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Inspirational Adventure

“Can you lose yourself? Why do I long, a lonely desperation, to find myself again?”

“You’re not alone,” my father, Time, answered. “Many feel an emptiness, a search for meaning. Although within your heart you ache, you also aren’t the same as men.” 

I saw my father as heaven’s strength, but Time was running old. 

“It’s true, Father, I often lie awake in early hours, my memory’s fingers barely touch the thing. The hound slips its bounds and taunts me in a fog. I know it’s there, but when I grasp the thing firmly, only mist escapes my hand. Later, when the day arrives, I see others making way. I know they feel the same, have also lost themselves. Do they also search in early hour to find a missing grace? There is a longing in me, a sadness I can’t bear.”

“I love you, son,” my father said. “Perhaps the enemy who haunts your dreams we share. Men are proud of what they own. Perhaps you long for them to share? I’ll challenge this beast called Consumption and rip her heart out from her chest.”

Sun, my father’s loving wife, strode the sky. “You old fool. You brag of ripping hearts. It’s all just talk,” she said. “Consumption has a hundred spitting snakes, and is an enemy you don’t dare. She eats a bottomless feast.”

“I have to try,” my father said.

My father rode a proud bay. He was in no hurry, the horse striding valiantly, a silvered mane held high. A golden armored shield against his chest defended him from harm.

Consumption, beating her black wings to full advantage, dragged my father from his gilded saddled throne. She bit him hard against a cheek not turned. Soon they gripped the insanity of their worst aspirations, murder in their minds, hands clutching each opposing neck. Father broke the bond and struck the bitch Consumption with the backing of his fist. Justly spiked, the breastwork of her brow lay breached. But she clenched again my father’s throat, finding strength in blinding rage. At last, my father, Time, lay exhausted on the newly blooded bank; his face twisted in the anguish of his pain. 

Consumption’s eyes were veined, not white, with crimson chords which showed within she’d won. “Time has passed,” she declared. “I will spread my now red wings and fly to boundless genocide, postulant in its effect. I’ll laugh at bodies stacked and bloated, endless under ashen clouds.” With shadowed wings she leaped and beat the sky.

I held my father where he lay. “Where do I go from here?” I asked. 

He held me close with still loved arms. “Your desire for men’s better nature burns in a sealed jar. And now your mind clamors against a feeding flesh, which eats upon your soul. You must go to your sister, Wind. Her strength may blow away the hidden veil of what you seek,” and Time passed.

It was not my father’s eyes which held mine. There was no clenched condemnation, nor was there the strike of anger against my young man’s naivety. But shame it was that struck that day, and so I tossed away hypocrisy, a betrayal to my broken heart, to muddy banks. But should Consumption have lost the fight, would this have solved my longing? I thought not. I resolved to find my sister, Wind. 

With Time gone, I rode his horse, and when I thought I’d ride no more, I came to find myself within the squandered hills. Was there within these sleeping mounds belief? Would this be where I’d find redemption for my longing where it lived, a mine which wildly crouched within a canyon’s cave? Once found, I dug with coaled hands to find the thing for which I longed within the entrails of its depths. But no, seeking rectitude on the deepest pits within those caves, blinded by the blackness of the tunnel’s condemnation, I found nothing, only emptiness, speaking hollow, without hope.

But true to my father’s advisement, I felt my sister Wind, a whispered graze which cooled my cheek (or rather she found me I think). Finding me disconsolate, she knelt down against my side. For a time, we lay in symphony. 

I asked her, “What was my justification, my error so floundered in the mines? I failed to find what I longed for, and now become more tired than before. Was I in fear, absorbed in my own shallowed ignorance, or maybe I was safely careless?”

Wind said, “It was none of those things. Do you remember a family long ago begging men to help? They had cracked hands, their dry clayed skin so written in a season’s draught. Do you remember?”

“I remember clearly, but what could I do?” I asked, uneasy in my defense. “You judge me too harshly.”

“I don’t judge you at all. I judge men. Did men, from silken fingers, drop cherished coins of kindness on white earth? Do you remember a young man, whose eyes shined pride, charging on horseback. His warrior’s chest was taunt with muscle, his horse the dust of vengeful sky. He thundered in the brightest sun, and died.”

“It’s true men killed that warrior, but must it always be that way?"

My sister, Wind, rose and thrust against my stance a driving rain, howling admonishments. “The warrior’s eyes last saw the hate in men. Yes, his blood was the color of all men’s blood, but still his body lay, unburied, a rotting carrion. They did not care and stood by unchanged in the rising heat. Men are stench on sour earth.”

“It’s not too late,” I said.

“But it is,” Wind said. “Time has died. These men will now find out what we wind, and sun, and rain can do. Beware.”

“But some men are good at heart,” I declared. 

Unheeding, Wind twisted a bitter lip. “You’re still a boy. Go find your mother, Sun. You disgust me in your forbearance in sight of agonies by men. For me, atonement is my breath to sweep away the wrongs.” With these words, Wind rose and begged the sky to join her, confident in her heights of vengeance, on wings of undue prejudice. But with her quitting, I sensed no change from slaughter re-commenced, a genocidal orgasm crying death; with my longing still not stayed. 

Was I a fool, an idiot jester, to discard the vengeance of my sister? Having little recourse, and to live not wanting to, I climbed my mount again to seek a banishment of pain, the soured pit within my chest I knew not from. If only my mother could give me favor, to lead me where I longed. And so, with stalwart back upon my father’s horse, I galloped in a forthright pace to meet my mother on the mountain of despair.

I rode through far-flung hills, relentless in their battlements against me, and seeming endless until I came to a valley filled with springs of salient screams. Women there were drinking deep a lecherous water, thousands gagging desperation. Standing men, resolved in their dishonor, lashed the woman’s backs. Their flesh now spoiled red, spilled, then pooled in rivers fed with flowing horror. The men wore lucred skirts and carried bellies false-glamoured in their gluttony. While they whipped, they gorged on froth-drooled flesh-meat, greed their only god. In wary stead, they fixed upon their own eyes, plucked them from their head and cast them to the woman, then stamped their blinded sight with heels of edacity. I did nothing, only reeled revulsion, passing those in bondage, their chains rubbed raw on ankles boned and bound by iron chains of broken chastity.  

Yes, I did nothing. The yoke of labor bore tight on the necks of these who served these master men. Was innocence chained in dens of inequity? Was hope beaten and strapped to white horses in sunsets, never to return? Does women’s conscience speak better than men’s whispered confidences, whose advisement is to lie down under endurant bondage, a bondage lying cold in a treeless valley called resignation? Was this a woman’s destiny? To choose life while obeying the calls of enjoinment, with no more solace than tears in a bed of straw? Would the striking of bondage alone find myself?

Riding on, my longing still remained.

The mounds grew into mountains, the mountains into madness. My abstract thoughts were real and bit. But I sought to seek my mother, Sun. I mounted cliffs, the steepest angles of repose. My fingers clawed on spiked granite. Iced tongues licked me with sharp pricked ill intent. Wind, my frigid sister, laughed, and threw frozen torment in my face. No spirit left, I huddled down, my body firmed and frozen blackened on a ridge. My quest was lost to find out who I was. I crawled behind some wayward rocks to pass, and there resolved to pray for endless night, a simple disappearance from this life. 

Does curiosity die a lasting gasp? I smiled myself a bitter satire’s breath. Far below, with one last look, a path struck clear. For there, below, were steps I had not taken, but only spied them now as I near passed. It was clear my path was one forsaken, the one false witness only shown by shining from above.

Sun, my mother, close at hand, climbed down from high with warmth as her embrace. “Hail well, my smaller son, hail well. The climb has no true way, and truth’s been lost as you can see now far below.”

I held my mother close and soon I warmed.

I pointed out the wayward trail below. “What choice was made by men who chose that path, the one where truth becomes an orphaned son, a boy who’s wronged, denied parental love he longed?”

 My mother lay back against the stone, thought hard about the question I had asked. “Truth has lost another’s reason. All men seek a truth to know, but now some hide the truth that’s known. Some now make a lie their own. I don’t have the answer for you. Maybe your brother, Moon, will know your way.”

 “Can you take me down?” I asked. “Time has passed and truth won’t find my name. I still long to find myself.”

My brother Moon beckoned in the night, his face a welcome ghost. “Our mother has told me you need aid.”

“Moon, you’re the last. I fear I’m done. Our father Time has died his day, genocide is carried on. Consumption lives with Gluttony as her guide. And sister Wind has flown away with bitter temper at her side. Oppression lives another day. Our mother, Sun, shines clear paths, but only lies now mark the way. I fear these are no more than symptoms of a greater loss.”

“So you’ve come no closer to finding who you are,” said the Moon. “But why is the sordid deeds of men your problem? Be honest, I’m your brother in the sky.”

 “I only seek to answer who I am,” I answered. “The quiet early hours still haunt my bed; I still don’t know the name for which I long.”

“Come with me,” said the Moon, and formed a crescent seat. “I’ll take you to my home.”

And so we crossed the sky above, brothers he and I. He lifted me and soon we stood where flags still stand today. My brother gestured towards a light, a blue marble in the sky. “Can you see the brightest hope, the thing that shines in glory? One small step, is what they said; It’s love that is your story.




November 20, 2024 22:00

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3 comments

Linda Kenah
17:53 Nov 22, 2024

Beautifully written! I loved this! Vivid imagery. Wonderful.

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Alexis Araneta
17:38 Nov 21, 2024

Just stunning, Jack ! The imagery here is gloriously rich. Amazing flow to this too. Wonderful work !

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Mary Bendickson
17:17 Nov 21, 2024

Your writing is so superb. So much description and filled with rich meaning with lessons to be learned. I, as a mere mortal, was was mangled along the way. I had many interruptions while attempting to read I found it hard to follow. It deserves undivided attention which I don't have presently. But it struck me as awesome.

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