Wishing Something Bolder [Katelyn/Vasco]
Sept 7, 2021 22:55:42 GMT -5
Post by marguerite harvard d2a (zori) on Sept 7, 2021 22:55:42 GMT -5
v a s c o
You came for me in fast forward
On a claim for something ordered
A way through and past the history that held you
I'd tell my own story through you
Tell it loud to never lose you
The night after auction, when Yani had fought sleep so hard she’d drooped her head in the folding chair next to me, bonfire still crackling, and I’d had to whisper the sleep out of her eyes and practically carry her back to the cabin, I’d been struck by the cool of autumn’s embrace. I’d finished off the smoked sausage with rice and beans with a cup of coffee, more for the bitter taste than to keep me awake, but it’d done its job well enough. Midnight came and went while I sat in front of the little firepit beside my cabin, tucked between a folding chair and the red and orange flame.
I counted the stars up overhead, each pinprick of white sprawled against a black sky. Reminded me of eleven, so few streetlamps to break apart the darkness overhead, you could get lost watching the heavens dance. My Tía Xuxa used to talk about the witching hour, when the world grew still, and secrets revealed themselves. But it wasn’t the scary stories folks told about demons or dark spirits crossing over to torment us other people told. No, we’d always been raised that the spirits of those who’d gone had every right to still be here, and that no one could tell the truth like a ghost. What reason would they have to lie?
And when I was young, I used to wonder how they’d speak to us. Or if Gero would appear after he died to give me all the wisdom I’d missed when I’d been too young to really listen. It’s the fault of getting older, that you wish you could hear all the same stories over again to piece together the odds and ends you’d missed the first time. Here we are making a truth for our kids to miss, for all the edges to fray and come apart, too. But there’s so many of us, I have to think that they’ll get together and talk about us like we do of Gero and Xuxa and the others who’ve gone. We may have been scattered seeds across broken soil, but there’s vines and leaves growing, a whole lush garden there.
They speak to us, still, if we take the time to listen.
A chill swept through the space between me and the campfire, and I huddle a bit closer to the flame. I’m reminded of the fiddle I took out to play earlier, still untouched. I’d meant to share a song with the few on the grounds near us, but my talking got the best of me, and I’d forgotten about it entirely. I could spend hours getting to know the strangers who’d made camp next to us, sipping beers and talking about life in eleven. I wouldn’t have even noticed if someone had slipped away with our new donkey.
But now the rest had gone to sleep, and I was left in too quiet a silence. I pulled the fiddle up under my chin and lay a hand on my bow before starting out a low tune. I closed my eyes and pictured the last time Benat and I had played for our family. He’d been almost a decade younger but could spit out a tune as though he’d been playing it his whole life. We’d go back and forth, finding rhyme and reason together until our fingers blistered. He’d had all the best of eleven: the gentle heart, boundless empathy, and a way to keep people rapt on the words that he’d say. He would’ve been a good mayor, I thought, as just and fair as I’d tried to be.
I set down my bow and nod toward the sky.
As the fire crackled again, I sat back against the chair, and could hear the footsteps of someone sneaking out after hours, too.
“Katelyn!” I’d started to grin from ear to ear, “I hope my playing didn’t wake you. I feel as though I haven’t seen you in ages. How are you? I’m sorry – Yani’s been dragging me all over the fair, and I’ve been running around with Emma, and Sofia, too – I’d meant to call on your cabin the other day.”
I motioned to the chair next to me.
“It’s good to see you, old friend. Why don’t you sit next to me? I could use some company. It's just me and the ghosts, now.”