
Miriam and the Grey Wraiths
January 18, 2008Waves. Mesmerising. The repetition of their roar and crash is soothing. Their mantra weaves its way into my consciousness and I hear other sounds. Seagulls, the peal of a bell on a buoy, the wind. I am aware of light filtering through my closed eyelids. All is red darkness then, as I slowly open my eyes, fresh, bright and white. Sunlight pours through an open window and door into a whitewashed room. Shutters on the windows are latched open to welcome a breeze which carries into the room the sounds of the sea.
A woman is busily moving around the room humming to herself.
“Where am I?” I whisper, my voice dry and hoarse.
The woman turns at my voice and smiles,
“Mudjimba. And not a moment too soon.”
She sets a jug of water next to my bed and pulls up a chair.
“Six days you’ve been lying there,” she says pouring the water into a large glass, “Six days we’ve been waiting for your soul to decide whether it was leaving or staying.”
She helps me up to sip a little water. It is deliciously cool and sweet and I greedily try to gulp more down my dry aching throat. The woman chuckles,
“It looks like you’re staying a while longer,” she smiles, “Mind now, your stomach is weak. Don’t go bloating yourself on water straight away. How about I bring you some soup?”
Her grip is strong and firm as she gently eases me up into a sitting position. I gasp as I feel fire shoot through my left arm. It is swathed in clean white bandages.
“Whatever attacked you did a good job,” she says, “You were a right mess when Vito brought you in.”
“Vito?”
“Carried you up the jetty all the way here. Laid you in that very spot you’re lying now. He was terribly worried. He told us he’d pulled you out of the water half dead. I’ll have to send him word that you’re well. You’re a lucky girl to have had him looking after you. He’s a good boy, Vito. I knew his Grandfather. Lovely man; wonderful smile.”
I sit quietly, propped up by soft pillows, listening to the sea, thinking about my new habit of being carried on and off boats. The woman brings me a bowl of soup.
“Here love. Now that you’ve decided to rejoin us we best get some meat back on those bones. You’ve got a long journey ahead of you. You’ll need all the strength you can get.”
The soup is fragrant and delicious. I thank the woman then ask,
“Who are you?”
“I am Miriam, this is my house,” she smiles again, “ I thought you knew. Vito says you called my name several times while he sailed here.”
I shake my head,
“I don’t remember that.”
“Well my love,” Miriam says, sitting again,” I need you to remember as much as you can. I cannot treat you properly until I know what it was that attacked you. It has poisoned your blood. That is why you are still in so much pain.”
I tell Miriam all I can remember about the attack.
She sits silently as she listens, her face growing grim. As I finish she shakes her head,
“Grey Wraiths. Their poison moves fast and deep. You have put up a good fight to get this far.”
Miriam gets up and begins removing jars and bottles from the shelves lining the room. As she talks she mixes oils and herbs from the jars and bottles into a large mortar and begins to mix.
“Those eels were Grey Wraiths, women who have failed Triton’s test and are imprisoned until they can appease him. They are shape-shifters who seek out and hunt down travellers in order to steal their gifts. They are very dangerous. I have seen them once or twice but have never had anything to do with them. You are very strong to have survived such a vicious attack from so many of them.”
“I did what I had to do,” I reply simply, “They were trying to kill me.”
Miriam nods,
“They are greedy and relentless. They will do anything for gold or precious talismans. If they can steal your gift and your life they can buy their own freedom.”
She begins to unwrap the bandage covering my arm,
“Let’s look at that arm shall we?”
Pain jolts through my arm. Once it is uncovered I see an ugly, infected mess of sores and scabs.
“That poultice will clear it up in no time now we know how to treat it,” Miriam smiles and she begins to hum as she applies the mixture in the bowl to my wound, once she has finished she rebandages my arm, “Now let’s take a look at the rest of you.”
She helps me remove my shirt and I look at my left side. It is completely covered in deep cuts and gouges. They are all clean and healing but I look terrible.
“I said you were a mess didn’t I?” Miriam says, “Fortunately they are all coral cuts so I can treat them easily. They look worse than they are.”
She hums again as she washes them with another mixture. The room smells pleasantly of herbs and oils. After she helps me put my shirt on Miriam leaves me to rest.
I close my eyes and remember the strong arms pushing me and lifting me through the water. I realize it wasn’t just Vito who lifted me from the sea.
“Blessings to you Triton”, I whisper through the sunlit window.
The sea roars and crashes comfortingly in reply.
Chefleur 18.1.08
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