Dear Dave,
A song swallows
me. It runs over my body like white milk. But a century passes by
before it is absorbed into my skin and another before I can even
begin to feel it in my bones. I wait. And then I wait some more.
In my search for a melody that I can not sing, I have to be content
in finding a word that reveals what I hide. And whisper it to myself
so you cannot hear. With closed eyelids and open eyes.
Words, as you
know, are my last refuge. Their liquidity is like a balm to errant
thoughts that gape open in my mind. I find comfort in their solidity.
You write with straight upward lines that don't move even as they
run across the fraying page. I saw when you weren't looking, and
I memorised the strokes. Like I memorised blue eyes, pale skin,
uneven touch.
Sometimes my
memory fails me. The picture loses resolution. An infinite field
becomes a desert. The blades of grass replaced by grains of sand.
I look around for water. It is a scorching day. But you stand still
amidst a solar eclipse. The dust rises and then my eyes forsake
me like my memory did. I fall asleep thirsty among the dunes.
When I awaken
I hope I will have drunk some water in my dreams. It has been the
shortest of nights and the longest of nights. I lie alone as the
dawn breaks, listening to birds gulp mouthfuls of clouds as they
fly from unknown beginnings to unknown destinations. I know not
where I am but I can feel wet grass squashed under my body as mosquitoes
drink my blood with renewed vigour. My eyes are closed but I have
not slept. Forgive me father for I have sinned. Forgive me for I
have lived.
There is a town
by a sea, with a mountain that overshadows the waves. When you walk
in that town, you can sometimes hear a watchful spirit calling from
the window. It screams through walls of glass. It speaks to you
of known dangers and unknown emotins. When Pandora opens her box,
the ills of the world know no boundaries. It is up to us to separate
the happiness from the sadness, the seeming eternity of darkness
from the promise of light. When we do not claim the joys that are
written into our destiny, fate itself forsakes us. The spirit howls
louder when the moon is pregnant. I close my ears and whisper the
words of my song again and again. Will my whispers drown his pain?
In the midst
of nightfall is there a living flame? In the searing depth of heat
is there an oasis of shade? In the palest of skins is there longing
for colour? In the narrowest of streets is there space for a tree?
In the chaos of life is there some promise of coherence?
The flowers
at my feet, which I took so much care not to trample, still smell
fragrant if I press them to my cheek. But I want them to live so
I make tender patterns around them with my feet, creating invisible
ornaments that meander and swirl like dervishes. Those buds that
wilted before their time, emit a heady, pungent odour. Some of these
I have attempted to save in my books, amongst leaves teeming with
countless secrets. One day I may try to break the silence of the
pages and replant my faded flowers under a new sun. When the time
comes, and when you knock at my door. My field will be my vase.
There is a window
in a town beyond a town. Where a flower blooms in cerise glory.
Every morning it would tell me silent stories. About angels and
demons and fears and hopes. Birds would carry these stories to me
and lay them in the small of my hand. I was not allowed into that
garden because I came from far away. The garden belonged to those
who had long found shade under its tree. But my window let me breathe
in its ambrosial perfume, and showed me glimpses of its petals,
whispering through the slats of a bamboo blind. That flower opens
in my dreams. It sways gently in the breeze. And it sings the song
I will one day sing.
If you listen
carefully, you might hear it.
Regards,
Fifi
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