Winter light of lapis and polished sterling flooded the room through
the paired windows. The stone around the openings flared outward into
the room, magnifying the illumination to make the infirmary cell much
brighter than Rāhula would have imagined. He was grateful, prayers of
thanks going up every morning when the sun slipped into his room.
The old monk lay still, his eyes tracking the progress of snow finches across the flagstone patio outside the window. His bed had been pushed close to the window to afford a view out. The weight of the blankets and bandages served as warm anchors. But it was the pain in his skin that acted as biggest shackle. Rāhula's eyes twitched in time with the hopping birds, his racing mind considering that the pain was simply another attachment. The task, he thought, was to consume the horrible ache before it consumed him.
The smell of gasoline lingered as a phantom haunt in his nostrils. Blinding sunlight and the horrified screams of passers-by kaleidoscoped across his memory. He gritted his teeth. Tears surged, searing his dry eyes. Rapid blinks cleared his vision. The snow finches snapped into sharp focus.
Rāhula smiled, a reflex action at odds with his will, but felt good. Watching the finches peck at the black scatterings of nyjer seeds on the snow, Rāhula decided then that he would never again set himself afire for anyone. Not the government, not the news, not even himself.
Been missing your words, Irish.
ReplyDeleteI've missed them, too! Sometimes the voice must be silent to regain its power. That's what I'm hoping has happened in my case. Thank you for being here with me.
Deleteso intriguing... I love how you hinted at the monks problem all throughout the post and then made the title make sense with the closing lines. Artful and clever
ReplyDeleteThank you! This particular vignette has a lot of potential, I'm hoping to expand it into something bigger.
DeleteJaguar man! Are these the seeds of something bigger?
ReplyDeleteSeeds, seeds...yes, I believe it is. I need to make this grow, yes?
DeleteWas waiting for this. Again, I savour it. Thanks.
ReplyDeleteAh, madam, you are kind to say so. You are most welcome.
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