
“I would understand completely if you didn’t love us anymore,” I say to the Outer as humanity roils in its own troubles. “Maybe you never did.”
The Outer slowly removes her apron, wipes her hands, and gives me her full attention. She is the grandmother I miss the most, daffodil bulbs I planted in the fall now emerging green. She is rain. She is equally at home in the bassinette and the casket. She digs ruthlessly into the soul like a miner extracting the rare elements needed to provide light to the world.
“And it’s okay if you don’t love me anymore,” she answers in the voice of a thousand cranes.
“Why do you say things like that?” I ask. I suspect the Outer is being strategic, not honest. I feel certain she wants my love.
“It’s just a badly translated word,” she shrugs. “You have a very limited understanding of, well, of anything. But especially the substance of that word.”
She’s right. Love is an impossible notion. A dark foreboding, an insistent demand. It’s both threat and promise, a transactional negotiation, a rigged wager. It’s time taken away. Time given back. Blood everywhere. Tears flowing. It’s organic and orgasmic. Sacrificial, selfish, obligatory, and oblique.
“There’s a total solar eclipse coming,” the Outer says. “What do you make of that?”
“Nothing,” I say. “Should I?”
“I would if I were you,” she says. “But then, I make something of everything.”
The Outer gives her homemade pinafore a shake and puts it back on. It’s a badly stained yellow. She wraps the strings around her ample middle and ties them in front. I’m filled with envy. I want an apron, too.
“In some places, for a moment, your tiny moon will obscure your view of the sun. I’d call that something,” she says. She’s begun to glow. I realize I am in mortal danger.
“Moon!” I yell. “Moon! I need you.”
Outer laughs. The nuclear fusion continues. Moon arrives just in time and covers me.
“Moon,” I say, humbled. “I love you.”
The great stirring and swirling and folding continues. I’m an easily eclipsed flash of joy, a dash of salt, a grain of sand, a sunflower seed. I offer thanks to the Moon and Stars, the Outer, the Inner, the Unknowable, the Tao, and the Way.
“I love you, too,” the Moon says back.
She hands me an apron and a wide-brimmed hat. A makeshift kitchen has been blown to bits, seven servers and their beautiful aprons, gone. I am desperately sad. But in this grim, eternal spring, the muddy garden calls me by name, and for now, I know where I belong.
your originality wit humor and dark wisdom never ceases to delight and amaze me. I look forward to reading what you write.
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Hey, Nancy–thanks for the encouragement and kind words. I look forward to what I write, but often, with fear and trembling ;).
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Thank you, Rita. You know I’m a fan, but this one brought a wave of gratitude and near-tears.
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Hey Marianne! I know what you mean. That state of near-tears follows me around most days. Gratitude helps. Love you.
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Your comment about the seven servers took my breath away. Thank you for remembering and honoring those we may overlook due to time and distance. You are a brilliant writer and a beautiful soul, Rita.
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Thanks, Kathy. The repeated footage and the images of those volunteers blown to bits in their well-marked well-intended vehicles haunt me. We are doing unspeakable things to each other, but I try to speak it anyway. Your comments, support, and love matter so much. Thanks again.
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While I am saddened almost every day, there’s poetry in every day, too. Thank you so much for your writings.
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Yes, and sometimes the sadness is the source for the best poetry. Keep welcoming both! Thanks for checking in.
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