The man was
married for nearly fifty three years to the same woman. She was his entire life and all the
experiences he had included her. One day
she got sick and died. His world
changed. Everything was not the
same. Food tasted different, the sun was
not as bright, the birds did not sing.
The world had changed and he could no longer cry.
One day, while leaving his house and heading
into town the man stood along the roadside.
He stood there thinking of all the many experiences he and his only wife
of fifty three years, seven months, four days, and five hours had meant to one
another. A slow peaceful expression came
over him. Sure there were a multitude of
things left unspoken, left undone, but for the most part all was said just
right, all was done just right, all was as it was. Contentment came over him.
Seemed the man was frozen in his inner
thoughts and he disregarded the passerby along the roadside and the night drew
on and it seemed the day passed him by without care. He was not in a pit of despair as some had
fear, nor was he outwardly prancing with glee.
His thoughts were all his own.
His memories were of contentment.
The people who passed him by, tried as they
may were never able to get the man’s attention as they themselves went back and
forth from the city to their country homes.
After sometime the ‘quiet-man’ as he became known, was not bothered and
became a fixture upon the way. Birds
would lit on his shoulder or head undisturbed.
After a while he raised his arms to stretch but found he could not lower
them and he was alright with them staying raised. After sometime, lost in his thoughts of
contentment and left alone by other, the others began to notice a change slowly
come over him. Days later his feet had
begun to grow roots out of his sandals.
After a while there were branches from his arms, twigs from his fingers,
bark on his body and a tree he became lost in this thoughts.
That was seven years after construction began on
the tower of Mithar. Yet, for some
unknown reason I – yes, I woke up three days before the Great Departure. I woke from my self-induce slumber, and began
shedding that woodland form that grew upon me.
Gathering news, from those who were astonished about me, I learned how
much the world had changed. The Great War of the Ring had come and gone. The
White Leader of our wizard’s order was slain, and his successor fled with the
elves to the greater west with the Swan fleet.
Vendumar knew me as Mereith, The Blue Wizard, but the
dwarves of Jebul knew me as Isptha; meaning ‘Tenacity’. They even named the northern mountain after
me for it had been my home prior my slumber.
But in fact there were two of us. We were twin forms of the same incarnation;
each finishing the sentences of the other.
We had been tasked, like the others to fight against the growing
darkness that was coming against the world.
We headed for distant lands in the Fareast, no longer on maps; to find
that shadow. In our search, Romestano
was overcome and slain. We were at our
best together, yet I had been misled and called away. In our separation deceitful companions fell
upon him.
In my despair I could not recover but sought
deeper sorrow in my grief living in the tunnels of the dwarves in their northern hill. I took one as a wife and
we lived as happily as despair allowed me.
Till one day, Gishmah fell from a broken bridge on her way to see
me. I fled the mountain for the cottage
where we lived. I never fully recovered
from her loss.
But here I am today and today is where I make
my business in a world that changed, and passed me by for far too long!
...
No comments:
Post a Comment