Bradley
This
is for the Princess in every girl and woman
and
the Sailor in every boy and man….
May
AH bless them everyone and forever….
“There
are things you only do for love….”
--G.
G. Marquez
I.
A letter to a friend
My Friend,
Did I remember to tell
you this: a story I once heard (though I don’t remember where or
when) about two misbegotten lovers—whose love was forbidden,
rebuked and rejected by all?
One
was highborn, a Princess, and the other was but a Sailor.
The Sailor was about
to set off on a long, long journey and the Princes was praying that
when he returned all would be well and the love forgotten and they
could go on as before: just the way their lives were meant to be and
to unfold. She vowed to pray for that and he vowed to pray not at
all.
Yet, when they saw
each other and for the first time knew the truth about their love,
the Princess swore off praying too. Somehow the Sailor knew that and
this is the story of their separation, of their not being together,
of their absence from each other.
They were both just
not praying, they had decided to just wait and see. Did I tell you
this?
This story about a
Princess and a Sailor is a story about Truth and Wonder and Love…oh,
goodness, most of all about Love. Love is so prickly a thing, so
distracting and so deeply profound that it is hard to contain it,
express it, make it True. Perhaps the best any of us can do is tell a
story about love and let that be the Truth.
So, the Sailor sailed
away to cross many seas and see many lands while the Princess stayed
home in her castle and wondered. Wondering
is perhaps, more than anything, what this story is about. The Sailor
stared at the Moon on the seas and wondered. The Princess welcomed
the Sun on the trees and wondered. Maybe “wondering” is the best
any of us can do about Love. Just wondering about things that can
scarcely be imagined. Maybe just that. Maybe that is enough. Who
knows?
And who knows where I
heard this story. I’m not sure—but it rings True, like Truth.
Wondering still,
you Friend
I.
The World of Seas
The world where the
Princess and the Sailor lived has no real name. No one who lives on
the Nine Seas has ever seen fit to name it since there is nothing, in
their minds, besides this world. The peoples of the Nine Seas
watch the sky—they love their sun and moon and stars—but they
have never, for whatever reason, deigned to name the stars or draw
meaning from them.
It is, as worlds
go, a remarkably pacific place. Fishing rights and free access to
ports are the most heated debates between Kingdoms. There have been,
over the centuries, internal insurrections among minor royalty in
some of the Kingdoms, but no border disputes since none of the Eleven
Kingdoms (besides Upper Morgan and Lower Morgan—which would be one
land if not separated by nearly impassable mountains) share an actual
land border. There have been overly ambitious leaders but the
distances between the Kingdoms and the difficulty of transporting
armies by sea have kept most all those ambitions in check. Besides
the strongest and largest of the Eleven Kingdoms are the Kingdom of
the Sun and the Land of Almodon—and these two lands can only look
west or east. They are separated by the Ninth Sea, the Impassable
Sea. So, although they are really quite close to each other—closer
than any other lands—they cannot cross the Ninth Sea to challenge
each other or do battle. They are, by virtue of the strangeness of
the Ninth Sea, a world apart: the Kingdom of the Sun always looking
eastward and the Nation of Almodon always looking westward. Separated
as they are by a sea that cannot be sailed, they are the ends of the
earth and never threaten each other’s peace.
The Eleven Kingdoms
have little interest in war—what most interests them is knowing
each other and trade. The Sailor’s journeys are only dangerous
because of the temperament of the seas and the strangeness of some of
the far-away lands.
The Ninth Sea is
that world’s greatest mystery. There are creatures there, at least
the songs and poems say so—sea serpents and dragons and even
worse—and there are indescribable storms and unthinkable tides that
prevent safe passage. Perhaps some day a boat will be built that can
sail that sea. But probably not. The Ninth Sea is a problem with no
solution. My AH be blessed.
The map of this
world shows the Eleven Kingdoms and Nine Seas (no one ever counts
the 10th sea—the Frozen Sea—because it is locked in
ice for decades at a time). Yet all the people in this world believe
they came, in the Time before Time, from the Motherlands or the Lands
of Hope. Most of the “races” of the world acknowledge a common
heritage and linage though there are several different skin colors
and two dozen or so languages, even within each of the Kingdoms. The
rule is this: the further east you sail from the Sun Kingdom, the
stranger things get—the less like the Kingdom of the Sun and the
Motherlands. And then, after Upper Morgan and Lower Morgan and the
Wonderlands and Almodon, you run into the Impassable Sea and must
turn back west. There is no circumnavigation: all “roads”—upon
the seas—run west to east and back again.
The “homeland”
of that world is the Kingdom of the Sun, but the “center” of the
world is Deep Morgan and the great port city Morganport. It is to
Morganport that all the Kingdoms send ambassadors who ferret out the
needs of each land and cobble together the agreements to meet those
needs. Deep Morgan is the center of learning as well—where all the
peoples of all the lands come together to study the ways of the seas,
the histories of the Kingdoms, languages, the aspects of trade, and
the intricacies of poetry and song—which all the Kingdoms value
highly. There is little Philosophy studied there and even less
Theology. All the people of the World of Nine Seas agree there is one
and but one God—AH is her name. She is a sea god and mostly
disinterested in the lives and well being of her people. She is more
like “chance” or “luck” or “fate” than the dogmatic gods
we know. And she is trusted absolutely, needs little worship and does
not require a large priesthood. (Yet another reason there are almost
never wars among the Eleven Kingdoms.)
In most places on
that world, you would have to search for a temple to AH and finding
it would think it rather plain and not often used. Only in the
Wonderlands is religion an issue and there only because the seas that
surround the Wonderlands are the Storm Sea, the Sweet Sea and the
Impassable Sea. Such contrasts and ambiguities of water spark
questions of the soul. There are prophets and seers and holy men and
women there—but they seldom travel and don’t need to proselytize
since all the people of the world already believe in AH, in their
way. And few people are willing to risk a journey even a little way
into the Sweet Sea because of the strangeness of those waters. The
only “high holy place” on the planet is the Isle of Dreams in the
Sweet Sea which can only be reached by specially built ships that
sail from The Blessed Port. The Blessed Port, where few from other
lands ever find themselves, is a place of mystery and magic and
soul-talk. It would be safe to say that the inhabitants of the
Wonderlands are the repository of the “religion” and
“spirituality” of the entire world. The most remarkable point on
the whole planet is a lagoon on the Isle of Dreams where AH is said
to actually reside. It is a credit to the people of that world that
few ever consider risking what must be risked to visit their Deity
face-to-face. Most are satisfied with a god far away—that is enough
and will suffice. And life goes on.
Though the major
land masses are all connected, ice and snow in the extreme north and
south and mountain ranges in strategic places, along with the Lesser
Desert in Middleland and the Greater Desert between Deep Morgan and
the Spicelands all contribute to require that travel between the
Kingdoms be on the seas. Thus, it is a world dominated by water and
ruled by those who ply the seas in ships.
II.
Six Months/Six Seas
(The outer
voyage was hurried, stopping at as many ports as possible, trading
goods from Lugonia to Paliseda and goods from Paliseda in a brief
Upper Kingdom stop (not wanting to linger too long there) and the art
works from the Upper Kingdom traded for ancient scrolls and priceless
carpets in the Middleland to carry to Deep Morgan to exchange for
grain and wine bound to the Spicelands to trade for rare spices to be
spread throughout the Eleven Kingdoms at great price. The plan of the
Captain of the ship Hope was to arrive in Almodan with a little of
everything picked up along the way before much more than half a year
had passed. The trip back would be more leisurely, with times to stop
and enjoy the wonders of the world as well as swell their purses with
the cargo from Almodan and the Wonderlands. And then, back to
Homeport after five seasons on the sea—a year and five moons more.)
The sailor had not
realized “who” he loved until he was sailing out of the harbor at
Homeport. That realization—along with all the lands he had visited,
all the seas he had crossed—had made him begin to feel old. He was
old from the moons he had seen—week after week on strange seas. He
was so exhausted from work and so far from his homeland that he
scarcely knew himself anymore. He had heard languages and seen
cultures foreign to his tongue and his life. He had settled into
wondering as a way of being—as “who he was”.
Each new port held
mysteries, but nothing to compare to the mystery of his wondering.
Everywhere he encountered new merchants with exotic wares; new women
of unexpected hues promising unknown pleasures; new drinks, alien to
his tongue, promising joy and forgetfulness—which to him were much
the same; new games of chance, promising wealth beyond imagining.
He began, after
passing through the Moon Sea, to live mostly on the ship when in
port. But, at a docking in the Upper Kingdom, he’d found some wood
that seemed to call out to him, as if alive. He’d purchased it, at
great price, not knowing why—some wood from an ancient mystic tree.
He kept it near his bed in his cabin and held it in his hands each
night before sleeping. It seemed to soothe his frantic wondering in
some small way.
Sitting on the
forecastle late into the night, holding his piece of wood, Hope
anchored in Morganport, the sailor took out the knife he carried that
has been his father’s and his father’s before him and one or two
more before that. His life aboard the ship had always given him ample
opportunity to hone and sharpen the family’s blade. But he had
never thought of carving before.
“R’e’vol,”
the Sailor heard a familiar voice out of the night.
“Dear Friend”,
it said, “will you cut the wood or your throat?”
It was
D’in’fre, his closest companion when he studied as a boy and then
a young man in Morganport. The two men embraced roughly, laughing and
almost weeping. D’in’fre told the Sailor how he had met Hope’s
captain in one of the port’s pubs and discovered his dear friend
was aboard the ship, avoiding companionship, wasting away with
wondering.
“I am sad and
I am lonely,” the Sailor told his friend, “and I would
carve this wood if only I knew how.”
D’in’fre
was silent for a long, long time. Hope rose and fell in her
moorage and the sliver of that month’s moon used its dim light to
caress the gentle waters of the harbor.
“You have a
knife,” D’in’fre finally said, “that looks hone and
ready to carve…and you have wood that almost beats like a heart…and
you have your hands, my friend. So cut away….”
After a bottle of
wine with his friend and a solemn promise to return on the way back
from the ends of the world, the Sailor sat in the moonlight, rolling
on the waves of a sea half-a-world from home; and while his shipmates
were gaming and whoring and drinking in the town, he took the mystic
wood and the knife of many generations and began to cut.
The wood was
forgiving and seemed to guide his hand as he cut, whittled, began to
carve.
For over a week of
moons and days, while the Captain was trading skins and paintings and
rough-weaved cloth for coffee beans and wine and satin and precious
stones, the Sailor carved. The wood was deeply forgiving and gave
life and purpose to the movement of his hands, the knife, his soul.
The wood was a blessing, a gift from AH, a messenger from beyond, a
wondrous miracle to his untrained carving skills. The wood beneath
his hand and his father’s, father’s, father’s blade joined to
create—perfectly, adroitly, absolutely and exactly formed as if it
had existed for ages beneath the wood’s grain—a heart.
From mystic wood of
a foreign land, the Sailor, not knowing how, carved out a perfect,
mystic heart…his—just big enough to lie in the palm of his
hand. He was stunned when the carving was through. He was no artist
and yet…yet something so remarkable came from that wood and from
his blade and from his soul.
The Sailor’s
heart was finished just as Hope left a port in Lower Morgan
and sailed into the meeting place of the Ocean East and the Storm
Sea. He was seven seas from Homeport where the Princess sewed. A
Princess in that land must be adroit in seams and sewing and
embroidery and the making of quilts. But one day—the day exact
though a world away from Ocean East and the Storm Sea, distracted
more or less by a sudden thought of her Sailor-lover, never to be,
the Princess cut her finger with her scissors and sucked the blood
into her mouth. In the blood she tasted—gathered on her tongue,
swallowed—the sure knowledge that she must cut more. She called for
fine paper, the finest in the land, and—not knowing what she was
doing, having never done it before, she began to shave away paper
with her scissors, forming shapes new, unknown to her.
The scissors and
the paper seemed to know what the Princess did not. Swish, swish
went her scissors, her hands guided from beyond—by AH,
perhaps—and as the shavings fell away the Princess held—against
all imagining—in her hand a perfect heart. Paper it was—but the
finest kind—and whatever else it was, it was a heart…hers…the
heart of a Princess.
She went to hide it
away—and since Princesses and all women in that world were well
educated and fond of poetry (as were all the men) she sorted through
her many books and found a book of poems she especially loved to
press the finely cut heart between pages of long and longing and
aching and never-more-shall-be verses. She held the book to
her breast and noticed how the sun, in just that moment, had found
its way through her window to illuminate the book…and her.
Holding the wooden
heart to his own heart, the sailor went to his cabin. He was first
mate, a man much loved, respected, who never issued pain on the other
sailors, and had a cabin of his own. He pulled out his small chest
from beneath his bunk. Inside he found an unopened bottle of wine
from the Kingdom of the Sun, his home country, where the Princess
reigned and ruled. The wines of distant seas were often too sweet,
too cloying for his taste. He wrapped the heart that his soul and
something else besides had carved in his best shirt, exchanging it
for the bottle in his chest.
Sitting on the
deck, the ship Hope having set sail at night, he watched the
moon rise and pass across the sky. He scanned the horizon as they
passed into the Eighth Sea—the Sweet Sea where few felt safe to
sail. That made him as far from home, as far from his life, his love,
his joy as he could be. Watching through the night as the moon, his
love, his Princess, crossed the sky and rendered his heart, he drank
the nutty, bold, red wine of their land and watched and wondered and
was, somehow, full.
The sunlight shined
playfully around her bedroom. She put away the book of poems and her
heart, hiding them where none could find them, and stepped out onto
the balcony. The sun was at full power—shining, burning, bringing
light and life to all. She thought to weep but remembered her heart,
pressed between the lines of poetry, and she burst into unexpected
song.
“My
love, the moon and sun are all we have,
and our hearts, stored away, hidden but so new….
Half a world away and more from me, I love you.
My heart is cut from paper and is yours….”
Incredibly, as far
away as he could be from her, and sailing even further away, watching
the moon, drenched in home-land wine, he too had a song to sing.
“My
heart I carved for you, it is yours, but mine:
so far away, so lost in distance and yet entwined:
the sun is your, AH, let it shine….
And mine the moon, so lush, so fine….”
Somehow, beyond all
possibility, beyond all knowing, they dimly heard each other’s
songs and knew vaguely about each other’s hearts. Such things
sometimes happen in a world so wrapped up in poetry and song.
But what is to be
made of all of this? A Princess and her Sailor; a Sailor and his
Love—so far apart and yet so near. Heartsick and yet heart-joined.
The sun sets and the moon rises; yet never quite together. But it is
the sun and the moon that are theirs…forever.
As are their
hearts—tucked away in a chest under a bunk; pressed in a book of
poems hidden on a bookshelf—ever given.
III.
The Sailor’s Songs
So the Sailor, far
off in an almost unknown sea, watches the moon cross the sky,
igniting the waves with washes of light each night. Often, he would
sing to the moon and to his love, far-far away.
“Like
the blessed cloud ringed moon
you are as near to me as night.
Yet so far, so long, so soon,
I have no words to sing a’right….”
Sometimes his
longing was so great, so profound, so indescribable, he thought he
would go mad. Too much ocean, too many seas separated him from the
Princess of the Day. But at dusk each evening he searched the sky and
there—there…the moon! He could sing again.
“So
constant, pale and dim
your light is still as bright as day.
Though the evening sky you rim,
still you show my path, my way.”
Often he feared the
moon’s dark cycle—no light at all. Just as his love was
impossible, there was no way to see the waves those moon-dark nights.
Yet he sang….
“Your
absence, love—lonely, dark,
sends me pain, loss, fear.
Yet night’s blackness, O so stark,
does not lose me—I am here….”
***
They are so
misbegotten—these two lovers. No chance for them. Everything
conspires against them. The Princess in her tower; the Sailor on the
sea—they are sun and moon, never together. Night-songs he sings as
she follows the sun across the sky.
Often, he wonders,
are they—the two of them-but a metaphor for loss of hope,
loneliness, longing?
***
One day, just at
eventide, in a remote and wondrously foreign city, as all hope
drained from him because of the sea’s vastness and her tower and
his ship—he noticed the setting sun and there, just to the east, in
a still blue sky…the Moon! He sang:
“Never
is the pain gone and past,
longing aches so deep within my breast.
But Sun and Moon will always last,
and patience will bring forth the best….”
He
knew then, in that far-away land—knew against all other
knowing—that this he could always give her: a song and his heart.
- THE PRINCESS’ LAMENTThe cook and the maid stood outside the door, holding each other, trying to give each other courage to knock and enter and comfort the Princess they both so loved.
The maid was
especially distressed, knowing as she did that she had contributed
mightily, though unknowingly, to her Princess’ pain.
“If only I had
not…,” she sobbed softly to the Cook, “if only I had refused….”
“Shush, my
child,” the cook told her quietly, “she was your Princess and
will be your Queen. Her request was yours to honor. You could not
have known….”
“It seemed so
harmless,” the maid whispered into the older woman’s ear, “and
she so needed some freedom….”
The sounds of
crying from within the Princess’ chambers elevated just then and
the two women held each other close.
The Princess had
been with her father, the King of the Sun Lands, and his royal
council. She had gone to plead her case. She was in love with a
Sailor on a far-away sea whom she wished to marry on his return. The
Sailor was a common man and well she knew how much confusion her love
would sow in the fields of state. She was the only daughter of Eliuia
the 12th, the sole heir to the Scarlet Throne of the
Kingdom of the Sun, Protector of the Motherlands, Guardian of the
Lands of Hope. No crown in all the Kingdoms of the world of the Nine
Seas was so important to the welfare of the planet. Never, for 68
generations, had the Scarlet Throne been vacant or passed to any
besides a true descendent of the Old Ones from the Motherlands. All
the other Kingdoms tenuously traced back the linage of their rulers
to the mating of the Old Ones with the People of Hope—but it was
mostly fiction and politics and clever, creative genealogy. No one
believed the claims of even Paliseda and Lugonia to the bloodlines of
the Motherlands—never mind those kingdoms further removed. But all
were polite and knew such claims were necessary for order. A bastard
here or there, some cousin from Middleland or Lower Morgan, even a
usurper with a swift sword and a large army…such details were not
troubling. But there was something different about the Kingdom of the
Sun.
Ask ten
thousand folks from all the Kingdoms of that world—stately Paliseda
to the lusty Spicelands to frosty, proper Upper Morgan to the eastern
most valleys of Almodan, ask them all: “what holds the world in
sway? What keeps us safe? What makes the winds blow fair, the sea
hold up our ships? What makes our men brave, our women fertile and
out children full of hope? What pleases AH and gives us pleasant
dreams?” Frame the question how you will and the answer will be the
same. Even the petty thief in Blessed Port, the Austere on the Isle
of Dreams, the dim-witted fishmonger of the Last Isle, the scholars
of Morganport, the sleepy artists of the Middle Kingdom, the isolated
craftsman of the Lower Isles, the ice bandits of the Frozen Sea, even
the suffering souls on the Isle of Pain—all them all…ask them all
and the answer will be the same.
“Bloodline
on the Scarlet Throne” is all they’d say. It would be
enough, more than enough to teach you all you need to know of the
World of Nine Seas. And the Princess was the 69th
generation of the blood of the Old Ones and the people of the Land of
Hope.
What nonsense to
believe such a thing as love…so brittle, so ephemeral, so passing
in a life-time, a few insignificant breaths…could be enough to
overcome 2000 years of blood purity on the Scarlet Throne—the very
thing that kept the world spinning and life going on as it had always
gone.
Through it all—that
dreadful, wrenching hour in Court—what gave the Princess the
cleanest, most agonizing pain was this: Eliuia, her father, spoke not
a word. He kept his thoughts to himself. The Counselors said it
all—in words polite and practical and politic. She thought, at one
point, she would begin to bleed from her eyes, her pain and
disappointment were so intense. And Eliuia 12th did not
speak, did not even glance at her, turned his head and closed his
eyes, sitting on the Scarlet Throne while she nearly died seven steps
below. He did not rise and come down to her and take her in his arms
to comfort her. He did nothing: spoke not, scarcely moved.
They
do not care that we’re in love. They do not care if our hearts are
broken…They only care that we’re not together, that we have no
life to share….
Those were the
words she began to repeat to herself as the Righteous Ones discussed
her plea to be released to marry a commoner. Those were the words
that sounded out a tattoo beat in her soul as her father sat and
listened. Those were the only judgments she could make or understand,
even hours later.
“They do not care
if we’re in love,” she told the cook and her maid between sobs.
“They do not even
care if our hearts are broken,” she said, calming under the care of
the two women. “All that matters to the Righteous Ones who guard
the Scarlet Throne is this: we shall never be together…we’ll have
no life to share….”
Through the long
night the two women held her as she tossed in terrible dreams. Then,
at dawn, as the moon faded and sun began to rise, accompanied by a
concert by birds outside the palace window, Eliuia was there. He had
been guided to his daughter’s suite by a simple kitchen boy—the
only companion he could find so early in the day.
“ENO-ON!” the
cook exclaimed when the idiot boy opened the door, “how dare you
enter here…?”
Then she saw the
man behind him and fell to her knees.
“Rise, Carriak,”
the king said gently, “I made the boy accompany me here. It is no
fault of his….”
The cook roused the
maid from sleep. They both bowed embarrassed and fled from the room.
Eliuia the 12th,
68th of his line, sat on the edge of his daughter’s bed
but dared not touch her, not even softly.
The King of the Sun
Lands did not speak and the Princess did not raise her head, though
she whispered to her father. “You do not care if our hearts are
broken,” she said, so silently he had to lean toward her to hear.
“You do not care if we’re in love—our love matters not to you.”
Eliuia breathed deeply, clinched his eyes closed and listened. “All
that matters is that we are not together, that we will have no life
to share….”
Eliuia was
gathering his courage and his voice to speak of generations, of the
Scarlet Throne, of the sweep of history, of the need for continuity,
of the importance of the royal bloodlines and the rising of the sea.
He was seeking to remember all the rational and conventional and
convincing arguments his Counselors had made for him. His heart was
deeply conflicted for he loved his child so dear—yet, he was
King…68th of his linage and she was 69th.
But before he spoke
(and he never spoke that morning, indeed did not speak aloud for
over a month from that day) a voice from the corner of the room
came flooding to his ears.
“A
heart is worth more than a Kingdom,” the
kitchen boy said. “A
Kingdom is a harsh thing—a thing of history and of power. A heart
is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift….”
The Princess felt
the stiffening of her father’s body and he sat up and turned toward
the boy by the door. She opened her eyes and saw Eliuia’s face in
the dim light of dawn—he was stricken, pale, looking years older
than his time. He struggled as he stood and stumbled to the door and
was gone.
The Princess dozed.
When she woke again the sun was already kissing the trees of her
Kingdom and the moon—half-a-world away—was painting light on the
choppy sea where the Sailor sailed. The tiny boy—how old? she
wondered to herself, and how so wise?—was sitting, cross-legged by
her bed.
“Eno-on,” she
whispered, “who are you?”
He smiled. “I am
the one who buries and the one who brings to life. I am to be an
Austere of AH, but not until the one not yet born of your blood
returns in the end to take me home.”
Her eyes flickered
and she slept, overcome by such a message, so unsure of how to hold
it that she sunk back into darkness. When next she awakened, he was
not there. She rose and washed and sought him out, finding him
playing in the plaza outside the palace kitchen. She tried to engage
him in conversation, but he seemed dull and placid and only brought
her worms he dug from the earth and bugs he found beneath rocks. She
would hold them out to her, wiggling and staggering in his dirty
hands.
“Eno-on is not
quite right, the cook told the Princess. “He cannot speak well. His
mind is dim.”
The Princess spent
all afternoon watching the boy play. Nothing he did would have
persuaded her that the cook was wrong.
Finally, she rose
and went to her rooms. She drank some milk and ate some berries and a
cold piece of baked fish. Then she gathered paper and ink and pen and
wrote this out a dozen times….
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
A
heart is warm and fragile and surrender is its gift.
She wrote it over and over so she
would never, ever, ever forget….
V.
The Love Letter
Far away, he was,
more than half-a-dozen seas removed from the Princess that he loved.
He mourned to the moon, night after night, longing, aching, beyond
reason for what was so impossible, so removed, so beyond his ken.
A letter he wrote
crossed all those seas, through lands more foreign and more strange
than she could ever imagine, back safely in the castle, the keep, the
place where she reigned.
His letter arrived,
carried by a pirate, a priest, a fool, a wine merchant, a minor
magician, a drunken sailor, a scholar, a widower, a soldier and,
finally, a child. Through all those hands it passed and arrived,
beyond all possibility, at the castle door. The old woman—the cook
who knew the Princess from a babe—took the letter from Eno-On, the
kitchen boy, and knowing what was best, showed it to no one else but
carried it to the Princess straightway.
The salt of many
seas was on it. The sun and the moon had rose and sat four dozen
times as the letter, sealed with wax and a kiss, crossed the world
they knew. Riding on half-a-dozen ships, from hand to hand the letter
passed—some hesitant hands, some doubtful hands, some anxious
hands, some hands full of hope and wonder—across the known world
that letter passed and arrived, into her hands, though in the
Sailor's fondest wishes he did not imagine it would survive such a
passage.
She blessed AH for
the hands that had carried it across a world to her and slept with it
beneath her pillow for a night or two. Then, trembling, weeping,
filled with dread and hope, she broke the wax and edged the thin,
almost translucent paper from the envelope. Princess that she was,
she did it all with grace and care, her heart racing, her head full
of blood and dizziness, quaking from the moment, shivering in the
sweet pain, and read:
Princess
mine and not mine, not ever:
I
travel the world beyond your knowing. I sail the seas we have not
named. I visit cities too foreign and bizarre to describe.
And
this I know, know as I know the tides and the pattern of the winds
and the phases of the moon that lift my spirits night by night….this
I know…my heart is ever yours…lovingly…forever….
His name she read,
though she seldom thought of him by a name at all—he was her
Sailor, her lover, her never-to-be One. And she wept to think so many
had risked so much to carry such a short message across a world and
more, across more than half-a-dozen seas, from a place where the
stars that spangled the night were different, from a place where the
moon itself was half-a-month behind the moon she saw. Is that all he
had to say to her? What of his adventures, his travels, his thoughts
and hopes and wonderings? What of the months of seas between them,
the seasons they would never share, already past and gone?
She did not eat,
was rude to her maid, cried herself to sleep. Such a short message,
so little news, what could he be thinking? Why did he not pour out
his heart to her in verse, in song, in long passages of prose?
And then she
dreamed: a dream of salt air and strange stars and a smell unlike any
in the land where she dwelled and ruled. It was something like a
spice from another life, another place, or someplace yet unknown. And
in the dream, the moon kissed the waves just off the shore, rushing
home to break against the land. As she watched, the waves—dimly
lit—were like tiny horses racing from the sea. Watching that, in
her dream, so sure and full of hope, she felt his breath behind her
on her neck and just before his lips touched her skin, she awoke to
the dawn and a cantata of a million birds. In that place between
sleep and waking, she embraced his heart.
At that very
moment—more than half-a-dozen seas away—he watched the moon and
knew, knew in his soul—that she had dreamed his presence and
awakened to beauty.
Such knowledge was
much less than his longing, far less than his aching, and yet, he
felt himself beside her as she awoke and heard the birds….
VI. HEARTS EXCHANGED
The
Sea was dark and the wind cruel and unyielding. It was the dark of
the moon—the time of month the Sailor dreaded more and more. He
felt the waves groaning to contain the wind and felt the ship Hope
sailing rapidly, further and further away from the one he loved.
“What am I
thinking?” he asked himself. “What am I doing to us?”
She was a Princess
thrice denied him. There was no “happy ending” for them as in the
books of love. The best either of them could hope for…the very
best…was longing and aching and on rare occasion being broken by a
moment of love. How did he dare confuse her life—a life that was
already lain out, planned, accomplished in all but fact? How dare he
intrude on what her happiness could reasonably be? How dare he
presume to love and make requests where no requests could be? The
Blood of the Scarlet Throne did not have the freedom to love a
Sailor. Not now and not ever.
The dark of the
moon and the seven seas between them turned him mad and reasonable at
the same moment. He left the deck and sought the close familiarity of
his quarters. He took out pen and ink and paper to write a reasonable
and honorable farewell to the Princess who he would (if the ship kept
sailing as it had) be a world away from, a hopeless world away from….
Back in the land
of his birth, dawn came. The birds gathered to sing outside the
window of the Princess. “Even the birds love you, O moon of my
sky,” he once told her in that only morning when they ever awoke
together. But the symphony of song did not warm her, neither did the
sun. Her heart was a dark as a moonless night on a far-away sea.
“What am I
thinking?” she asked herself. “What am I doing?”
He was a Sailor
never to be hers in ways she longed to have him. Always he would
circle ‘round her life, a ship on a nearby but inaccessible sea.
How did she dare keep him a prisoner of hope, a slave to
impossibility, a refugee of love? He had loved before her and he
could love again, without such longings and such pain.
She rose from
her bed in search of paper and pen and ink. In a letter passed from
hand to hand to hand across a world, she would free him of this
madness, let him go, drive him away….
(They
had met two years before,. She had escaped the castle dressed as a
maid. He was on leave, dressed in his finest. They literally bumped
into each other on a busy street, full of sellers of flowers and food
and finery from distant lands. He imagined her a woman of his class.
She, mistaking his clothing, thought he was of some minor royal
blood. They both had loves—he betrothed to the daughter of the wine
merchant across his family’s humble street; she promised to the
Prince of Palisedea. So, an innocent day walking by the water, eating
sweet fruits and ice, talking until their tongues were exhausted,
growing close…it all seemed but a romantic afternoon. But they met
again and again—she always disguised as her maid, he always in his
best clothes—each becoming more and more enamored and more and more
self-deceived by their mistaken identities….)
The sailor
was full of purpose—he would end this madness, this escapade of
lunacy, with words upon paper—harsh and hateful words that would
set her free from him. He threw open his trunk and tossed aside his
finest shirt, looking for the heart he so painstakingly carved,
planning to throw it into the Sweet Sea and be rid of her himself.
The silk shirt floated softly to the floor and out of it spiraled an
exquisite heart cut from finest paper. He stared at the artistry, the
love that heart bore until he realized it was not what should have
been wrapped in his shirt. It was the shirt he always wore when he
was with her—before he knew her linage and true identity—and it
should have been wrapped around the heart of mystic wood.
She found her
stationary—crafted by the finest paper-maker in the land, embossed
with her royal seal. But dipping the pen in the ink she remembered
the heart she’d cut so selflessly, so magic directed, for him.
“That I must destroy first,” she told herself. “I must take
back my heart.”
Her favorite
book of poetry was not hard to find—it was hidden only from other
eyes, not her own. She took it from the shelf, unconsciously
realizing it had a weight it should not have, and from the pages
slipped a heart carved of rare, exotic wood. It rolled crazily across
the floor and stopped against the leg of her writing table. The sun
spilled across the room and she stared in utter confusion at that
heart until she picked it up and held it in her palm. She thought, as
mad as such a thought might be, that she felt it pulse, beat of its
own accord.
Neither letter
was writ that day, that night. Instead the Princess and the Sailor
sat at desks—he until dawn came, she until night fell—looking at
two hearts that could not be where they were.
Both hearts belonged a world away. And the Princess and the Sailor
wondered. Just that, for hours…they wondered….
VII.
Letter from the Lost Isle
Princess
Mine,
I
stared a long time at those words I wrote. How dare I call you
“mine”? I am on the Lost Isle at the northern edge of the Ocean
East, almost as far from you as possible without flying with the
white birds that, legends here say, live in the Sun. So how can I
call you “mine”?
And
if I were there, where you are, in Homeport and the Kingdom of the
Sun, you would not be “mine”. Though I was outside the castle
walls and you were watching me from you window, we would be as far
apart as we are now. Seven seas of distance between us for
now…perhaps for always….However, close we might come, seas lie
between us. And yet, I call you “mine”, for you have my heart and
I hold yours and that…that is enough.
The
Lost Isle is not “lost” at all, only hidden by rolling fog and
shielded by unpredictable currents that shift and change without
warning or reason. It took the best part of a day to negotiate the
waters and come to port. Though it is high summer here, we are so far
north that most water freezes each night—a thin shell I have to
break to wash and drink in the morning. Most water freezes, but not
those streams that flow south from the mountain range that rings the
northern edge of the island. That water is warm always, even if you
put it in a bowl and leave it out at night. It emerges from deep
inside the burning mountains and carries with it metals and minerals
from the very bowels of the island.
Those
mountains cause the eternal fog cover. The chill air from the north
passes over the heat of the smoldering range and drapes everything in
this strange place in a mist. And waters flowing from that place—the
high mountains—is eternally warm though vile to drink and stinging
to wash with.
But
those waters give life to the strangest creatures in this strange and
shrouded land—the strangest creatures I’ve seen up close in all
my travels. The creatures are about the size of a cat at home, a
little larger, and they walk on their hind legs and have six fingers
on each of their front paws. They have a look on their furry faces of
perpetual playful intelligence and awareness. The people here call
them k’tchk’n and they seem to outnumber the citizens of the
island by four to one. Every household has one, at least, as a part
of the family. The k’tch’n are clever beyond belief and can be
trained to do most domestic chores. They sweep with small brooms made
for them and herd the mountain sheep and make minor repairs around
the homes. Though some of the people of the land have told me there
are k’tch’n who have learned to cook, that seems a myth that
gives life to the strange intimacy between the creatures and their
human companions.
(I
started to write “their owners”,
and then “their masters”,
but
neither is accurate. k’tchk’ns are neither owned or mastered by
the humans, but attach themselves to a home voluntarily and, it seems
to me, with some forethought—matching their skills in husbandry or
housewifery or child caring to the needs of the family with which
they choose to live. But no one could assure me that the k’tchk’ns
“choose”, since communication between them and the humans does
not exist in any way I understand. The creatures do not speak: in
fact, they make no sounds at all that I have heard. But to watch them
causes me to imagine it is merely because they have nothing to ask
or tell to the humans with whom they share their lives.)
In
the inn where I’ve stayed, I’ve had the creatures bring me water
for washing, breakfast of gull eggs and fresh fish and bread and a
weak wine of the island, make my bed and take my clothing only to
bring it back to my room dry and pressed. I’ve thanked the various
k’tchk’ns who have served me well but they pay as little
attention to my gratitude as a cat would to a conversation in Home
Port. I’ve tried to ask some of the older women if the
k’tchk’n live “in the wild” anywhere. My lack of facility
with the dialect here is only part of the reason, I believe, that my
questions meet with blank confusion. I don’t think the people of
the Lost Isle have any memory of the k’tchk’n prior to the
creatures coming to live with the humans. In fact, I suspect that
people and k’tchk’n arrived simultaneously—or at least the
little, furry ones were waiting on the shore in the dim past for the
first settlers of this distant place in a time as lost in the mist of
time as the Isle itself.
The
relationship between creatures and humans is odd to me. None of the
Lost Islanders ever pet or play with the k’tchk’ns, not even the
children. They are obviously not seen as “pets”. But neither are
they ever “given” tasks to perform—the k’tchk’ns perform
the work they do without request, almost as autonomous members of the
home. Most are given names that have to do with fur color or some
physical characteristic—“long tail”, “short nose”, “big
eyes”, “yellow one” are examples. The humans do talk to the
little creatures, though usually only to pass the time. Not once have
I seen a human mistreat a k’tchk’n; quite the contrary, the
creatures are given respect and acknowledgement and the people talk
“about” their companions and household creatures quite a bit,
almost always in a gentle and loving way. The k’tchk’ns, for
their part are loyal for life (about 15 human years, so far as I can
tell) once they attach themselves to an individual or a family.
Though they don’t try to communicate with the humans, they seldom
leave the side of their family. In fact there is a saying here for
what we would call “madness”—it is this: “the k’tchk’n
has left home”. Once a k’tchk’n has come to live with someone,
the islanders say, “there they will live and there they will die.”
The
Captain and I spent a late night of drinking the potent wine
fermented from the fruit of the only tree that stays green year round
on this island. We drank the night away wondering why the little
upright cat creatures with such useful skills (like bringing us more
wine and opening the bottles) have never been exported from the Lost
Isle. I’m embarrassed to admit we were, a little drunk, wondering
what profit we could earn from such a business. We made a rather long
list of how valuable the k’tchk’n would be throughout the Eleven
Kingdoms, only to discover, on the morrow, with sizable head-aches,
that there is only one reason k’tchk’ns live only here. The
k’tchk’ns can live no where else because they consume only the
volcanic waters of this particular place on the earth. They eat
nothing and drink nothing but the warm waters. The waters and the
k’tchk’ns are perfectly harmonious and interdependent. That
mineral heavy, steaming water is used for nothing else here except to
be drank by the k’tchk’ns; and the k’tchk’ns live solely on
those waters.
In
two days we lift sail again, down to Center Port and Almodan. Months
and thousand of leagues are still between us. But waking from a
dream of you, I realized there is at least one positive thing about
our situation—about our not being together, to share a life and a
love as I would wish. It is the only “good thing” I can imagine:
I would smother you. I would be your k’tchk’n and never lose
sight of you, never leave your side.
I
would be always near. I would wake at first light to watch you sleep
and hide behind doors to watch you when you did not know I was
watching. I would hover around you, crave your presence, completely
monopolize your life. I would drive you crazy in that way and perhaps
blunt your feelings toward me.
So,
the distance and the separateness of our love keeps you safe from
that at least.
My
heart, you well know, is yours. I will cross the seas to reclaim it
and offer your heart back to you. And I pray to AH that in that
exchange we will choose to hold each other’s hearts a little
longer.
Revol,
your Sailor (yours)
(This
letter made it to the Middle Sea, passed through many hands, but
never arrived at the castle and the Princess never read it….alas….)
Viii..
Interlude ON THE LAST PLACE
(The
Last Place, by geography and logic, is part of the Kingdom of
Almodan. The Almodain claim it and refer to it as their own. Yet, it
is land that belongs to the seas that lap it from the south and the
east—the Last Place is wholly part of the Sweet Sea and the
Impassable Sea and exists within the caress of those two waters. The
Last Place will not be defined by land, but by the astonishments and
mysteries of the Sweet Sea and the dangers and defiance of the
Impassable Sea. That is simply how it is: there is no other way. That
the Last Place appears on maps at all—though always inaccurately—is
a wonder in itself.
There,
in the Last Place, on a narrow sand bar that touches both seas, is a
place where the sun shines and the moon gleams all at once, together
for a short time each day. Few have seen it, but all in the Eleven
Kingdoms have heard of it in song and poem and legend. The priests of
the Sweet Sea call it “AH’s dance with herself.” The scholars
of Morganport believe, if they only had the science, they could
explain it.
Nevermind:
it is as it is. It is this: Moon on the sea and Sun in the trees
together, for a few brief moments each day. And it is said—the
Sailor and the Princess might confirm this if asked—that one can
stand half in moonshine and half in sunlight for a moment or two,
casting two shadows on the sand. You and I might never know—but at
least we know this: that has been said about the Last Place.)
ix. The Last Place (i)
When he was barely
more than a boy, the Sailor’s father took him to the Eastern Shore
of the Impassable Sea. That sea is where the Sailor’s father’s
remains rest—a Captain, he was, so intoxicated, along with his
whole crew, by the Sweet Sea waters that he dared sail by the Last
Place and attempted to return to the Kingdom of the Sun the short
way…east across the Impassable Sea. His fortune would have been
made and his reputation would have become a thing of legend—but the
Impassable Sea is nothing if not consistent. There our Sailor’s
father died. But that was years and years later, after his father
took the Sailor-to-be, ever westward through the Kingdom of the Sun
to see the east-most coast of the ocean that would not be sailed.
Because of the geography of the Nine Sea World, the only way to reach
the eastern coast of that sea is to travel west.
The western lands
of the pleasant Sun Kingdom are inhospitable places—arid,
mountainous, scorching and chilling. The boy and his father traveled
with a caravan of workers headed to the coast to extract sea salt
from the flood plains of the Impassable Sea. It was the only safe
travel. Oxen-like creatures—dull brutes needing little food and
less water—pulled carts through the narrow valleys between the
mountains and down wadis that were protected from the cruel
sandstorms beyond the mountains. The journey took over a week and was
the harshest days the Captain’s son had ever endured. Had he not
inherited some great measure of his father’s fierce and
uncompromising pride, the boy would have begged to be sent back to
Homeport—to his mother and aunts, to comfort. But instead, he
clinched his teeth and drew upon his father’s strength. They
journeyed on.
“This
is one shore of the Impassable Sea,” his father told him,
reverently, gazing out westward, ever westward, over a dark gray
ocean, distant swirling clouds, a surf so rough the noise was
deafening and the boy could feel the waves’ power shutter through
the ground and into his body though they stood a quarter-mile away.
“The other shore is not that far away to the west—but our whole
world away to the east. And the only way to see that shore is to
journey to the Last Place and gaze out. I’ve stood both places now,
my son, and how I long to pass between….”
His
father’s face glazed over with some deep longing, some imagined
adventure, something no man should ever consider. The waves crashed
and the boy’s body felt their shock and knew his father’s bravery
was wider than that angry sea. Yet, his father’s discretion was
weak. Looking back, decades later, the Sailor imagined he knew that
moment, that day, staring out at the Impassable Sea, that his father
would die there. But such thoughts were vain and wrong. He was just a
boy back then, gazing at an ocean that defied the boats and sails of
men. And he was afraid.
“Why
is the sea impassable, Father?” he finally asked, after they had
been there several days, staring out across the depths.
His
father rubbed the young boy’s head. –“These are harsh words to
speak to a man-child,” he said, “but you have asked and I will
answer….”
Out
over the sea, the boy watched green and pink lightening and storm
clouds that moved with the swiftness of eagles from north to south
and then south to north again.
“Pride
and arrogance,” his father finally said, after pointing out a
waterspout higher than the highest building in Homeport and telling
him how much damage such a phenomenon could do.
“It
is said from the lyrics of the Old Ones, that once the Impassable Sea
was known as the Sea of Hope and sailors from the Motherlands sailed
it with joy from west to east, just that direction only, arriving at
that sea after passing first the other eight seas. The oldest song
in the common tongue goes like this:
West
and east from the Last Place to Homeport,
The
sailors sail the eight seas and are done.
But
only east we sail the last sea,
From
the Last place to the Kingdom of the Sun.
A
cloud rolled in off the sea and descended on the Sailor’s father.
“The Old Ones obeyed the motion of the sun. They only sailed east
to circle the world. But then,” he said, “pride and arrogance
emerged from the soup of the emotions of those who descended from the
Old Ones. Some thought that sailing from the Sun Kingdom to Almoden,
sailing west on the last sea, would bring them profit and honor,
though the Old ones warned against it. No one ever sailed the last
sea from west to east—and after the first ones tried, the sea
turned against them and it could never again be sailed at all.”
The
boy watched the sea and as he watched a creature rose up, several
miles off shore, a creature like nothing the boy had imagined or
could have imagined. It was vast in wing span—each wing larger than
all the canvass on the largest ship on the Nine Seas. And it was
covered with bright, shining scales on its wings—deep blue, the
purple of the last sunset, black as the night sky, the brown of a
maiden’s eyes in the Wonderlands, a green so dark it defies
description except to say it was the most wondrous green on the
planet bathed in darkness….The creature rose from the sea and
crashed down just as quickly, and the spouts of water from its
crashing cascaded over the miles to the shore.
A
great deal of time passed. The sun set and the moon rose and father
and son had not moved, barely breathed, in all that time.
“And
that,
my father,” the boy said, “what
was that? How like an enormous butterfly it seemed—so massive. It
seemed to have no body, only wings, but wings for what? Can it really
fly?”
“It
is the last gift of the Old Ones to the Impassable Sea,” his father
answered, whispering, astonished and stunned for having witnessed,
with his son, such a breaching of the sea.
“That
creature has no name—at least not in the common tongue—perhaps in
none,” he told his son. “They say there is but one of them and
she is almost immortal. Who knows? But there is this: all the legends
say that
is the creature which will carry the pure in heart across the
Impassable Sea flying…yes, flying….”
The
boy who became a sailor breathed for a quarter of an hour, silent,
staring to where the creature had disappeared into the ocean. It was
totally dark and the moon was rising, remarkable and golden, when he
finally spoke.
“And
who are these pure
in heart?”
he asked.
He
heard his father laugh—something that good man seldom did—before
he answered: “there have been none yet.” That is all he said:
there have been none yet.
For
reasons he would not understand for a lifetime, the boy had been full
of joy as he watched the frightening power of the legendary creature
tearing a hole in the sea as it descended.
****
So, as a boy, the
Sailor saw one shore of the Impassable Sea. It was not until his
world-spanning voyage after leaving the Princess in the Royal Barge,
finally knowing who she was and how impossible that made her love…it
was not until then that he saw the other shore from the Last Place.
But it would be even more than a life-time before he saw the
butterfly-like creature again, the gift from the Old Ones, bear the
pure in heart to him.
“We will be a
week in Center Port,” the Captain told his crew. “And then,
because we have much to gain from a wealthy patron in Lugonia and
another in the Upper Kingdom on our trip home, we will seek to sail
the Sweet Sea to Blessed Port for artifacts and religious items I do
not understand besides understanding how valuable they will be to all
of us.”
The Sailor watched
the faces of the crew. They had sailed to the Lost Isle in the Ocean
East and were under full wind to Center Port. But seamen are
superstitious and there were many tales about the Sweet Sea and the
mind-numbing creatures near the Isle of Dreams. Men who had survived
a life upon the sea did not easily venture into the Sweet Sea.
“Some may wait in
Center Port for Hope to return,” the Captain said. We will vote
with straws to decide if those who do not venture might also gain.
The Sweet Sea needs scant crews—so if you choose to stay another
week or two in Almodan, I will not hold it against you, ever.”
Order and reason
was restored. The Sailor knew the Captain to be wise, but his
understanding of the older man’s wisdom had grown by leaps and
bounds on this earth circling journey. A small crew would sail Hope
into the Sweet Sea. The Sailor would be there at the wheel. But
before then, whiled the Captain signed contracts and made trades in
Center Port, the Sailor knew he would visit the Last Place.
****
There are more
than a dozen stops along the way from Center Port to the Last Place
by land. And each of them is more attractive, more seductive, more
peaceful and complete than the previous one by far. Few—almost
none—ever reach the Last Place because they stay at one of the
stops before returning to Center Port. Few ever reach the Last Place
because few are meant to. So, for those who think this journey is in
their stars and meant for them, there are extravagant and appealing
stops along the way to convince them otherwise.
In Almodan, the
beasts of burden are magical. To you and me, they would look like elk
with legs twice as long as normal and, just behind their necks,
small, tidy wings. No one in the World of Seas questions why the
Aaiuria only live in Almodan. The other Kingdoms tried for decades to
export the creatures only to have them die aboard ship. Some traders
from Deep Morgan decided it was the peculiar grass that grows in
profusion between Center Port and the Last Place—millions of acres
after millions of acres of grass—that keeps the Aaiuria alive. So
plants were dug up and seeds hoarded—all of which rotted during the
narrow passage between the Ocean East and the Storm Sea, weeks before
any ship could carry them to Morganport. All that had occurred
generations ago. Traders no longer tried to bring Aaiuria from
Almodan.
So this is the
truth in the World of Seas—Aaiuria live only in Almodan and live
only to carry a precious, scant few from Middle Port to see the Last
Place.
It cost a year’s
wages in most Kingdoms to make that journey, but there was never a
lack of those who set off to the Last Place, though almost none
arrived. The day the Sailor left (“three days down and three
back—one day in the Last Place”) 273 others climbed up on Aaiuria
behind their Kasi.
Kasi
was an Almondain word which was, like most words in that language,
both a noun and a verb. The noun meant, depending on context,
“guide…companion…fellow traveler” and the verb meant “to
journey”. The Sailor knew enough of the Almondain language and his
Kasi was adroit enough in the common tongue for them to talk on the
first day out.
“Kasi,” the
Sailor said, sitting behind his guide as the beast of burden began to
fly, with tiny wings, across the endless grasslands, “do many
arrive at the Last Place?”
Peruine laughed
after the fashion of that land. Having trusted the Sailor with his
name, since those in Almodan guard names carefully, was a sign of
hopefulness between the two of them.
“Manusept,”
Peruine answered (manusept was an Almodain
noun/verb which means “master”, “companion”, “sharing
bread”, “pilgrimage maker” and “friend” in that slippery
tongue) “Manusept,” he said again, just to make it clear he meant
it, “none reach the Last Place unless you
do….”
Peruine and the
Sailor became close because the Sailor—like his guide—never
disembarked at the pleasure stops along the way to the Last Place.
The lure of riches, games of chance, comfort beyond measure, sexual
satisfaction, food and drink of the holy ones, distractions full of
joy—none of those byways on the way to the Last Place enticed the
Sailor. He was absolutely committed to seeing the Impassable Sea, and
his heart was no longer his.
272 of those who
set out for the Last Place settled instead for one of the stopping
places along the way. On the third day only Peruine and the Sailor
were still in transit, on the journey.
“This Princess
you love,” Peruine asked on the afternoon of the third day, having
been privy to the Sailor’s life, “does she know how much you love
her?”
“I can only
hope so,” the Sailor responded and Peruine was silent for hours,
considering that answer.
At the end of
the third day, Peruine whispered over his shoulder to the Sailor, “I
have never been here before….none I have guided in a dozen years
have passed the pleasures to arrive at the Last Place. But I know
what to show you and show you I will….”
(The Last Place
is difficult to describe and since neither the Sailor or Peruine had
ever been there, they were terribly distracted by the smell of the
Sweet Sea and the roar of the Impassable Sea and the rare color of
the air and the temperature—which was neither hot nor cold, but
somehow just the temperature any of us would long for always. Peruine
did find the place, a tiny spit of land between the Sweet Sea and the
Impassable Sea where, after they waited for an hour our so {though
time there, in the Last Place, became confused} the Moon and the Sun
danced ‘round each other in the sky.
“This is that
place,” Peruine said, astonished by the Grace of AH
that had allowed him to finally journey there with the Sailor. He
buried his forehead in the sand and said prayers in several tongues.
The Sailor built a fire and noticed how, on the beach, he could step
to the right and be bathed in Moonlight and step to the left and feel
the Sun upon his skin. The two shadows he cast were different—Moon
Shadow and Sun Shadow, and he nearly wept. The fire he built was in
darkness and his Kasi prayed in the Sun.
The Sailor
realized he was separated from the Princess by only one sea in this
place—as near to her as he would be in nearly a year—but it was a
sea he could not sail. He sat in the moonlit sand until the Sun and
Moon, circling each other for almost an hour, decided to begin again
the transversing of the sky they had agreed upon in the moment of
creation and they moved away, in the directions they were meant to
go.)
Back in
Homeport, in the castle, with the Impassable Sea between them, the
Princess noticed her shadow on the wall of her bedroom, backlit as
she was by the Sun through the window. She watched her shadow move as
the Sun moved and she remembered how the night before she had sat
bathed in Moonlight and let her shadow move as well.
The Sailor
walked to the edge of the spit of sand. His feet were chilled
suddenly by a wave from the Impassable Sea. He did not speak aloud,
but he thought of speaking. And this is what he thought to say:
“My
love, I stand across one sea from you just now and I send you my
love. The sea is the only one I cannot sail. My love is the only love
you cannot truly claim. And I send it to you all the same….”
The Princess
called her maid. “Help me,” she said, a bit frantic, “I must
find a book I read when I was just a child about the Impassable Sea
and about the legends that swirl and die there and about a creature
that rises on impossibly huge butterfly wings and about the pure in
heart and about….”
Her maid was a
simple girl, but not without soul.
“About love?”
the maid asked.
The Princess was
no longer frantic. She smiled at her maid as if she were smiling
across a sea impassable, a see so angry and so final it would not yet
yield, even to love.
“Yes,” the
Princess finally answered, suddenly full of hope and joy, “it is
all about love, that book, about love…all of it…every word….
X.
What He Saw
The Eighth Sea—the
one never sailed by those from seven other seas—had filled the
Sailor up almost to bursting, almost to death, almost to losing any
touch he had with the reality of his life. The trip to and from the
Last Place, he had thought, was more than he could endure…but
nothing, not even that, prepared him for the voyage on the Sweet Sea.
He saw things
beyond his mere imagining: creatures with scales and horns riding
huge fish and calling out in voices and languages that sounded like
the sounds of lutes; islands that seemed suspended above the water,
held in place by roots of trees with no names he knew; humans in hues
of green and blue who moved past his ship in boats without oars or
sails and waved greetings and offered fruits never seen nor tasted
before; birds with three wings and fish with no mouths and sinuous,
multi-colored serpents that smiled with multiple lines of teeth and
seemed to talk though in on language he had know or even heard; stars
and constellations beyond his ken which made the ship’s charts
useless; birds without feathers and porpoise-like creatures with tiny
arms and bright red eyes…all of it he sought to hold in his mind,
as he held the Princess in his heart, to tell her, to tell his
children and grandchildren yet unborn. Nothing was familiar. The sea
was golden, the sky an odd shade of green. Only the night was the
same—darkness was still dark on the Eighth Sea—the night and the
Moon. The Moon moved between alien, chartless stars, but it was the
self-same Moon. That he knew and that alone kept him sane.
Two weeks into the
Sweet Sea voyage, a ship’s boy fell overboard while unfurling a
seldom used sail. The wind was so languid, the sea so flat and calm,
that Hope was almost anchored by ennui. One more sail, the Captain
thought, might let them catch a breeze so soft they felt it not. The
boy floundered, though he was a strong swimmer, and went under. The
rope tossed to him did not reach. So the Sailor stripped off his
clothes and dived into the placid sea. Easily enough he pulled the
boy to the edge of the ship and both were hoisted aboard. But both
were full of the Eighth Sea waters—surprisingly sweet...a deep,
almost disturbing sweetness—and neither could stand or talk and
thinking was difficult. It was as if the sweet water had taken the
bones out of their bodies and the thoughts from their minds. Carried
to their hammocks, they slept away three full days, not needing to
eat or pass water or be awake.
The Sailor woke on
the third night and, though his limbs were like sticks he had cut
from briar bushes, he found his way to the deck and, eyes swimming
and blurred, found the moon just above the horizon. He clung to the
railing like a mother clings to her child in a sudden catastrophe. He
had little thought, almost no control over his body, and eyesight
impaired by sweet water. Yet he stared and stared at the moon,
humming noises he did not intend to make.
The Captain found
him there, entwined around the railing, humming, smiling maniacally
at the moon. And then they both watched with gathering wonder and not
a little fear, as a beautiful woman, made, it seemed, of moonlight
with her long, thick hair free around her shoulders, diaphanous and
spectral, walked atop the sweet waters ahead of the ship.
The Sailor imagined
the apparition to be his Princess. The Captain took her as a warning
sign, a ghost luring them on, some magic spell cast by green people
and talking serpents and featherless birds. This Sweet Sea journey
had been ill-taken, the Captain thought, and the order went out to
turn the ship around and sail, under faint winds, back to Center
Port.
It was then the
storms came—raging and brutal, tearing sea and sail asunder,
swamping the ship again and again, but propelling it out of the
Eighth Sea at ever increasing speed, back toward Center Port and
safety. Through all the week of storms—black lightening against a
white sky, thunder that trilled rather than roared, deep azure rain,
sudden freezes and times of terrible heat—the Sailor lay abed,
dreaming of a Moon-Woman on the waves. When they sailed through the
inner passage back to the Seventh Sea, the storms ceased and all the
damage the Captain expected to the good ship Hope was minimal at
worst. One by one, the sailors forgot the Eighth Sea altogether,
never remembering sailing there, imaging they had always been headed
west and sailing home.
But the Sailor
woke, full and whole and remembered it all—especially the Princess
of the Moon walking on that mystical sea…that, and the sweetness of
the waters, the wonders it revealed.
The cloud across
the sun moved rapidly away and the sudden light woke the Princess
from her dream. She had dreamed of serpents beneath her feet—orange
and luminescent green in the moonlight—of creatures riding fish,
singing lute songs to her ears; of a beautiful purple woman giving
her a fruit that tasted of flesh; of the tiny hands of porpoises that
held her above the seas…and of the strange stars above her and the
ship she walked ahead of on the waters, on the waters, walking
unaccountably on the waters. Dimly she could see a man, clinging to
the railings of the bow of the ship, holding on as if he could not
stand, staring out at her, walking on the waters….”It is my
Sailor,” she thought, was thinking, had always known, just before
she woke.
The bottom of her
bed was wet. She threw off the sheets and reached down with her hand
to touch the damp. Lifting her fingers to her mouth, tasting deeply,
she was shocked…the dampness was so very, very sweet.
She did not eat
that day or the next and barely slept. She sat by the window and
stared out until her maid feared she was going mad. But she only
smiled and remembered the sweetness of the damp, the strange stars
above her head, the Sailor on the ship, the strange sea beneath her
feet—her dream—and the wonders it revealed….
XI.
In the Rains
The Sailor held the
wheel lightly in his hands. A gentle breeze pushed the ship across
the meeting of Ocean East and the Storm Sea toward the Sea of Shame
and Morganport, the next stop before heading home to the Kingdom of
the Sun. There was a mist that had lasted more than a day. It was no
so much rain “falling” as moisture clinging, filling the air,
softly dampening everything, wrapping the Sailor, the ship, the sea,
the sky, in a light sheen of wetness, like a second skin.
For nearly two
hours the Captain had stood beside the Sailor, silent, pensive. He
was a man of few words and deep thoughts, the Captain was—and the
Sailor was comfortable with his quiet presence. A brief shower broke
through the mist and the two men stood in the rains, sailing on. It
was late afternoon, though from the light it could have been morning
as well. The Sailor was lost in thought about the strangeness on the
Eighth Sea, the sweet water he had tasted, the Princess walking on
the waters as in a vision. Unknown to him, the Captain thought of
that moment as well.
“Perhaps we
should have sailed on,” the Captain said suddenly, not so much to
the Sailor as to hear the words aloud.
The Sailor looked
at him, raised his eyebrows, did not speak. On in silence and
dampness they sailed.
“Some say the
sweet waters give waking dreams—dreams in broad daylight, in the
midst of whatever else is happening.” The Captain spoke and fell
into profound quiet.
After what may have
been an hour of rain and wind and silence, the Sailor told him it all
had been true….
(At one in the
same time, the Sailor was at the tiller, guiding the ship, standing
in companionable silence with his Captain and
he was walking by the First Sea, the sea of the Sun Lands, with the
Princess in the rain.
It was a waking
dream, going on simultaneously with his real life, and both, he felt,
were real.
She was wrapped
in his jacket, having come without a coat. The rain had blown in
unexpectedly as they searched for heart-shaped rocks in the sand.
When the first drops fell, she looked at him with the look of a
child, both excited and fresh. They started to run for shelter, but
the sky opened and they were soaked to the skin. Laughing and
embracing, licking rain from each other’s eyelids and cheeks and
lips, they held each other as the rain slackened into a mist that
covered them both with a damp second skin.
They sat in the
wet sand, holding each other, unable to tell where the mist ended and
their bodies began, where his body ended and hers began, and told
each other all the secrets they knew and could remember. In the rains
they emptied their souls to each other. He wrapped his coat around
her and they walked…amazed at the rainbow far out on the First
Sea.)
“A
rainbow,” the Captain said, pointing ahead to where the sky was
clearing. “Good luck for sailors….”
The Sailor adroitly
guided the ship and smiled, laughed out loud, for in the distant sky,
just above the horizon, as night fell purple and orange and gold and
damp beneath retreating clouds, he saw a sliver of a moon, reflected
in the sea, mirrored there.
***
The Princess
watched the light shift to dawn through a mist that wrapped the
Kingdom as in a second skin. She had been standing on the balcony of
her room, where the sun often surprised her at dawn, standing in the
rain, soaked through and through, waiting for the day to begin. No
sun through the clouds, but she had been caught up in a vision of a
beach—the rain, her Sailor…his lips against her face, his coat
and arms around her shoulders.
She wondered where
he was—which sea he sailed, if he were well, if he dreamed of her.
Then she realized, stunned with the knowledge, he had just the moment
before been there with her as in a dream in the rains.
A crack appeared in
the clouds and the sun insinuated itself into the gap. The Princess
licked her lips and tasted rain. It tasted so sweet, so good, so
wondrous….
XII. IN PORT,
WONDERING
The inn was full of
sailors from a dozen different ships—and therefore, full of voices
in a dozen different languages—full of noise and news and nonsense
nurtured and nudged along by ale and wine.
In a corner, our
Sailor sat, nursing a melon flavored wine from an Eighth Sea
vineyard. The taste reminded him of the sweet water of that sea and
the waking dreams it brought to him. Those dreams were less frequent
now and he hoped, as he sipped, that the wine from Sweet Sea waters
would bring back his visions—his sights across the seas and lands
between him and the Princess.
As he drank, calm
and silent, surrounded by cacophony, his Captain came through the
door, glanced around the room—which grew less loud because of his
entry—and noticed the Sailor’s wave to him. The Captain was a man
of substance-even strangers sensed that from hid bearing and his
stride—so the crowd parted, silently, to let him pass.
The Captain pulled
a bench near the Sailor’s table and asked what he recommended. More
melon wine was ordered—the Captain took a drink and complained of
the sweetness. The Sailor explained that it was Eighth Sea wine and
the Captain gave him a knowing smile. I was wine to wet the soul and
not the throat. The two men sipped silently, surrounded by noise.
****
A world away and
more, the Princess prowled the marketplace near the docks. Dressed as
a maid from a great household—a servant girl—she had escaped the
castle as she always had to meet the Sailor. She heard the chirping
and growling of a dozen languages as she passed through the strange
and bizarre women and men in odd fashions—hair braided or long and
silky and pale and then, oiled and slick—flowed around her. She
loved the bazaar. It reminded her of how far away in some place
unfathomedly foreign the Sailor was. Sights and sounds and scents of
the docks of Homeport assaulted her senses until a sign—beautifully
painted and mysteriously above a doorway—distracted her from all
else.
There, as if
painted with sea spray and moonlight and star-shine, was a picture of
a woman walking on water, splattered with spender and shining,
leading a hip through the night. The sign read, in the common tongue
of her land, Night Visions/Day Dreams.
Shivering
unaccountably, she reached for the door knob beneath the sign. Her
hand tingled as she turned it and a dozen tiny bells announced her
entrance in tones almost too high to hear, almost too painful to the
ears, and, at the same time in some remarkable way, almost too
pleasurable to stand.
The shop was
small—one little room—and the smell inside almost took the
Princess’ breath away. The smell was of exotic plants, warm summer
days, a sea of honey and pepper—burning to the nose, making her
eyes water with what felt like tears of wonder and joy and hope.
The shopkeeper
was a tiny, veiled woman of no discernable age—perhaps no age at
all. Her eyes were deep set and amber above her veil and, if the
Princess had not known better, she would have thought the woman’s
skin was a hue of light green. But surely not, she thought; it was
only the dimness of the room that made it seem so.
The diminutive
woman was busy wrapping something in paper so shear, so diaphanous
that it seemed more web-like than anything. She tied the package with
string that was more like light than thread. As she tied light, the
woman apologized and told the Princess she had come earlier than
expected. She told the Princess the gift should have been already
wrapped.
“It is a
shame,” the woman said, in a voice like bell tones and bird songs
and insect calls, “that the gift was not wrapped and ready for you
when you came. I am so sorry, so very sorry; but sometimes it is hard
to know the timing of things.”
The woman used
the common tongue, but her voice was so soft, so weird, so strange,
that the Princess could only barely understand her and would never be
able to remember exactly what she said or precisely what her voice
sounded like.
The woman moved
rapidly, but with great grace, around the counter and thrust the
gift—it was a “gift”, that much was obvious though the Princess
was greatly confused—into the Princess’ hands.
Bird singing,
the shop-keeper told the Princess, “You must go now…take your
gift and go…too long in the shop and you might never leave.
Cradling the web
and light wrapped gift in her arms like a child, the Princess let the
tiny woman manipulate her toward the door.
“But who…?”
she tried to ask. And why and what and how? But no words came to her
but these:
“What is it?”
“Melon wine,”
the woman chirped, “from the Eighth Sea Sailor….”
Suddenly the
Princess found herself outside in the busy market street, holding a
bottle wrapped in brown paper and cheap string.
“Melon wine,
indeed,” she thought, looking up where the sign of the shop no
longer hung, seeking a door knob that existed no more on a solid
brick wall.
She but
wondered, no longer unaccustomed to magic, and carried the wine home
to the castle.
Late in the
night, she woke from a dream of water-walking and a trailing ship and
a lonesome sailor there. Then she opened the wine, deep in darkness,
and sipped. So sweet, so gentle, such a wondrous gift. In the
darkness she sipped and it was enough.
****
Two full bottles of
melon wine plus half-a-bottle more—and through it all the Sailor
had finally told his Captain all he had to tell: the Princess dressed
as a servant girl…the love between them growing…the way just
breathing became more and more wondrous when he thought of her…the
moon on his many seas and the sun on her trees…the loneliness and
aching…the wondering…the electric touch of her…the dampness on
the beach of their visionary, rain drenched day…the rock, a perfect
heart, they found together in the sand…the birds who sang them both
awake…the excruciating pain of their apartness and
impossibility…the joining of their souls…the gift and blessing of
all that. On and on the Sailor spoke, encouraged by wine and love and
the joy—so deep—of telling of his Princess.
Most all the
sailors from the other ships and other lands had left the inn, full
of drink and many of them with a willing woman on their arms. A few
old salts dozed by the dying fire. The innkeeper cleared away empty
and half-drained cups. The serving girls, sullen and exhausted, sat
at a table in the corner of the room.
“Another sip or
two,” the Captain said, his first words in hours, “and then to
bed with me. The sea waits.”
The Sailor smiled,
almost laughed out loud. The Captain was such a good man to hear a
tale so fraught with pain and lack and needfulness. He was such a
good man to while away a night with, along with melon wine.
“I knew once,”
the Captain said, so softly that the Sailor thought he had imagined
it. The Sailor leaned forward and waited.
After a long time,
the Captain spoke again: “I knew once such a love,” and then he
took a sip of the Eighth Sea Wine, rich with sweet water from that
forbidden sea.
Then, as the
serving maids fell asleep and the old men shuffled home and the
innkeeper locked the doors and the melon wine never quite gave
out—then, deep in the night in a darkened, cooling, locked and
empty room—the Captain told his tale.
It was like this:
out of time, with no warning or reason, just when he least expected
such a thing, a Gift of Love was offered him—a Gift so rare, so
profound, so life-altering he had no categories, no easy answers, no
way to understand it.
It was a Gift of
Love so fraught with pain and poison to his life and to the life of
the bearer of the Gift that in his fear, his anxiety, his decency and
goodness, his longing to give no pain and to do no damage, bring no
harm—in all of that, he made the choice his mind and reason willed.
He refused the Gift.
“I’ve sailed
the seas for decades now,” he said, his face and voice enlivened by
that last bottle of wine that could never be fully consumed. “And I
carry with me a Gift unopened, a Gift refused, a blessing never
savored.”
***
The Princess was
called from sleep and wondrous dreams by the birds outside her
window. She rose from bed—awake to life—fully rested, ready for
the day.
“The wine,”
she thought, and found a gift on her table. It was not the opened
bottle she remembered, but a gift wrapped in webs and light,
unopened.
She sat in a
chair and gazed at the gift, wondering how this could be; wondering
if she should open it again.
***
The Captain and the
Sailor drank melon wine from a never empty bottle until the dawn.
They grew more sober as they sipped, more open to life, more ready
for the day. Both of them stared at the still-full bottle. Neither of
them had ever felt so awake, so alive.
“Should we
take it with us?” the Sailor asked, eyeing the bottle.
The Captain—so
alive, so young in spite of his years—said only this: “It is
yours to choose. I chose for myself long ago and I sail the seas
alone, with only my loss to taste and my nobility to embrace.”
The Sailor looked
at the bottle, beginning to brim as he watched. Only a cork would
stop the wine from renewing itself always. And only carrying it away
to the ship would continue the renewing. The Sailor knew enough of
wonder and magic to know that.
“Nobility is a
good thing,” he said, watching the wine rise up slowly in the
bottle.
The Captain
laughed. “It is its own reward,” he said. “Never do I
regret being noble. I wear it well. It serves me greatly. It is one
of the two most holy choices we can make.”
The Sailor
corked the bottle before it overflowed. The two of them were more
sober, more alive than either remembered being.
“One of two?”
the Sailor asked.
The Captain nodded.
He was solemn but full of joy. The two of them stared at the never
empty bottle of melon wind and wondered.
***
The Princess
touched the unopened gift. It glittered in the sunlight and stung her
fingers somewhere between pleasure and pain.
And she wondered
what to do. All of her wondered.
***
“One of two?”
the Sailor asked again. “Between nobility
and what? What is the choice I face?”
His Captain
leaned close. The man’s breath was of melon wine. He whispered.
“Love,” is
all he said, except for this: “It is the choice no one would
choose to make if one had a choice about what to choose.”
“Nobility or
Love,” the Sailor said, as much to himself and to the Universe
as to his Captain.
“Precisely,”
the Captain said, watching the Sailor’s hand hovering near the
bottle. And the Captain knew, knew so painfully well, the agony of
the Sailor’s choosing.
The Sailor’s hand
wrapped around the bottle. And he wondered. All he was or ever would
be wondered….
xiii.
THE DAY THEY KNEW
The good ship Hope
slid through the narrow straits from the Sixth Sea to the Fifth, the
sea all the sailors knew as the Sea of Shame. Besides the sweet
waters of the Eighth Sea and the impassable waters of the Ninth Sea,
the Sea of Shame was hardest to sail. Strange storms erupted without
warning, dead calms could last for days and—so sailors thought—this
was the sea where pain from the past was tasted and known again, as
if for the first time. It was a myth, our Sailor knew, something told
by old men and small children, but he dreaded the passage none the
less.
Deep in the night,
on the Sea of Shame, with a leading wind pushing them toward home,
the Sailor remembered the day they knew….
(“I must leave
on the morrow,” he told his love, the serving maid of some great
house. He longed to ask her to stay with him this last night before
months at sea and to vow vows they would fulfill on his return…but
he knew no words.
“Then we must
spend this night together,” the Princess said, and his heart nearly
broke from joy.
The Captain
always spent the night before a sailing on the ship, so the Sailor
took the Princess to the Captain’s house. The Captain was a wealthy
trader and his home was elegant enough to pass for minor royalty. The
Princess was reassured: her love was close enough in class, all was
not lost. The Sailor only hoped she would not be embarrassed as a
guest in a great home. Little did he know. The Captain’s servants
knew the Sailor well and loved him. They whispered and smiled behind
their hands that he had brought a woman to dinner. She seemed, from
her dress, to be but a servant girl, but the Captain’s servants
knew better. She looked them in their eyes as they served her and her
look commanded respect and honor. She was sweet and tender to them
all, but her disguise did not fool them, and when the Sailor and his
guest retired at last to the second best bedroom in the house, the
servants sat in the kitchen, eating and drinking and wondering if
either their Sailor or his women knew…really knew….
Nothing they
talked about that night—and they talked about almost all things:
how they longed, what they loved, what touched them and made them
whole in verse and song and prose, about their hearts and what
stirred their passions—none of that revealed the great and
insurmountable boundaries to their love. They were but man and
woman—not Sailor and Princess—for that long, pleasure filled
night.
The night they
spent together was gentle and kind and wondrous and erotic and new.
Mostly they kissed and touched and explored each other, astonished at
each unexpected pleasure, grateful and blessed by the sweet surrender
and total abandonment each found.
A cantata of
bird song woke them early. The Sailor kissed his Princess’ eye-lids
as they fluttered awake.
“Even the
birds sing for you,” he whispered, “as well as my heart.”
She rushed to
dress, to leave him there, to hurry back to the palace before she was
missed. Frantic, she was, and frightened, for she had never spent a
night away. He was confused at her haste and sought to hold her: then
he realized she might be needed in the house where she served to
prepare breakfast, to clean the bed rooms, to open the drapes.
She, for her
part, didn’t want to be discovered by his servants in his bed.
Obviously, to the Princess, this grand house was his father’s and
he was heir to some great fortune and title and bloodline. All would
be well, she thought, rushing through the streets at dawn, back to
the castle. When he returned from his journey—probably a trip to
visit the foreign holdings of his family—that would be time and
enough to reveal her true self to him.
For the Sailor’s
part, he knew that when he returned from this long journey across the
8 seas, he would find her and claim her and offer his life. So, he
had breakfast with the servants in the kitchen, smiling lovingly at
their blushes and giggles and averted eyes. He loved these people,
they were his own kind, and he never imagined—not then—that they
knew what he did not about his loved one. All he knew was this—her
scent and her taste and her touch and her dampness was still all over
his body as he walked to the dock to board the good ship Hope for a
long, long journey. All else would be resolved on his return.)
The Sailor
was at the helm, steering the ship out of Homeport when the Captain
ordered him to turn astern and lower the sails.
“The royal barge
is passing,” the Captain said, “we must make way.”
Adroitly the Sailor
shouted the needed commands to take the ship to the side and slow its
passage. Making way for the royal barge was reason enough in the
Kingdom of the Sun. As the ship Hope slowed to a near stop, the
Sailor glanced over at the barge and saw the King and Queen—familiar
faces to anyone in the Kingdom of the Sun. But then, just as he was
about to hoist sails again and move Hope out of the harbor, he saw
his love on the barge, dressed in gossamer and silks and sunlight, a
tiny crown sparkling in her wild, black hair. Suddenly—all at once,
without knowing how—he realized what he should have known from
their first meeting in the market place and the long walks and the
talks…this was not a common girl, she was deeply precious and
something beyond his ken. She sat in the back of the barge, her head
down as if she longed to be somewhere else. But he saw her and willed
her to look at him, opened-eyed and alert, seeing all that must be
seen.
She sat in the
barge, thinking of him, recalling his fingers’ touch, his
gentleness, how much he longed to pleasure her; then, something
caused her to raise her eyes. And there he was, guiding a ship,
dressed in rough cotton, common clothes, a first mate and not
royalty—how could she have not known he was but a Sailor and not a
Prince? Her soul mourned. Her heart was already his. She would pray
to AH for weeks to release them from this love. He would cease
praying altogether. Finally, both of them would pray the same
prayer—“AH, almighty, all goodness, eternal lover…let us find a
way….”
Their eyes locked
for but a moment and in that moment they both knew. This was the day
they knew, as his ship, guided by his own hand, was raising sails to
venture into the 8 seas and she was touring the harbor in her
father’s yacht—the royal barge.
So, their eyes met
and they both—finally but for the first time, knew. They both knew
how hopeless and impossible their love would be. The both knew that
neither of them had been prepared for such a surge of love. They both
knew, passing in the harbor, knowing they would be separated for over
a year now—they both knew how longing felt, how they would pine for
the other and ache—all the while knowing how unfathomable this love
they shared was and how it could not be.
The Sailor held
that love over the seas and back again. He loved her only and gave
his heart to her. Now, sailing home, he wondered and felt loss,
regret on the Sea of Shame. His Captain and friend always locked the
brandy and wine and dark ale away when Hope was on the 5th
Sea. He knew well the longings and the pain that needed drowned in
drunkenness. But the Sailor had a bottle of wine that never ran out
and a key to the closet that he used that night. He pined away on the
deck, reeling from port to starboard, weeping aloud, deep in his
private hell. The Captain found him near dawn and put him to bed,
wrapped his face in cool cloths, cleaned up his mess and even held
him near, knowing as he did about the pain of the loss of love.
****
That very night, as
fate would have it, the Princess was at a royal party with the
Archduke of Palisadia—the land across the Sunny Sea from her
Kingdom. The Sun Kingdom and Palisadia were firm allies and had
inter-married more than once over centuries. The Archduke was a
charming, lovely man—a man the Princess would have gladly welcomed
into her life and her bed, but for the Sailor, far away.
She drank too much
that night—wines from Deep Morgan and the Spice Lands and
Lugonia—all deep red and hearty. Her maid and the Queen took her
from the room hours earlier than was proper because she was dizzy and
sick. Her maid, the one who changed clothes with her whenever she
escaped the palace to meet her love…a Sailor, a common man, she now
knew—wrapped the Princess’ face in cool cloths and cleaned up her
mess and rocked her in her arms, singing sweet, child-like songs of
the sea and of the moon. Apologies were made, formally and privately
and the Archduke, a good man, was gracious and understanding and
commented on the potency of the wines from the Spice Lands.
The next morning,
head aching and body drained, the Sailor stood on deck and looked off
to the south where the Spice Lands lay. He tried to apologize to the
Captain but was both rebuffed and encouraged. Nothing, after all, had
changed.
“Tonight we pass
into the 4th Sea,” the Captain said, “the sea we have
always called the Sea of Mourning. You are not through with your
pain, my friend, my son…and you are a son to me. I love you
dearly.”
The Sailor bowed to
his Captain, like the bow of a son to a father, and then stared off
to the west, toward the Sun Kingdom, toward his love—unspeakable,
unattainable, never to be known or possessed, far from his ken, out
of his orbit…yet, he saw her eyes, always open when they kissed and
touched…he saw her eyes.
And in the
pre-dawn, now only half-a-world away from him, wakened by the birds,
head throbbing, still a little nauseous, the Princess stared eastward
and, unaccountably, saw the Sailor’s eyes, focused only on her. She
saw his eyes as well.
The
Sorrow Sea
His fever left
him—the fever brought on by his drunken night on the Sea of
Shame—as the ship Hope passed through the channel into the sea all
the world knew as the Sea of Mourning but the Sailor called the
Sorrow Sea.
He had been there a
dozen times before—but the last time, heading east, knowing he
loved a Princess who could never truly be his own. He had felt his
sorrows deeply. He woke, fully sober and alert, without fever, to a
pain around his heart.
That pain had
accompanied him from Homeport to the Sweet Sea and, now half-way back
again. It had been his companion in foreign ports and on the open,
moon-drenched waters. His pain had become his newest and best friend.
Such pain, he knew, others carried always with them. He did not
imagine himself “special” in that way. His Captain carried always
the pain of love turned away and left behind. Eron, his friend for
several voyages, carried the pain of a dead child. Malion, another
sailor, knew well the pain of a brother who had murdered a rival.
Escalon, a neighbor back in Homeport, bore a scar across her face
from the brutality of her father. Halimon, a trader from Almodan, had
watched his whole family perish in a fire. Everyone, the Sailor knew,
bore, like an extra limb, some piece of sorrow. He was never alone in
that.
Yet, his sorrow was
his alone, and on the Sea of Mourning it bit bitterly at his soul and
brought him full awake.
“Homeport is
still half-a-world away,” the Captain said, after the Sailor found
him on the deck and stood comfortably, silently by his side for more
than three leagues of sea. “And the Sea of Mourning deserves a
drink or two to toast the losses of all our lives….”
The Sailor knew
then to open the cast of rum saved for just this part of the journey
and to fill the cups of the other sailors, mourning their lost lives.
Only he and the Captain would not drink. They both believed that
shame was best drowned in company, but sorrow was best faced sober
and alone.
The Sailor had
never been one for regret. What life offered, he believed, was AH’s
will. And who was he to doubt the will of AH? A path not trod, a turn
not taken, an opportunity ignored—for the Sailor all that meant was
that there was another path walked, a turn chosen, an opportunity
embraced, just not the one passed by. And he was content, satisfied,
deeply engaged with his life in the moment. Where would “regret”
play into that? Anything he regretted would have left him at some
other place this day, led him to another harbor than the one he knew,
dressed him differently, perhaps, though the clothes he wore were the
clothes he chose to wear.
But there was
mourning for him and sorrow too.
He would change
nothing of his past, not even the outrageous and audacious giving of
his heart to one who—though she gave him her heart as well—could
never share his life. Even surrounded by people he loved, he felt
loneliness beyond description. Even in times of happiness, he felt an
emptiness no words could name. Even when he was full of life, there
was something—someone—missing that might have made him whole.
And all that was
just as it would be. And that he mourned. That was his sorrow deep.
On the Sea of Mourning, his eyes were seldom without the skein of
tears and his heart—what was left of it since he had given most of
it away—was nigh on breaking.
***
A week’s journey
on the sorrowful sea would bring them to Morganport—the greatest
city of the world, the center of learning and trade. There they would
off load the Almodain fabrics and rugs, the wines and fruits and
bitter herbs of the Spicelands, the jewelry and gold and magic
trinkets of the Wonderlands, the wool and brandy of the Morgans…all
for great profit. And there they would rest for the half-world
journey home, leaving Morganport with books for scholars, musical
instruments, the finest clothing, the latest devices to help in
farming, dried meat and fish, all to carry to Homeport in the Kingdom
of the Sun.
But first a week in
Morganport, where the Sailor had lived as a student for several
years, would break up the sorrowing. There he would find
entertainment and distraction, perhaps even fun and a chance to flirt
with women of a dozen hues. And he would visit old friends in
familiar rooms to speak of poetry and history and the myths and songs
that gave them their claim to identity, to life. He would find in
Morganport more than one shoulder to lean upon, more than one ear to
bend, more than one soul to support him in his sorrow.
He would not tell
them quite the truth. The truth, he knew, he shared only with the
Princess and perhaps, in another way, his Captain. But he would tell
them of his tears, his loss, his plight. They would fill him with
wine and good wishes and warmth.
He would visit the
grand market place and find there, among all the finery and wonders
of the world, something to take back to her—whether she could
accept it or not—something that would prove to her in worth or
words or simple wonderment…something that would prove, in spite of
all that stood against it…simply this: his love.
***
A week of aching on
the Mourning Sea before the longed for rest of Morganport, before the
respite that waited there—that was the cost the Sailor gladly paid
to find a harbor in the storms of his emotions. The payment was only
this—a week of tears of his sorrow for what could never be. As Hope
lowered sail and anchored in Morganport, the debt was paid in full...
in
morganport
in
morganport
in morganport
Hope slid into the
dock without so much as a whisper of a breeze. The Sailor smiled to
himself at his skills and the Captain crossed the deck to touch him
lightly on the arm.
“Almost as well
as I would have done,” he said, walking away.
As soon as the ship
had entered the crowded harbor under his hand and command, the
Sailor’s spirits had lifted. Out of the sorrowing sea into a place
as familiar to him as his heart—if his heart had not been
elsewhere—he was no longer forlorn or troubled or aching. In a way
he could never explain or understand, he felt at home half-a-world
from the place he called “home”.
Even the wood of
the docks felt familiar as he strode into the city. The pavement
welcomed his boots. The air acknowledged his breathing. A port in
heart storm. The Princess retreated to a deep recess in his mind. He
was home. For the first time in months, he felt free and easy even
though every other step he saw something he wished he could show her
or thought something he wished he could tell her or felt something he
longed for her to share. The he realized why—she had been here too,
here, in Morganport, long before he loved her. The Royal Family
traveled to Morganport every dozen full moons for the opening of the
assembly of the Kingdoms. Surely, she had been here, his Princess,
times before, and walked the very street he walked and saw these very
things and had her heart leap up to be in the city at the center of
the world.
The Sailor was
buying a sweet cake from a vender dressed all in scarves, as folk
from the Wonderlands dressed, a sweet cake so delicate you must not
chew it but let it dissolve on your tongue…he was doing that and
accepting a thimble sized cup of coffee from the Spice Lands, so
potent and dark and rich you could not swallow it like other liquids,
when his memory kicked in and he remembered something that shook him
to the marrow of his bones.
(His first
journey to Morganport had been as a rude, unlettered teen, a cabin
boy on the good ship Hope. What he did not know, could not even
imagine, is that the Captain of his ship had made arrangements to
leave him there, leave him to the scholars of the Academy in the
Center of the World for five years. His Captain, a wise and good man,
had seen promise in his orphaned cabin boy and had made all the
necessary connections for that raw boy to become a man and a great
sailor. The boy had no knowledge of those plans when he prowled the
docks of Morganport, but what he did know was that the King and Queen
of his home kingdom were in that city as well. He was an unschooled
boy, buying a sweet cake he would mistakenly chew and a mouth full of
Spice Land coffee he would try to swallow without savoring it on his
tongue. And, at just that moment, his King and Queen passed by.
He fell to his
knees, choking on cake and coffee, feeling exposed and ignorant, when
a small child, a girl with perfect skin, unspeakable grace and wild
black hair rushed over and whacked him on his back. Her blow allowed
him to swallow and sputter out a thank you. That mere child then
touched his face and laughed out loud, speeding away, back to her
parents and the gaudily dressed guards who looked horrified that she
had touched a common ship’s boy.)
That memory,
eating sweet cake and savoring coffee once again, in the middle of
the busiest street of Morganport, drove the Sailor to his knee,
wrapped in the past and lost in love.
Several people,
passing by, heard him say, in the common tongue: “My Princess, that
was you, was you, was you….”
***
The week in
Morganport sped by as rapidly as the long nights on the seas before
had dragged and labored. The Sailor found old friends and joined them
to listen to the poetry and song of the Nine Seas. He found drink
enough and food to fill his body. But nothing—not friendship or
rich meals or the lyrics of his world—could give him back his
heart.
On the last night
in port, on the way to visit with some of his teachers and their
newest students, he found himself wandering down a dark and nearly
deserted street. He well knew the way to the eating and drinking
place where he would meet his friends and could not imagine how he
had become so lost. Just as he was about to turn back, he saw a dimly
lit shop that smelled of melons and vanilla and musky spices. He
opened the door and entered to find a woman…or perhaps a
man…sitting on a divan, bathed in strange light and wrapped in
smoke and veils.
“Sailor,”
he/she said, “come and sit.”
His mind reeled
from the incense and his body moved without his control until he sat
beside her—it was a woman, now he could tell—and she held his
hand.
“I can tell you
all you can endure,” is all she said.
He thought he
should leave and find his friends, but he said to her, “speak….”
Long she stared at
his hand, holding it in her tiny hands, touching his wrist gently
with her fingers. She smiled and laughed and frowned and wept.
“Your love,”
she said, “is deep, like the seas you sail. And as endless as all
those seas.”
He waited until she
continued. “But your love is as bound and tied as a ship at dock in
a far away port.”
He closed his eyes
and sighed.
“But there is
this,” she told him, “there is something of hope.”
He laughed
bitterly, thinking she was a common fortune teller, not knowing the
truth. “That is the name of my ship,” he said, sadly, “nothing
more.”
His eyes were still
closed when her tongue touched the center of the palm of his hand,
like some damp, warm, loving creature it touched him.
“Sail on,” she
whispered, “on hope….”
He did not remember
leaving that shop or walking to the inn where he found his teachers
and friends. He was disconcerted and distracted through dinner and
song and poetry and all the well wishes for his journey to Homeport.
Suddenly he found himself alone with a young student of one of his
friends from the Academy. Alia was her name. She was small and slight
with skin the color of moonlight and hair as bright and golden as the
sun. She had spoken not a word through all the evening, but now that
everyone else had departed, she picked up a bottle of deep red Morgan
wine and two cups.
“Walk with me by
the waters,” she said, “and tell me of your sadness and your
joy….”
Together Alia and
the Sailor shared the wine and the moonlight and the sand beneath
their feet. And he told her of his Princess and his love and the
hopelessness of it all. Now there was a fourth who knew: the Princess
and the Sailor, his Captain and, unexpectedly, Alia.
“She is my moon
and my stars,” he said at one point, swinging his arms to the sky.
Alia listened as
intently as a stone is a stone and matched his steps though the sand
by the sea. When all the wine was gone and the story fully told, she
took his hand in her tiny hand and held it to her face.
“I would live a
hundred lives of suffering and pain,” she said, “to live one life
and be so loved, hopeless as it may be….”
Just as the fortune
teller he had almost forgotten had done, Alia raised the palm of his
hand to her mouth and touched it with the tip of her tongue. She did
it so gently, with such care, he would wonder for a forgotten
lifetime if it truly happened.
“Cross the
waters,” she said, standing on tip-toe to kiss the Sailor’s cheek
and eyelids and finally his mouth. She did it so gently, with such
care, it would take him a lifetime and more to know if it had really
happened.
“Sail on Hope,”
she said. And with those words she turned from him and walked away,
leaving him on the sands of Morganport, wondering if he would see her
again, staring across the Sea of Mourning, toward the west, toward
the coming day, toward Homeport, toward his heart, his love….
The
Sea of the MoonT
(xvi)
Seldom
discussed and never shared with anyone who does not sail the seas was
this: no one sleeps on
the Sea of the Moon.
In inns and pubs
throughout the 11 Kingdoms, in port cities great and small, sailors
huddled over their cups and glasses and whispered, from time to time,
about the sleepless wonder of that sea. No one ever questioned it or
sent representatives to Morganport to consult the scholars or to the
Wonderlands and the Isle of AH to ask the holy people why it should
be so. The people of that odd little world were not philosophical or
theological by nature. Whatever happened simply happened.
And what happened
is this: no one ever slept on a ship that sailed the waters of the
Sea of the Moon. Just that and nothing more. Husbands did not tell
wives; fathers did not tell children; those who sailed that sea never
mentioned it to those who had never been on a ship there; lovers kept
it to themselves. There was no reason to share the odd knowledge. It
simply was the truth. That was all.
With a great west
wind in the Spring and Autumn or the swirling winds to the east in
Summer and Winter, a well-trimmed ship—like the ship Hope—could
cross the Sea of the Moon in 8 days. Headed in the wrong way in the
wrong season would mean the trip would take a fortnight. And never,
not once, not ever, did anyone on board a ship crossing that
half-moon shaped ocean, fall asleep.
The moon itself was
enough rest, all agreed, for reasons often discussed deep into rum or
brandy or wind, but never questioned. On the Sea of the Moon, the
souls and minds of sailors found comfort all through the night, but
never fell asleep.
During the days,
the decks were handled by the assigned crew. Duties were done and
jobs completed with care and competence, even by the most
inexperienced sailors. And at night, when the moon broke on the
horizon and rose through the clouds and danced in the middle of the
sky and then began to fall to the other end of the world, every
sailor on the ship was above deck, sitting quietly, scarcely moving,
drinking in the restful light the moon provided, fully awake though
sluggish, slow of thought, breathing deeply, taking in the salt air
in a way no other sea provided. There were never storms at night, or
even rain, on the Moon Sea. And clouds were scarce and stars from
other worlds were bright and fierce. Any bad weather on the Sea of
the Moon would come in daylight.
It took several
journeys for any sailor to accept this phenomenon. And even after
years of acceptance, it caused pause and wondering. Why this sea, of
all the seas? Why was the Moon so powerful here and nowhere else?
What might it mean? But all such questions were dissolved into one
stern fact: a sailor crossing the Sea of the Moon in either
direction, found healing and strength and wakefulness that either
prepared them for the “Sorrow Sea” or renewed them from that
mourning. In every port there was a bar called “the Moon Sea” and
that place was the favorite drinking spot of most any sailor, though
when they were there, they seldom drank much.
Our Sailor tended
to man the wheel all night, every night, when Hope was on the Moon’s
Sea. Even before this voyage to the earth’s end and back, his was
his favorite sea. But now, even more so—in his soul he knew her now
as the Princess of the Moon, as Moon Girl, as Moonlight. Each night
she visited him, the westward path marked by her light, the miles
from Homeport diminishing in the darkness. The Captain leaned against
the rail, night after night, hour after hour, glancing occasionally
to the face of the Sailor—deeply moved by the slight smile and the
moonlight-lit-eyes of the wheelman. The Captain, like everyone, was
sleepless there, and his deeply broken heart drew life and vitality
from the Sailor’s face. Something there of wondering beyond what
was True. Something there of dreaming though sleep would not come.
Something there of hope in spite of hopelessness. Something there,
something the Captain could not quite claim or name—he thought it
must be love.
The Sailor was
astonished that he could remember almost every moment he’d ever
spent with the Princess and live them again in his heart—the part
that still beat, that wasn’t hers because he needed it to live—and
feel them again and know her touch, her laughter, her smile, the
smell of her, the grace of her movements when she did not know he was
watching, the softness of her breath against his neck, the eloquence
of her few words, the erotic grandeur of her kisses. Throughout the
sleepless nights as Hope sped on, he relived his times with her and,
as dawn drew near each morning, his fantasies overtook him and he
lived times with her that had not been, that would not, could not
be…except in his soul.
“Could I always
but sail this sea,” he whispered as the moon disappeared into
daylight, “I would always be with you….”
Sailors injured or
ill before entering the Moon’s Sea found new health and healing
there. Those homesick and lonely ceased to pine the hours away. The
Sea of the Moon was the place to come form balm, for acceptance, for
newness. How rare the moon, to share her gifts so freely with those
who crossed her sea in ships.
How kind she was to
all of them. How lovely and how rare.
Time did not only
stand still on that sea, it ran backwards and piled up against itself
and made itself available to heal the wounds of all life’s past.
That was the Moon’s work and magic and wonder and great, great,
good gift.
Such a great,
good,
gift for the
Moon to give….
MOON
SEA (2)
XVII
For
reasons she did not, at first understand, the Princess found herself
sleeping through the bird’s symphony at dawn and through the first
light and then through breakfast and then through lunch and then
through the sunlight at sunset on the trees….Each day she slept a
little longer and woke later and spent more time walking in the
gardens of the palace late at night.
She
ate little—some melon at dusk, a glass of wine from her never
ending bottle as darkness came, an egg or some sweet thing as the
moon rose…then a glass of icy milk before taking to her bed to
sleep for hours and hours only to wake in the depths of the night and
take a walk. Then she would sleep away most of the day.
It
was almost a week before she realized what was happening to her. She
was sleeping because the Sailor couldn’t. She had made friends with
the night and was sleeping away most of the day by then.
“He
is on the Moon’s Sea,” she finally understood, “sleepless and
thinking of me….”
During
her next sleepless night—having slept away most of a day—she had
a waking dream, a memory, really, long forgot, not even clearly
remembered. It was like this: she had just arrived in Morganport,
having sailed west across the Sea of the Moon, sleepless for eight
nights but more alive than she ever remembered being. Even three days
in the Sea of Mourning had not shaken her vitality, excitement, pure
joy. She was a child—5 or 6 at the time, she couldn’t remember
which—and as she walked the streets of Morganport she was
astonished at how people bowed or kneeled at her passing. It was her
father and mother, she knew, even then—the King and Queen of the
Sun Lands—who people honored, but she had not yet realized she was
heir to the Scarlet Throne and people reverenced her as well.
Then,
out of the corner of her eye, child that she was, she saw a raw,
young man, choking as he knelt, his face turning red, almost blue.
She escaped her guards and ran to him, batting him on his back,
watching natural color return to his face, laughing aloud, proud of
herself, knowing she had saved him for some Great Thing….What she
never imagined until that night when the Sailor was on the Moon’s
Sea and she knew it, was this: that youth she had met and saved for
some Great Thing had been saved for the Great Thing of loving her
always, though that love could never be.
“What
do I do with such knowledge?” she asked herself.
That
question would haunt her for weeks.
His
gift…
The Sailor
was finally asleep. The second mate had guided Hope into the Middle
Sea. There were ports to visit and goods to trade and almost three
months yet to go before Homeport would come in sight.
All the sailors on
Hope were full of life to meet the Middle Sea. Our Sailor slept for
two days, dreaming strange dreams of many colors and emotions and the
dream he always had—the dream of building something out of elements
and materials he never quite understood. And in his dreams as the
ship passed into the Middle Sea, for the first time, he was not alone
in his dreams of building. The Princess was with him (it was a True
dream, a dream that touched the bottomless-ness of where dreams live
and move up to give themselves, without comment, to sleeping folks.)
And in the dream they were building something, wondering what it was,
confused and annoyed from time to time, but tireless, working,
wondering, building, not knowing…never knowing, only wondering. The
sun was in the trees and the moon was on the sea and they were
wondering, patient but longing, building something….In his
dreams….In his dreams….In his dreams….
He woke and was
surprised to find the tiny wooden trinket he had found for her in
Morganport in his hand. He thought it was deep in his chest, under
fabrics for his aunt and two bottles of Morganport’s rum for his
uncle. But there it was in his hands.
He’d found it in
a tiny shop near the docks, a shop he walked past twice without
seeing it was so small, so tucked into a wall. A crude sign said
something that the Sailor could later not remember though he imagined
it said “Night Visions/Day Dreams” though that didn’t seem
quite right as he tried to dredge it up from his memories.
The
wizened little man who greeting him warmly, like an old friend, was
scarcely four feet tall and had painted his face with intricate
patterns in black and gold.
“Sailor,”
he said, in a voice more like very distant thunder than like a voice
at all. The Sailor had to listen intently to understand what the
little man said since his voice was muted and roaring at the same
time. “Sailor, welcome, you have come for the gift for your love….”
The
Sailor had been in a light mood, having spent an evening on the beach
with a beautiful and seductive woman named Alia, a woman he would
have sought after and loved if his heart had not been elsewhere. So,
still captured by wine and Alia, after a deep night’s sleep, he was
inclined to follow the strange, little man’s lead.
“This
way, this way,” the shop-keeper croaked, “something just for you
to give your love.”
Then
he put it in his hand—a perfect carving of a creature (so the
little man told him) that existed only in the 9th and
un-sailable sea. It was so seldom seen, it had no name. Yet the
Sailor recognized it. It had wings like a butterfly but was
obviously, in some unspeakable way, a creature of the sea. He had
seen it once as a boy and, dimly, imperfectly, as through an eternity
of clouds, knew he would see it once more, though how he knew he
could not have explained.
He
gave the little man with the painted face many coins for the wooden
carving. Little did he know the Princess would never see the carving
because he would loose it over the years. Yet he knew it was a gift
for her, something she needed to possess and know and hold on to.
Something from a dream deep within—down near the bottom of the
Dream Place, down where only wonder and surprise and eternity dwells.
And in the moment he touched it, he almost caught the creature’s
name—though it has none—and he touched the small carved things to
his lips.
Waking
on the Middle Sea, the carving was in his hand. He kissed it again,
not yet knowing why—perhaps he never made the connection—but
knowing it belonged to the Princess he loved.
It
was a gift never given, never shared—but a gift, nonetheless, a
gift of his to her.
Sometimes
gifts are like that—they never get to the one to whom they truly
belong, but they are gifts nonetheless, nonetheless….
The
Sailor would soon rise and join the others on deck, but for a while
he simply stared at the great wings of the wooden carving and
wondered about the creature’s name and why it was so vital to his
life and his love.
XIX.
The Middle Sea
The musical note that is pronounced the same, the
Middle Sea is perfectly placed. Nestled between the sleepless,
starlit Moon Sea and the soporific, harsh glare of the Sea of the
Sun, the Middle Sea lives in shade and shadow. Sailing westward,
sailors call it “the dusk sea” and while sailing east, they name
it “the sea of eternal dawn.”
In
either case, the Middle Sea is the rhythm all other seas play off of
and complement. It is the most gentle of all seas, held captive as it
is between day and night. The winds are always blowing, but always
light, and sailing is slow, but the fishing is marvelous! Sailors not
on duty line the sides of their ship with fishing gear they have
fashioned from whatever is available to them, trolling the gentle
waters, pulling up ship of all manner—oily and dark, white and
flaky, flat as a coin and fat as a ship’s cat. The cooks on a ship
sailing the Middle Sea are busy men—making stews and frying fish
and broiling and baking and, with the rare, but much valued tuna-like
fish, carving it into tiny, rare, raw bites and spicing it with the
unspeakable hotness of the spices of the Wonderlands. Creatures with
legs and spines and trailing limbs also bite and are landed. They are
delicacies unfound in any of the other seas. Sailors grow content and
well-fed because they eat so many fish while they slowly sail the
Middle Sea.
Like
the Sea with which it shares a name, the Middle Kingdom is a twilight
land. O, the sun shines there, but usually through a haze of clouds.
And darkness falls in the Middle Kingdom, but the clouds disappear
and the night lights seem much brighter there than anywhere else in
the Eleven Kingdoms. The folks of the Middle Kingdom tend to be
extremely fair skinned with hair so blonde/white that they seem to
have no eyebrows and the men seldom shave. Even the products and the
arts of the Middle Kingdom are different in their leaning toward
shade and shadow. Most of the healing drugs of the world are produced
there—rare herbs that thrive without the sun and minerals distilled
from streams that run clear and true through dim light. The poetry
and art of the Middle Kingdom is known for its ambiguity and soothing
confusion. The music of that land reminds travelers of the dreams
escaping their souls at dawn and the rush of thought that precedes
sleep. What strikes visitors most is how languid and relaxed life
seems in the Middle Kingdom. There is seldom any rush or hurry and
never panic. People there—even those who stay but a day or two—move
with a stunning grace born, it seems, of the bare suffice of light.
Few shadows fall on the ground or on the walls of houses there for
all is shadow, all is shade, life reflects back only the illumination
it is given and that is spare enough.
There
are important ports in the Middle Kingdom that need to be visited.
Besides the healing herbs, there are dusky, meaty fruits—most
without any name besides their shape: round fruit, long fruit,
short fruit, small fruit, large fruit—which are greatly valued
throughout the Kingdoms. People often argue about what the taste of
the Middle Kingdom fruits is like and seldom agree. But all long for
them and they bring a find price at market in Homeport.
And
for the collector, there are the twilight sculptures of the artists
of the Middle Kingdom. People in the Sun Lands and Lagonia and
Paliseda seek to display the wood carvings and shaved rock in primary
light. But those pieces defy being shown in sharp relief. People can
seemingly never come to a common understanding of what the sculptures
“are”. They defy definition while seeking to define all things.
From time to time, the more literal minded folks who have come into
possession of a carving from the Middle Kingdom wrap it in thin silk
and hide it in the back of a closet. It is there that it might most
truly be “art”.
Then
there are the exotic foods: not salt nor pepper, not tangy nor bland,
not bitter nor sweet, not vinegary or syrupy—always something just
beyond description, just beyond judgment, just beyond distinction.
Tastes that move back and forth, never quite settling, never discrete
enough, just out of reach of comment. Such foods are greatly valued
in the other Kingdoms and longed for.
The
ports of the Middle Kingdom have pensive names: Almost Port, Seldom
Port, Nearly City, Sometimes Town and, most remarkable, Stormy Port,
though to all the memories of several generations there has never
been bad weather in that place.
Time
seems relative in the Middle Kingdom. Everything slows down. Living,
as they do, I eternal twilight and early dawn, there seems no reason
to rush. Dogs wag their tails slowly. Cats sometimes seem to seldom
move at all. Business transactions that would take minutes take hours
there. Meals can last the better part of a day. Lovers undressing
each other might linger over clothes for a week. Children mature
slowly. Death waits and come late. Visitors initially feel as if they
were moving through amber, but quickly adjust. It is a difficult
place to leave and ships in port make sure some sailors never come
ashore until it is time to gather the crew and bring them back to the
ship.
There
is only this to ruin the lovely languidness and patience pace of life
in the Middle Kingdom—one creature, no larger than a crayfish,
moves with rapid strokes and has venom that most often kills. The
Quellbeast strikes three times before a child, or even an adult, can
jump away. The creature is rare but not unknown and loves to live
among the brambles along the slow moving streams that trickle down
from the highlands and the cold lands.
There
are berries on those brambles that taste of evening and early morning
and cannot be resisted. Our Sailor, slowed down by a day on shore in
Stormy Port, was drawn to those berry bushes, filling himself, the
juice running down his face into his beard (running slowly, as might
be expected) and he was thinking about how much he longed to hold one
of these berries in his fingers and offer it to the Princess’
mouth. He could almost imagine her tongue, reaching from between her
lips to take the berry and savor it. Then the Quellbeast struck—once,
twice, a third time….The Sailor moved as if in heavy water, raising
the wounded hand to his mouth, sucking in the blood and the poison,
his mind not fast enough to realize he should be spitting it out, so
slowed down by that strange land that he didn’t realize he might be
dying before he fainted dead away.
It
was the sailing day for Hope and the sailors who had not yet ventured
onto land found him there, in the brambles, mouth stained by berries,
hand stung by Quellbeast. Before the slowness of the Middle Kingdom
could grip them, they brought the Sailor to the ship and the Captain,
almost insane with grief, sent for a healer from Stormy Port. As soon
as the aged, wizened man stepped aboard Hope, he began to move more
rapidly, speak quickly, took action. Herbs and minerals were
administered but the Sailor sunk deeper into stupor.
“Lift
anchor,” the Healer said, “sail back to the Moon Sea. It is the
only hope.”
The
Captain knew that to retreat back to the previous sea would cost him
dearly. Cargo would rot and rust, his sailors’ pay would diminish,
his promises and contracts for future ports would be voided. Yet,
when he watched the faces of his crew, he knew one thing—all else
could be restored if only the Sailor lived.
“Come
with us?” he asked the Healer.
“For
what its worth,” the old man said. “He needs the healing of the
Moon Sea and of the Pure of Heart, something I cannot provide.”
(There
were birds, a precious few, that could fly with messages in dire
times. The Captain had but one such bird. It was meant to be sent to
Homeport if storm or accident or shipwreck occurred. The Captain took
quill and ink and parchment and wrote a message out:
Princess
of the Sun Kingdom,
Come. Fly
to him on the Moon Sea.
He will
die. He must see you before
that
voyage.
That
was all the message said. The Captain did not sign it or mention
names. He rolled the parchment into a tiny package and tied it to the
bird’s leg with string. What chance was there that the bird would
find Homeport? What chance that the Princess would ever read his
words? What chance that the Sailor could live long enough—if she
could truly fly—to have her hover near as he died.
No
chance. No chance at all.
But
Hope lifted anchor and headed back toward the healing sea.
There
was nothing else but that….Hope sailing….)
xx.
The Bird Flies
It was a bird who
had never had to fly across the seas before. Well trained and
hell-bent for Homeport, she lifted off the captain’s arm and
circling to get her bearings, headed unerringly west.
Yet, she was young
and had never flown a sea, much less two, before, and was not immune
to the sleepiness of the Middle Sea air. Something deep within her
urged her to drift down and float on the sea, basking in the dusky
light of sunset, of early evening, a time to rest and float.
But something even
deeper—instilled there in the Sun Kingdom by the old women who
train the birds—something deeper still kept her wings moving, those
dozens and dozens of bones, those hundreds of feathers, carrying on
her leg a message bound for the place of her birth, her
training—bound HOME.
Pulling with the
wind as hard as her wings would carry her, it would take a week to
cross two seas, a week where she would suffer greatly from the sun
and elements and a storm a hundred leagues from Homeport that would
blow her miles off course, confuse her, make her almost want to die.
And she must fish, eat, float, sleep, gather strength on the sea and
from it.
A shark like fish
almost devoured her as she dozed, exhausted on the Middle Sea. Blood
from the wound trickled down and stained the message brown. And on
she flew because flying was what she was born to, her only purpose,
her life, her love, her being.
High over the Sun
Sea, days later, an eagle from an island sighted her and knew she was
weak from flight and that the sun blinded her from the right. The
Eagle, himself weak and hungry, barely missed his meal, but his
talons tore her wing dreadfully and more blood mingled with that
already dried on the parchment.
She flew on.
A sudden squall,
just off the coast of Homeport, tore away the training of her life.
She over flew the house of the Captain and, fatally confused, smashed
into one of the turrets of the castle of the King of the Sun. She
plummeted down, already dead, drenched with rain, and dropped onto
the plaza just outside the palace kitchen.
A kitchen
boy—little more than an idiot—found her there and carried her,
like the precious gift she was, to the cook.
“Mesach,
carriack,” he said, in the common tongue. Messach means much
of what we mean by “messenger”, but more. And carriak is
the word for both “cook” and “mother”, but more.
The cook laid the
dead bird—closer in size to a seagull than a pigeon in our
world—and reverently spoke to AH, thanking Her for the message she
untied from the bird’s leg. It was sea-stained, blood-drenched, sun
bleached and yet readable.
The cook instructed
the kitchen boy carefully on how to bury the bird with dignity and
honor and thankfulness to AH. Leaving that to him, knowing he would
do it trembling and with the strange mixture of sadness and joy the
people of that Kingdom knew well, she found the first maid of the
Princess, showed her the message and the two of them went to find
their mistress.
They watched her
read the parchment over and again. They gathered her in their arms
and held her as she sobbed. They radiated their love to her as she
gave them her pain.
The maid poured the
Princess a glass of wine from the bottle that never seemed to empty.
The cook put her to bed, wrapping the sheet around her tightly. And
the two servants slipped away, unable to speak, not knowing what to
say, realizing as they did the impossibility of what the message
requested. Wondering how the Princess would respond and what she
would do with such grave knowledge, the cook and maid tossed
sleeplessly in their narrow beds that night.
(And
there is this…the bird, buried with great solemnity by the kitchen
boy, found herself suddenly awake and restless beneath a patch of
earth. Slowly and with more patience than is expected of a wild
creature, she moved her wounded wings slowly, until the dirt was
pushed away and she was free. Shaking earth from herself, she stood
in sudden sunlight, realizing—in the deep, profound way that
“realization” comes to creatures of the air—that her wings were
whole again. No, not “whole”—all
new and full
of strength and vigor never know before.
Though she was a bird with no song to sing, she cried out to the sky,
gathered herself and flew—full of wonder and joy—across the broad
blue sky straight into the sun and paradise….The kitchen boy
watched her go, stunned to his bones but realizing, deep within
himself, how all this was as it should be.)
The next morning,
convinced a castle cat had found the carcass of the bird, the cook
cuffed the ears of the kitchen boy more than once.
“Carriak”,
he cried out, running from her, “elidesia, elidesia, elidesia….”
“Elidesia”
means, in the common tongue, just this, “she flew….”
The cook regretted
her blows to the boy, raised her eyes to the sky and wondered….Could
such a thing be…? Could the Princess also fly…? To the Moon Sea,
fly there?
BEFORE
THE KING—xxi
The morning after
the bird, dead yet not dead, arrived, bearing her message truly, the
Princess dressed in her finest gown of court, put emeralds around her
neck and a tiara of unknown value crafted from jewels from the
Wonderlands around her brow.
She was going to
stand before the King—not as her father, but as her sovereign—to
ask of him a privilege in the way the subjects of the King of the Sun
so often did.
King Eliuia the
12th was a good King and a better man and a father beyond
compare. The Princess knew the man and the father would grant the
privilege she longed for without hesitation. But she needed it from
her King. So she came to him in chambers, kneeling with solemnity as
she had seen a thousand others do, until he bade her rise and address
the Scarlet Throne.
He was surprised:
she saw it on his face. And she knew him to be the second most tender
and gentle man she’d ever known. Before the Sailor came into her
life, she would have called her father, her King, the most gentle and
tender man in the Kingdom of the Sun. Now she knew differently—and
her lover was dying and she must fly to him.
He used the common
tongue to invite her nearer and to insist he longed to hear his
subject’s request of privilege. The language of the court was
stilted and formal, but always in the common tongue. There were
whispers among his advisors as the Princess moved forward, but a
single glance from King Eliuia silenced them all. He was a man with
that authority.
Then, in the
rarified language of royalty and blood that most in the throne room
could not understand, he said to her these words: “Daughter of
mine, nothing can I deny you….”
She shifted back to
the common tongue and spoke loudly, so all could hear and understand:
“My King, you might, perhaps you must….”
“Speak,” is all
he said.
“I must fly to
the Moon Sea,” she told him, and all the courtiers, so all would
understand, “in your fastest galleon with your most trusted crew.
There I must say farewell to my heart or else heal my lover. All of
that is forbidden me. I ask you for a forbidden privilege.”
The King, shaken
and loving, rose from his throne and descended the seven steps that
set him ever apart from those who addressed him and begged for
privilege. He embraced his daughter and whispered in her ear: “I
will not ask you what this means and why it must be so. My ship and
crew and all my love is yours. Fly, if you must, and may AH be with
you….”
Then he re-ascended
the Scarlet Throne, took back his Kingship from his parenthood and
spoke in the formal tongue.
“And what, my
subject,” he said, his voice quivering as it seldom did, “do you
return to me, your monarch, for granting your privilege?”
The Princess knelt,
as a commoner would have done, and gave away her life. “I will
marry the Duke of Paliseda, that good man, and give him sons and
daughters to sit after you and me on the Scarlet Throne and rule as
gracefully and justly and with the same compassion you have taught to
me.”
The man within
Eliuia ached. The father in him nearly dies. He was a man of deep
passions and a father of unfathomable love. And he was a King and his
kingdom must be foremost of all things.
“As you have
asked and promised,” he told her in that twisted and convoluted
language of the court, “so it is and so it will be….”
She bowed until her
forehead almost touched the floor and backed away from the Scarlet
Throne like any faithful citizen; then she rushed to fly to the Moon
Sea.
(In the stony
silence of the Princess’ parting—none of the members of the Court
daring to whisper or speak—Eliuia bowed his head and wept. A King
crying for the foolishness of the bargain his Princess daughter had
made….It was best for the kingdom and the Duke of Paliseda was a
very good man, a perfect match to forward the glory of the Scarlet
Throne…oh, he knew that and knew it well. But for her…for her, he
wept and prayed to AH that she would not arrive on the Moon Sea too
late….)
There
to die—xxii
A sleepless sea is
not a fit place to die. Most people die when those around them leave
the room or doze off or are deep in wondering thought. On the Sea of
the Moon, no one can sleep and so they are constantly hovering around
our Sailor as he tries to die.
Unexpected winds
(thanks be to AH!) drive Hope to the Moon Sea a day earlier than
could have been expected. The Healer from the Middle Kingdom, freed
from the languor of that realm, finds new and unexpected urgency and
makes much life-giving magic with his potions and herbs. The sailor
lives on, deep asleep on a sea where sleep is impossible. Locked in
unconsciousness where all but him are fully conscious, alert, aware.
The Moon Sea,
sailors believe, is the deepest of the nine seas—though the
Impassable Sea may be deeper, but who can know but the dead. It is
the depth, incredible and beyond calculation, that keeps sailors
awake there. That is what they believe. The scholars in Morganport
have no clue. The theologians and mystics of the island of AH are
stumped and confounded. No one knows. But depth is one possible
answer.
(In the deepest
part of the Moon Sea—every sea, perhaps—there are round and
bulbous creatures, blind from the dark of the depths, unable to
breathe except the heavy waters of darkness and deeps. These
creatures move slowly and adroitly and with purpose no one can
imagine.
It is there that
the Sailor has sunk to. It is there that he clings to life. And the
great, slow behemoths of the sea bottoms are ministering to him,
cuddling him in their blubber, whispering to him in words and
languages beyond all knowing, urging him to breathe—however
faintly—and to dream…however vaguely…to simply live this moment
and this moment and this moment and the one after that. He lives for
no reason, really, except that that ask it of him. Breathe. Dream.
Live.
What none of
those creatures could say—even if they could “say” something
the comatose Sailor could comprehend—is this: “your Princess is
flying to you, have heart….”)
If anyone,
any thing, could have but whispered those words, he would have risen
precipitously from the sea bottom and shouted with joy. But nothing
in the universe could conspire to share that knowledge with
him—though it was true, was true, was true. True.
Flying she was,
across the Sun Sea and the Middle Sea, flying as fast as the fastest
ship of the King of the Sun could carry her, flying she was to find
him in the empty and incredible vastness of ocean, find him and bid
him farewell on his voyage to the lands of the dead, or—dare she
even imagine it—somehow heal him with her love before leaving him
forever.
Either way,
she feared, his heart would be dead. He would either expire in the
depths, in spite of the healing dances of the large, blind creatures,
or he would die because she had promised away all hope for a life for
them for the faint possibility of seeing him before he died. She
would marry the Duke. She would be her father’s daughter and sit
after him on the Scarlet Throne. She would do her duty and conform to
the expectations and conventions and settle into the life AH had
fated for her when she was born a Princess instead of a servant girl.
That much she knew. And beyond that she knew that her life would not
be a bad life—it would be a life full of children and caring and
tenderness and a bitter sweet satisfaction. It would be a life she
would not frivolously cast aside, having paid so dearly to live it.
And, she knew well, that life would not include her Sailor, or, in
some ways, her heart. But it would be enough—and if her bargain
granted her time to see him before he died or—beyond all
hope—allowed her to heal him so he could live a life without
her…then it would be more than enough, and AH’s will.
She traveled
lightly. All she carried was a change of clothes, some soap, some
scent and a mirror, the carved wooden heart that scarcely beat at
all, though she held it near her breast, and a bottle of wine—a
gift unspeakable—that never emptied. Only that she brought with
her—that and the one message passed hand to hand across many seas
and the blood stained missive the bird had brought.
Eastward she
stared, into the rising sun, longing and daring to hope. She had
brought only two servants—her maid and the kitchen boy, still woozy
from having found the dead bird and seen it live again. The cook told
the Princess that story and so she took the boy with her for luck,
for life, for resurrection.
Hours later, near
dusk, the wind died and the waves ceased on the Middle Sea. That lazy
sea fell asleep and the fastest boat of the Sun Kingdom floated as if
in dock. The Princess was not “religious”—few of the people of
that world were—but her spirit was strong. She did believe in Fate
and in that believing believed in AH, her mostly disinterested God.
The boy was a convert to AH, she thought. Few could see the dead live
again and not believe. So the Princess had him teach her to pray.
Staring east, across the darkling sea, the boy and the Princess
prayed.
There are creatures
at the bottom of the Middle Sea who are cousins to the healing
whale-like things of the Sea of the Moon. And one of them, sluggish
from a decade of feeding on the very bottom of that ocean, heard the
boy’s prayers and the Princess’ as well, then roused and rose.
Fathom after fathom, the creature rose, circling slowly from the
depths, knowing such exertion and such thin water would seal her
doom—yet she rose, called perhaps by AH but more likely by the
searing, anxious love of the Princess. She rose—that nameless
giant—through deep currents and strange eddies and from the chill
of the ocean floor to the warmth of the upper waters. She rose,
without thought, yet with purpose, until her broad, incredible back
touched the gently floating bottom of the fastest ship of the Sun
King’s fleet.
It was deep in the
night by the time the monster found the ship (called Truth,
named by the King). Most of the crew slept below and those above had
dozed off since there was no wind, no wave, but only gentle rocking
to encourage dreams. Even the boy had fallen asleep in mid-prayer,
propped against the railing where the Princess stood, staring into
the east through abject darkness. So it was that only she and she
alone, who felt the bump and caught her breath as the ship began to
move through windless air and water without current.
And move Truth did,
that speedy ship, without a crew to sail it, driven only by hope and
love and prayer and a kraken-like creature from the depths of the
Middle Sea. The creature, freed for these last hours of life from the
crushing weight of the sea depths, fairly flew. Her life was no price
at all to pay for a time of such pure liberty. And she drove the
King’s ship through the narrow channel to the Moon Sea with one
last mighty exertion of what—if creatures who live blind and
crushed on the bottom of the sea can experience such a thing—a
feeling of eternal joy.
The crew had
awakened hours before and stood with trembling wonder at the speed of
the ship. No hand gripped the wheel, no mates furled the sails, no
one moved, they scarcely breathed, as the ship immerged into the Moon
Sea and sped on, league by league, faster than any storm could drive
it, until, in the dim distance, another sail was seen.
When the good ship
Hope came into view, the monster’s work was done. Her heart split
in twain and she drifted, slowly because of her great mass, into the
depths where other creatures found her, praised her life and her
death in ways beyond imagining, then nudged her massive body with
their soft snouts to the deepest place in the deepest sea where she
could rest forever.
The Captain of
the ship Hope stared unbelievingly through his glass at the ship
tearing toward them, propelled by no sails, no winds, no tides. He
shook his head and wiped unexpected tears from his eyes. His
sleepless crew seemed both confused and troubled—such strange
happenings might occur on the Sweet Sea or the Sea of Storms, but not
here with the moon.
The Captain
called them all together.
“Fear not,”
he said, “it is the King’s ship Truth, it flies to us, bringing
the Princess. All is well.” And as he spoke it, they knew it
was so.
xxiii.
…when truth
and Hope
last kissed….
It took an hour or
more—that seemed like days—for ship Truth to come aside Hope.
Without the deep-sea creature’s aid (floating down, down, down to
the depths to be honored and adored), the ship drifted on, but
slowly, across a placid, sun-lit sea. The Princess was at first
frantic, but grew more somber as the minutes passed and the two ships
grew nearer. When at last they were within boarding distance, she was
almost in a trance as deep as the Sailor’s coma. She moved as if
through the deepest, heaviest sea water, as if chilled and calmed by
some unknowable peace, with the kitchen boy holding her hand.
There had been time
to bring the Sailor to the foredeck on a bed the crew fashioned
lovingly for him there. He was washed by his cabin boy and dressed in
a cotton gown he used for sleeping. His breath was slow and thin, but
even. His color was pale and growing paler still—his face nearly
gray. Yet, he breathed, yet he lived, perhaps he dreamed—only the
Moon Sea manatees could know that and they were busy with the body of
a cousin deep below.
A plank was set
securely between Hope and Truth and the Princess with the kitchen boy
crossed it without help, moving with grace the Captain had only seen
in a maiden on the Sweet Sea, walking water. Their eyes met
briefly—the Captain and the Princess—and though words were never
quite spoken between them, volumes passed through their hearts and
minds.
--you
have flown to him….
--you
have kept him well….
--he
loves you beyond his life….
--perhaps
not yet, I hope….
--he
lives…but only for you….
--I
must make him live for himself alone….
On
and on their conversation flowed between them in an instance. The
Captain thought nothing of it at the time, but would spend the rest
of his life seeking to comprehend how it had happened. It would have
taken many nights in a pub, drinking rum, to speak such words as they
exchanged in a moment, without speaking. And the words flowed on,
from their souls.
--there
is no life for you, together?
--none
at all that I can fathom….
--and
are you sad?
--“sad”
is but a word, my heart cannot break because it belongs to him….
--may
AH bless your healing….
--(the
Princess almost laughed) the only power of AH is love…she said,
moving to the Sailor, dying on the deck.
****
Deep in the next
night the Sailor stirred and woke. He was as fully awake as all
others on the Moon Sea. His pain was gone, but with the pain had
flown his memory. The Captain sat by him, smoking a pipe, drinking
brandy. From the color of the Captain’s face in candlelight and
from the drifting of his eyes, the Sailor imagined he’d been
drinking brandy for some time.
The Sailor had
quickened all at once. He was fully conscious, profoundly alive,
aching to know what had happened to him. The last thing he remembered
was reaching slowly for a berry and having something bite his hand.
“Captain….”
He said.
The Captain drew
deeply on his pipe and finished off his cup. “I will tell you as
best I can all I know,” he said, his eyes closing to remember, his
face shining too brightly to attribute it all to candlelight and
brandy alone.
Your
Princess moved across the deck and dropped beside your bed. She took
your hand I hers and seemed to kiss your palm. Her other hand stroked
your face and the look about her melted every hardened sailor’s
heart. It was such a look, such a gaze at you that the tides might
have turned under her love.
“Did
I awaken,” the Sailor asked, “did I see her?”
The
Captain sighed, poured more brandy for himself and a small glass for
the Sailor. “I think you did,” he said, “but what do I know? I
was very near you and her, bending close, and I think you said
something in the common tongue…elidesia…that
was it, or so I believe.”
The
Sailor smiled. “She flew,” he said.
“She
flew…,” the Captain repeated, a tear suddenly leaving his eye and
coursing down his cheek.
“Then?”
the Sailor asked, waiting.
“Then?
Then?, Who is to know. A hundred men watched it happen,” the
Captain confessed, “and none of them in all the drinking places of
all the 11 Kingdoms will ever agree on what they saw…..Someday soon
there will be thousands who will claim to have been on board Hope or
Truth when they kissed and all else was lost….”
He
drained his cup and refilled it. Relit his pipe and continued: “Broad
daylight on the Moon Sea is a time for sudden storms….” His voice
was distant, drained. “So as she bent to kiss you a squall came up
from the north—mist and rain and clouds with some strange wind. I
had my hands on your shoulder and on hers and was the one closest to
you both. And this—I believe though it is unbelievable—I s what
happened, no matter what you hear in times to come, no matter what
the poets or the singers say. What happened in this: elidesae,
elidesae, elidesae….”
The
Captain had used the plural of the common tongue.
The
Sailor wandered back through memory, remembering vaguely something of
great heights, something of strong winds and chill, something of the
flutter of a thousand wings, something more….Then it slipped away,
was gone.
“We
flew?” he asked, confused.
The
Captain blew out the candle and put down his cup. They were in
darkness absolute.
“I
swear to you,” he said in darkness, “I swear to you my son, and
you are like a son to me, in touching you both as you flew I had a
vision full of wonder, something to be recaptured at the end of days.
But this I know and you will sometime find again in dream and memory,
this I know—you flew….You flew….You flew….”
Hours passed and
dawn came. The Sailor slept for a few hours and woke again, even on
the Moon Sea. He did not dream and did not remember again, for nearly
a lifetime, the heights and winds and chill and the thousand wings.
He would remember, but not yet, not now. The Captain still sat by his
bed, sleepless as all were on that Sea.
“She is gone?”
the Sailor said.
“You know she
is,” the Captain answered, his voice tinged with a sadness as
sleepless as the sea. “And you must live for you alone now, your
heart is lost.”
After a long time
the Sailor asked, “you will take me to Morganport before you return
home?”
“Of course,”
the Captain said, “just as she made me promise to do.”
“You do her will
now?” the Sailor asked, with an edge.
His Captain smiled.
“All will is the will of AH,” he said.
Many minutes passed
with the two men lost in their own thoughts.
“And…” the
Sailor said, then paused and took the Captain’s hand.
“And is an
important question,” the Captain told him, “but one I cannot
answer….”
Hope sailed on to
Morganport.
xxiii—the
in-between times
In
Morganport, the Sailor recovered slowly. He was cared for by the
finest healers in the land, all of whom knew he had been brought back
to life by the Princess of the Sun Kingdom. Nursed and comforted, he
gained strength and began to walk in the gardens as the moon rose.
In Homeport, the
Princess prepared herself for her wedding to the Duke of Paliseda—a
kind and good man who would love her dearly and become her trusted
companion. She was exhausted by her flight to the Moon Sea—and from
a flight she did not yet remember—but she knew she had brought life
to the Sailor and his love had brought unexpected life to her. And
she had, deeply hidden in her memory something not yet accessible,
something just beyond her ken.
The Sailor healed
and met Alia again—a student of the Academy who had walked with him
on the sands and shared wine and heard the story of his love. Alia
came to simply be with him as he gained strength. He never imagined
loving her. She never asked for all his love. But love for her came,
came surely, strongly, only limited by the part of his heart that
belonged to the Princess.
The night before
their marriage, the Princess sat in a lush room with the Duke and
told him everything about the Sailor and how the marriage they would
share was a bargain she had made with her father. She fully expected
Duke DePlace to reject her. She did not wish that because she had
grown fond of him during their engagement. But she imagined it would
be so. The Duke was a man not unfamiliar with romance and he loved
her even more knowing her love would never be completely his. In a
way beyond explanation, he knew his Princess bride had some memory
she could not quite touch that someday would return to her. He
honored even that, and before he died he told their children to wait
for their mother to remember. He was a good and noble man and a
wondrous husband and father.
Alia asked nothing
of the Sailor, but in their many hours together they grew close and
dear to each other. Since she knew his heart would never completely
belong to her, she was never disappointed by what love he offered.
And he offered much love. And she knew—knew in a way beyond
“knowing”—that there was some memory just beyond his grasp that
he would share with her if he could only retrieve it from the fog and
mist of his soul. She would never hear it—but she knew someday it
would return. She was a dear and loving woman. Their marriage was
sweet and tender and full of joy.
So it was that the
Princess and her Sailor lived out lives full of truth and pleasure
and no regret. Neither of them ever completely forgot the other, but
they somehow knew that what was and would be were things they could
not command or force into being. There were seasons of forgetting
followed by weeks of painful longing. But the longing was never
bitter and the times of their lives apart were full and whole. And
the years passed. The years, as they are wont to do, passed.
Sometimes at night,
the Sailor would gaze at the moon and dream of the Princess who had
brought him back to life.
At dawn, on some
occasions, the Princess would watch the sun rise on the trees outside
the palace and remember, remember with joy.
And time passed:
years, lifetimes.
The bargain they
made with fate, with AH, was this: to wait, to be patient, to go on
with life, never losing hope and yet, never expecting anything. The
wooden heart the Sailor carved beat in a jewel box near the Princess’
bed. The paper heart the Princess cut was folded, marking the page,
in whatever book the Sailor read at night.
And they waited.
They were patient. They went on with life in a way that did not feel
like patient waiting. They never lost hope and yet never expected
more than hope itself. And never did they let their longing and their
aching and their hope discolor the lives they went on to live. There
was something pure in that, something important.
(One can hold
another’s heart for a very long time. Through sun and moon over and
over again—for years and years, a lifetime—that is how long hope
can live.
That long and
longer….)
xxv. when
they flew
Almost 30
years later—three decades into a good and faithful life as a
duchess and then a Queen—the Princess was crossing the small plaza
behind the palace kitchens. Eno-on, the kitchen boy—by now the
kitchen “man”—was sitting in the dirt digging patiently at a
hole in the earth. Eno-on, who came with her flying across the seas
to find the Sailor, was considered simple or even deranged by all
except the maid, the cook, the Princess and her family, the Duke and
two wondrous children. But the Duke had died, almost a year before
that day, and the Princess/Queen was emerging from her mourning for
that dear, beloved man. That was one less person in the world who
knew Eno-on was a child-like man who had been touched by something
wondrous, holy and held it in his bones.
“Eno-on,” the
Princess said, “why are you digging?”
He smiled at her,
his eyes slightly out of focus, his mouth gaping open, nearly
toothless for all the palace dentists could do.
“Memory is buried
here,” he said.
“I would
remember,” his Princess/Queen told him, gathering her skirts around
herself, sitting with him on the ground.
He cackled and
continued to dig. “You will remember, for it is time,” is all he
said.
Then from the
earth, an Eno-on dug, the Princess saw something white begin to
emerge from the soil. A feather drifted up into the air above the
hole while Eno-on dug. A wing appeared, moving softly.
In the near
distance, the Princess/Queen heard her grown children talking to the
cook about dinner—they were asking about quail and mussels and the
availability of fresh berries. They were grown Royals, already ruling
in Paliseda and heirs to the Scarlet Throne. But the laughter between
her children and the cook faded as she watched Eno-on’s hands work
the dirt. There was, she knew—though it was impossible to imagine—a
bird beneath the soil…all these years though long ago flown…a
bird with grievous wounds that lived now in the Sun. But it was
there, beyond all reason and imagining, and in a moment more it
fluttered, cooing in the idiot man’s hands….She fainted dead
away. Darkness within/without rolled over her as a wave rolls to the
shore.
{She
had a long conversation with the Captain, though it lasted but a
moment over 30 years before. She was moving with such slow grace not
born of her that she imagined that if she did not concentrate
carefully she might float up off Hope’s deck and hover by the
sails. Then she saw the Sailor and found herself once more bound by
gravity. She rushed to his side, took his hand in hers and gently
smoothed his face. He was so pale—pale to gray—and barely
breathing, but his eyes opened slightly and he spoke to her. The
Captain was beside them, touching them both, she smelled the old
man’s fear and hope as well. Everything was so clear and crisp to
her—as crisp and clean as the sheets the other sailors had laid
carefully over their dying friend.
The
Sailor’s lips moved, something in the common tongue…”elidesia,”
he said, as if his last word.
“I
flew to you, my love,” she said, and then, gathering up all her
strength and hope and wondering, she kissed him.}
What the poets
never wrote and the troubadours never fashioned into song was what
happened next. What happened next had been lost to the Princess and
the Sailor. Blessedly AH—holy is her name—erased all the memory
of what happened next until an idiot man dug up a bird, fluttering
with life, three decades later and the Princess fainted from memory.
{The
mist and the clouds moved in even more suddenly in daylight than
could be expected on the Moon Sea. All was obscured. The Captain
gasped and the Sun exploded. All the sailors from Hope and Truth were
stunned as if dead. And from the blinding brightness of the exploding
sun, through the clouds and mist and squalls that wrapped around the
ships, a hundred huge white birds came winging down. Their feathers
stirred up the sweetest winds and smelled of ginger and lime, in
their beaks they took the sheets where the sailor lay dying and tore
them from the deck into the highest sky.
“I
flew with him,” the
Princess/Queen said, days later from her bed, only recently awakened
from her week long swoon. Five faces surrounded her—the cook, her
oldest friend; the maid who a life-time ago traded clothes and rank
with her when she first met the Sailor; Eno-on who dug birds from the
earth; and her children—royal born, 28 and 25, prince and princess,
duke and duchess in their own right.
All
of them—even the royal children—had heard the songs of the
sailors and the poetry of the seas that spoke of that moment on Hope
when the Sailor was brought back to life by the kiss of a Princess.
The tunes and tones were never quite the same. Though a hundred saw
it all and thousands claim they had, no one could quite agree on what
happened when Truth and Hope kissed and the squall blew in and the
sun exploded as with wings. Every song, every poem had something of
the truth, but none had all. The maid and Eno-on had been almost as
close as the Captain, yet their minds had never quite revealed what
really happened. Memory was blinded by sun and ginger wings and
flight.
Enin
and Damar—Prince and Princess of the Sun Lands—had been told by
their father, long ago, the good Duke of Paliseda, that secrets
haunted their mother’s life. They did not see it, those children,
because she was to them a mother without peer, pouring her life and
her time into their joy and growth. But this is what their father
told them, when they were barely teens: “Someday she will remember
all….I do not grieve that she loved that Sailor so. It is her, in
her love of him, that I won.”
Perhaps
the Duke told them too soon in life because they had feared for their
own safety. Their mother had loved another man? It was not something
they could easily understand or bear. And their father did not hate
her for it, was not jealous? How could such a thing be so?
But
that night, by their mother’s bed, full-grown, they were not harsh
at all. Their eyes were wide and their hearts were open. The Duke,
their father, had told them: “wait until your mother remembers…then
listen and learn how to love….”
***
Here’s what
happened: the eternal birds carried the Princess and the Sailor from
the deck of Hope into air so thin they could hardly breathe, so cold
they could hardly live, so blue it pained their souls and it was full
of orange clouds. Across the seas they flew as on the shoulders of a
storm and were brought again to earth in the Last Place. There the
birds left them and returned to the sun.
After what seemed
ages, the Princess, still holding the Sailor’s hand, still kissing
him, pulled away.
“Where is this
place?” she asked.
“I know it well,”
he said, gaining some strength from the place itself. “But first
from water from the sea…I need a drink.”
She rushed down to
the shore and cupped water in her hand. Her thirst was great as well
and she lapped it with her tongue, carrying it to him. Together they
drank the sweet water and then tasted it again on each other’s lips
and tongues.
And there they
lived—for years that seemed like decades to them—in the Last
Place. They swam in the waters of the Sweet Sea and walked in the
bone-chilling surf of the Impassible Sea. They made a home and became
friends with the strange beings who lived just below that sea. The
Sailor learned to fish and the Princess grew vegetables and fruits.
The Sea-Folk gave them a boat—a tiny thing—to row into the Sweet
Sea. Visitors from other kingdoms brought them books and some faint
news—but though they read the books over and again, reading to each
other, news soon seemed unnecessary. What use did they have of the
larger world? Here they lived and loved—in the Last Place—for
what seemed like years and years.
They even had a
child—a son—a winsome, quiet boy who tamed the odd animals and
the strange birds. The Princess and the Sailor did not name
him—calling him only “son”—somehow knowing he would
eventually name himself. And one day, in his 14th year—if
years can be measured in that place—when a slight beard had
suddenly appeared upon his cheeks, he came to them after dinner.
“I am
Trav-res-sha”, he told them. And they knew it was true.
The boy left them
some time after that—both the Sailor and the Princess had grown
confused in time and couldn’t have said how long it was between his
naming and his leaving. But they knew it was right. He sailed their
tiny boat across the Sweet Sea to where Ah resides. He became a
priest of love. Though neither of them had ever mentioned AH to
Trav-res-sha, AH has sought him out and he sailed to her heart. He
had known the holy in his parent’s love. So they let him go as
joyfully as they had shared his life. Often, with the moon on the
sea, they walked the sands, hand in hand, and remembered him, telling
stories of his childhood, wishing him well, loving him deeply.
After many, many
years (hard to count in that place) the memory of their former lives
began to fade. It was as if they had always lived on this sea, drank
its sweet water instead of wine, worked in the sunlight and loved by
the moon. This was home for them: home. This was where their lives
were fully contained and held in hope. This was who they were—the
two who lived in the Last Place and loved….
One day, after what
seemed like an eon (and was probably longer) the Sailor had grown
old. He walked slowly with pain in his legs. The Princess was caring
for the garden or memorizing some poem to repeat to him after dinner.
He found some berries—the kind she loved, and thought of feeding
them to her from his hand. He put them in his pocket. Then he found a
stone shaped like a half-moon and a shell the color of the sun. Those
treasures, too, he would carry to her. She had a thousand of each,
but valued the next one most.
And as he turned,
things began to disappear, vanish, fade into light just beyond sight.
Something was passing by, something leaving. The last thing he saw
was her running toward him across the sand, staring into what was
fading away, looking confused at what was ending….
***
Enin
poured his mother a glass of wine from an ancient bottle that never
ran dry. Damar held it to her lips and she drank, she drank. Then the
two of them, brother and sister of the Scarlet Throne, crawled into
bed with the Princess/Queen---their mother, their life-love. As they
had done as children, they lay on either side of her, snuggling
against her, not understanding at all but knowing this was a moment
her whole life had pointed to. The maid and cook and servant man,
made breathless by the intimacy of all that, bowed (though no one saw
them bow) and backed out of the room.
It
was just a mother with her children, slipping off to sleep—but
there was something more in that tableau, something about memory,
about loving, about truth and hope.
“All
that I forgot for lo these many years,” she mumbled, falling
asleep, “and at last I have remembered.”
Enin
and Damar held her in their arms and in their hearts.
***
A week later she
sent a bird, the bird Eno-on had dug from the ground and kept in a
cage for just this purpose. But what does an eternal bird, resident
of the Sun, dug from the earth after three decades by a man all
considered an idiot, an idiot who knows all things—what does such a
bird know of time or tides or the waxing and waning of the moon and
the direction to Morganport? Nothing, that’s what.
The bird’s
journey took another 12 years thought it was not a long one for such
a bird. She often found something interesting enough to visit for
five months. She returned a time or two to the sun to rest for a year
or so. But she never removed the message the Queen had tied onto her
leg, written on the finest parchment with dark, black ink in a
graceful stroke of the pen.
“My
Sailor,
I
remember now, at last. We Flew!
It
was not a dream.
We
have a son we shall see again if AH is good.
Can
you wait for me, wherever you are?
There
is more to life and love than we know, or could….”
She did not sign
it, there was no need. If the bird ever found him, he would know it
was from her. And she did not leave her Kingdom to seek him. There
was no need. There is more to life and time and love than we know…or
could ever know….
WHO
THEY WERE—xxvi
Still, to this day,
they are remembered in the 11 Kingdoms in song and story and myth and
legend and poetry. Still, to this day, the great-great-great grand
daughter of the Princess—72nd on the Scarlet Throne in
that peaceable kingdom—knows by heart the lays of the singers about
her great-great-great Grandmother, how she saved the Sailor on the
Moon Sea and saved the Kingdom from the Plague, how she journeyed
under the flag of purple and disappeared into the Lands of Hope.
Eb-de-vol was a name on every singer’s lips. Almost
forgotten, but remembered in a few of the more obscure poems, was the
name of Re-vol, the Sailor who would have possessed a
Princess. The Kingdoms reverberated with the story of their love that
was not to be.
Who they were—their
lives and true identities—have been consumed by legends.
Eb-de-vol, daughter
of the good King, Elliuia the 12th and his loving wife,
Queen Noom, had two elder brothers who died by water—the first a
stillborn, drowned in the waters of the womb and the second a fierce
young boy who swam out too far into the Sunny Sea at six years and
was lost forever. Little wonder, in an ironic way, that Eb-de-vol
would love a man who had conquered the waters, a Sailor of the seas.
So Eb-de-vol became
a precious commodity—the only true heir to the Scarlet Throne. She
was so guarded, so restrained that in her 19th year of
life she needs must escape, visit the world, find life beyond the
castle walls. Her maid, hard pressed by the entreaties of her
Princess, reluctantly agreed to exchange clothing and let the
Princess pass through the castle gates dressed as a maid.
What can we say of
her? What will describe her being, her character, her identity? She
was pure of heart, that we know from the rest of this story. And she
knew her duties to her life, her birth, her inheritance. She never
disappointed those who relied on her. She did what was right, needed,
required. She married well, produced heirs to the Scarlet Throne,
never defied the conventions that surrounded her and had requirements
on her life. She flew to the Sailor over the seas—and that was well
documented in the song and poetry of the 11 Kingdoms and nine Seas.
But she kept the bargains she had made and the promises she had
given. May AH bless her memory.
Re-vol, was the son
of a sea Captain who perished on the Impassable Sea, along with his
whole crew, foolishly seeking a short passage home. Like the
Princess, Re-vol was an only child. Though his parents longed for
more children, none came. But his father died when he was 12 and his
mother when he was barely 15 and a cabin boy on the good ship Hope.
His mother’s brother and that brother’s wife were his only
family.
He was a passionate
man, but a man of honor. The Princess was his first real love—bar
flies and prostitutes throughout the nine seas he had known, but not
love.
And once he knew
that love, once he gave his heart, his life was ever changed,
transformed, made new. From the moment he bumped into her in the
marketplace, from that point on, Re-vol was a flame that burned
brightly with what was full of love and hope and truth and purity.
Like the Princess
he lived out a life full of joy and wonder with another. His marriage
and life with Alia was always true and faithful and without deceit.
Their greatest grief had been their childlessness. But they clung to
each other in the nights and it was enough. It was enough, just their
love. Just their love was enough.
So what you hear
next, the amazing conclusion to this tale of love, might not make
sense. Good and loving as they were, why these two?
There is nothing
terribly special about them—how many millions have ached and longed
for a love that could not be? Don’t we all have something missing
in our souls, something we believe could be made whole by the lover
of our life? Aren’t we all, finally, lonely and alone, waiting for
a Princess or a Sailor to arrive? And don’t all our hearts ache?
Why these two for
what comes next? Who knows? Who can tell?
(There is no
way, really, in such a tale as this, to know why AH chose these two,
out of all the others, as the ones who would know something of
eternity and eternal love. Perhaps all the others know it as well,
but this is the only tale I know to tell. That is something worthy of
a prayer to AH.)
xxvii—eternal
bird arrives at last
Nearly a score of
years she wandered (as she was meant by AH to do)—flying, resting,
returning to the sun, searching all the 11 Kingdoms and one to all
unknown, soaring above the nine seas. She had no patience for time.
She flew as she willed. Then, one day, high above Morganport,
thinking of visiting the sun, she had a distant memory crash into her
tiny brain. She dropped to earth and found the Sailor walking the
busy, crowded streets and landed on his shoulder, digging her talons
in, drawing blood.
For more than 40
years now, he had fleeting, escaping dreams of the Last Place, of a
life he could not quite remember there, of fishing and hunting for
rocks and shells, of nights of loving in moonlight, of a child who
seemed to name himself and sailed away, of growing old and
disappearing. Nothing could bring the memories to the surface where
he could engage them until the talons of that eternal bird cut
through his light, cotton shirt and drew blood. Then—in a moment—he
remembered all, everything.
He somehow even
remembered the message the bird carried for so many years. He read it
in his mind, his heart. He even could see the Princess write it. He
soared, distracted, for the bird for many years. All was clear and
all memory came back to him. In that moment.
He shooed the bird
away to return to the Sun. He had no further need of her. The wound
on his shoulder had told him all. He turned around and rushed through
the streets toward home. He must tell Alia what he had remembered.
She had waited for him to remember, for that memory to come. She had
loved him in the life he led for himself…for her—the life without
the Princess—she had taken his tattered heart and his broken body
and made both whole again, she had given him love and taught him how
to love. And she had never asked for his whole heart—she knew from
long ago where his heart dwelled.
He was opening the
door, about to call her name, “Alia” was in his mind and almost
in his mouth when a newer memory came crashing in on him.
(The Captain had
left him in Morganport. He slowly recovered. He found employ at the
Academy and taught navigation and geography to several generations of
young sailors from all the 11 Kingdoms. And there, in Morganport, he
found Alia again, who had kissed him so gently, so gently he could
not decide if it had happened at all, and she married him, full
knowing his heart was never to be fully hers.
They made a life
together well worth living. She was a quick and wise woman. He was a
tender man. They both had pasts but she was willing to live a life
with half his heart rather than live without his tender love. He had
told her on the sands of his love for the Princess. And she had heard
the songs and poem written, sung, performed about Truth kissing Hope
and the Sailor and his Love that flew. Often she asked him what he
remembered about all that—about his role in lore and legend.
“Nothing but
some dreams,” he told her, over and again, truthfully, drawing her
near, drawing comfort from her love, drowning himself in her
devotion, returning it, loving her in his own way and greatly.
Now he could
tell her all. The bird’s claws had returned the memories and more.
Now he knew, at long last, of the life he had shared with the
Princess in the Last Place—in that moment on board Hope—that had
drifted away. Alia would want to know. She had always asked….)
The silence
of the house reflected back his unspoken call to her. He had done
this before, several times. He had rushed home to tell her something
only to have his call of her name echo back emptily.
Alia was dead.
Often he forgot, having grown so accustomed to sharing his life with
her, his days, his nights, his thoughts, his messages. But she was
dead—had died almost a year before, though he still came home to
tell her things. He spoke to her each day, “Alia, Alia,” he
always said when he returned to their home of 40 years. Something in
him could not get used to the emptiness of the house. Each day he
called her name. “Alia,” he said.
They had no
children.
“It matters not,”
she told him, each month in the years they longed for sons and
daughters. “Your love is enough for me. It fills me up and makes me
whole.” That is what Alia would say.
And that was true.
Standing in the hallway of their home—where he and Alia had shared
a lovely, loving life, knowing at long last the secrets he had
forgotten long ago on the deck of Hope on the Moon Sea—as
remarkable as it seemed, even to the Sailor, he knew she would want
to hear it. And he knew this—he and Alia had loved, had become part
of each other. He stood at the door of an empty house and called her
name. “Alia…,” he had said, longing to hear her reply, then
realizing she wasn’t there.
It was enough, the
life they shared, more than enough. It had filled his half-a-heart
brimful and broke that when she died.
“Some few of us
get to choose the last words they speak,” she said to him, wrapped
in his arms, frail and wasting away.
“Hush,” he
said, “you will live on.”
“No, Sailor,”
she told him, holding his head away from hers. “I die now. And this
you must know and hold always: I always knew your heart was not
wholly mine. I dealt with that though at first I hated her. But I
hate her no more. I love her in my way. And this I now know—the
purity of your love—you and your Princess—left room for me as
well and made me a better person, one who repaired a great, good
heart. So, I honor her and you and all that you and I have shared….”
He wept bitterly
and sought to make her stop talking, willed her back to life as best
he could.
She held his hand
to her mouth and touched his palm with her tongue.
“Sail on Hope,”
she whispered as she died.
(The Sailor
stood in the empty hallway and listened to the echo of his call:
“Alia! Alia!” he had said, longing to share with her the
wholeness of his heart, not remembering, as he seldom did, that she
was no longer there.)
The next day his
visited Alia’s grave and bade her farewell.
“I go now to the
Last Place,” he told her. “I know not why except that I must and
always was meant to do so….I loved you, you know that, but I must
leave you here, on this hill above the sea, in this dear land we
shared so long.” The Sailor was a tender man who sat until the sun
set beside the grave of his wife.
That night he
prowled the docks, looking for a ship to carry him to the Last Place,
where he knew somehow he must wait and where few ships sailed. No one
would accept his coins or his offer to work. They knew who he was—had
heard of him and the Princess in songs in pubs across all seas. No
one would give him passage. He was suspect. Sailors seldom wanted
suns exploding while they were on the sea, or people flying, except
in songs.
Discouraged and
terribly exhausted—he was no longer young—he found himself in a
pub called, ironically enough, The Moon Sea. Across the room, near
the fireplace was an old salt he felt drawn to. He ordered an ale and
a brandy and took it to the table where the old man sat. The man’s
eyes were as white as a sudden squall—blind, poor fellow, the
Sailor thought. The man’s skin was as wrinkled as the waves and as
dry as a strong south wind. What hair he had was beyond gray to white
and falling out. His smile was toothless as the Sailor sat down.
“Brandy, my
friend?” the Sailor asked.
“Rather some of
that wine that never ends,” the old man whispered back.
“Captain?” the
Sailor said, astonished.
“I have been
waiting all these years for you,” the old man wheezed, “and now,
just in time, you come.”
After a long
silence, the Sailor said, “today I remembered everything.”
“I have always
remembered,” his Captain answered. “I touched you both and have
held the memories you forgot all these years in my heart. I knew you
would once more know and that we would sail to the Last Place
together.”
“You have a ship
still?” the Sailor asked, wondering.
“Hope never
sinks,” the Captain said, laughing, somehow picking up the cup of
brandy and hoisting it to his lips.
“And a crew?”
the Sailor queried, “You have a crew?”
He smiled a
toothless smile and stared with blind eyes.
“We need no crew,
my son,” he said, “there are creatures who have been waiting,
though ‘waiting’ is not a thing they would comprehend….There
are creatures who have known, though I dare say their ‘knowing’
far outstrips ours….It is too hard for my feeble, ancient mind to
think about and far beyond my words to speak of….But this is true:
we need not crew nor sail—our journey has long been charted, all
that is needed is the will to cross the seas.”
The Sailor sat and
wondered for a long time. Then he spoke.
“When shall we
leave?”
The old man downed
his drink. “The moon is full tonight. What better time than now?
Oh, except for this, you must go home and bring that bottle, the one
that has not gone empty in all these years, the wine that never
ends….”
On the full moon,
while the Captain and the Sailor sipped 40 year old wine from the
Sweet Sea, the creatures came, willing to die to take Hope to the
Last Place. And their last journey began….
Plague
comes to homeport….
During the high
summer after the Sailor and his Captain departed for the Last Place,
the permafrost in Upper Morgan melted for a few precious weeks and in
that time a truncated spring came to the cold lands. This particular
year, the 37th year of the Reign of the Queen on the
Scarlet Throne in the sun lands, a creature we might call a mountain
goat was gravely ill. The goat was bitten by a fly that the gentle
southern breezes carried serendipitously over the mountains down to
the port city of LaRue, in Lower Morgan where it bit a horse and then
died.
That horse, as fate
(or AH, depending on your theology) would have it, was loaded onto a
ship bound across the narrow joining of the Ocean East and the Sea of
Shame to a port in the Spice Lands. The horse was thought to be a
champion racer but grew weak and sick and, just before dying, sneezed
on the dog that guarded the stables. That gentle dog, turned
aggressive by a gnawing pain, bit a maid who kissed a sailor good-bye
on the docks. By the time the ship reached Morganport, many of the
crew were feeling poorly, though none died and only one—the sailor
sent off with a kiss—was in critical danger. He stayed in
Morganport in hospital as she ship sailed on.
A nurse in the
hospital in Morganport, cleaning up the recovering sailor’s bed,
did not notice the flea that had bit him in the night. She shook the
sheets off the balcony into the garden where the flea found a tiny
rodent, much like what we could call a mole, to feed on. The mole,
confused and dazed a few days later, insinuated itself into a box of
medical books a merchant left on the street in front of the hospital
while he relieved himself behind a tree. The books were put on a ship
that sailed across the Moon Sea to the Middleland’s and a healer
there.
The healer, excited
by his shipment of books, unwrapped them on the dock and, finding a
dead mole-like creature, threw it into the sea where it was devoured
by a fish who swam into the Middle Sea and was caught by a sailor on
yet another boat. The disease had spread, by the time it was caught,
to the fish’s brain and the cook fed the fish head to the ship’s
cat who, a week later, almost caught a seabird that landed on the
deck, biting the bird and infecting it with the Upper Morgan plague.
The bird flew to
yet another boat, bound for Paliseda. Some of the bird’s blood
dripped on the deck and was tasted by a spider. The spider formed a
web that was tangled in some merchandize being unloaded in Paliseda
for transfer to a ship bound for Lugunia. While the cargo sat on the
dock, a petty thief, shifting through the boxes, was bitten by the
spider. In a bar the next night, when the sailor beside him wasn’t
looking, the thief stole a drink of the sailor’s ale. The sailor
finished the cup and half-a-dozen more before boarding his ship,
ironically called, “Good Health”, bound for Homeport at the dawn.
One of that
unfortunate sailor’s job aboard “Good Health” was to help the
cook. As he peeled turnips and potatoes for a stew, he cut himself
and coughed and coughed. And so it was that a plague which (Blessed
be AH, forever blessed!) killed no one along the way—though the
thief was rendered feeble minded by the disease—found a place to
incubate and gain strength on the ship “Good Health”. The Upper
Morgan plague turned that ship into a ship of Death that limped into
Homeport on a glorious autumn day.
(All this death
began in the high summer—just as the Sailor and the Captain passed
into the Sweet Sea—and it took nearly three months to arrive in
Homeport and send the Queen on a journey as well.)
ACROSS
TO HOPE—xxix
The
tiny caravan flew a purple flag. In the land of the Nine Seas,
scarlet was the color of royalty and purple the color of plague.
Purple warned the uninfected to stay away and cleared the road for
the sick and dying. Not only did the cart, drawn by two horses, fly
purple, the four humans wore purple though only two of them had
symptoms of the Upper Morgan sickness. But it was only safe and fair.
Eno-0n had been with the Queen from the beginning, as had her maid
and the cook. Cook was sick, coughing already, and the Queen’s
color was bad and her breath short. The oldest were most susceptible
to the plague. Cook was nearly ninety—a great, long life in that
world—and the Queen had sat on the Scarlet Throne for nearly 40
years. Her 65th
birthday was but five moons away. The maid was five year older than
her Queen and the “boy”, as most still called him, was barely 50.
They were a strange crew, draped in purple, moving south along the
sea toward the mountains by Royal Decree.
****
When the ship Good
Health drifted into Homeport, laden with death, the Queen had gone to
witness the suffering, give aid to the afflicted, and evaluate the
danger to her people and her Kingdom. She well knew plague and
recognized it immediately in the pallor and breathing of the sick. It
was her quick thinking that sealed off the docks for a month and
ordered all those who had come in contact with the dying crew to
leave the Kingdom of the Sun to the north or south, along the sea,
dressed in purple and flying flags, to either the Mother Lands or the
Land of Hope—if, indeed, any of them survived long enough to travel
so far.
Eight royal guards
had accompanied the Queen to the dock. As soon as she saw the signs
of sickness, she chose the youngest man to go back and keep others
away.
“Shout to the
crowd as you drive them back,” she told him, “to bring my
Chancellor to the street above the docks and have him wait there for
me.”
To the seven other
guards she said, “I ask you now, along with healers I will send, to
stay and care for the dying on this ship. You, yourselves, may die
out of that compassion. I do not order you as your Queen, but ask you
as your sister to not let the dying die alone.”
And for love of
her, those soldiers stayed, squeezing water from cloth into parched
mouths until all who were meant to die were dead. All of those guards
eventually perished, without seeing loved ones or visiting home. They
stayed on the ship, taken by the Upper Morgan plague that had grown
so virulent on Good Health. Those who burned the docks waited until
everyone on the ship was dead, then the burners stayed on the beach,
waiting to see if they would die. Half of them did and the other half
had complicated lives thereafter. But all of them agreed to their
duties out of love for their Queen. For love of the purity of her
heart, they stayed—and most of them died.
After consulting
with her Chancellor and other royal advisors through notes exchanged
by the youngest guard (who lived and died an old man with many
grandchildren) the Queen reached a quick and radical decision. All
who had come in contact with the docks in the last day must leave the
Kingdom, flying the purple flag. And those who were on the docks had
three days—either they would show symptoms or not. If not, they
would set fire to the docks and burn them into the sea, then leave
the Kingdom under purple flags. Whoever had caught the plague would
be provided with poison or be burned alive for the sake of the
peoples of the Kingdom of the Sun.
It was a stunningly
correct decision. Several hundred died, either on the docks by
disease or fire or in caravan out of Homeport, flying purple. But
thousands would have died had not the Queen been so decisive and so
brutal. Once she made her decree, she knew that she too must leave
Homeport. Her son and daughter were safe in Paliseda and would return
to the Kingdom of the Sun to rule when the month long ban was lifted
and the plague had been burned away. Her decision was wise and
wondrously wrought. So she left, down to the south, toward the
mountains around the Land of Hope, flying purple all the way.
Here son and
daughter and various of their descendents would reign after her and
hear of their mother’s bravery and selflessness in song and poetry.
Down
to Hope the Queen did go
Bearing
with her sickness dire
Saving
all with her great love
Bringing
health out of the fire.
Her last royal
command was to burn the ship and the docks three days after her
departure. Her guards did that without hesitation. Looking back, over
miles and miles the third night of her journey from Homeport, she saw
the flames rising from the north, burning away the disease, saving
her Kingdom.
****
The Queen’s
little troupe made their way south, along the sea, toward the Hopeful
Mountains. Word spread faster than the fire that burned the docks and
folks along the coastal way knew their Queen was passing by,
submitting herself to her own decree, clearing the way for life to
continue, carrying her disease toward Hope. So, all along the way,
simple people put out hearty, country foods and fine, local wines for
the Queen’s band of travelers. The cook began to rally from the
good food found at every crossroads and Eno-on drank too much peasant
wine. He would sing and prophesy in his cups. Perhaps because the
country folks knew their Queen and her odd retinue were passing near
and charted their progress toward the mountains, a few brave folks
would be just out of sight at night when Eno-on created his songs.
Some of those tunes passed into legend and were sung to the Queen’s
prodigy for generations and all around the Eleven Kingdoms. One of
them was this:
Southward,
ever southward, the Queen her journey goes
To
the Land of Hope and from that place nobody knows.
Yet
legend of the dark sea will find a voice to sing,
As
the Bearer of the Pure in Heart rises and takes wing.
A
Princess becomes a Queen in time we all agree.
But
from the Land of sickness, a Queen must always flee.
And
a Queen becomes a Princess from water that is sweet.
There
in the Last Place, a Sailor she will meet.
Night after night
Eno-on would sing. The maid would hold her hands over her ears to
block out his tales. The cook took solace in his lays. And the
Princess who was a Queen—she stared into the fire they built each
night, her eyes full of tears for the children she would never see
again and for her Kingdom, now lost to her. Yet, as she listened to
the idiot boy’s songs, she dared, with half-a-heart, to hope again.
It
is in the Last Place the Princess shall abide.
Finally,
yes finally, to be the Sailor’s bride.
In
a boat that floats just above the Sea,
A
priest and son shall come and leave again with me….
Such lyrics brought
pain to the Queen’s maid. She, ironically enough, when barely more
than a child, just as fate or AH would have it, had loved a sailor
of her own who sailed with a Captain—our Sailor’s father, as it
happened—from the Sweet Sea into the Impassable Sea and died there.
She had never loved another and the kitchen boy’s strange songs
nearly drove her mad. She could not have said why, any more than she
could have imagined what waited for her at the end of this
plague-driven journey.
Long
ago on tempest’s seas, a sailor loved was drowned.
And
the maid who loved him, her heart was cruelly bound.
Yet
on the shores of the Last Place, she will find a love,
To
free her from her bondage and carry her above….
“That one was
about you,” the Queen said to her maid once it had come tumbling
out in song from Eno-on’s lips.
“Do not torment
me, your majesty,” the maid replied, painfully.
In the silence and
the flickering light of the camp fire, the Queen smiled and changed
the direction of the conversation.
“Don’t you
think,” she said, finally, “after all we’ve been through, you
might call me by my name? I am Queen no more and have never been a
majesty to you, my dear friend.”
“But your name is
never spoken,” the maid replied, “less the spell of your reign be
broken. It was written so by the Old Ones from the Motherlands.”
The Queen smiled,
almost laughed, and shook her head.
“My reign is over
now and purged by fire.” She paused to let the maid remember the
flames they had seen over Homeport several weeks before. “So I will
speak my name in this place, just before the mountains, in the dim
light of this fire, and you will say it with me and our mutual fate
will be sealed.”
The maid took a
deep, deep breath.
“If you insist,
your majesty,” she said, sadly but with mixed expectations.
“I do insist,”
the Queen replied, “not as your Queen, but as your life-long
friend. My name is Eb-De-Vol. Say it with me….”
And together, Queen
(no longer Queen) and maid (no longer maid), they spoke:
“Eb-De-Vol….”
In that shared
speaking, their common fate was sealed. Embracing, they wept with joy
and expectation.
****
“Carriak,”
the Queen whispered, “you must survive and come with me across the
Impassable Sea. (Carriak
was a word from the common tongue, a language seldom spoken, the
language of the Old Ones from Motherland and the Land of Hope, a
language that was much like a religion among the people of that
world. To use the common tongue was to taste of what was basic and
real and vital. It was not a language to be used frivolously. And in
the common tongue, “carriak” means cook
and
mother
and deep-woman
friend
and much more besides.)
Once
they passed the mountains by traveling along the sea, the little band
had to turn west and brave the wastelands of the Land of Hope. One of
the ironies of that world is that a place known as the “Land of
Hope” was so barren and scarred and intimidating. The Land of Hope
is arid and chill with cruel winds and dust storms and almost no
place fit for human habitation. Legend has it that a great race of
men and women once lived there and, mating with the Old Ones from the
Motherlands, created all the people of the Land of Nine Seas. But as
the Queen and her laughable retinue soon discovered, the Land of Hope
was anything but hopeful. The food and wine the Queen had hoarded
before the mountains was all they had to sustain them. And they still
had a week’s journey toward a sea that could not be sailed or
crossed. Nothing seemed possible. All seemed lost. Yet the Queen
whispered her wishes to the woman who had served her as “mother”
over decades.
“Carriak,
you must live,” she said.
The
maid and kitchen boy had learned more about the strength and courage
of the Queen they had long served than they could have ever imagined
knowing. She kept them moving, cheered them when they doubted, kept
Cook alive, it seemed, by the force of her will that Carriak would
not die. At least not yet.
The
Queen seemed to know where they were going (though she could have not
named a place certain) and why (though she could express no real
reasons). And she was convinced they would all arrive or none of them
would—that much was clear from hoe she nursed the cook, encouraged
the maid and provided focus for the always distracted Eno-on. Much
nursing and encouragement and focus had been necessary for the
journey grew always harder, mind-numbingly harsh during sunlight and
chill-to-the-bone during the nights. But the Queen was relentless and
devastatingly kind at the same time.
****
The morning the
second horse died, they finally saw the Impassible Sea. Storms of
several kinds—waterspouts, lightening and wind-driven rain—were
barely visible through the mists along the shore. They had felt the
land shake with the surf for an hour before they saw the sea. The
maid had been almost hysterical when Eb-De-Vol insisted on burying
the horse in the sands.
“We are almost
dead with hunger and thirst,” the maid protested, “we have no
strength to bury each other, much less a horse. It is only a horse….”
Eb-De-Vol, no
longer her Queen but a woman with a name, smiled gently at her. “The
boy and I will do most of the work,” she said, without rancor, “and
this good creature did not bring us this far to be left to the sea
birds. I will have him buried and Eno-on will chant one of his chants
over that grave.”
When the horse was
buried, the idiot who knew all, chanted softly, tears running down
his face:
Here
he lies, the one who gave us life.
His
death delayed until Hope was crossed.
Without
his strength spent fully in the strife,
We
would be dead and all our hopes be lost.
The maid wiped away
Eno-on’s tears and shed some of her own. She turned to apologize to
the Queen but Eb-De-Vol merely shook her head and smiled.
“We have arrived
now and now we wait,” is all she said.
“Wait for what?”
the maid asked.
“I do not know,”
the Queen replied, staring out across the Impassable Sea.
****
Wait they did, for
a full day and night after all their food and water ran out. Eno-on
built a fire from brush wood and they boiled the acid water of the
sea until it was safe to drink. But a gallon only made a cup, so cook
got most of what they distilled from the ocean. The Queen had begun
to imagine they waited in vain for what she did not know. Why had she
believed something waited here for them? What had drawn her toward
this place in their long two-month journey? And why had she brought
these innocents with her to die on the shore of a sea no one could
cross?
She sat awake all
night, watching the moonlight on the stormy, untamable waters, numb
with cold, her thoughts vague and passing, never dreaming that on the
other side of that cruel ocean another watched the moon as well.
****
(“Time grows
near, Revol,” the Captain said, resting his hand on the Sailor’s
shoulder, speaking his name with great tenderness, looking down at
the moon-watching young man on the shore. In their years in the last
place—months, really, that seemed like years—they had both seemed
to grow younger. The Captain was a hearty man of middle years again,
his sight restored. They didn’t discuss it, but honored the changes
that weird place at the end of the world wrought on them.
In fact, they
tended to discuss very little. They lived there in that place in a
quiet, complementary way. They worked together each day—especially
once the Captain began to be restored—and shared each meal. But
there seemed little reason for speaking. They both knew—in a way
beyond knowing—what they were doing there. Waiting.
“The waiting
is almost over,” the Sailor said, “after all this time….”
The Captain
laughed and slapped him on the back.
“What time?”
he asked.)
****
Time was very much
on the Queen’s mind as dawn broke through greenish and threatening
clouds over the Impassable Sea. Time was what her little band had run
out of—the maid was almost too weak to sit up; cook had slipped
into a shallow-breathing unconsciousness; and even Eno-on seemed
dehydrated and on the verge of collapse. As for the Queen—it was as
if she had aged a decade in the months of travel. Her face was
sunburned and deeply lined, her cheeks had collapsed until her face
seemed like skin stretched too tightly over a skull. She found it
hard to breathe and her head swam from hunger and thirst.
“This morning
is my last,” she thought, “and there are no trees in this
wretched place for the sun to shine on….” She had lost hope
and was ready to die.
Suddenly she
heard, through the fog of her own thoughts, a soft cooing sound, much
like the sound the old women in Homeport who trained birds made to
call their charges. It was Eno-on and his crooning grew louder and
more disturbing. She thought he was mourning for cook and she was
about to find enough dampness in her mouth to tell him, “she’s
not dead yet” when the maid leaped to her feet, as if by a miracle,
given how weak she was, and pointed over the sea.
“Elidesia!”
she shouted in the common tongue. “Elidesia, my Queen!”
****
There
are no poems or songs ever written or sung about that day. No one was
there except for the four of them and they flew away, never to
return, never. So what happened to the Queen and her motley retinue
was never know in Homeport or the Kingdom of the Sun or anywhere at
all. Everyone who wrote poems or songs imagined the Queen died in the
Mountains of Hope and was lost forever. The Queen’s courage and
wisdom was the theme of much rhyme and music, but as for her
end…nobody knew.
All
that happened was this: a legend rose from the Impassable Sea, a
giant, winged creature shaped like a butterfly but huge as a ship.
The creature was talked about throughout the Eleven Kingdoms, but not
one in a thousand believed the tales. Only a handful of people in all
time had seen the creature, even from a great distance. It was so
eerie and strange it had never been named. Some referred to it as
“the wings of the pure” or “the bearer of love” or “the
great scaled flying ship”—but none ever gave it a name. And those
who believed in it at all believed there had been only one of the
creatures since the dawn of days and it existed for one purpose and
one purpose only—to fly with one whose love was pure across the
Impassable Sea to the Last Place. The legends became vague and
unwound there. There was no finish to them. The fascination of the
songs was with a creature—seemingly eternal in human terms—which
waited for one moment to fulfill its purpose and then be allowed to
die. Who the “pure lover” was did not play into the legend. It
was enough that one would come and be carried by the Nameless
Creature from Hope to the other side of the Impassable Sea. That was
enough.
So,
all that happened was this: in a way not even he understood, Eno-on
knew it was time to call the creature from the depths, knew the
legend was now completed, knew the one whose love was pure had waited
by the Sea until she lost hope and now her deliverance was at hand.
After
the giant creature landed on the sand, the four of them nestled among
the soft scales of the Nameless One and soared above the Sea.
One
stop was necessary. Carriak must go to one of the islands uncharted
in the Impassable Sea called the Death Lands. The great, unnamed
creature landed gracefully and the inhabitants of those lands came
rushing up to welcome the visitors. Everyone was shining,
luminescent, not quite solid but not shadows either—more like
thick, incandescent fluid—warm honey, sweet oil. The Death Lands
shown with light that came from neither sun nor moon, but from within
the citizens of those happy places.
And
“happy” was the word for those denizens of the Death Lands—or,
perhaps, more accurately—deep, profound joy. That, the Queen would
remember in a century or so, was the glow they carried within them
that lit the darkness in soft amber light—Joy.
Cook
was swept away by several of the hosts. Eno-on climbed back on the
creature, frightened, but the maid and Eb-De-Vol were drawn into the
midst of the deep, almost humming joy around them. And there, in the
crowd, moving toward her, the Queen saw her husband, the Duke of
Paliseda, looking as dashing and as gallant as he had been when they
had danced and she had turned to drink to escape from him and mourn
her lost Sailor. There was no color to the Duke but the pale orange
of his light.
She
started to bow to him, as she had done so many, many times, but his
fluid hands grasped her shoulders and raised her up. A warmth spread
through her like wine without dizziness. Her mind seemed clearer than
she could ever remember. She gazed into his face, his light.
“I
would stay here, husband,” she said, “in this place of light and
warmth.”
He
smiled and his face rippled slowly.
“No,
my love,” he whispered in a voice like fog and smoke, but so
pleasant and loving that the Queen, overcome by the ambiance of the
island, nearly swooned.
Then
her husband said, in a voice of fog and wonder, “Your journey is to
another place.”
“I
should stay with you, my husband,” she whispered, feeling that she
should.
“I
free you from your vows,” he said, embracing her fully. It was like
being wrapped in warm, damp silk.
“you
no longer want me?” She asked, confused and not a little pained.
He
laughed a deep, liquid laugh.
“The
dead have no wants, no needs,” he said, “and you have promises to
keep.”
Beside
him, suddenly, was a lovely, liquid woman—small and beautiful,
radiating shades of yellow and gold.
“I
am Alia,” she told the Queen, “you know me not, but the one you
fly to loved me in his way. I rejoice for you. And you must some day
tell him I release him from his vows to me so he may vow all to you.
But you must not linger here long—you must mount the dear creature
now. The Death Lands are too seductive to the living.”
“Am
I alive?” the Queen asked, deep in confusion.
The
Duke and Alia laughed and backed away, blowing her liquid kisses.
The
maid was weeping softly on the creature’s back and Eno-on was
trying to console her.
“Rossel,”
the Queen said, “why do you weep?”
“I
saw the man I loved who died upon the sea,” she said, “but he
only smiled and waved to me and moved on.”
The
Queen wrapped her in her arms, like a child in a blanket, wishing she
was as warm as one of the Dead, as liquid, as consoling.
“The
Dead have no wants,” she whispered to her, “no needs. And we yet
live….We live to fly….”
Before
she finished speaking, the great winged thing was climbing into a
green and storm filled sky. They were almost home.
****
The Queen wept for
her dear friend the cook—no, not for Carriak, but for herself. The
cook was now among the joyful dead. The Queen wept for herself, and
in her weeping wrapped the maid, Rossel, in her arms, and slept
fitfully.
Her sleep was
broken by a soft cooing sound. She shifted among the scales of the
amazing creature and saw Eno-on singing. Suddenly, she realized he
was guiding and directing the flight.
“Eno-on,” she
said, amazed, “are you singing us home?”
There was a look in
the man’s eyes of fierce, determined intelligence and great
wisdom—something the Queen had only seen dimly in moments before.
“I was meant to
be here,” he told her, calmly. “I was sent to sing you to the
Last Place. That was my job, my calling. I never knew why or how or
for what reason—all that was hidden from me. I am an Austere of AH
and have always been, though none have recognized me as such.”
“I don’t even
know what that means,” the Queen said to the Kitchen man.
“Your son has
always known, that is all that matters,” Eno-on said, laughing.
She thought of her
son Enin, now King of the Sun Lands. How could Enin had known about
any of this? Remarkably, no other thought entered her mind.
“Now I must sing
to the Love Bearer,” Eno-on said, his face suddenly melting into
that of a slightly addled man—damaged by touching AH directly. And
his cooing resumed.
On they flew.
***
Re-vol, the Sailor,
saw them coming far out to sea. He had imagined this moment,
seemingly forever, and now it was here. Descending like darkness, the
great creature came to ground, the shadows of the enormous wings of
the Love Bearer spreading across the sand.
Eno-on and Rossel,
the maid, slipped off the beast that seemed to be dying on the shore,
but the Sailor did not notice them. All he could see was the body of
a sick and aging woman, nestled among the scales, asleep or worse. He
climbed the back of the creature and carried the Queen back to the
sand.
“You did this for
me once,” he whispered gently, touching the withered cheek of his
Princess. “Now I do it for you.”
He hurried back to
the surf and cupped his hands around the waters of the Sweet Sea,
bringing it back to her to drink, not spilling a drop.
The Captain
approached Rossel and took her hand.
“Come,” he
said to her, “come and grow young with me. You know me not, but I
will be the gentleness and the love you have longed for all these
years. I will show you things you have never imagined and never
could….”
Rossel stared at
him, still woozy from crossing the Impassable Sea. “Are you trying
to compromise me?” she asked, harshly.
The Captain
laughed from the soles of his feet. “At least that, my lady,” he
said, sputtering with glee, “an more besides….”
She disengaged
her hand from his but did consent to a walk by the Sweet Sea.
Eno-on stroked
the great creature’s face as it died and chanted words so softly
none other heard them. Only the Idiot man saw the creature wither
into a snow white bird that flew away, right into the sun.
The Princess and
the Sailor sat in the sand and drank the sweet water for what seemed
like a life-time—and most likely was. Sun and moon care
ten-thousand times and they sat without discomfort or chill or heat
and drank sweet water from his hands until it was finally gone and
she touched the palm of his hand with her tongue so gently he would
wonder for countless ages if it had truly happened, even though it
happened almost every day of all those ages.
At some point—time
is helpless in this tale now—a tiny boat came drifting over the
Sweet Sea. The Princess and Sailor watched it approach for a day—a
week, a month. Finally, the boat beached on the sand.
A tall, gray-haired
man walked toward them, dressed in flowing, cream-colored robes.
Though his years were obviously many, he walked with rare balance and
soft grace.
“It is a holy
man”, the Sailor thought.
The Princess knew
better.
The two of them
stood, as seemed proper, to greet the man. The Sailor glanced at the
elderly woman who had flown to him across the Impassable Sea and saw
that she was, once more, as young as the Princess he had loved.
The holy man held
out his arms to embrace them.
“Trav-res-sha,”
the Princess whispered, “our son….”
As
they embraced on the sand, the Sailor realized who the holy man was
and remembered it all. Then he was struck that his son of another
life-time was so much older than he was himself.
“Shhhh…,”
Trav-res-sha whispered to his earthly father. “Do not ask. It is
only as it is and will be always….It is the will of AH.”
So the three of
them held each other and each, in their own way, wept away a life of
longing. Finally, after what you and I might call a month or two of
embracing, their son of another life, the Child of the Last Place,
pulled away and stepped back from his parents.
“I come for the
boy,” he said, solemnly, “the Austere of AH.”
The Sailor had no
idea what his son-of-another-life meant. The Princess was confused as
well—the air and water of the Last Place has that affect. But then
Eb-De-Vol saw Eno-on running up the beach, suddenly as young as he
had been the day the dead bird brought its message from the Moon Sea.
Then she knew and laughed through sudden tears.
Eno-on saw the
Priest of AH and started to drop to his knees in the damp sand, but
Trav-res-sha caught him in his arms and lifted him up.
“We go now?” he
asked the boy, kissing his head.
“Of course,”
Eno-on answered, holding the priest close.
Trav-res-sha looked
at his parents, a look of farewell and love.
“You have no
idea,” he said, softly, with great compassion, holding Eno-on to
himself, “what trouble AH has gone to for you….”
Then the two of
them climbed into the boat without any ceremony. Waving, they began
to pull away. There were no oars and no sail to propel them to the
Isle of Dreams. Something else would take them across the Sweet Sea.
“He could have
told us what all this means,” the Sailor said as the boat moved
toward the horizon.
At just that
moment, Day and Night collided, as they only do in the Last Place.
The Sailor turned to see the moon upon two seas. The Princess looked
at the sun falling on the trees beyond the beach.
The Princess smiled
at him.
“There is nothing
left to tell,” she said.
“But I was
wondering…,” he began.
She held him near,
kissing him for lives already lived and for life yet to come. When
she took her mouth from his, she whispered, laughing like sunlight
and moonbeams in his ear:
“There is no
wondering left…,” is all she said.
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About Me
- Under The Castor Oil Tree
- some ponderings by an aging white man who is an Episcopal priest in Connecticut. Now retired but still working and still wondering what it all means...all of it.