Thursday, August 21, 2014

A road for a King




             It happened yesterday.  As I had missed the King’s Highway, the royal road, I found myself traveling across the Meadows.  Fields passed in a green blur as my car glided forward.  I was on my way to the bibliotheca.  An archive of tomes and treasures to enchant the mind.  Yet as my car pressed forward, when I had gotten off the thoroughfare to take this way, I always thought of her.  Rather than a sensual tendril, this was actually more of the mundane.  I remembered her words in passing that one should pass by the green village if traffic should ever appear.  There it might have stayed except there was a black car in front of me.  Well the problem wasn’t in the sleek sportster that was in front of me, it was in the lumbering yellow leviathan in front of it: a garbage truck.  As this slowed our passage, it gave me time to think.  To dwell for a moments reprieve of the trace from the past.  It reminded me of a dream.
                The dream was odd in that I remembered most of it.  Usually, it is only fragments or frozen images of scatter shot narratives that survive my passage during the night.  A flash of eyes, the shattered glass, the collision of ice cubes, a wilted rose on a broken boulevard:  just images.  This seems to be a defense mechanism put in place by my brain to protect me from my own madness.  A bind placed by myself, to save me from myself.  Perhaps.  But every so often, my mind is merciful in that it allows some of the visions to pass. 
                I was in a house.  It was one of those dream houses.  You have never been in it but from the wooden interior frames, soft lighting accentuated by candles, the wooden floors--it was a fashionable place.  The guests were dressed in the plumage of the upper class evening wear.  I can’t argue.  I was also decked out in the haute culture.  I don’t know why the party was being held except it seemingly was an open house for people to meet and greet each other.  Sadly, all too often it’s not what you know, but who you know.  Anyway, I was engaged in one such conversation.  Well not really.  It was one of those conversations where you are present, but only half-heartedly.  I had other things on my mind.  I knew that she was here.  She was somewhere.  I had to find her.  While the person I was talking to continued in there rambling, I took a champagne glass from a silver tray.  At his pauses I would fill in with the appropriate “uh, huh,” “really,” and “ya don’t say.”  My eyes were furious in their scanning to and fro.  My senses were racing trying to pick up where she might be.  Seeing a doorway I excused myself to go into the next room. 
                I entered the next room to find myself in a crowded kitchen.  Now one might expect it to be full of the hustle and bustle of help making sure the party continued to flow.  Replacing the sound of colliding cutlery however continued banter.  As the blue colored tile on the walls served to amplify the bedlam of the banter, the sound was crushing.  My eyes scanned furiously.  As white cuffs capped with links of the finest stones rose to the air in an unceasing and unending calls for cheers.  For who, for what, I never was truly sure.  My eyes scouted. 
                The delicate ballet of courting couples had begun.  By this time sweet words of whisky had replaced the shy wisdom of wine.  Be they groups in their fifties, forties, thirties, twenties, or even the uncoordinated youth… they were all reflections of the others; shy studied curious or explosive in bombastic bravado.  Women adorned in the finest of pearls swirled them around fingers in a slight seduction to those they were talking to.  The silent laugh as a hand was pressed to the chest.  White jacketed maître de rushed about blocking faces with trays or upheld arms before the face could be fully grasped. Where could she be?  Where could she be?  I sat on a chair trying to figure out the next step.  In the cacophony of smells of roasted flesh of rabbit and lamb, arose a trace of her distinctive fragrance.  Immediately I leapt from my chair.  Like a bloodhound I followed the scent through the throng of party goers desperate to appear animated behind the suffocating masks they bore. 
                My eyes fell upon a sudden break in the crowd.  In part of the magic that only dreams can provide, a doorway that had been hidden from my vision earlier, appeared on the back wall.  With each step closer to the doors the scent grew stronger.  I did not have time to look nervously around, this could be her, it could be where she was.  I opened the door to find a wooden staircase going up with the hall bathed in light.  I locked the doors behind me.  I began to climb the stairs unsure but hopeful.  When I reached the top of the stairs I came upon a great room.
                The only thing in the room was a huge bed.  The roof of the room glass open to the sky which allowed the bed to be bathed in the warm glow of the sun.  On the bed itself was a huge white comforter that hid a diffused shape below.   Her arm lay palm down on the bed.  Through an opening in the comforter I saw her beckoning eyes smile.  I ran to the bed, pushed back the comforter to reveal her face, her smile.  In her savage beauty a part of me died in return for life perpetual.  Tears of joy softly swept down her cheek as I leaned in to deliver a kiss that had been building for so long.  At this point the dream broke down into images of shapes and skin erupting from momentary openings in the comforter.  Words unspoken burned fierce on unrestrained lips as passions gave way.  The silent sighs were broken only by purrs of pleasure under the twisting protection of white.  The elusive reflection of nirvana however was just momentary... the black car began to move.
                I laughed at the sudden vibrancy of the recollection.  As I swerved into a passing lane I was caught by the humor of the situation.  Though I might write a short story about that.        

 

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