MY LIFE
The things that make me happy
are things that make me sad
field, sea, sky, and people
no more is to be had
I work the fields in earnest
I earn what I can make
I know I'm not in charge, though
I don't own all the take
some take it upon them
to wear the absent crown
they shout and march forever
they never set it down
In words I see the past
both spoken and in tome
but words sound very different
from changing as they roam
in eyes I see the present
to what we all can strive
to whom we have to strive for
to whom we are alive
in clouds I see the future
no single image tells
but a series of arrangements
in crow's caws, and in bells
I don't have many friends
but some friends do have me
one day I'll learn to bridge the gap
but I'll never learn to please
though separation serves us
allows us to divide
and rejoin later onward
and know from center's side
I know I'm not a statue
my body stands today
and one day it will pass me by
and I'll be yesterday.
Perhaps my soul will linger
my spirit will depart
and travel places never seen
and live in every heart
I'm not sure if I want that
I don't know if that's me
do I need so much majesty
and synchronicity?
they say that Gods can hover
above us when we sleep
but so can ghosts, and both of them
say nothing when I weep.
* * *
I am The Reaper. Life is difficult for me. I live in Ireland, in a village that wants to be a town called Fogborn. We're farmers, mostly, but half of what we harvest is sold abroad. People still go hungry at home. I guess life is difficult for a lot of people, but I know it isn't hard for everyone. I should be thankful, I wouldn't exist without the trade routes.
My mother was Egyptian, and her mother was from India, and hers was from a place that might be called 'Siam'. I hear they're going to start calling it 'Ayutthaya', or something. My father was a French Jew, his father was a Persian-Greek of the Homeric gods, and his father was an Irish Catholic. Their mothers were whatever their fathers didn't have, and their wives brought in the Scottish, Nordic, German, Russian, and English, though in what way I never learned. That's all in four generations, in the last hundred years. People say "If you're from a land, you ARE that land." But I was born right here in Fogborn, in my great grandfather's house. And nobody believes that I'm Irish.
You're probably wondering how a farmer can read and write.
I was one of the lucky kids selected to learn in The King's hold, a few
days away. It was a sort of test: The King wants to know if people who
can read are better for the market than people who can't. The King is a
gentle man with a commanding presence. He has long blond hair, both from
scalp and beard, that hangs to his sides like a lion's mane. He wants
to be everyone's friend, but he beats himself up over petite faux pas,
and grows bitter to callous in defense of his pride. Sometimes he's
happy, other times morose, and his in-between is the calm he shows at
dinner, when he's laughing but not yet manic from wine. Then, and when
the other tribes attack. He has a stern anger and never loses his head
about things. The other leaders are scared of him, he seems to win every
battle.
Anyway, I wasn't lucky so much to be chosen, but to have
been born to my parents. My Egyptian grandfather is The Mentor of The
King. An unsmiling man of rope and robe whose white hair seems to cling
to him only in SPITE of falling, at the bottom of his face and nowhere
on top of his head. He's the smartest person I know, but his feelings
are like tough sand full of roots, and mine are like wind and water
between blades of grass. Girls I like tend to be like rays of light, or
tall shadows, or cotton balls, or clouds in the wind, but there were no
girls in my class. It was just me, I was their first experiment.
My grandfather believed I have better memory than my seven siblings did
at the time. I'm not sure why, but I can remember almost everything I've
ever seen, though I have trouble with faces and more-so with names. I
don't have a name myself, so that might be for the best; I'd probably
forget it. My parents forgot to give me one when they were done naming
the others. When I was growing up, they called me "boy", or "you", or
"Reaper", knowing from my birth the job I was going to die with. I'm
still a bit sore about them doing that. That's one of my problems, I
remember some things too well, and I can hold a grudge about things
nobody else remembers, against people I care for. And I can get lost in
my memories, too.
Back to my story. While studying at the hold, I
became deathly ill. I had boils on my arms and legs, and my face swelled
up like a melon. My grandfather said the disease came from far away,
and that The King's need for foreign furniture, delicacies, and
information were both the life and death of him. To me, each new good
was like a friend from one of my many homes. I spent a lot of time
recovering on a Persian sofa, which I hear is close to Egypt. The King
had to re-cushion it when I got better. He's still a little sore, it
cost him a few gold coins. Me, I'm okay now, but my sickness spread to
my grandfather and took him in his sleep. I miss him. He would have
known why the side of my face that swelled up no longer has as much
feeling to it. He might have known what to do before the sickness
returned years later, and took my parents and seven siblings. Honestly,
they should call it The Plague of Loneliness.
That's not entirely
fair, actually. I've been playing swords with my friend, The Knight.
He's a handsome boy my age with hair like a raven. He says his English
father married an Aztec princess, that he purchased from her father. But
she died of the flu after giving birth. He says he can't get sick
because his parents' blood became stronger from fighting the disease,
before it was given to him. Is blood so much like a muscle? It makes me
wonder if I was stronger than my family, or just luckier to have had my
grandfather's full attention.
The Knight likes my schemes. I'm not
really interested in milling wheat for the rest of my life – for one
thing, I don't even like it. Gruel makes me itch and swell, and I can't
afford meat, so I mostly just eat the vegetables that others don't, from
their gardens. They frown and call them "boring veggies", but I think
they're delicious. I don't have any animals to make milk or eggs, only a
dog and a cat. It's good for me they hunt their own food, or they'd
starve. The Knight chops wood for the oven, and I make lunch for the
both of us. He said he wants to live with me, but he needs to sleep at
the barracks with the other Knights. They play pranks on him and rough
him up, but he says he's stronger for it and needs them to be that way.
The Knight also told me he likes bread, but somehow, it seems to make
people big and stupid. He thinks it's because eating grass turns you
into a cow, which I thought was hilarious. I imagined it as hard as I
could, breath evading me, and I played the cow on my knees, chewing
grass and mooing low. He thought that was funny, but also kind of dumb,
and told me to stop. He's fun, but serious too.
Oh, yeah. My
schemes. Sometimes I say mean things about people, and I get crazy ideas
about how I want to hurt them. I'm not evil, I just want revenge on
them for being rude. Not only to me, but to each other. The Knight tells
me his blood boils when he sees people being stupid. Well, mine gets
hot when people are uncaring to one another. But mostly, they really are
just cruel to me, calling me "bogmoor" because I'm "dark as mud". The
Knight is a bit dark himself, but where I'm mud on a warm day, he's mud
on a hot day, the color it is when it's already dried out and cracked.
The girls really like him for his looks, not that he pays much attention
to them. He seems mostly to spend time with me. One time, he joked that
we should get married, and held my hand as if I were a wife. I regret
it now, but I was embarrassed, and angry.
I said, "You know everyone hates me. I know you don't really feel that way."
He
looked upset. I didn't see him for a week, when he was leaving with the
other knights to fight in the King's name down the river. He came back
again, and we spent some more time together. I'll tell about it later,
it's a bit of a sensitive topic. The King called again, a few years
later. The next time The Knight left, he never came home.
That was a
year ago. It's 1350 now, under the Lord's sun and moon. Secretly, I
think the old gods and The Lord are the same people, or perhaps he's
their Lord and they're his dukes. The old gods wouldn't have minded me
and The Knight in bonds, but the new one seems to. Maybe he's just
lonely, like I am. Keeping something away he's afraid he might like.
Don't they say he loves everyone anyway? Religion is full of
contradictions, but so are people. I wonder how it could have been to
hold with The Knight for a moon. I'll probably never find out, to be
honest.
Anyway, without my friend to keep me out of trouble, I
got up to some trouble. The Manager has never been so angry. He's a man
like dough, he looks different every day in his new set shape, simply by
how he wakes up and on what side of his bed. Not his body, he isn't
obese – I mean his face. Sometimes, he's a hard-chinned man, other times
a gossipy princess, and others a myriad of things between. But he
hardly seems aware of it. What he always is, he's driven, and a bit
cross. He wants me to be his friend, but he's very fake with people, and
I can't stand fake. Others love it, prefer it most of the time. He says
that's called "putting in the effort". To his credit, everyone likes
him, except his reapers.
Spending long hours under the hot sun with
no breaks, I contend with: dull blades; ensnaring weeds; animal carcass;
dry musty brush; stray branches as big as trees their own; and bugs.
There are more bugs than people alive, I'm certain. I got tired of it,
and when The Black Plague arrived formally in Fogborn, not so casually
as it met me or my family, I saw an opportunity. I pretended I was sick
too. Many people really were, and died left and right – the fields were
overgrown and still but for the wind. I was at home, using cloth and
kettle water to fake fever to a brilliant man. His weakness is simply
his own trust in himself; he believes he can't be lied to, that his mind
is 'rubber' and bounces all deception. I don't know what 'rubber' is,
but I do know he's full of it. I spent the time reading and writing,
making sure not to forget my words and meanings. My English was strong,
but the tongues my parents spoke were fading from mine. I felt a great
sadness, seeing symbols etched in the boards along the wall, and not
being able to make them speak in my mind.
Well, my grieving was
interrupted. The Manager had some knights come to my house and drag me
out to the field. He didn't care if I was sick or not – there'd be grain
in it for me if I worked, so if I knew what was good for me, I'd work
with whatever strength I had left before the wheat started to rot. I
told him I didn't want grain, and he told me to trade it with someone.
He handed me a long-handled scythe, much more extravagant than my usual
bronze sickles, too brittle to last two moons. He said the blade was
Japanese, from his cousin around the world. He bought it for himself,
but now, he was supposedly coming down with something. He was ready to
let me keep it to rend, as long as I reaped that which I'd previously
sewn. I was impressed with its strong, but flexible wood, wowed to suit a
body, rather than straight and indifferent to the swinging of arms.
Sickles demand fierce grip at the wrist and strong shoulders, they force
you into a crouch to reach stems. They risk the fingers on your other
hand when dulled, as you try to hold the grass like hair and saw away.
This was the opposite, and with it, I could stand and sway side to side,
letting tall wheat become gold strands cross-hatched. I was the perfect
height to reach the top of the stems, just under the seeds, without so
much as bending my knees. The shining blade, silver as moonlight, was
tempered harder than a knight's broadsword, and curved like a crescent
of light past dark. I was in sheer awe at what roads could let people
bring into the world, simply by connecting them. At this moment, and
seeing his beaming pride, I felt a respect that connected the two of us.
I'm sad to confess, I had one more trick up my sleeve. In my defense, I
didn't want to use it. The scythe was a joy for work, and that joy
lasted a moon, but The Manager decided that if I didn't need grain, I
should work for free. My home was next to the field, and his knights
would grab me in the night, beat me, and toss me into the field 'fore
the sun could scarcely lick the surface of the Earth.
He told me I
was part of a greater good now, an' I said "That's a load of horseshit
so heavy I hope you got a hell of a deal for it."
So he punched me in the eye, and stood over me as the sun began to rise so I stood in his long shadow.
Before
he left, I asked him: "Why are you treating me like this? I've given
you my sweat, but this work is meant for many more than one. It's
impossible alone."
He turned around, and smiled. A malicious, proud
smile. He said, in an almost gravelly whisper only loud enough for rage,
"Because you're the only stupid bastard left here to kick around. The
Black Plague has ruined me, what boils all my hands at blade and makes
gaunt the old and young. It's taken my wife, and my firstborn son. If
you know where the dreaded shyte comes from, by all means go kill it
dead – you're far more useful here if you can't."
His wording seemed
a little mixed-up, I think. Did he mean to be sarcastic? Was he daring
me? Maybe that morning was the wrong time for him to choose prose over
practicum, because I was of a full mind to accept his taunt. Find the
menace, and strangle it. It was better than strangling him, whom I knew
could crush harder my neck if I was within reach. I decided not to be.
That night, I grabbed my grandfather's rain cloak, black with drawstrings in front and light stitching around the edges, and a long hood like a trail. I put on my own jacket, my mother's leather gloves and boots, and her old satchel belts. I took my father's coin in my pouches, hidden in boards under his bed and now at my disposal. I used the iron key to lock the doors, and hid it under a potted plant. Then, gleaming scythe covered in dull rags, I paid one of my father's coins to a carriage jockey, and jumped into the back of his cart, among sacks of grain and barrels of milk. He was to bring me as far away as he was able.
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