Posts tagged ‘mystery’

04/26/2013

Acrolith

by Pierce Nahigyan

Damien rounded the pedestal of the statue a second time, like a dog hunting for a place to mark its territory. Behind him the eternal expanse of the desert met the pale blue sky. There were no clouds to get in the way of their combatting colors. There was simply a slithering landscape of darker dunes leading to the North African heavens (much bigger, older heavens than our own, I should say) and a subtlety of darker shading where the blue met the land. Damien and the sculpture were alone on the firmament.

I and the sahibs waited with the tent materials. It was not late enough to make camp but Muhammad assured me a sandstorm was on its way. I lit a pipe and wondered if our statue would be a noble protector of our party or an ill omen to be shunned. One meets both species of idols with regularity across the Channel.

Damien removed his helmet to fan himself with it, crossing back from the pedestal to my camel. He avoided its dripping mouth.

“Being an anthropologist,” he said, “I have the unsettling honor to know exactly where most things ought to be.”

“Quite,” I said. I tamped down my tobacco and relit it.

“The trunk,” he said, “is made of fossilized wood. As far as I can tell, of a type not native to the Sahara. The head and feet are marble. There’s not a marble quarry known inside the next three countries. That,” he said, pointing to the statue, “is an acrolith.”

“Rather,” I said.

Damien scowled at me. “It shouldn’t be here,” he said.

I puffed a thick cloud to cheer up the lonely sky. It drifted over Damien’s head. “Well why don’t you ask him politely to go back where he came from?”

Damien stalked off and called for the waterboy.

01/07/2013

Accuracy

by Pierce Nahigyan

You give things away as you age. One of my personal sacrifices was the belief that I would be understood (a better way to say it is exist) perfectly for anyone other than myself. It is a vain tenet but one primarily held by the young. And I am not really young anymore, and losing faith. So I have modified my faith, and adapted it to the life I lead, that life that is flexible, that is pliant, that is seldom steadfast. But that faith, shaken by the accrued circumspections that have recoiled without enough enemies to blame (the young can make enemies of anyone), survives only with fewer sacraments. What I sacrificed was my reproduction in full.

I am unknown even to myself in full, and it is a humble, domesticated sort of hubris that denies this. A patch of perfume stained drapery pulled from the corner of a closet unlocks rich memories previously dissolved in banal daily rituals. A forgotten lover’s smile and kiss and wrinkled knuckles awakes. Where was that? Where does it live when I am at my desk, sleeping, mining aisle 13 of the grocery store? A surface street taken amidst the freeway’s rush hour is suddenly recalled the moment the green arrow directs me under the offramp. And I wondered, before this excision, how someone I speak to can know me, someone I have loved, sang to, held, been sneezed on, might contain my soul entire.

Is the disappointment the fear that we have not been heard or that love’s binding cannot assuage our inadequacies? Would that we could know one another with total accuracy, but I believe there would be little room left for whatever cares for the imperfect creatures that we are. Some mystery is good, I suppose. The not knowing is a lifelong ailment; allowing it to be the silent ache we stop concerning ourselves with is the rudiment of graceful aging. Those small things we do remember about one another become bright trinkets, unto the day only one of us remains to polish them. So many years gone by and stories told and the stories are what remain. Your grave and the ground we purchased for it cannot belong to either of us in the end. How will we remember we are both owners of this mossy plot?

It won’t be long till I forget grace, and my name. Yours I have not given away yet.

01/04/2013

Accumulate

by Pierce Nahigyan

In a cave at the bottom of the world lies a pile of gold. Strewn over its bricks and ducats are treasures of unrivaled rarity, statues of unparalleled casting, yellowed parchments bound by notes of unequalled composition. In the cave glitter the pearls of wisdom cast before swine, when moonlight, reflected in the pools of silver, shines into its mouth. All manner of things that make a man rich may be found in that place, the accumulation thereof and its accumulator mysteries old as the world is old, in history deep as the cavern is deep. If perchance you reach its mouth without succumbing to the dangers that guard it, prepare to brave what lurks within. For the cave’s final treasure is life itself, that most precious commodity, and none who enter may return by the same path.

10/07/2012

Abyss

by Pierce Nahigyan

When the Universe was young, and I mean very young; so young that it had yet to utter its first words, yet to combine its sundry gases and grits into stars and quarks, eons before galaxies, when the whole swath of Creation was mostly hydrogen and echoes, I took my dog fishing. (There have been many scientific fellows in the prestigious universities scattered about this one mean world who would argue that without oxygen, or matter, there would be no echoes at all, for sound would have no medium to travel through – there being a scarcity of molecules to carry the tune. I challenge them to explain the great screaming from the rim of the abyss when the neutrinos figured out how to get their Ford Thunderbirds to walk the dog on the rim of the first black hole. They called it the event horizon shuffle, and believe you me, without any molecules to get in the way their rowdy lingo was enough to turn the black abysm blue.)

My dog was not much of a fisherman, but he couldn’t be blamed for that. There weren’t a lot of us around in those days, and certainly no fish. I’d string the lure and dangle it down into the abyssal trenches left over from the Big Bang, and I’d drink beer and just sort of ruminate to my mutt. Sparks (he was a binary mongrel) must have learned a lot about what it’s like bein’ married, and I do suspect it was my constant pontificating on the subject that ensured he reached a ripe old age without ever getting himself similarly entangled. He died a proud bachelor.

Me, not so lucky. After a shouting match I’m sure the neutrinos next door were delighted to overhear, I left my house with a slamming of doors and my dog in tow, swearing I’d sooner build a tent on a neutron star than pitch another fit with my sweet harpy.

A few hours later, us about four beers deep, and me still steaming, I got a wiggle on the line. Well I got to reeling and sure enough, up comes something probably better left down in the ether. Wasn’t sure what it was to be honest. Sparks barked at it. I tried to cut the line but it reached for my knife with one of its silver tentacles and asked, as placidly as its fleet of mouths could manage, “Olaf Erikson?”

I swallowed and just shook my head. “My name’s Pete.”

“It appears we’ve both been misled,” it chorused. “Would you mind terribly lowering me back down into the madness of chaos? I’m waiting for someone.”

I lowered my pole until the great weight on the end of it shuddered and disintegrated. When I raised my line again my hook had turned into a flock of bronze butterflies. Then I went home, apologized to my wife, and helped her finish off the pie she’d left to cool in the windowsill.

Perspective, it’s what makes a marriage work.

05/11/2012

Abreact

by Pierce Nahigyan

The events that took place inside the house on 201 Hargrove Mango have long been swamped in mystery, the truly comprehensible facts even wrapped in a tangled bracken of spookiness, owing in no small part to Elliot Thompson’s preponderance for strong drink and little regard for facts or what he would often term “book learning.” There were, in his previous criminalities, numerous examples of bad faith, and several notable intoxicated incidents of the young man preying on Mobile’s traditions. Or “superstitions,” to be less charitable.

Inside the house, a decrepit Georgian Gothic (built several hundred miles from anyone who had ever set foot in Georgia), its stained floorboards had taken on nightmarish aspect, the resting place for restless spirits, or sometimes cited as the prime site for Satanic ritual. What the house was, undoubtably was a decrepit wreck, long abandoned by its long destitute and since obliterated aristocracy, and several stories concerning how it got that way, what might be buried under the house, or squirreled within a hidden room, served the community of children and hooligans entertainment to no end at the expense of the unwary, throughout several generations. But aside from a termite colony and a parliament of owls, no inhuman vermin were known to regularly inhabit the place.

Elliot Thompson was squatting in the house after another night on the lam from his old lady – Madame L’Engle down by Olyphant Street – and there was a commotion, a great green flash. Soon the whole town was awakened to the hoops and hollers of Elliot, his ass on fire, hoofing it up the main thoroughfare screaming about ghosts and witches. His abreaction in the jailhouse only confused the issue. The sheriff chose not to commit his statement to public record, something Mobile questioned but, the lot of us without a page of law amongst us, did not press. Yet it could not but embolden the mystique.

Whatever Elliot saw in the house, and whatever it did to him, only increased the moodiness up on Hargrove Mango. It prevailed, and yet Elliot grew less perfidious over time, and folks, by and large, forgot him and his incontinent manner. Come to think of it, it’s been years since I saw him myself. It’s like he vanished into the telling of that house. The myth of it swallowed him up, like a rotten mailbox consumed by crawling weeds.

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