Molly O’Shea

Molly O’Shea was a bonny lass,

And the pride of the Emerald Isle.

With long flowing locks which fell ‘pon her breasts,

And a face that made every man smile.

Molly was wild from the time she was a child,

Untamed as the wind running free.

But it were my foolish heart, right from the start,

That were captured when Molly smiled at me.

For a lifetime I’d chased her, and caught her, and lost her,

Once I’d hold her then I’m left all alone.

Well, that’s what I get from Molly’s body made of flesh,

But her heart which is surely made of stone.

Oh hey, Molly O’Shea.

Hey ho, please don’t go!

Oh hey, Molly O’Shea.

Hey hey, why won’t you stay?

Molly; she’s granite to me now, boys,

She’s just like granite to me now.

When Molly reached the marrying age,

I asked her to be my bride.

We drove into the country, she leaned over to kiss me,

Swiped my wallet and most of my pride.

Years later we finally met at the altar,

Her Pa said she must settle down.

We exchanged our vows, moved into town,

Then she left me and my head spinning round.

Oh hey, Molly O’Shea.

Hey ho, why did you go?

Oh hey, Molly O’Shea.

Hey hey, why won’t you stay?

Molly; she’s granite to me now, boys,

She’s just like granite to me now.

After raising three kids, can you believe it, we had ’em,

Molly told me that she loved me a lot.

Her words brightened my day and lightened my heart,

Then she left me again right on the spot.

Time passed, it were very late in the day,

While Molly sat by my side.

She said it was time she’d be going away,

She smiled at me, then went and died.

Oh hey, Molly O’Shea.

Hey ho, please don’t go!

Oh hey, Molly O’Shea.

Hey hey, I wish you could stay!

Molly; she’s granite to me now, boys,

She’s just like granite to me now.

Then they came and they carried away,

My sweet lovely Molly O’Shea.

They buried her, and placed a stone on her head,

Always leaving me when she’s alive or she’s dead.

Molly; she’s granite to me now, boys,

She’s just like granite to me now.

~FS

The Tea Song

Some days seem rough before they start, my father used to say~

Son drag your bum up off that couch, before it gets away.

This world can be right cruel it’s true, the rest is up to you~

Lace up your boots, put on a smile, it’s time to see it through.

Stand strong my son,

God’s will be done,

It’s only for a day.

The evils of this present age~

Shall soon be swept away.

So when this world appears too much,

Too much to carry on~

Step back, stop and breathe,

And chat a while~

And have a cup of tea.

Sit and have a cup of tea.

Ah, sit and have a cup of tea…

Just have a cup of tea.

~FS

Howl, Again

Or whimper into the dead of night, late, when everyone is sound asleep, or should be sleeping, when I should be sleeping, but how, when visions of destruction dance like shrapnel in my head, images of little girls, their fathers reaching up under their skirts, traumas too sad to hear, to see, like young men forced to fight in wars that have no end, that should never have begun, blown to pieces, holding pieces of themselves together with duct tape and baling wire, hoping to see their mothers once again, hoping they won’t come apart before it’s too late, before they can make it home again, when home is taken by somebody else, when home is under a bridge, too much money for anyone to afford, to stagger, to gasp, to scream and run away, into the mountains if we’re lucky, where the wind blows savagely and wild animals hunt us, but better to be hunted by the wolves than by other men, giving and taking blows, never ending, demanding, lying and taking, taking, taking all that might have been sacred, breaking through the doors of  our churches with fabulous tales, promises of safety, secular fantasies that replace ancient orthodoxies, progressive delusions that supplant traditions beloved for millennia, a farewell to trust and faith, capitulating to a fear that hides within masks, pretenses of love and harmony, parading like neighbor’s, like Christians, betraying, Christians, each other, themselves, betraying, betrayal, the seeds of terror, of night-sweats, of nowhere to turn, nowhere to trust, nowhere to believe, our sacred institutions prostituted, prostituting, despicable and filthy, beauty corrupted by betrayal, this is the stuff of nightmares, dead-ends, sorrows and loneliness. I remember the beautiful places where we gathered together, apart from the world, where we worshipped and made our home, home away from home, sojourning in hope of a more perfect future, before confusion, coercion, good intentions and hell disguised within cloaks of light bastardized our communion, how can we not wail now, even years later, after so many years of deceit, lying to ourselves and each other, believing the lies, telling the lies and consuming them like an unholy Eucharist, peeling our masks down to taste the sacred through deceptive teeth, tongues that lap up treachery and deception, breathing the holy air through N-95s, self-satisfied, primitive, raising the banner of our tribe, proving our allegiance, our loyalty to the world, trampling on the still small voice that whispers truth into our ears. Howl at the loss of everything we loved, the betrayal of whole societies, peoples, families, congregations turning their backs on one other and on what once was, which is no more, and cannot be regained, never found, lost forever, until death do us part, and we are restored in darkness, into a different world.

~FS

Jesus

His tender eyes spoke,

To man, as to a little child,

In the dawning of the morning,

So fair and clear and bright.

Bathed in sunlight,

Walking on new-born earth,

With chubby feet washed clean,

With eyes gazing straight and true.

Not turning away~

Either from the glare,

Or from the shadow,

But seeing it all,

While He watched over.

Yet as the sun climbed higher,

Men gave their eyes to others,

Gazing as through clouded eyes.

With trust in trust misplaced,

And with love of love erased~

With words of blooming sweetness,

Loyal to their dim heart’s weakness.

Until Spirit intervened,

Interceding our salvation,

Mediating revelation,

Through a nativity reborn.

A mother of clear vision,

He raised our eyes to His,

And lit the heart on fire,

And spoke again the Word,

That freed us from each other.

~FS

Kara

Tender shoot, run, run away,

Make your tracks soft, tender bunny,

Run, run away, by the light of the moon,

Into the deep of night you must go,

Escape far, far from home—

Run from your home, frightened bunny,

Come into my arms, I’ll hold you,

I’ll keep you safe from harm,

Lean into me and I’ll hold you,

I’ll kiss your furrowed brow—

A morning mist enshrouds you,

Like laughter falls from the sky,

Erases the tears that bound you,

Our hands interlaced,

Yours and mine—

Insomnia

Here we are in the middle of the night awake,

A walk to the bathroom in the dark,

Feeling our way through doorways,

Trying not to fall, trying not to hurt,

Like an eternity is our brief passage,

Starting so slowly and ending too quickly,

Eons we slept unbothered in shadow,

In the middle of this night we are awakened,

Yawning and startled we stand,

Playing our part, while yearning for sleep,

We can’t seem to sleep, why can’t we sleep?

Now is our time to shine—reluctantly—

Unwilling to lay down this script,

We stride the stage to the applause,

Or is it only the toilet running?

Is that the world clapping for us,

Or is it simply the water flowing?

Pause and reflect upon this sweet moment,

While you are awake and cannot sleep.

Rub your eyes and do not yearn too much,

Sleep will come again to close them.

An Old Wood Bridge

Under the trees,

Spanning a small creek,

Rests an old wood bridge.

About as long as two men—

Lying end to end.

As wide as one man’s arms, outstretched—

Fingertip to fingertip.

It’s a reliable footbridge,

Although it leans a little to the left,

As I head out across it every morning;

And it leans a bit to the right,

On my return home in the evening.

But for all of that, it has no politics of its own,

And cares not a bit about mine.

It simply does its job—

Carrying me to the other side.

It’s built for adventures—

Its aged planks groan and creak underfoot,

With views, through its heartwood,

Rotted away by time, neglect and weather,

Of the water that flows beneath.

Its surface made slick from years of life,

Portends a slip and fall off its tattered edge,

For any impatient traveler who crosses too fast.

It invites one to take it slow,

Enjoy the passage and watch their steps—

Wild salmon swim within its shadow,

A possum or two scurries by,

Scattering the fallen leaves with a rustle,

A moist fragrant smell of earth fills the air,

And time—suspended briefly—

Between what has been, and what will be,

Exhales; and this woodland world holds its breath,

When I cross over the old wood bridge.

The Dream of a Forgotten Love Song

There are times when I feel as though I have always been here. Of course, I know this isn’t true. There was a time when I arrived; although I can’t remember when. There was a time before I knew, what seems like, everything about this place. Now, it all is so familiar: its gardens and courtyards, the paths which meander between flagstone patios and tiny sitting areas, outdoor rooms that are hidden behind hedges, and others that lay serenely under the canopies of tall, arching trees; its buildings, dining rooms with walls of windows which fold away, and open out onto raised terraces; hallways that lead inside to kitchens; and stairways, and bedrooms; and small closets, only large enough for a person or two, which hold enchantments in secrecy, and surprises that delight. And of course, the light—everywhere the light. Bright, golden light that fills the rooms and spills out through the windows, causing the flagstone to faintly glow in the gathering twilight. Light which makes the white columns and door frames shimmer and shine, and gives one a warm comforting feeling; and makes the heart smile, if not sing. It is light which radiates from thousands of tiny bulbs, suspended from ceilings, and strung out across the garden landscape, forming promenades of stars under which people gather, or walk hand-in-hand in blissful reveries.  

I am fortunate. Because I live and work here. I belong here; at least for now. I’ve given my life to this place, after all. And for goodness sake, I built the patios with my own bare hands. I laid out the pathways, and dug them, and raked them smooth. I clip the hedges and prune the trees. I’ve earned my keep, I should say, but even so, I feel uneasy. Always anxious, in the back of my mind, wondering, when might I be asked to leave? When might I be noticed, as an imposter, and shown the door? When might I lose it all? But we are more like a family here, than a business. We all work together, everyone does their job. We meet face to face, and there are smiles, and handshakes—embraces—laughing and sharing; and when we look into each other’s eyes, I feel safe. And for a moment, I disbelieve my doubts, and I begin to think that this may last forever; though mercy isn’t mine to give, it still may shine on me. I was never jealous about not owning this place, or that others did. I didn’t need to own it; I just didn’t want to lose it. Jealousy, for me, was the lie that I could keep what I have forever, that I wouldn’t someday have to give it all away.

In the garden, where three gravel paths meet is a tall circular hedge. It is a hedge of pink camellias trained against a lattice framework of roughly eight feet diameter and eight feet high, open to the sky, and with an opening near one of the paths. The camellias are pruned so that one can see through them, and through the lattice, to the inside of the circle where a metal frame stands, with a hook at the top, from which a large wooden birdcage is hung every evening after sunset. This is done without fanfare, and nothing advertises the event. It is a simple gift. The birds sing for about fifteen minutes and then, after they conclude their song, the cage is taken away again until the following evening. Like an intermission between acts at the theater, the bird song is an interlude in the midst of life’s dramas. For this brief time everything in life falls away as in a dream, and those who are fortunate to be there by happenstance, along with those who made a point to be there, can be carried away to wherever they please, to places known only to them. One might drift gently into the past as the tiny birds sing, or one might follow their song as it lifts them up into the night sky, and dream of future things. Sometimes, loved ones lost in the past even appear for those who listen. And from night to night the song is never the same. One night the song may be a simple sweetness; another night it may be bittersweet and melancholy. Some nights the birds sing like trumpets blaring, triumphant and holy, and other nights theirs is a soft and gentle lilting. Without conductor, they orchestrate improvisationally, as one body, like a flock of birds in the sky, darting this way and that, seemingly without a leader, but always in harmony. To the listener their music is always familiar and enchanting, and intimate; as if it is being composed just for them.  

One evening as the birds began their song, I was walking through an empty dining room on my way outdoors, when I paused a moment to listen. Their notes were low and resonant, but feminine, like those of an alto voice, and then a trill like that of laughter rose lightly over the top, dancing in the air and then fading into the night. I was startled by a voice behind me, of very similar quality, and turned to see a woman standing near me, only slightly younger than myself. She had eyes that reminded me of Cleopatra—large, dark, sultry—and olive colored skin, smooth like a child’s; and she smiled ever so subtly in a manner reminiscent of the Mona Lisa. I recognized her instantly as my first love from my youth, though she had aged by several decades, and like me, was no longer a child. Her presence here and now, so suddenly and unexpectedly and so close to me was exhilarating. Memories of our shared past flooded my mind, and mingled with thoughts of new possibilities. My first impulse was to embrace her, and hold her close as though no time had ever passed between us. I took a small step towards her, but she pulled back and looked at me quizzically. She clearly didn’t remember me.

Perhaps she simply didn’t recognize me. I was much older after all—heavier, grayer, balder. If I had become a forgotten love, it was not surprising; and to be expected after so many years. I couldn’t blame her for that. So I decided to bide my time, not press my luck, and wait for a more advantageous moment to make my move. Why so many silly idioms such as ‘make my move’ suddenly came into my mind at that moment I chalked up to nervousness, and to the unexpected influx of so many adolescent memories.  

As she spoke to me it became evident however, that she wasn’t here in order to fulfill my dreams, but she had some of her own. The bird song, if it had indeed magically brought her here, apparently had a broader scope than my personal interests. She informed me that she was here to purchase the property. She wanted to take a look around, at everything that was to be included in the sale—all of the buildings, the grounds, its gardens and the surrounding woods. I must have appeared alarmed, for she quickly assured me that there would be no immediate terminations to staff; in fact, she planned to keep everyone on after the completion of the sale. Of course, she couldn’t guarantee there wouldn’t be some shake up down the road, that was probably inevitable, but nothing right away. We would cross that bridge when we got to it, she said comfortingly. Her assurances failed to put me at ease however, but somehow made me more anxious about my status here. At the same time I was so enchanted by her presence here, that I could not put aside my delightful memories of holding her and kissing her; and the joy of our ‘deep’ conversations when we were young. I yearned to speak with her like that again, and to spend time with her as I once had. In hopes of also sparking some memory in her of our previous life together, I offered to be her guide and to show her around the property. As we walked outside, my mind raced in search of things from our common past which I could say to help jog her memory. The home she grew up in, where we had spent so many hours together, came forward in my mind.

“I imagine this probably reminds you of your childhood home,” I said airily, trying hard to appear nonchalant, while waiting intently for her reply as we walked. “I mean the flagstone patio and French doors, the trellis and such.” She said nothing. “I was just thinking, it is likely that this here is very similar to what you had then,” I paused, waiting, and still she said nothing, but continued to walk with me. I began to get nervous at her silence, and doubted myself; maybe she wasn’t the girl from my past after all. I ventured a little further, “I was only thinking, it would make sense if this reminded you of your childhood home, and was the reason you are attracted to purchasing this now,” I struggled to continue, but did so, clumsily: “I bet you even had a pool, like the one over there, and a covered walkway with climbing vines, just like this one here.” And still, she said nothing. She drew her coat tighter and plunged her hands into the pockets, and glanced indifferently this way and that, easily ignoring my conversation, while inspecting her surroundings.  

But I persisted, convinced that it was impossible she could be anyone else but who I remembered her to be; she had to be my first love, there was no way I could be mistaken. In fact, her silence now made me even more certain. I searched my memory for something bold, some detail, something more intimate, that she couldn’t ignore, that she would have to respond to, and prove to both of us that we were who we once were. But what could I say; what should I say? Surely there are some things that I remember, but I couldn’t say those out loud. And what if those things meant nothing to her? Or if they had faded in her memory, or mingled with other memories, of other men; and what if there was nothing so special about me, in her mind, at all? I reconsidered it would be better not to be too bold. We paused in the garden, standing before an enormous hydrangea in full bloom, the light from a nearby window illuminating its large, mop-head flowers, making them look like Chinese lanterns, glowing against the surrounding darkness. “Do you still know loneliness?” I asked her, as we stood there in the semi-dark. “Even as a young woman, you possessed amazing insight. I marveled at you. You understood the ache that lives inside every man’s heart.”

She turned towards me and took my hand in hers. There was a lovely gleam in her mischievous eyes as she looked up at me. She smiled.

“You do recognize me, don’t you?” I whispered. “You do remember.”

She laughed. “Of course I do.”

“Well then, why didn’t you? You acted as though…why, you were pretending that you didn’t know me?!” I was incredulous, but nearly laughed as well.

“I wasn’t pretending, not really. We aren’t the same people we were back then. In a sense it’s true, I don’t know you.”

“You are still as clever as I remember; that hasn’t changed. Frankly, I don’t think I’ve changed much at all since I was eighteen.”

She sighed. “Besides, it was humorous watching you struggle to make me remember.”

We laughed; and then I lifted my hands, placing them gently upon both of her cheeks, and I held her face briefly in my hands, feeling her warmth. And then I stroked her hair for a moment; touching her to prove to myself that she was real. My mind could not believe what my senses surely felt; I found myself lost in thought as I held her. But was she real? This moment was pregnant with the totality of all that I could remember about this girl, and of our times together. All of my dreams, memories, regrets and hopes coalesced into this vision of her that was now before me—which I held so poignantly in my arms—and touched so vividly with my hands and with my mind, but which were also tinged by an aspect of fantasy. As I gazed into her dark eyes, trying to extract every depth of emotion that might dwell within her, in order to feed my own desires, the familiar feeling that I could not have her, returned to me. It was a recurring awareness that I never owned her, could never own her, and had no claim over her. Again, I wondered if she was real, even though I believed that I was holding her close to me. Yes, she was my first love, and she had become more than that; she became also a symbol of everything that I love, and everything I cannot keep in this beautiful world, including life itself.

I was startled back from these thoughts and the sweet stupor brought on by them, when a small bulb began to flicker on the strand that hung over the pathway above us. We continued our walk. We spent the evening together, and far into the night walking the paths through the gardens, as I described the grounds, the buildings, and everything I knew about the property she intended to purchase. I smiled within myself as she spoke to me all about her past, and her plans for this place. Unlike me, she seemed destined to remain here, and it made sense to me that she would someday own it. In a romantic and poetic way she seemed worthy of it all; like a princess entitled to inherit the kingdom. Whereas I always saw myself like a guest, or a hired-hand, and one that was grateful to be allowed to stay for any amount of time, but who would inevitably have to move along someday.

We sat down on a stone bench and listened for a while to the sound of falling water from a nearby fountain. The morning light was not far off now, as the night was well spent and coming to a close. This life suddenly reminded me of lyrics to a favorite song, from a time long-past—words so warm and tender—but words that one can no longer clearly remember. I reached out and took her hands in mine, feeling her warmth, as we sat together listening to the water fall and observing the night sky fading. Yes, in time, I know that I shall awaken, but for now I will hold her just a little while longer.

The Man Who Cried At Mountains

The town where Salvador lived was small and tucked into a valley, like a babe in its mother’s arms. And it was ringed by small jagged mountains, like a crown upon its head. When the sun rose each morning, the mountaintops glistened like a thousand jewels set into a framework of gold and platinum; and when it set each evening, the streets were robed in deep purple and crimson. People gathered in the shadows of the church, whose steeple rose sharply into the sky, and of the clock tower, which sat stoutly upon the supporting columns of the courthouse façade. Tall pines and firs graced the corners of the public square, below which well-maintained lawns stretched from side to side, and wide concrete pathways crisscrossed the grass, leading old couples from the surrounding streets to the amphitheater at the north end of the park, from which a band often played popular hits on summer evenings, competing with the sounds of children swinging and twirling from monkey-bars in the nearby playground, or dancing across the paved edges of an enormous water-fountain, a stone edifice set precisely at the middle of the park, and which appeared in the mid-day sun as a diamond shimmering and sparkling; which made one squint and rub a tear from the corner of their eyes, if they stared too long at its watery surface.  

Salvador was one of the kids who frequented this playground. He came from one of the prominent families in town; a very large family. One uncle owned a restaurant and a café near the square. Another uncle owned the grocery store. Aunts and cousins sold fruit and vegetables at the outdoor market. His grandfathers played backgammon and cards under the shade of the sycamores in front of the church, as they sipped tea or coffee, sometimes spiked with a touch of tequila or of vodka, or whatever else Salvador’s eldest brother brought back with him from his many trips overseas. Even friends of the family, who lived down one side street or another, even these would turn out to be—upon closer questioning—a distant or not so distant relative: a brother-in-law of a second cousin perhaps, or the twin daughters of his great-aunt’s maid—who rumor whispered had had relations with his great-uncle, and so, well…these girls might also be blood relatives, but it was best not to ask questions about that.

Nearly everyone in town knew Salvador and he was very well liked. He was an energetic kid, with a ready smile, and a quick wit. Caught taking a basket of oranges from his aunt’s produce stand one morning, he explained good-naturedly that he wanted to give them to a friend, for her family, who had all come down with the flu. Oranges have a lot of vitamin-C he explained, and that will help them get better. His explanation itself hadn’t convinced his aunt to turn a blind eye to his thievery, but his innocent eyes and his honest expression as he explained himself to her, melted her heart, and she forgave the offence and even added a few lemons to the basket, patting him on the head and commending him for his thoughtfulness, before he ran off to fulfill his mission.  

Fresh breezes blew down from the mountains, bringing fragrant aromas in their arms and casting them in swirling eddies throughout the streets of the little town. In all seasons there was something to enjoy: rich citrus flowers spicy and piquant, soft roses upon wild vines, summer rains gathering into creekside pools, and musty leaves fallen and decaying amidst the ferns. Morning was especially full to bursting, with the mountain scents that rolled into town, anointing it with their sublime and earthy touch. Salvador ran through an intoxicating burst of cinnamon emanating from a small grove of trees lining the road. Without breaking stride he took several deep sniffs of the sweet spice upon the wind. It made him want to stop and climb into those trees and take a nap. But he had places to go and gifts to deliver; he could nap later. The basket of fruit swung from his shoulder as he ran, and the weight of it nearly toppled him as it careened from side to side. As he rounded the next corner, an orange escaped and rolled across the alley, stopping at the feet of an old lady, who was standing there watering some potted plants. She called out to the boy. “Salvador! Did you drop something?”

The boy stopped abruptly, and turned towards her with a quizzical look upon his sun-browned face. She bent over, picked up the fruit and held it in the air. “Or is this one for me?” She smiled, and her face wrinkled in a hundred familiar places as she laughed. He smiled broadly back at his grandmother. “Mimi! That is medicine for a sick family. But, of course, if you need it more than they do, you can keep it.” He walked up to her, looking very serious and severe, which took her aback at first, but then she chuckled.

“How could I take medicine from a needy family? What would you think of me, Salvador?” She held out the orange and the boy put it back into his basket, and turned to leave. “But Salvador, have a glass of milk before you go,” his grandmother said as she ducked quickly inside the door, and returned a moment later with the refreshment. “Thank you Mimi,” he said, and then he drank, wiped his mouth on his sleeve and handed back the glass. “I have to go now, they are waiting.”

“Good boy, Salvador,” the old lady chuckled, as he took off running up the alley and out of view.

Several years later, at noon, the church bells rang out, filling the air with a plaintive cacophony. They chimed in tribute and remembrance for one of Salvador’s brothers. The young man had been climbing in the mountains with his friends when he lost his footing and fell to his death. Now he lay in his casket at the front of the church while the townsfolk who filled the building, celebrated his life, mourned his passing, and hoped for a better life beyond the grave. Salvador was there too, waiting in line to see his brother, who was supposedly lying inside the wood box, though he couldn’t see inside it from where he stood. The room was lit solely by candles, but for a lone chandelier over his brother, which cast a bright white light onto the stone floor and gave the box an otherworldly radiance which excited Salvador. The line moved slowly so he tried to occupy his mind as he waited. Glancing about, the faces of his relatives appeared soft in the low-light, and they looked like disembodied ghosts in the surrounding gloom; specters emerging briefly from the shadows and returning again into obscurity.

When Salvador finally got to see his brother he was perplexed, for this thing laying in the box certainly wasn’t his brother. He stared at the figure and held his breath, hoping to see some movement, some slight quiver; just a little smile. Anything. He scanned the body, the hands, the neck…its face. Nothing. No, this wasn’t the boy who had climbed trees, who had eaten cookies by the handful, or who had raced Salvador up the road to the orange trees, which grew in the foothills above town. It was strange. This was a different person, or no person at all. Salvador nearly laughed, but instead he only smiled briefly, not long enough for anyone to see him. Everyone had come to see his brother, but his brother wasn’t even here. It was a surprising joke, a trick that Salvador hadn’t anticipated nor expected when he had imagined seeing his dead brother. For a moment, he enjoyed this inside joke, which he shared with his brother only. Had nobody else noticed? Did they all actually think that this was his brother in the box? This is a good joke. But Salvador felt a sudden tinge of anxiety. A thought came to him, as though out of nowhere, and it disturbed him. What if the joke is on him? If this wasn’t his brother, where was he? Or worse, what if this was his brother lying motionless here in front of him? That thought terrified Salvador the most. The creature in the box resembled Arturo; it was enough to convince anyone who hadn’t known him very well.

Salvador had seen enough and wanted out. Why couldn’t anyone make his brother wake up?! He looked at the exit and wondered, could he run out of this place without causing a scandal? He needed to get away, but he didn’t want to disappoint his parents. He didn’t want the family to talk about how he had brought shame on everyone, especially for Arturo, by running out of the church and causing a scene. He wanted to climb an orange tree with Arturo; if he could get back there now, maybe he would find his dead brother in the mountains.

Salvador’s father had a keen eye on his family at all times and right now he could see panic rising in his son’s face. He stepped forward and put his hands firmly on his boy’s shoulders. Bending down, he whispered into his ear and gave the boy a hug. Salvador relaxed a little, gratefully accepting his father’s comforting words and the warmth of his embrace. But he was still on high alert and felt a compelling need to get out of there. Relief came finally when the lid on the box was closed and they placed it into the ground. Later, surrounded by all of the members of his large family back at his home, Salvador smiled again.

Quite a few years later, as a young man, Salvador worked in his family’s orchard. The job afforded him long days to observe the life of the mountain, and to consider his own life. Salvador’s education, by any formal standard, was short and unimpressive. He had attended school through the tenth grade, but after that he never again set foot inside a classroom. However, he trained his intellect through the exercise of his keen perceptions, and by his astute observation of the world around him. So, in this sense he became well educated, and a bit philosophical.

Salvador often thought, and would sometimes say, that philosophies were like overcoats: they could provide comfort while they fit, but we usually grew out of them, and eventually we looked for something new to replace the old. Or, they protected us against the harsh realities of life; at least until they grew threadbare, after we began to see through them. But then, oftentimes, we never truly threw them out, but simply hung them in the closet so to speak, waiting for a future time to try them on again.  This especially was true with philosophies explaining death and suffering, which Salvador recycled with hope, but also impatiently. How many times had he heard at the funeral for a loved one, by someone making a stab at wisdom, ‘at least they are in a better place now, and they are no longer suffering’? He even found himself saying the very same thing, for lack of anything better to say, and it would irritate him. Much was unsatisfactory about an imaginary ‘better place’, even if it were real. And an ‘end to their suffering’ rang very hollow, since that ‘end’ effectively increased his own suffering, now that they were gone and he would never get to hold them again. He would prefer to admit the anguish of this loss and the abject horror of it, but it seemed carelessly unmerciful to address this out loud, in the presence of others, who were also suffering and needed something positive and hopeful to ease their pain. So he continued to talk about this ‘better place’ that everyone was going to, because it fit the bill better than yelling at God, and bringing shame to himself.  Although complaining to God often crossed his mind.

As the years passed after Arturo died, the family grew. New little boys and girls were born and these new lives replaced that of Arturo, and of the other family members who also shipped off to that better place during this time. The fact that time and life was constantly renewing like this, was sometimes brought to Salvador’s attention by a well-meaning family member who wanted to brighten his mood. In these moments of melancholy, when Salvador yearned to run with Arturo, or hold his grandpa’s weathered hand, or share his dreams with a sister, Esther, as they watched the clouds together drift slowly overhead; when all of these people who were gone, never to return again, would permeate his thoughts, he would look at the new people around him, and smile. Truly, life was constantly renewing. Although this comforting thought felt oddly impersonal.

Salvador had a crazy aunt who talked to her dead cats that weren’t there. She ‘carried’ one or two into town sometimes, and stroked their backs, which made them purr, she said. She’d hold one out so you could pet it too if you’d like, but few people would try. Rather they might shake their head and politely decline, and then look sadly in her direction as she would walk back home to feed them. Salvador would pet the ‘cat’, which made his aunt smile gratefully. ‘Do you ever miss your cats?’ Salvador might sometimes ask her. ‘I keep them always with me, my dear, and I never forget them,’ she would say.

‘Time allows us to forget. Isn’t it sometimes better not to remember?’ But she would disagree, usually saying something like: ‘Forgetting the dead is selfish; we must carry them along with us every day. It is cruelty itself to leave them behind on their own.’ And with these words her eyes would well up and she’d start crying. But when Salvador would mention this perspective to his mother, she would twist up her face and spit, ‘Selfishness is forgetting the living, because you’re too busy remembering the dead.’ Salvador struck a balance so as not to offend anyone, living or dead, and to keep the peace. He decided that he would remember the dead, within reason; but he’d also forget about them, to keep them in their place. Yet, who but saints and angels can make their mind do exactly what they intend? As it turned out, he remembered the departed more than he wished; and forgot about them more than they would allow.

In the heat of the summer sun, just past mid-day, the mountain which hung high above the orange orchard where Salvador was working, would loom menacingly. Its bare granite top blazed starkly against the cool blue sky, as shadows of coal-black descended its weathered face in haphazard shards, like inverses of lightning, filling all of its crags and fissures with deep furrows of night. Between the orchard and the base of the stone cliffs was a brief span of denuded land, a large white scar of raw earth, with vestiges of burnt trees scattered across its surface. A fire had caused the damage, and had brought most of Salvador’s family, along with many others from the town below, up to fight it and save the orange trees from destruction. They fought for hours against the flames, armed only with shovels and several buckets, which they filled from a cistern at the edge of the orchard. In the end, it was the wind, more than their heroic efforts, that turned the flames away, back towards the cliffs, and eventually the fire burned out on its own, leaving a quarter to a half-mile of bare dirt on the sloping hillside above the orchard. For years afterwards, the fire was a source of many real and imagined stories the townspeople would tell one another, of fantastic bravery, individual sacrifice and communal solidarity. It was a day that was memorialized in their memories as a day of victory against a powerful enemy in which tragedy was averted. Few, if any of them, understood how that day also set the scene for another tragedy which loomed in the not too distant future.

For weeks after the fire everything smelled burnt; and it was impossible to make the smell go away. It hung over the town and in the mountains like a dense fog and filled everyone’s nostrils, which stung the mucous membranes and was irritating. Some people developed a persistent cough and a few began to have seasonal allergies after that, which stayed with them for life. It gave Salvador a headache and made him feel more tired than usual. His grandma Mimi developed pneumonia and died a short time later. And it was around this same time, when he was in his thirties, that Salvador found himself beginning to measure his own life by the deaths of others, when he might say or think things like: ‘Do you remember? That was the time just before so-and-so died, when we did such-and-such together’?, or later in his life, something like this, ‘Mimi made that wall hanging two years before her death, just a little while after her husband Alfonso had passed away, I was about thirty-two back then, and I’m sixty-two now, and that’s the same age he was when he died, isn’t that strange?, life moves quickly’.

Salvador began to seek solitude in the mountains. He spent long hours there because, as he put it, he ‘Wanted to lodge some complaints with the management (of this world), and that’s where their offices are located.’  Out there he felt free and at liberty to speak frankly about his displeasure towards death, and sorrows, and especially against the loss of the relationships he loved. He hated his powerlessness in the face of these losses, he felt guilty leaving his loved ones to death, and he was ashamed of it all, of everything. Although most of the time ‘the management’ didn’t give the impression that it was listening to him, still, by the time he was done submitting his complaints, he felt better and somewhat comforted. Besides, these were things that were difficult to air down in town. Perhaps because everyone else felt the same way as he did, and it was uncomfortable to discuss; and possibly because nobody else had any real solutions either. One afternoon he sat at the edge of a familiar creek, on a large flat rock he’d visited for decades, in a spot under an oak tree which he and his brothers often frequented, sometimes trying to fish (though there weren’t any fish there, and never had been) and sometimes swimming, or looking for creatures. Arturo once found a big, old, ugly salamander near this rock a long time ago, and Salvador smiled at the memory of the slimy critter, and the splash it made when Arturo dropped it onto a fallen branch and it missed, and disappeared into the water. His father also once sat here with him, after Salvador’s mother had died, when his dad tried to explain the cycle of life to him: one of those time-worn philosophies designed to make us feel better, which rarely accomplish the task. It is just the natural course of all things, we’re born-we live-die-give-ourselves-for-the-life-of-others-repeat-repeat…Salvador frowned at the memory of that discussion. He remembered how he wanted to scream at his dad right then, ‘Sure, our bodies decompose! And they nourish the lives of the next generation. Fine! Worms will enjoy mom’s body now, that’s comforting!’ But as he sat there, he stopped himself from remembering any further, telling himself, ‘these are the very times meant for forgetting.’ And with that, he rose up and continued his walk in the mountains.

Not far from that creek was a small clearing surrounded by many large trees which form a network of interconnected branches, that act as a highway for an extended family of squirrels, which Salvador had befriended long ago, when he first began to bring them a variety of nuts to supplement their normal diet. They loved his visits and came clambering down the trunks of the trees whenever he approached. It was difficult to determine how many of them there were, they all looked basically the same, and each one scuttled this way and that way, so rapidly, that he could rarely keep them all straight. As he walked beneath the trees, all of the expectant rodents came scurrying from every direction to meet him, abruptly interrupting whatever their current tasks had been, in favor of whatever handouts Salvador had brought for them today.

In the flurry of activity, a smaller group of squirrels at the far end of the clearing caught his attention. Three of them stood motionless in a tight circle, appearing to pray, with their heads down. Two others looked on from above, as they clung upside-down to the sides of nearby tree trunks; they were also motionless. Curious, he approached them slowly, his bare feet crunching as he stepped through the thick layer, still remaining, of last year’s fallen leaves. As he came closer, none of the animals moved a muscle, although two of them gave a brief glance in his direction, before returning to their intense reverie. It became clear that one of their number was lying dead at their feet. A tiny trickle of blood draining from the back of his neck, and spilling out onto a dry leaf beneath his head, indicated a violent death, by predator, had occurred very recently. It was a horrible scene. The living animals all appeared to be stunned. They continued standing there in silence, without moving, seemingly unable to decide what else to do. Salvador could relate to their predicament; and so he also stood in silence, motionless, joining the small group as they mourned, and adding his own helplessness to theirs. Finally, he buried the poor animal, while the other creatures looked on.

Much later, Salvador sat at a table in a café with several other men, sipping tea spiked with amaretto, and sheltering from a nasty storm taking place outside. The conversation had grown lively after someone had said that man’s highest role in any society is to know their place and to not ‘rock the boat’, as this is essential for the smooth functioning of society. But this idea was ‘thoroughly repugnant’ to others at the table, who countered that man must, in any society, always assert their individuality, and ‘that was the highest role of man and the only role worthy of man!’ They went on, after the waiter brought a bottle of tequila and shots were passed around, ‘How else can man correct the intractable problems of life but by asserting himself?’ ‘Psshh, flies on a donkey! That is the same as advocating for endless war, where is the peace if every man asserts himself over every other? It’s no good.’ After which, a brief silence came over the group as another round was poured, and every man drank it down. It started up again when one of the men uttered, ‘I’m not sure it’s even possible…what intractable problem of life has man ever solved…by war or peace?’ ‘That’s my way of thinking too,’ a man who’d begun to have too much to drink agreed, and went on: ‘You can’t move mountains you know…some things you just can’t change.’ Quickly, a rebuttal was proclaimed, by a man standing up as if making a toast, ‘But remember what the Lord says, with enough faith you can move mountains!’ And he emptied his glass, before sitting back down. The other men drank to that, and one replied, ‘Well…I have yet to see it done. If you see it, let me know.’

Meanwhile, outside the café the rain kept coming down in torrents. It hadn’t let up for days. What began as a refreshing shower, became a thorough cleansing, which scrubbed the rooftops of all debris and clogged downspouts so that now, several days later, as the rain continued to pour from the skies, it also gushed over gutters and fell in sheets onto the streets below, forming little rivers in the pavement. Umbrellas were useless because the wind blew the rain horizontally, instantly drenching anyone who happened to be outdoors.

As if there wasn’t already an overabundance of rainwater in the town, the mountain sent even more down its slopes, filling streambeds and creeks to overflowing and creating new waterways which had previously never existed, making it generally unsafe to be outside, for risk of being swept away. So, most of the townspeople stayed indoors, to wait out the storm, as if their lives depended on it.

Salvador and several of his co-workers worked hard, digging in the orchard, in the early days of the storm, when the waters were light and only just beginning to accumulate. Their concern was to redirect water flowing down across the fire-scarred slope above, to catch it before it ran through the orange trees, to preserve and protect them, and to channel it around the orchard, allowing it to continue down the mountainside.  They dug a deep trench, wide enough to receive and successfully divert the water coming from above. Several days into the storm however, the earth began to fall away along the sides of this trench, as water filled it and threatened to overflow.

Salvador took advantage of a break in the storm one afternoon as the rains subsided. He, along with two of his cousins, drove up to the orchard to dig a second trench parallel with the first, to capture the overflow and redirect it further down the mountain. The earth was thick and saturated with water. Each shovel-full held fast at first, and then came loose with a sharp sucking sound—’suck’—and then fell back to earth with a ‘thud’ as it was thrown to the side. Suck-thud, suck-thud, suck-thud, they made slow but steady progress. Much further up the mountain, near the base of the cliffs, another trench was emerging, silent and unnoticed. A crack about as long as a football field and as deep as a man had formed earlier that morning. It had been gradually expanding throughout the day, but was now gaining momentum, growing faster than Salvador’s work down below. If the workers had been watching they would have noticed an unusual bulge beginning to form in the land on the other side of their original trench. In fact, the entire mountainside above the orchard where they were working appeared as if it were alive and growing.

‘Mudslide! Run, run, run!’ yelled Salvador to the others. Before the land let go and the mountain came crashing down, it first heaved and groaned as if in labor, and then everything shuddered, as a tremendous cracking and hissing could be heard for miles around; and then an overwhelming thundering that sounded like the end of the world, which went on and on, which then became a grumbling, and then a sigh, and then finally an uneasy silence.

The bodies of the three men were never found. Rescue teams searched for days, moving tons of mud to find them. But the rain continued to fall, increasing the risk of further slides so they abandoned their efforts until the storm abated. Weeks later the search resumed, but there was little hope by any of those doing the work that they would find any of the bodies. Millions of tons of mud, perhaps hundreds of millions, had fanned out and entirely covered the orchard, so that most of the trees were no longer visible. Only a handful of trees remained, and of these few, only the uppermost branches and leaves remained above ground, so that they looked more like tiny shrubs, or groundcovers, rather than trees. Of what hope was further digging? Heartfelt prayers were said for the three men, and everyone agreed that they were in a better place now. Their bodies had returned to the mountains from which they came, but their souls were now free and they lived on in our memory.