Friday, September 8, 2023

Coming of the Nord. -M, Weisgerber

In the heart of modern-day Nordlingen, nestled among the rolling hills of Bavaria, an eerie sense of foreboding had settled. Whispers, like ethereal tendrils, wound their way through the town's cobblestone streets. The townsfolk spoke in hushed tones of Rothenburg ob der Tauber and Dinkelsbuhl, cities to the north that had just last week, just the other day even, met a fiery, calamitous fate!

(Oh hate of hates, how oft do you fly free??)

ForRothenburg, with its medieval charm, had become naught but ashes. Dinkelsbuhl, once a bastion of history, lay in ruins. Both had fallen victim to infernos that had raged unchecked for days, reducing these northern siblings to charred vestiges of their former glory.

As the townspeople gathered in the marketplace, exchanging tales of these tragic blazes, a trio of enigmatic figures arrived. Cloaked in obsidian robes that seemed to drink the sunlight, they emanated an aura of otherworldly significance. Their eyes, deep pools of shadow, held secrets untold.

"KIDS!" said the group, while the elders watched on. (Deviants, whispered others, but it took a week before those words rang on)

As the sun descended in a circle of fiery hues, the trio positioned themselves at the square's epicenter. Their hands, pale and delicate as porcelain, joined in a peculiar union. Murmuring words born of arcane tongues, their voices wove through the air like a whispered enchantment, words that the townsfolk could not decipher. An aura of mysticism enveloped the square as darkness settled.

"LUNATICS!" some giggled, falling to the floor. "Usurpers!" others joked, rolling their eyes in a bore.

With a quiet confidence, the trio positioned themselves at the center of the square. Hand in hand, they formed a perfect circle as the last rays of sunlight painted a fiery ring around them. Words fell from their lips, words unknown to the townspeople, a language lost to time. Only a few onlookers noticed, their curiosity piqued for a moment before being drawn away by the distractions of the evening. The circle dissolved, and the trio dispersed into the crowd.

It was only a matter of hours before the square itself seemed to mirror that fateful circle. A fire, ignited in a manner both poetic and mysterious, began to consume Nordlingen. The flames danced with a supernatural grace, illuminating the ancient stone walls and casting eerie shadows that seemed to whisper secrets of their own.

As the town burned, questions and theories swirled like smoke in the night. Some blamed the suevite, the impact material that formed the town's unique geology, while others whispered of the town's druidic past, suggesting that old powers had awakened. Still, there were those who suspected arson, a malevolent force working its way south towards Munich.


Days turned to nights, and Nordlingen's whispered conversations took on a newfound urgency. The townspeople, bound by a collective unease, wondered if the trio's presence had anything to do with the disasters befalling their northern neighbors. They questioned the role of Suevite, the mysterious mineral that formed the bedrock of their town, a relic of a meteoric collision eons ago. For Nordlingen, steeped in history, had always borne an air of the arcane. It was an old druidic meeting site, a place where the mystical and the mundane intertwined. The streets whispered of ancient rituals performed beneath the shadow of the tree in the marketplace, its gnarled branches reaching out like an oracle's fingers.

The nub-tailed cat, a shadowy specter with eyes that gleamed like shards of onyx, became a symbol of these enigmatic events. Seen only on the fringes of sight, it slipped in and out of thought, a silent witness to the growing tension.

For flames erupted from the ground, but it was a fire unlike any other. It moved with a poetic sort of grace, embracing buildings and streets in a dance of destruction. It wasn't the savage hunger of an ordinary blaze; it was a fire that seemed to tell a story, to sing a mournful, ancient song.

Whispers and theories would later abound. Some believed the Suevite, restless in its ancient slumber, had awakened to vent its fury. Others thought it was the consequence of the town's past, the echoes of druidic rites that had left an indelible mark. And then there were those who suspected a malevolent arsonist, a shadowy figure working their way south to Munich, leaving poetic devastation in their wake.

The tree in the marketplace, its branches now scorched and twisted, stood as a silent sentinel to the night's infernal ballet. Its roots, once a source of solace and secrets, were now exposed, the earth around them charred and broken. The tree had witnessed the transformation of Nordlingen, from whispers of its enigmatic trio to the crescendo of its burning mystery.

And the nub-tailed cat, the elusive guardian of secrets, lingered at the edge of perception for many days. Its presence was a question mark that haunted the town's collective consciousness, a riddle that defied solution.

"Omen," many said, though it never reached their lips. "Menace," said the rest, and on this they meant.

As the ashes settled, Nordlingen remained an enigma, its secrets buried deep within its meteorlogical heart. The trio had long vanished into the folds of obscurity, leaving behind a town forever changed by the shadow of its fiery dance. It would be remembered not for what it had been, but for the mysteries it had harbored and the questions that would never cease to haunt its history. And as the first light of dawn broke over the charred remnants of the heart and the beat and the cradle of that once and former fair of town, one could almost hear the whispers of ancient spirits, weaving their tales into the tapestry of time, as the world moved on, forever changed by a Friday eve in a quiet Bavarian town.

 

Saturday, January 7, 2023

Wander (1/7/22), by M.Weisgerber - 1800 Words/appx 10 Min Read

 

Twas hot again, sweat and minute drippings catching at the creases, the morning barely at 9am.

“Do you know where you are going?”

“Sure.”

“Is it somewhere to the north?”

“Most assuredly.”  There was hardly any space in the parking lot when he arrived, a thin coat of dust already settling across the front of the Land Rover as much as the scrub-brush and cactus around him, the very words Karen had left him with seeming to carry as his only guide.   

Vortexes, life, Arizona – what did the world know of the make believe??

So here he was, hot boots, short pants.  He wondered at what the Edo Japanese would have made of this same trek, equal mountain loving folks that they were.  Sedona, the land of the Red Rocks - There was something particularly alluring about the thought of finding a place where a break in the earth was said to split open and carve up the very air around it. 

“Are you sure you don’t want anyone to go with?”

“Or at least a guidebook?”  Andy, always the prankster, butting in when it wasn’t needed.

Vortexes, sun life; what else then could he find? Yes, it had been one of those years for all of him.

“No, no, I should be ok, just don’t ruin for me what I can find up there.”  He took another swig from his canteen, glancing further around. 

The entire way up he had seen the trail crowded thick with people, every seventh or eight with a yellow guide book clutched deep under one armpit.  Yet as he walked through the red rocks of the canyon, he couldn't help shake the feeling that something was off – perhaps he would see a man with a knife?  They had warned him back at camp to keep his head. 

“The very air gets to you, man!,” one of the taller old-timers had said. There had been mustard on his mustaches.

Still, he had to admit that maybe the fellow was on to something.  The landscape seemed to shift and swirl around him, and he found himself focusing in on details that he normally would have overlooked - a single bush, a rock, a local bird flying overhead.

Light, shade, shadow, the rocks – the utter red of the iron stuck for a hundred thousand million whatever. 

Was that a saguaro on the distance, waving (or just wavering?) in the morning fug?

Despite his mounting nervosa, Ezekiel remained determined to continue forward - he had come too far to turn back now, and he knew that he had to see this through to the end.

“Pardon me sir!”  A tall debutant had said, pushing close.

“Outta my way!” a sharply dressed boyscout, forging ahead. 

“Excusse!” came the hashish of a sure footed Italian. 

Up and up he wound, wondering again and again if Karen had been right.

Was he on the right track?

He had never been the type to examine a guidebook, wasn’t yet sure if the nearest twists and bends really were taking him deeper into the canyon, or out of it; another tip of the hipping flaska, another hard trudge forward, up.

“Half an hour more!”  said a couple on his right, give a thumbs up.

“Fifteen more my kind sir!”  an Australian, he could have sworn it. 

Nothing was off, the heat was just getting to him a tad was all, the fact it had been forty minuets longer already than he had hoped or suspected, up, another few steps, further up.

Boyston Canoyn.  Back at camp they had told him this was the real center of it, the real place where the nights would linger, and sometimes clocks would run..

(What was off, nothing is off, all is fine, something is off what was off, what was..)

So out he had came, on he had trudged, the weight of the year starting to slide off, no, nothing was off up here, his sister had been wrong, he continued on until he saw…no cyotes at least, nothing much to worry off, no ginkos, no sloths, no worries other than the…other than the…

The lines.

The lines?

It was then that he spotted what his deeper animal cortex had been warning him for the last half hour, maybe more, the sheer audacity and size of it.

There were regular lines

“Huh,” was the best he could manage.  The rocks and trees seemed to be arranged in strange, straight lines radiating out from somewhere, he was sure, and he couldn't help but feel that there was something deeper and darker at play.

No, not malevolent; just a trick of the light, just another few steps, just another..

When he reached the top of the summit, Ezekiel saw a massive stone outcropping that looked like it was about to give way on one side, and a sheer cliff on the other that resembled the prow of a boat pointed towards the sky to the other.  Groups of people were huddled nearer the tall rock to the right, where one gnarled old tree that seemed to stick out of the ground like some ancient being.

Many people waved at it, but nobody went near it or touched it.

Nothing sinister after all.

Yet what of the outcrop to the left?  This was clearly the ‘vortex’ his sister had been chatting of this morning, its clear styrated shape to.

“Betcha couldn’t run around it twice!”  Yelled the shorter.

“Bet cha couldn’t keep up.”  Ezekiel could only stand there

 It was huge!  Taller than a house, even if only an eight as wide.  It was hard not to take ones eyes off of it once it was spotted.

Could it be done? 

This side of the wide stone seemed to sit as if on a table top, .

Eh, why not?  Something about the lines continued as he stooped. 

He started round.

He made his way towards the stone, his heart pounding in his chest.  Likely it was from the altitude.  Likely too, the booze was just beginning to get a foothold.  It looked the same hundred shades of dark maroon that made up the rest of the canyon.

Heat, a slab of stone similar to Heston’s Ten Commandments; oh, he was being ten shades of fool on this; he continued forward. 

As he continued on, Ezekiel couldn't help but feel that he was being watched.  He glanced over his shoulder repeatedly, expecting to see one of the smaller kids ready to strike him with a stick, or else some new fangled toy, or perhaps .  No, nothing but the middle aged couple bitching about the map in front of them, two snotting little dogs nipping at each other. 

One step, two – a little further and he couldn’t see the big tree further back behind him.  A few paces further on.

Three steps, ten – a few paces more and he was certain he had crossed the halfway mark. 

Almost, almost, there we.., his mind kept telling him, edging him forward, the thick molten bottom of the hip flask calling, he turned harder again, he was just, he..he..he..

When he finally made it to the other side, he let out a sigh of relief.  Saftey!  Pauseure!  Nothing else then to worry!

No, no!  It was just a trick of the light?? 

Yet beside him, mere millimeters from his hand a thick insect lounged happily.  He had seen one before only in books, pondered.

The land bent – the very rays of the sun seemed to reach out and touch him.

“What the…?”  Was all the best he could think to say.  Nobody around him seemed to notice, too many were busy taking pictures, the side of the scorpion continuing to mill and twist and to…to turn back into the stick it had always been??

No, no, that couldn’t be, wasn’t right! 

Quickly he pulled his hand close, grabbed up what remained of the knapsack, and started to hurry down.  In his head he swore he could almost just hear the faint tick of drumbeats, having to remind himself again and again.  Not a bug, not a trial, not on time – down, leaving, time to go. 

As he descended the mountain, whistling a tune to steady his nerves, Ezekiel heard a low whisper behind him (no, nothing but the wind, no faint tricks or turns of the light).  He turned around, but there was nothing there.

Nothing but the wind, nothing but the tall basketball fellow or the Lithuanian just going for a morning stroll, nothing but, nothing but..

Sedona, vortexes – a very split in the seam of the earth, where (what?  What exactly other than himself?) something could slither out if it wanted to. 

He quickened his pace, but the whispers only grew louder.  Another few steps, and he could feel the dirt begin to whine, the very ground threatened to give way, the very air seemed to taste..

“Is everything ok?” 

The lady seemed nice.  She had bright purple boots on, and wildly stringy hair that for some reason reminded him of his mother, standing short before him, hair pulled back and up and smart and close and proper. 

“Yes, assuredly,” he mentioned, lifting himself again and again.  He couldn’t help but stare at the flower on her bonnet, glance from time to time at the smaller buds seeming to peek and pry from each corner and crevasse of the land – flowers, chimeras; the land suddenly seemed alive and thrilled!

“Yes, I was just up checking out your...oh what do you call them, your fabled ‘vortexes’ or whatnot, and seemed to have forgotten to bring enough water!”

“Oh that’s alright dearie – here, have some of mine!”

As he descended the mountain, whistling a tune, Ezekiel couldn't shake the feeling that something profound had happened to him back up there. He felt a sense of clarity and purpose that he had never experienced before, and he knew that he had been changed.  Flowers seemed to sprout after each step he took, seemed to stick to the sides of his shoes, seemed to swirl up and around the very motes of dust and deep that circled the air.  

…or perhaps it was the first of the tincture, taking hold.

Sedona, vortexes; life.

Either way, he continued whistling as he carried on south, happy at how the day was turning out.