THE PAST
The golden rule does smother
our failures do anoint
but to bring harm to another
is opposite the pointour blades are forged for brothers
and sisters in dire need
to carve themselves a path to walk
in bogs of thicket reedand if a beast approaches
you let it show its fangs
before you plunge your sword
or tie it up to hangBut this beast has no face
no fangs with which to speak
invisible, contented with
its deeds and havoc wreakedon other beasts it travels
on small ones in distress
in buckets nearly emptied
in sweat in every dressimpossible to skewer
inconceivable to noose
inner beast of humans
gave channels far and looseNow faces grieve as skeletons
their mouths dry, caked in sick
their stomachs do betray them
their touch is but a prickthey pile in the streets across
they curdle in their homes
they rot into the ground below
the swarms now freely roambut I have heard a stranger tale
that manners can defeat them
what weapon is a fork and spoon
and how a dish is eaten?What magic bubbles sick away
what makes us clean again
what covered can our voices say
what air can we take in?and if none heed the call,
to make safe what makes sick,
they close their ears to good advice,
skull made home for plague like brickyet trial afar, it seems to work
though I can't understand
what separates the ones who make it
and those who stone does brand.* * *
It took several days on a moon, but we rode to a port city on the east side of the isle. The jockey parked his horses and carriage in a friend's barn, and I helped him load cargo onto a ship to sail for Britain. Where we came from was empty and sad, fog rolling into bare streets nary tracked by wheel, foot, nor horseshoe. Most of the city's folks were in wheelbarrows. I was given a pinch of tobacco from a sailor's pipe, something from the New World. It lit my head on fire, and my chest, but the pain subsided and I felt pleasant. My focus hardened, and I was able to notice the tiny details in glittery grey seawater, the sway of reeds on the bank, and the peculiar way fog billowed into the lower decks like a cloud of menacing sadness. That, and I could see how damn ugly all the sailors were. Faith in all fuck, these men were hairy, nasty, and destitute, and their smell killed all conversation. What parts of them I was blind to on others were stitched and scarred on them, and I found it almost easy to tell them apart by the grotesque ways in which they'd been mutilated. I retreated to the barracks to sleep, and counted nicks and lines in the floorboards above me until I fell asleep.
I woke up feeling as burnt as a torch, at the docks of a town called Stadtport. I was almost carried back the other way as I rushed to the upper deck and leapt from the ship to a post, then to another post, and finally to the docks. The jockey commended my agility, but in truth, it was a fluke in the heat of rush. I was glad to have fallen asleep with all of my gear on, my scythe firm in hand.Stadtport was open-skied and sprawling, but sick to its core. Folks wandered the streets looking for something to blame their woeful boils on, feverish and confused. I was feeling strained in my stomach, but they were gaunt and drained. Something was sucking the very life from them. The smell was fishy, putrid vomit, and the air was warm and thick in all the wrong ways. They noticed I was a little different by fashion, and began chucking rocks at us sailors and travelers.
They yelled, "This is your fault, go home!"
"Get out, you bloody foreigners!"
I was pelted by pebbles, and I didn't mind. Then, a sharp piece of flint bounced off my brow, softened only by a tuft of my hair and my hood. My bone stung like a knife, and I felt blood trickle down my face. The other men didn't care, the rocks finding them like mountains. I was scared, hurt, and angry. I ran from the unbothered sailors and the bothered mob, and down a few alleys, past children in rags eating flame-crisped rats. I found myself in a clearing, gridded with stones. Then, it struck me: not a rock, but a memory. This is where we buried my father, next to his parents. I was only a child, and I must have forgotten the trip. We'd boarded The King's own ship, tagging along on a mission to supposedly purchase canvas art from a local painter. It felt like we'd blinked out of town in a single day, spent one here, and blinked back. The King's nurse had me drinking medicine as a "preventative measure", which I took without question after my bout, but now suspect was some kind of sleeping potion. Why was I there? The King and my father must have been close. My mother wanted to be buried at home, which The Knight helped me do when I got back. We put her next to his mother. They didn't know one another, but we both agreed they probably would have. That was how we met. Finding myself back in the cemetery, mentally, I remembered how The King wept for my father. He clutched my hand and cried in a low moan, as tears flashed on his cheeks and disappeared into his beard. I didn't understand it at the time, because I barely knew my father. Only that he liked books. I couldn't even remember his face. I looked around for a shovel. I found one with a broken handle, discarded it, and started digging.
I dug, and dug, and dug, until I heard a thud from iron striking wood. Guards leered at me, then shrugged. I heard one say, "lad wants the sick, let 'im have it", from around the corner. I threw away the shovel, and used the butt of my scythe's staff to break open my father's casket. Call me psychotic if you want, but iron head-ware is heavy and expensive. I needed something lighter. I put my hands on his skull, twisted it from his spine, and pulled it out. A poof of dust crawled all around me. I noticed a letter in his hands, and considered not reading it. My curiosity was greater than my respect for the dead, or maybe just my superstition, and I felt a pang of guilt as I slipped it out from his dry, shrunken fingers. It was rain-washed and illegible, but the wax seal was a deer with an olive branch. The King's seal was a lion and a shield. The only words I could read were: "...things are looking grim." I nodded in agreement, put the letter back, and spent an hour or two filling the hole back in. I put a piece of flat wood over the pile, and stomped on it to compact the grave and spare my mother's boots any more dirt.
YOU ARE READING
SRθ: Grim Inquiries (2023-2024)
Historical FictionIn the year 1350, a nameless intersex boy is sent on an impossible quest to discover the origins of the Black Plague. Travelling afar, he meets with strange and shady characters who teach him dark lessons about life and death. Over time, he becomes...