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It rained a lot that June, and July, and August, but mostly June; probably no more than any other start of summer, or middle, or end. But this time I was there to feel it; to hear it; to smell it, and to watch it from a splintery chestnut bench beneath the sheltering arms of Blueberry. It was an eyelid-drooping-day (that day we arrived), and I remember well the syrupy spread of hazy heat o’er that frog polluted lake (or pond) and the perspiration, all but dripping from every spruce (or hemlock). “And this,” David said, “is the Barn.” Cracked and shaky it stood like a dusty, weathered book, unwanted, tossed into the woods. “Here stay the pigs and the horses.” “And this,” Daniel said, “is the animal pen.” Where goats and sheep of black and white roved their cells with passive acceptance, and puppies pawed and nipped at each other’s ears, and ducks awaited the arrival of a hungry fox (that blasted, blasted fox) And then the Taj Mahal like a jewel protruding from the forest’s earthy ***** sporting its sparkling bathroom stretching on as a football field, complete with stadium seats of the finest porcelain. Through the burning day we rambled, every inhale, a different experience— for me: aromas of the new to someday fashion potent memories, for them: a blissful return. Like coming home (as in fact it was). And though it had a night, that day could run forever on a thin white track picked freshly off the stack, but it won’t for it was but the first domino and maybe even the one that is blank on both sides. Lazily we fell as if onto the moon through mornings of sluggish scrubbing, afternoons of anything, anything at all, and bare-chest-bonfire nights. And that rubber ball loving no one like it did Philip. With solid swings; fantastic flourishes his hand was as God’s— directing the perilous orbit with ease and the care of a diamond cutter. And so it was us, the four: I, the brothers, and the ruler of the tethered pole conquering seven foot ping pong tables and seven acre deer fences and mountains. So passed weeks, and we were diminished to a trio for David had stepped off of the continent to the land of the “highest” religion, but we didn’t miss a beat and plowed through month’s end, ridding our bodies of water through nothing but sweat. And we held every moment for ransom forcing the next to give us better so by sunset we were rich as kings, and then Robin Hood would slip out of the woods and rob us blind ‘til we awoke and stole it all back. So came July, trotting in with bloated pride upon his mighty steed of white and red and blue, and us: riding cheerfully behind. It was a splendid night on moon-streaked shores where once again we fell to one less than three, and Daniel with his ancient mandolin, and I with hearty laughter played the night a song more lovely even than those steady, falling waves under bottle rocket stars. Then celebration folded as peace made way for mighty conqueror’s return, and we paraded through the streets (gravel strewn, and dusty clouded), four flags raised high on their posts once again. Our arrival was rejoiced and met with days of games and feasting, and we embraced our loyal subjects and friends and family and bathed in bliss until our skin wrinkled. The festivities were a glorious potpourri of doctor ball and bombardment, frisbee goal and son of prisoner’s base, but one kicked dust in all of there faces and was known to only us. The most dangerous game, in expansive fields of ferns and fiery thorns and rivers of knotted rhododendrons was played, and we were darting swallows, prancing fawns, and stealthy owls hunters and hunted wielding broken hockey sticks. Our war wounds burned when merged with the salty grime of humidity and blood and ravenous gnats. Gritting our teeth, we brandished our staves, Hacking through brush, towards survival. Each quivering breath— an alarm -to prey or predator- ‘til we discovered it was just our own, and then a snapping twig would bulge our eyes and wretch our heads to put us right back on our guard. And when the chase was on it was a race against the beating of our hearts (whose footsteps may have ran a mile in a minute). With flailing arms, wildly we sprinted grateful to the wind for tending to our wounds. And it always came down to three: two to make the wolf against one to make the timid hare, and our brilliant, clashing swordplay out-rang the tick of the clock until our arms were merely crutches held firm against our quavering knees. Hungry, weary, we returned to eat our fill and drink nearly twenty glasses of water, and Nate: his nine cups of tea, and Sarah: her mug, larger than the coffee *** itself, and Rhodan: the entire pond for his sweat-rag had ****** him bone dry. We sat impatiently conversing through our grinning teeth who yearned to navigate the textures of the awaited food. And then it arrived, shoved out onto ebony countertops, accompanied by salt and pepper. We downed every morsel in a single, hour-long gulp, then cursed our gluttonous guts for expanding far beyond their boundaries and sat for walking was as thin a hope as eating dessert. Rhodan then reached his charcoal hand and swiped the salt from where it had static stood: beneath the feet of its dark companion. I watched in wonder as the dropped container swayed and swayed— a drunkard with his shoes nailed firmly to the ground—, then righted itself with a final shake. We all declared it simple and stacked the salt atop the dusky survivor. Swipe after swipe, we beat that pepper ****** and left the pale mineral to gravity’s mercy, rebuilding and razing again and again our cookies n’ cream totem pole, but not a soul prevailed. Finally, Rhodan interrupted our failures, and between squeaking giggles voiced, “Well, you can’t do it that way!” and gently helped the milky shaker to its feet and retrieved the other battered building block. “You see,” he said while delicately setting his stage “the pepper must always be on top.” With a blink he swept his hand across the table rendering the black bottle dizzy but securely parked in its place. “It’s the only one that can land on its feet.” Amazed, we tried again, of course and succeeded for the most part, both perplexed and delighted— a combination that is a magician’s best friend. Although, Rhodan was no magician, just a giddy boy who understood simple physics and lived for moments where he could explain his confused and jumbled symbolism (the kind that you know you could discover if you searched for half of a Summer). Then August Where time, not at all anxious to win, slowed tremendously on the homestretch. Every day that passed was a cloud who emptied all of its contents before waving goodbye. The water slowed our falling bodies even more (as water tends to do), and David with his quiet disposition sung the loudest, danced the wildest at waning firesides, and soon we all began to wish that we would never land. And as the ground rushed ever nearer we made our final mark on brim of mighty mountain whose shadow had generously cooled us from the sun all Summer. And the skies leased a stronger storm than any we had ever beheld, and gazing from that towering peak into the face of midday’s cloud, we thanked God for not dropping us as hard as he did that rain. And now, thinking back, I would say it rained more in August than in June for that single afternoon of thunder shattered skies must have drowned the earth a thousand times over and then some. And when we made our dripping descent, I heard the echo of a gleeful voice revealing the secret, and I knew then that we were pepper, that we would land feet first so as to leap straight up again. That we would soar from the chalky flats of that pallid moon to discover planets of lower gravity and more rain and greener forests and higher towers.
0
Nov 29, 2011
Nov 29, 2011 at 6:15 AM UTC
Salt and Pepper Towers
It rained a lot that June, and July, and August, but mostly June; probably no more than any other start of summer, or middle, or end. But this time I was there to feel it; to hear it; to smell it, and to watch it from a splintery chestnut bench beneath the sheltering arms of Blueberry. It was an eyelid-drooping-day (that day we arrived), and I remember well the syrupy spread of hazy heat o’er that frog polluted lake (or pond) and the perspiration, all but dripping from every spruce (or hemlock). “And this,” David said, “is the Barn.” Cracked and shaky it stood like a dusty, weathered book, unwanted, tossed into the woods. “Here stay the pigs and the horses.” “And this,” Daniel said, “is the animal pen.” Where goats and sheep of black and white roved their cells with passive acceptance, and puppies pawed and nipped at each other’s ears, and ducks awaited the arrival of a hungry fox (that blasted, blasted fox) And then the Taj Mahal like a jewel protruding from the forest’s earthy ***** sporting its sparkling bathroom stretching on as a football field, complete with stadium seats of the finest porcelain. Through the burning day we rambled, every inhale, a different experience— for me: aromas of the new to someday fashion potent memories, for them: a blissful return. Like coming home (as in fact it was). And though it had a night, that day could run forever on a thin white track picked freshly off the stack, but it won’t for it was but the first domino and maybe even the one that is blank on both sides. Lazily we fell as if onto the moon through mornings of sluggish scrubbing, afternoons of anything, anything at all, and bare-chest-bonfire nights. And that rubber ball loving no one like it did Philip. With solid swings; fantastic flourishes his hand was as God’s— directing the perilous orbit with ease and the care of a diamond cutter. And so it was us, the four: I, the brothers, and the ruler of the tethered pole conquering seven foot ping pong tables and seven acre deer fences and mountains. So passed weeks, and we were diminished to a trio for David had stepped off of the continent to the land of the “highest” religion, but we didn’t miss a beat and plowed through month’s end, ridding our bodies of water through nothing but sweat. And we held every moment for ransom forcing the next to give us better so by sunset we were rich as kings, and then Robin Hood would slip out of the woods and rob us blind ‘til we awoke and stole it all back. So came July, trotting in with bloated pride upon his mighty steed of white and red and blue, and us: riding cheerfully behind. It was a splendid night on moon-streaked shores where once again we fell to one less than three, and Daniel with his ancient mandolin, and I with hearty laughter played the night a song more lovely even than those steady, falling waves under bottle rocket stars. Then celebration folded as peace made way for mighty conqueror’s return, and we paraded through the streets (gravel strewn, and dusty clouded), four flags raised high on their posts once again. Our arrival was rejoiced and met with days of games and feasting, and we embraced our loyal subjects and friends and family and bathed in bliss until our skin wrinkled. The festivities were a glorious potpourri of doctor ball and bombardment, frisbee goal and son of prisoner’s base, but one kicked dust in all of there faces and was known to only us. The most dangerous game, in expansive fields of ferns and fiery thorns and rivers of knotted rhododendrons was played, and we were darting swallows, prancing fawns, and stealthy owls hunters and hunted wielding broken hockey sticks. Our war wounds burned when merged with the salty grime of humidity and blood and ravenous gnats. Gritting our teeth, we brandished our staves, Hacking through brush, towards survival. Each quivering breath— an alarm -to prey or predator- ‘til we discovered it was just our own, and then a snapping twig would bulge our eyes and wretch our heads to put us right back on our guard. And when the chase was on it was a race against the beating of our hearts (whose footsteps may have ran a mile in a minute). With flailing arms, wildly we sprinted grateful to the wind for tending to our wounds. And it always came down to three: two to make the wolf against one to make the timid hare, and our brilliant, clashing swordplay out-rang the tick of the clock until our arms were merely crutches held firm against our quavering knees. Hungry, weary, we returned to eat our fill and drink nearly twenty glasses of water, and Nate: his nine cups of tea, and Sarah: her mug, larger than the coffee *** itself, and Rhodan: the entire pond for his sweat-rag had ****** him bone dry. We sat impatiently conversing through our grinning teeth who yearned to navigate the textures of the awaited food. And then it arrived, shoved out onto ebony countertops, accompanied by salt and pepper. We downed every morsel in a single, hour-long gulp, then cursed our gluttonous guts for expanding far beyond their boundaries and sat for walking was as thin a hope as eating dessert. Rhodan then reached his charcoal hand and swiped the salt from where it had static stood: beneath the feet of its dark companion. I watched in wonder as the dropped container swayed and swayed— a drunkard with his shoes nailed firmly to the ground—, then righted itself with a final shake. We all declared it simple and stacked the salt atop the dusky survivor. Swipe after swipe, we beat that pepper ****** and left the pale mineral to gravity’s mercy, rebuilding and razing again and again our cookies n’ cream totem pole, but not a soul prevailed. Finally, Rhodan interrupted our failures, and between squeaking giggles voiced, “Well, you can’t do it that way!” and gently helped the milky shaker to its feet and retrieved the other battered building block. “You see,” he said while delicately setting his stage “the pepper must always be on top.” With a blink he swept his hand across the table rendering the black bottle dizzy but securely parked in its place. “It’s the only one that can land on its feet.” Amazed, we tried again, of course and succeeded for the most part, both perplexed and delighted— a combination that is a magician’s best friend. Although, Rhodan was no magician, just a giddy boy who understood simple physics and lived for moments where he could explain his confused and jumbled symbolism (the kind that you know you could discover if you searched for half of a Summer). Then August Where time, not at all anxious to win, slowed tremendously on the homestretch. Every day that passed was a cloud who emptied all of its contents before waving goodbye. The water slowed our falling bodies even more (as water tends to do), and David with his quiet disposition sung the loudest, danced the wildest at waning firesides, and soon we all began to wish that we would never land. And as the ground rushed ever nearer we made our final mark on brim of mighty mountain whose shadow had generously cooled us from the sun all Summer. And the skies leased a stronger storm than any we had ever beheld, and gazing from that towering peak into the face of midday’s cloud, we thanked God for not dropping us as hard as he did that rain. And now, thinking back, I would say it rained more in August than in June for that single afternoon of thunder shattered skies must have drowned the earth a thousand times over and then some. And when we made our dripping descent, I heard the echo of a gleeful voice revealing the secret, and I knew then that we were pepper, that we would land feet first so as to leap straight up again. That we would soar from the chalky flats of that pallid moon to discover planets of lower gravity and more rain and greener forests and higher towers.
joshua-quinones
Written by
Nov 29, 2011
Nov 29, 2011 at 6:15 AM UTC
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