Archive for the ‘Chefleur's Caravan’ Category

h1

Miriam and the Grey Wraiths

January 18, 2008

house

Waves. 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.

sea

Chefleur 18.1.08

http://meetmysister.wordpress.com/

 

h1

Was it a Dream or Too Many ABHs?

January 15, 2008

 While I was hallucinating on my way back up from the dive hole I had a flashback to one of our big nights …I don’t think there are gorillas at Rainbow Beach…

Chefleur

h1

The Price of Appeasement

January 14, 2008

Despite having a wonderful time with Vito I cannot stop fretting about my visit to Triton. I have no idea what to give him.
The morning of the dive dawns and I am particularly troubled.
“What’s up Che?” Vito asks.
“I have nothing to offer Triton,” I say, “I can’t think of a single thing that would be appropriate.”
Vito’s easy grin slides across his face and he shakes his head,
“You worry too much. You’ll think of something.”
I smack my head in frustration,
“I haven’t even paid you for the crossing!” I cry. This time Vito laughs out loud,
“You paid me several times, in full, the night you came stumbling up the dock looking for a boat.”
“I did?”
“You paid for more than a week of crossings. How else do you think you’ve been getting food and board here?” he asks laughing again.
“Oh, I see,” I am flummoxed, “I guess I thought, I thought maybe you…”
Vito roars with laughter,
“You thought I was wooing you?”  He continues to laugh and begins to wipe tears from his eyes. I am feeling more and more uncomfortable and beginning to get a little angry.
“I’m sorry Che,” Vito chuckles, “I’m very flattered, but if you wanted holiday romance you should have picked the boat of my brother, Santo, it is always moored right next to the Queen’s Fancy. If you had fallen over his mooring lines Santo would have carried you aboard and taken advantage of your inebriated state. I doubt you would have seen the outside of the cabin for days.”
Vito starts to spin the yacht’s wheel,
“I can take you to him right now if you want.”
I laugh,
“Don’t you dare!”
Vito reaches in to a pouch on his hip,
“Seeing as this is your last morning aboard I owe you some change,” he hands me three  gold coins. I am stunned,
“How much did I give you Vito?”
“You paid me eight Lemurian Guineas and wouldn’t listen to me when I tried to return it. So I decided to give you your money’s worth. I usually charge a guinea a day. That covers everything. You’ve had five days on board. You have three Guineas change. Now we’re square!” he smiles again.
“Vito, you are a perfect captain and a true gentleman. Your Great Grandfather would be very proud of you.”
“I like to uphold my family name,” Vito says, “Unlike my scoundrel heartbreaker brother Santo. I can still take you to meet him if you like!”
He chuckles to himself,
“So, Che, have you decided on your gift to Triton?”
I tumble the coins in my palm, listening to their heavy metallic chunking.
“Yes I have,” I say,” Can I borrow some beeswax?”
In my cabin I search my pack for a small roll of handmade paper that I have planned on using as a journal. I take a sheet and begin to write;

Thankyou Triton
For your gift of the sea.
Thankyou Triton
For sending me guardians, guides and companions
Who are strong, wise, honest and true.
Thankyou Triton
For teaching me I can be these things too.

I roll up the sheet of paper and seal it inside the beeswax. I wrap the wax pellet, with the 3 gold coins inside my favourite silk scarf; hand painted in turquoise with golden dragonflies.
Within an hour my bags are packed and I am on deck, suited up, ready to dive.
“Ready to rock and roll?” Vito asks winking at me.
“Gung-ho!” I reply. I have butterflies in my stomach despite the preparations of the previous days.
“I’ll be right here,’ Vito says seriously, “I’m not going on to Mudjimba without you.”
“Thanks,” I try to smile, “I’ll see you soon.”
I dive into the water and easily find the entrance to the deep reef. It is a hole, maybe about three metres wide, ringed with a colourful crown of coral. I push my way down, taking in the amazing and varied marine life. My offering is safely stowed in a pouch around my neck. I start to relax and enjoy the breathtakingly colourful surroundings.
Out of the corner of my eye I see something swimming beside me. I turn and see a large grey eel with red eyes. In a moment it is joined by two more identical grey eels. They seem oddly out of place amongst this rainbow world. The eels appear to be following me, swimming closer and closer, forcing me against the coral wall of the dive hole.
In unison, and without warning, they lunge at me, maws open, displaying viciously long and sharp teeth. They aim for my mask. Instinctively I raise my arm to protect my face.
A searing pain burns through my upper arm as their teeth tear through the suit and deep into my flesh. Again and again they attack. I keep my left arm up over my face and try to push them away with my free hand.
 The eels are relentless, determined to reach my mask. I cannot scare them off, the hole is too deep to attract Vito’s attention and I am loathe to swim back to the surface without fulfilling my journey. The dive hole is still not very wide. I bend my legs, push my feet flat against the wall and propel myself, as hard as I can to the other side of the hole. The coral cuts into my arm and side but the eels disperse. I swim deeper, blood pouring from my wounds. The eels return; again I shield my face and smash them into the wall as they bite and gouge my arm in a frenzy to reach my mask. They attack again and again; I lose track of how many times I have to torpedo from one side of the hole to the other. I can feel water filling my suit through the many tears and rips caused by the razor sharp coral. Eventually I realize the eels have gone. I don’t know if I have killed them or just scared them off. Blood is pouring from my left arm and side and I am on fire with pain. 
I manage to swim down to the floor of the hole. It is covered with blood red coral. I cannot tell if the coral is red naturally or if I am tainting everything with my blood. With my  good arm I prize my gift free from the pouch. I place it on the bed of coral. As I do a branch of red coral gently falls infront of my fingers. I stow it safly in the pouch, my fingers fumbling to close it.
I am dizzy with pain and fatigue. I cannot read the dials of my air tank but I know I used a lot of air during the fight. The brightly coloured coral is becoming blurred and indistinct. There seems to be nothing but blood. I cannot remember which way is up. I am incredibly tired. I just want to stop and sleep. I can see nothing. I feel the water around me. It is pushing me. It is pulling me. Lifting me away from the pain like many strong, comforting arms. All is darkness and red.

Chefleur

14.1.08

www.meetmysister.wordpress.com
 

h1

Queen’s Fancy

January 10, 2008

yacht 

The days of the Pageant are a blur of activity. The afternoons are spent on the barge participating in and watching performances; the evenings find most travellers celebrating at The Golden Camel ‘til the wee small hours; the mornings are spent recuperating and exploring the town. I have a room at The Golden Camel, where my belongings are safely stowed, but I prefer to sleep off the night’s festivities on the beach.
One morning, after a particularly raucous evening at The Golden Camel, I awake to find myself in the sleeping quarters of a small, red yacht. I cannot for the life of me remember how or why I am here. I groggily make my way above deck and am immediately greeted by a cheery male voice,
“Ready to rock and roll, Chefleur?”
I force my eyes to open and register a young man with dark, curly hair, twinkling eyes and an infectious smile.
“Come again?” I croak grasping my head to stop it from falling in two.
“Are you ready to dive and appease the Tritan?” he smiles, “You were gung-ho last night, brought all your gear with you too.”
He indicates my bag and pack. I groan remembering suddenly, with too much clarity, the night before. A group of us had been downing a particularly powerful concoction called an Alien Brain Haemorrhage. After 9 or 10 rounds (or more?), interspersed with some vigorous dancing and a howling competition (no wonder my throat hurt!) we decided that the time had come to appease the Tritan. We had stumbled to the docks, singing at the top of our voices (something about leaving a hat?) and had apparently commandeered our boats. Fortunately for us the boats’ crews had convinced us that appeasing the Tritan could wait.
As far as I am concerned, this morning, the Tritan can wait a while longer. The yacht shifts gently beneath me, my stomach lurches. The Tritan can wait a lot longer. I sit down heavily and try to focus on my feet.
“Here, have some coffee.”
A mug of steaming, sweet, strong black coffee appears and I gratefully accept it.
“Thankyou,” I croak, inhaling the wonderful aroma.
“I’m Vitorro, your Captain,” the smiling young man sitting across from me says, “You can call me Vito. Welcome aboard the Queen’s Fancy.”
“Thankyou Vito.” I say, trying to move my head as little as possible, “I think, under the circumstances, diving can wait for today.”
Vito chuckles,
“Just let me know when you’re ready. You’re welcome to bunk here ‘til you’re ready to leave for Mudgimba.”
This seems perfect; I could use a couple of quiet nights to clear my head before I head out to the island. I nod in agreement then hold my head in agony. Vito chuckles again,
“Tell you what; I’ll take you out to Morning Lagoon. It’s the perfect spot for a hangover cure.”
Before I can reply he springs up and is busying himself casting off, coiling ropes, hoisting the sail and we are pulling out of the docks. His energy, enthusiasm and cheerfulness are exhausting to watch. I drag myself into a nearby hammock, pull my hat over my eyes and gratefully sink into oblivion.
When I wake up I find we are surrounded by a sea of brilliant blue. Not too far off on the shore palm trees nod above pure white sand. On the far side of the lagoon I can see the surf breaking over a wall of natural rocks. The lagoon itself is blue, beautiful and serene.
“Amazing” I whisper.
“Pretty good eh?” Vito grins appearing from below deck, “You hungry?”
On the deck a table is laid with a platter of fresh pineapple, mangoes and grapes; a plate of crisp bacon, eggs and toast; a pot of coffee and a jug of water.
“Wow!” I exclaim. My stomach rumbles in agreement. I am starving.
Vito and I sit down to eat. While I enjoy my breakfast Vito explains that the Queen’s Fancy was built by his great-grandfather. It has been handed down from father to son ever since,
“The family men have always been sailors.” He smiles proudly. I admire the boat. It certainly is beautiful. Before I know it Vito has cleared the table.
“How about a swim?”  He asks. The water is incredibly inviting and I need to wash out the grime and sweat from the night before. I head down to my cabin to change. Afterwards I sort through my pack and I find the music box. I have been so busy with the Pageant that I had forgotten it.
I open the lid and the beautiful music surrounds me. I am transported by its sadness. I cannot hear anything else. The cabin door swings open and Vito’s face leans in briefly and then disappears. I come to with shock, Ahmed’s warning ringing vividly in my ears. I shut the music box and stuff it into my bag then rush above deck. Vito is nowhere to be seen. I begin to panic and start to sob, dashing from one side of the yacht to the other, screaming Vito’s name. What have I done? Poor Vito, doomed to rot in Sheba’s prison for ever. How could I?
I am sitting on the side of the yacht crying and crying when Vito surfaces from underneath the Queen’s Fancy. His grinning face soon becomes puzzled.
“Oh Vito, Vito!” I cry, “You’re here! You’re still here!”
“What?”
“You’re here, you haven’t disappeared, I didn’t kill you!”
Vito shakes his head as he climbs aboard,
“I can’t hear you.”
I stop in shock, then start sobbing afresh. I’ve cursed him anyway; he’s deaf as a stone. This is terrible. I sink to my knees in front of him.
“Oh Vito, Vito I’m so, so sorry! Please forgive me”
Vito grabs me by the shoulders and lifts me to my feet, real concern showing on his face, “Hang on Chefleur,” he says, reaching to his ears with his hands, “I’ve put bees wax in my ears and I can’t hear a thing you’re saying. Is everything okay?”
“Wax? In your ears?” I sniff and hiccough.
“Yes,” he smiles, holding out his hand and showing me two balls of wax “It keeps the water out. What’s the matter? You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
I feel very foolish and very relieved at the same time. I begin to giggle at the absurdity of it all. Finally I compose myself enough to tell Vito the story. He shakes his head.
“That Ahmed has some strange things in his stall, I’m not saying his story is true but I would be careful with that box. There is some powerful magic around the Kerith River. I’m just glad my ears were blocked!” he looks at me and begins to laugh, “You should have seen your face…Oh Vito! Forgive me, forgive me!”
He mimics my crying and weeping and collapses in giggles. I thump him,
“Are you always so cheerful?” I cry in mock exasperation.
“Always!” he crows, “Come, let’s swim!”
My fears are forgotten and washed away by this joyous young man and the beautiful Morning Lagoon.

lagoon.jpg

 

Chefleur 10.1.08

http://meetmysister.wordpress.com/
 

h1

The Queen of Sheba’s Music Box

January 8, 2008

Sheba 

I spend a pleasant afternoon being entertained on the pageant barge. The traveller’s performances are brilliant and inspiring. This early in the trip I feel great sense of peace and belonging. I feel as though I have joined a group of sisters with whom I already have a very strong bond.
As the sun sets over the waters of Rainbow Beach I head back to shore to find food and lodgings for the night. To get to town I pass through the Night Markets on the beach. The stalls are illuminated with lamps and lanterns of different shapes, colours and sizes. In the soft twilight the effect is charming and magical.
“Welcome to the night Markets Madam,” an oily voice whispers at my shoulder, “Is there anything I can tempt you with, my lovely?”
I turn to see a small, thin, dark haired man standing beside me. Behind him is a small stall crowded with objects. Its hand-painted sign boasts “Ahmed’s Amazing Antiques and Historical Artifacts from Around the World”.
In the lamplight shadows flicker across his face and I cannot tell if he is smiling  or leering. I dismiss a momentary sensation of unease; I won’t let anything spoil this perfect day.
Ahmed quickly slips into his stall and begins to offer me all types of trinkets and oddities talking all the while. My eye, however, is caught by a small gold box, no bigger than a deck of cards. I pick it up. It is beautifully decorated with tiny precious stones and intricate filigree.
“Aaah yes…you like?” he asks, rubbing his hands together in undisguised greed. I ignore him and undo the delicate latch to open the hinged lid.  As soon as it opens a sweet melody begins to play and I begin to feel unsteady on my feet. The music stops abruptly as Ahmed slams the lid shut with something akin to panic in his eyes. Was he afraid?
“You cannot open that here!” he hisses fiercely.
“What?” I am incredibly curious and a little taken aback at the sudden change in his demeanour.
“If you want this box, I will sell it to you,” he whispers, “but you must only open it when you are completely alone. There must never be anyone else with you. It is far too powerful and dangerous.”
I smile and laugh a little,
“What are you talking about?”
Ahmed looks around nervously before clearing his throat. Leaning closer he continues,
“This music box once belonged to the Queen of Sheba. It was made for her by the high court jeweller of King Solomon himself. The Queen fell in love with the music box, just as she had fallen in love with the King. She was an incredibly passionate and jealous woman and refused to let anyone else touch or listen to her gift.
It is told that one day a maid servant, whilst cleaning the Queen’s chamber, slipped the music box into the folds of her robes. When the Queen discovered the box was missing she was furious. She had the entire palace turned upside down until it was found. The maid in question was severely punished for her crime. The Queen had her eyes put out and her eardrums pierced before throwing her into the palace dungeons. There she stayed until she died.”
Ahmed pauses  as if for effect; the background sounds of the market suddenly feel very far away.
“It is said that from that day forward a curse was set upon the music box. If anyone who was not the rightful owner listens to the music box they will be damned to spend eternity rotting in the chambers of Sheba’s prison unable to hear or see. You are lucky I shut the lid when I did,” he speaks earnestly, “Else everyone on this beach, including you, would have been doomed.”
He looks behind me and I turn to watch the happy crowds apparently safe, this time, from certain death. I look back at him, skeptical,
“If it was Sheba’s music box then she still must be the rightful owner”
“Oh no my love,” Ahmed replies, the oiliness and gleam returning to his voice and eyes, “The rightful owner is she who pays the right price.”
His stare turns meaningfully to the leather pouch at my hip. Instinctively I curl my hand around it.
“What is your good price Madam?” he asks with a leer. I mentally shake myself. This guy is nothing but a con artist! I almost turn to leave but my eye is caught again by the gorgeous box.  I cannot resist it and, if nothing else, it will make for a good story when I get home.
I remove the pouch from my hip and dig down to the bottom past the precious talismans bestowed on me by E. Ahmed’s eyes do not leave the pouch for a moment. I pull out a single, small gold coin then tuck the pouch into a pocket safely inside my vest. I place the gold coin on top of the box and wait.
A thin smile plays across Ahmed’s lips and he begins to shake his head.
“Oh no, no, no Madam,” he remonstrates, “ You misunderstand. This box  is priceless and here you insult me with one tiny, gold coin…”
I retrieve the coin and begin to walk away briskly,
“Take it or leave it my friend,” I reply over my shoulder. I walk on refusing to look back.
Suddenly he is at my shoulder again, all charm and smiles,
“Oh Madam, forgive me please, my mistake. I apologise… it is so dark I could not see the coin properly… your price is right….”
He proffers me the box and his greedy hand swallows my gold coin.
Before I can leave he grabs my arm. I stare at his hand with thinly veiled disgust.
“Remember Madam,” he says menacingly, holding my arm tighter, “ Remember what you have been warned. Only open it alone. Let no one else hear the music.”
With this I wrench my arm free and turn from him, walking away as I tuck the box into my vest beside the pouch.
“Remember!” he calls out again. I turn around only to find the stall has disappeared and its lamps are gone. There is nothing but the quiet dark gleam of the  River Kerith.
I shiver and head quickly towards the comfort of the crowd within the lights and noise of the Night Market.

Chefleur 8.1.08

http://meetmysister.wordpress.com

h1

One Woman Show

January 6, 2008

The stage is dark…but for a woman’s voice: 

What can I show you that will tell you about me?
What can I share that will give you an understanding of who I am?

Lights up to reveal a shawled woman in a rocking chair…

Once upon a time there was a girl who loved to read and seek adventure within the pages of books.
As she grew older and her world grew more uncertain and unstable her books remained a constant for her; a comfort amidst all the change and upheaval that she could not control.  She discovered that, as well as her books, her imagination allowed her to create places that she wanted to go to and people that she wanted to be.
Her own life was fractured and difficult; punctuated by stress and grief. She found it a relief to disappear between the pages of a book or enter into her imaginary realm.
For years this was how she existed; hiding from real life within her own dreams.
Bit by bit, as she grew older, she learnt to leave her refuge and live within the real world. She learnt to deal with the instability and stress and, in time, control it. Soon she lived, loved and worked in this world competently and completely. So much so that her old sanctuary was left forgotten and untouched.
Until now.

As the woman speaks she stands and begins to pack a leather back-pack with clothes and other items:

Some buried part of her is stirring, dreaming of escaping the everyday world that she has grown accustomed to. It has awoken something within her, a craving for the unreal and a yearning for adventure. Everyday it grows stronger and stronger, more insistent, refusing to be ignored.
It is that part of her has embarked upon this journey. To rediscover her voice, once her only solace, now creaky and rusted from years of neglect.
Her journey is my journey.
To find a balance between imagination and reality; between facing life and running  away; between the real world and that known only to me.

The woman has packed and secured her bag and swung it onto her shoulder. She stands and faces the audience:

It is time to help her find her voice and find her way.
 It is time to open the doors to my forgotten world and play once more.

Lights slowly fade to dark as the woman strides purposefully offstage:

Once upon a time…..

Chefleur 6.1.08

http://meetmysister.wordpress.com/

h1

Birds at Rainbow Beach

January 5, 2008

The seagull stands on the dock its beady eyes watching the movement and bustle of people on the barges and the pontoon. Next to him, atop a pole, a cormorant sits motionless, airing its wings in the warm sunshine.

“They’re not fisherman,” the seagull squawks suspiciously. The cormorant does not answer but turns his head from one side to the other and blinks.

“They’re not fisherman,” the seagull repeats, walking a few steps on its flat orange feet towards the barges, “There’s no bait.”

The people busy on the dock are loading bags and boxes onto the barges.

“No bait, not pots, no nets,” the seagull continues, “They’re definitely not fisherman.”

The cormorant blinks again and sits silently.

“What are they doing?” the seagull grumbles, “What’s the point of being on a boat if there are no fish? What am I supposed to eat?”

The seagull watches the people point and gasp as a large pelican gracefully glides from the sky and lands on the water beside the dock. It floats proudly towards the other birds.

“No point staying here Brother,” the seagull calls out, “There’s no fish.”

The cormorant sits statue still.

“There are no fish My Brother,” replies the pelican grandly, “Because they are not fisherman. They are travellers.”

“Travellers?” the seagull screeches indignantly, “Travellers? What do they do?”

The pelican replies calmly,

“They seek answers. They look for the truth.”

The cormorant blinks once, turns its head and is still once more.

“Truth? Answers?” the seagull repeats excitedly, “Are they fish?”

“No” replies the pelican, “But they are important to the travellers.”

“Rubbish!” says the seagull, “Nothing’s more important than fish!”

He looks again with his beady eyes at the people stacking the barges with evermore boxes and bags,

“How do you know all this?”

“Our Brother, the osprey, who flies from the sea to the mountains and back again, has seen all this and told me.”

“Brother Osprey?” snorts the seagull, “What does he know?”

The pelican gives the seagull an uncompromising chilly stare,

“Brother Osprey flies far and high and sees all. He knows more than you and I Brother Gull.”

The seagull is momentarily silenced and the pelican takes the opportunity to continue,

 ”Those boats are taking the travellers far up the river. They have mules that are walking with them many days from here to the Mountains of Myrr. Brother Osprey tells me the travellers stop there at the Sanctuary of Mnemosyne. There they seek answers and truth.”

“Mountains! What good are mountains? No fish in the mountains.” The seagull looks scornfully at the travellers, “How stupid to be travelling to the mountains away from fish!”

“Not everyone is interested in fish,” the pelican replies.

The seagull shakes his head in disgust,

“Well if there’s no fish I’m off.” With that he flies away screeching noisily to himself.

The pelican bids a polite farewell to the cormorant then, lifting his heavy bulk out of the water with his great wings, flies slowly away.

Apart from the noise from the barges and pontoon the dock is peaceful. The cormorant slowly stretches his wings then returns to his original static pose. He watches the movement further down the dock, blinks once then speaks,

“That sunshine’s nice and warm.”

Chefleur 5.1.08

http://meetmysister.wordpress.com/

h1

Into the Blue

January 3, 2008

She offers her hand
Once more I cannot refuse.
Her voice, like cool water,
Has the power to soothe.
She leads me onward and inward
Through the door, past my fears,
I take one certain step
And my past disappears…

Hold your breath,
Make a wish,
Count to three…..*

 

Chefleur 3.2.08

* Leslie Bricusse and Anthony Newly, 1971, Pure Imagination

  

h1

Her Reassurance

January 3, 2008

Traveller, traveller, do not despair,
The doorway you seek has always been there.
It stands neglected where your dreams grow wild,
Untamed, left behind, with your inner child.
Go there now, seek it out, do not fret.
It waits for you, open, you didn’t really forget.
Your muse and your spirit await you there too.
Just take that one certain step,
Step out into the blue.

Chefleur 3.1.08

h1

Traveller’s Lament

January 3, 2008

One step, two steps; maybe more.
How many steps ‘til I find the door?
Will it be red, or green, or blue?
Will it be old or shiny and new?
How will I know, when will I see?
Will it be gently calling me?
Inside or outside, country or town?
Must I look up or keep my eyes down?
So many places I can spy
I’m so frightened I’ll pass it by.
One step, two steps; maybe more,
How many steps ‘til I reach the door?

Chefleur 3.1.08

h1

The Legendary Lemurian Travelling Sideshow

January 2, 2008

Roll up!
Roll up!
Roll up!
Take your places please,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Girls and Boys,
For the all singing,
All dancing,
Legendary Lemurian Travelling Sideshow!
There’ll be thrills!
There’ll be spills!
There’ll be laughter and tears!
Amusement and Amazement!
Poets, bards and artists
Ready to paint you a picture
Or tell you a tale!
Open your eyes, ears and hearts
Get ready to be
Tantalised! 
Energised!
Mesmerised!
So much to hear!
So much to see!
Hurry! Hurry! Hurry!
Roll up!
Roll up!

Chefleur. 2.1.08