Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Two Tales of Love and Loss under the Light of the Full Moon

Spells

They lay on lounge chairs on the rooftop of his apartment building. Cole had brought Dianne home from the party where they had met with the promise of an unrivalled view of the night sky. The clear, cloudless expanse above them – mantle of black dusted with stars and silvered by the insanely brilliant full moon – had made good on his word.

Cole let the silence grow, waiting for it to become just slightly uncomfortable. Then he said softly but clearly, “You know that the moon – more than any other object – is the container of all of our feelings, right? That it’s just bursting with them and is thus the most potent talisman for magic?”

Dianne looked at him. “What do you mean?”

“Well, it’s just that for hundreds of thousands of years, it’s hung up there, taking in all of mankind’s fears and dreams and wishes. Just like you and me right now, people have been looking up at it and sending it whatever they were thinking and feeling. Peasants offering up their gratitude that it was giving enough light to harvest by; hunters doing the same for the light with which to see their prey. That’s why the full moon is sometimes called, depending on the season, ‘Hunter’s Moon’ or ‘Harvest Moon.’ And think of all the travelers and sailors and wanderers who have blessed the moon for lighting their way. That’s a hell of a lot of emotions that it’s been absorbing.”

Dianne smiled. “I guess. That’s a nice way to think about it. So you think that an inanimate object like the moon can actually absorb all that?”

He gave her a look with just a shade of condescension – but softened it with a smile of his own. “All objects do. Otherwise seers and sensitives wouldn’t be able to walk into a house and sense strong emotions in the very walls and foundations. Someone died there lonely, perhaps, or terrified; or maybe it was a place where people had lived happily.

“No object is really inanimate; things resonate with the sentiments that we project into them. Haven’t you ever picked up something – a ball, or a pencil, or a… a sandwich – and gotten a tingle of the person who held it before you – an echo of what he or she felt? Or think about holy places – cathedrals, mountains, monasteries. The moment you come to them, you get a sense of their sacredness – because they’re reflecting back to you all the worshipful feelings people have been imbuing them with for years.”

He continued: “Now, most things don’t last very long, and most things don’t continually get bombarded with thoughts and feelings. Balls are lost, sandwiches are eaten“ – he smiled at her again – “houses and churches are torn down. Even mountains shift and crumble, in time. But the moon“ – he pointed up and watched her follow his finger to the incandescent orb – “that’s been there forever, for as long as people have walked the earth. Just imbibing everything.”

He smiled as a thoughtful look came over her face. “And of course, more than any emotion, what the moon’s been taking in are the feelings and wishes of lovers throughout the ages. You don’t even have to try very hard to sense the ardor and longing and heartbreak and love and, yes, the lust” – another smile – “of all the lovers who have gazed at the moon and shone the lights of their hearts on it.”

She turned to him, with a little look of uncertainty now. She said, “And you’re saying you can sense all that?”

He answered, deadpan. “Sure. But then I’m part warlock.”

A slow smile spread on her face. “Sure you are.”

He shrugged. “You know how all women are at least part witches? Well, only some men are part warlock. And of those few, even fewer know that they are part warlock.”

“And you’re one of those very few men.”

“I sure am,” he whispered confidently, in confidence. He made a gesture with his hand as if he was gathering in the light of the moon and then closing his hand around it in a fist. He sat up and opened his hand towards her as if releasing the light he had captured.

She sat up herself, her face a question. “What, did you just cast a spell on me?”

He grinned. “I sure did. I told you: the moon has all this mojo. I thought I’d lay some on you.”

She looked amused. “And what’s it supposed to make me do?”

He stared at her, a slight smile on his lips, not saying anything.

“Really?” She laughed. “Do you pull this routine on every woman you bring up here? All this moon magic stuff?”

He lowered his eyes, then looked up at her sadly. “Sure. Have it your way. I’ve just been bullshitting you.” He smiled and got up. “We’d best get down. I’m getting a little cold anyway.”

He turned and started walking to the stairwell. He heard her get up and follow him a few steps behind. He stopped and waited for her at the door to the stairs and opened it for her, still smiling. She looked a little confused. “You’ll give me a ride home, right? You said you would.”

He gave her a slightly surprised look. “Of course. I said I would.”

“Are you mad?”

He smiled, pleased at her anxiousness. “No, not at all. It was just – a moment that misfired.”

He started going down the stairs but got off at his floor and headed to his apartment. He said to her over his shoulder, “I just need to check on an email I’ve been waiting for before we go.” She followed him to his door. Again, he opened the door for her with a smile. Following her in, he went to his laptop and said, “Feel free to use the bathroom if you need to.” He turned on his laptop and pretended to look at his email account for a few minutes.

When he stood up, he saw that she was staring intently at the painting on his wall of a naked woman caressing the snout of reverent dragon in a moonlit grove. She cast her eyes down to read his signature in the lower right corner of the canvas. Her expression was a little stunned as she turned to him. “This is yours? Its really good.”

He walked closer to her. “Thanks.” After a moment, he said, “Would you like to see something else that’s really cool? It’s in my bedroom, though, so say No if it makes you feel uncomfortable. We can just go if you want.”

She hesitated. Then said, “No, it’s okay. Show me.”

He led the way to his room and opened the light. She entered and looked around, a little warily. He went to his bed, sat on it, and said, “Okay, close the door and turn off the light.” He laughed at her look of suspicion and said, “Trust me.”

She shut the door behind her and turned off the switch – and gasped.

The wall behind the headboard was suffused with light in the shape of huge, full, gibbous moon. He had painted the moon on the wall with glow-in-the-dark paint, and the painting had absorbed the ceiling light when he turned it on and was now shining it out in a yellow glow. It was a remarkably accurate rendering: a luminous circle pockmarked with maria and craters and mountains. The ceiling and the other walls were sprinkled with stars.

He got up slowly, went to her, and stood before her, playing his gaze from her eyes to her lips, then back to her eyes again. He could see that her pupils were dilated and the sides of her mouth were upturned in a slight smile. “Spells,” he said, and pulled her to him and kissed her. After a moment, her body released all stiffness and yielded, and she started kissing him back.

* * *

She fell asleep afterwards, sweaty and spent. His muscles ached deliciously as well, but he could not fall asleep himself. The phosphorescence was fading away, but his waning moon was still giving off just enough light to allow him to watch the look of peacefulness and satiation on her face, the nimbus emanating dimly from her pale skin, and the soft down on her arms shining golden. Eventually, his eyes grew heavy, and he slid slowly into the dark, his arm lying across her breast, rising and falling softly with her breath.

* * *

The bright glow of the ceiling light woke him. She had nearly finished dressing and was bending down to the floor. He asked her, blinking, “What are you doing?”

She smiled apologetically. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to wake you. But I had to turn on the light to look for my shoes. Here, I found them.” She sat down on his side chair and started putting them on. “Go back to sleep, I’ll be out of here in a minute.”

He was still groggy. “You’re leaving?”

“Yes. I’ll just call a cab. No need to bring me home. I don’t want to get you out of bed.”

He rubbed his face. “But – you can stay the night. I’ll take you home in the morning.”

“It’s okay. I don’t want to put you to any trouble.”

“But –“ He wasn’t quite sure what to say.

She sat down on the bed beside him. “That was nice. I had fun.” She leaned down and gave him a quick kiss and made to go.

He grabbed her arm. “Wait.” He sat up. “What’s your number? Can I call you?”

She bit her lower lip. “I don’t think so. I have a boyfriend.”

“But –“ He tried to think of the right words. “It’s okay. That shouldn’t stop us from seeing each other, if we really have a connection –“

She shrugged. She looked down at where he was holding her. He let her go.

She smiled again. “It really was nice. I liked your story about the moon.”

“It – wasn’t a story.”

Her smile widened. “What? You’re saying you meant it? You think you really can cast a spell with moon mojo?”

He didn’t answer.

“It’s nice to think. But the moon’s just a battered rock falling in space. And things are just things. Sometimes nice things – the moon thing you have on the wall is really pretty – but they don’t take in any feelings. There’s no such thing as magic or spells.”

Every sentence she spoke felt like a blow.

She kissed him again, and got up. She stopped at the door and said, “Go back to sleep. And thanks!” She turned off the ceiling light and the moon and stars on the walls started shining again.

He lay back down, shivering once in the cold light, feeling empty.

She was wrong. Before tonight, he would have secretly agreed with her, but he knew better now: there were such things as spells. She had just laid one on him. Or maybe he had been the one who woven it, spinning all those words into that fable about the moon. But if so, he had cast it on the wrong person.


(August 2012)

Tuesday, August 14, 2012

Two Tales of Love and Loss under the Light of the Full Moon

Translation

Chandrima had the ill-luck of passing away while still carrying her child within her, of taking her child with her when she was transposed. And she had the further misfortune of passing just as the full moon was climbing into the sky. She would have no time at all to linger with her Aditya, who was still desperately, convulsively clutching her body – the shell she had just shed. She watched him as he sobbed and cried out for the young wife he had barely begun to love and the child he would never even see – the family he had now lost forever.

Mrs. Chauhan stood by her as she stood heart-stricken over Aditya. Mrs. Chauhan had died during the new moon, a fortnight before Chandrima, in a hospital a few blocks away. She at least had the chance to see her family overcome the first shock and the most cutting grief, and to make her silent farewells to them and thus come into a measure of peace. When Chandrima had breathed her last and followed her breath out of her body, Mrs. Chauhan was in the room, waiting, having made it her duty to welcome her and try to ease her transition. Though strangers in life, they had each known who the other was the moment they met.

“Perhaps it is for the best you will be departing so quickly,” Mrs. Chauhan said. “The pain is sharpest now, but perhaps not so bad as when it starts to dull.” She was thinking on how her husband, children, grandchildren, and other loved ones, even in the depths of their bereavement and desolation these past two weeks, had begun picking up their lives again  going back to work, to school; going about their daily tasks; slowly filling the hole she had left behind  once they had withered her body into ashes.

“How can it be that I will never see him again?” Chandrima asked, her eyes still on Aditya. “I am still here. You are here. How can it be that he will not be when his time comes?”

Mrs. Chauhan let a moment pass before answering. “I do not know.”

“Why is it that men have no souls? How could that be?”

An even longer pause. “I do not know.”

Chandrima looked at her naked, swollen belly and quietly voiced her truest, deepest fear: “And what of my child? It is a son I bear inside me. Is he in there? What will happen to him when the moon is full in the sky?”

Mrs. Chauhan pursed her lips tightly. “I do not know.” She was sad; it didn’t seem as if she was of much help after all.

Chandrima had known the answers to her questions even without Mrs. Chauhans responses. Some things had been made clear to her the instant she had passed, but most things remained a mystery. She had asked in the forlorn hope that Mrs. Chauhan, who had been dead longer, might have some knowledge that she did not.

Mrs. Chauhan felt the first stirrings inside her. It was almost time. She said, holding out her hand, “Come, child. We’d best get outside.”

Chandrima was desperate to stay, to touch Aditya one last time, but she knew that if she tried, her hands would not rest on his skin or feel his warmth – nor would they ever again. And she, too, was beginning to feel in her body the first intimation of the rising moon; she could sense her growing lightness. After one last longing look at Aditya, she took Mrs. Chauhan’s hand. They left her house.

Outside in the street, they saw here and there others like themselves: women and girls, shorn of their clothes as they had been shorn of their bodies, standing and craning their heads towards the heavens. Some who saw them gave them smiles – knowing, welcoming, sisterly smiles, sweet with anticipation. All seemed to be glad that the waiting – short for some, nearly a month for others – was at an end.

Mrs. Chauhan released Chandrima’s hand and watched the moon with a sad, solemn look as it inched upwards. Chandrima had glanced at the circle of light, but had looked down at once to stare at her belly, in which all her love and anguish lay. When it came time to depart, would her unborn son pass from her, a soulless husk? Would she give birth to him right there in the street and leave him behind at once?

A breathless sigh arose from the waiting women and girls as the moon continued to rise. More and more Chandrima felt lighter on her feet as the moon exerted its pull. She closed her eyes and embraced herself, wrapping her arms around her belly.

The moon moved over them, came to its highest point, and cast its brightest glow. Chandrima felt her feet slowly lift from the ground, felt her toes kiss the earth one last time before pulling away. She opened her eyes in fear – then cried in exultation. Her arms still cradled her belly, which was still round and heavy. She could feel that, as the full moon drew her upwards, so it drew up the child within her. Her joy and relief could not be marred, not even by the sorrow of leaving Aditya behind.

She glanced about her and saw Mrs. Chauhan smiling at her as she rose upwards alongside her. The air that flowed around her and past her was soft and warm and caressing. Bangalore below them was a receding grid of twinkling lights, becoming smaller and smaller, until it was a glimmering smudge on the dark face of the earth.

Chandrima looked up and saw what she and Mrs. Chauhan and all the other women and girls – and the son within her – were flying towards: the shining disk, the round mirror, which for all its blemishes bathed them all in its clear, cool, borrowed light. The glow became brighter and brighter, as they ascended above the earth, rushed through the void, chased the moon as it flew through space, until the light became so radiant that it enveloped them, swallowed them, consumed them, and they disappeared, translated.


(August 2012)