Sunrise, Sunset, Onwards and Upwards: The Changing of Pace January 4, 2009
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Hello Everyone,
I’m sure my lack of bloging have made some of you so angry that you want to punch me. Please don’t. I needed a time away from the blogshpere, but now I am coming back, not with vengeance, but with a changing of pace that some of you may find interesting.
I’m moving my blog more into the amateur writer sphere, probably less of random thought in hopes that my work might be a little more constructive, and accessible.
I leave you the new page: www.davidjcairns.wordpress.com
I’m happy to have shared this blog with everybody that read it, it’s been a slice. I hope we can continue the conversation at the new website.
David
Texting on Sunsets and Colosseums July 10, 2008
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I was texting today, while the sun went down, and I commented — It’s beautiful here.
This is somewhat of a strange thing to say, because when I’m brutally honest with everyone, I don’t find Wainwright that beautiful very often, and maybe that makes this all the more special.
I find the outskirts of Wainwright very beautiful, the canola is blooming right now, and I remember how it made me feel when I rolled into it, snow lightly falling, fresh off 43 hours of travel that had begun in Jerusalem in what seems like another life ago now. And I remember an excursion I took with my sister this winter, a search for beauty? — I would definitely call it that…but we never called it that at the time for more than one reason. But, never the less, we left Wainwright and went to the outskirts to find some trees overcome a million times over by the frost.
My sister is beautiful. I have always think of her as a beautiful piece of art fashioned by God, and in some moments, like those out there in the ice-flanked trees, the sun shines off her face and she glimpses as Helen of Troy. These are just moments, though, in which I get to be Castor for a second and then they are gone.
Its really interesting watching the character being formed into someone’s face. We all look at pictures of our high school days, then skip to the present and see how life has weathered and shaped the visage. But with my sister I’ve been a much more consistant student. I have this joke with her where I make my hands into circles and place them over my face, imitating think coke-bottle glasses. I then put on the silliest grin I could possibly muster and say “Hi, I’m Mary! I have pink-flower colored glasses! I’m in grade one! Want to be my friend?!” It’s a good laugh, and it is one of my most vivid images of her, full of life and stupid looking. Like, she just looked thick.
I’ve watched how these seasons have changed her, and I dare say that the pain and the joy that brings progress might be called a beautiful thing if you look at her face, even when watching the tears cut new lines that won’t go away. They are formed for good, can we call it beauty?
Today as the sun went down, to the south there was a great congregation of cloud. Fire colors and pinks — arranged in a sort of Colosseum, so that the center floor where the gladiators would die was a solid veil of blue. It was grand, and I was on the outside. I imagined it to be a Colosseum of gods, the center — all that blue — holding the secret.
This has been my hardest summer. There were four weeks of 2005 that I consider to be some of the hardest of my entire life, dark-dark-dark and even as I remember them now a phantom pain runs up in me. A black scar to remind me of things I rather not be reminded of.
I was driving tonight as I watched the sunset, a classic introverted thing to do. The official word on the street (”the street” being Internet personality tests) is that I’m the most introverted of all extroverted personalities. That makes sense to me, but the way I’ve always described it is this: I love to be with people, but I need time alone.
I looked out into all that blue, into the secret of God, and began to ask a list of questions I have of God, but soon gave up, I surmize, for one of two reasons (there could be others) – I don’t actually have a list because I have not mouth to talk of it* or I can’t imagine any answers that I would want to hear.
Donald Miller said that at one time he didn’t care for God or Jazz because neither resolved. I’m not going to resolve this either, other than I’ll say this: the Colosseum of the gods wasn’t over Wainwright it was out of town, yet I say that Wainwright is beautiful. I say it because I really needed a win for the home team, and I think this was a win that I could will into existence.
* In the Achebe Things Fall Apart sense, I realize this might mislead some if they think in the Till We Have Faces sense
Small Flesh Wound with Wet Cement June 22, 2008
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I think I should update.
I have been writing, I’m writing a sort of me-moire or novel. The current manuscript flows rather freely between fiction and non-fiction, but all major events thus far are based on memories that I tend to regard as true.
I have wondered if I should take an excerpt from the freewriting that I have done so far and post…I don’t think I will. I think I will keep it under-wraps for the time being, but maybe one day.
What I can promise you is that I will try and keep working on separate projects so that my blog does not degrade into an inert puddle of old posts. And if it does, you can look forward to the school year when I am enrolled in a poetry class, so if poetry is your cup o’ tea — stay tuned round September.
.
I quit my job at Boston Pizza, which is good because I was really getting tired of all the cat calls coming from the corner booth. Well, to be honest I was tired of a lot of things there and in the end I think that it was a verry good decsion — my mother and some of my other friends say that its good for my health both physically and psychologically. I am inclined to agree.
I work as a landscaper now, mostly shoveling dirt and shoveling gravel and shoveling concrete; then hauling dirt and hauling gravel and hauling concrete. My unofficial job title is “The Mule”. I like my new job.
Its greatest advantage is simple, it gives me an opportunity to shut my brain off. Sure, I still contemplate epistemological questions, such as the limits of skepticism…and other thoughts yet wander their way through the overhanging jungles of my brain. But overall cerebral activity can be become quite relaxed at work: move dirt here…I like that best.
Last week I quite my job. Last weekend I went to the mountains. I cut my hand in the mountains; this week sealed the small flesh wound with wet cement.
(Anyone Spot AK down by the Water in this Pic — That’s Classic Cairns Photography)
P.S. Did I mention that I got to go to the mountains with some of the bestest friends a man could ever ask for? And we laughed? As Harry would say: “I often wonder if that’s all we are really here for, I mean really here for.”
He Narrated June 4, 2008
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In my mind there is a small boy with a sickle.
He cuts at the golden waves of grain,
The dust of the chaff fountains up into the air and scatters the rays of the setting sun.
He has skin the color of almond wood
His rounded, dark eyes focus on the wheat, the wealth, the season of plenty.
He wears no shoes as he treads my thoughts;
I stand and watch in my black-soled sneakers
I stare at his face,
And wonder if it would resemble a mirror,
And why I always think I should stamp my face on my memories
Just because I am the narrator.
The Ostrich Man (Revised): I’m not trying to beat the man to death, but on popular demand his revised visage is gracing these electronic pages again… May 29, 2008
Posted by david in Creative Fiction, Creative Non-Fiction.add a comment
Episode 1
Melvin Merkle took a breath and then holding it in, made three succinct and satisfying smackering sounds with his large lips. Melvin was king, for everyday added more decisive proofs that he rightly reigned supreme over the small town of Plainfield and its dimwitted occupants. You see, Melvin was an ostrich farmer.
“It takes a cow to feed a cow.” Melvin said in firm and direct voice.
“Um, well…what exactly to you mean by that Mr. Os-um…uh…” The sixteen year old girl winced, “Sorry I don’t know your name.”
“It takes a cow to feed a cow.” Melvin said, looking straight into the eyes of Lizzie March. “Don’t you see?!” He said, the last word gaining in volume and pitch. Melvin stared with his enlarged eyes for three more, full seconds – very full seconds. This was awkward for Lizzie and thus she became very interested in the tufts of grass growing to her right, around the base of the RACE TRAC GAS sign.
Lizzie had come to the lonely non-town-side-of-the-highway establishment to purchase a quarter tank of gas for the family vehicle and perhaps a chance to talk to the handsome blue eyed boy who ran the cash register on weekends.
She did not know Melvin Merkle’s real name, for in the town of Plainfield most people (unable to come up with a better title) knew him as the Ostrich Man.
One of the many reasons that Melvin was a most excellent king was that he did not sit on some throne resolute in his pride. No, he took to surveying the streets of Plainfield and the surrounding highways looking for those upon which he could endow his wisdom. It was in the midst of one of these kingdom inspections, that he came upon this young damsel, Lizzie March.
“It takes a cow to feed a cow. I wouldn’t let a cow start walking on two legs; put on a flowery apron and slop some tasty beef stew into my blue tin plate, would I? I reckon I would shoot a cow walking on two legs wearing a flowery apron.”
“Yes…” Lizzie said, looking down and then back up into the giant saucers and asked: “Why is a cow serving beef stew.”
“That’s my point Ms. Marsh if I let a cow serve me, I would be…” he paused for dramatic effect, “bovine.”
“Well, I guess that makes sense,” Lizzie lied. Melvin could see that she couldn’t understand his higher teaching, but he thought she might need some encouragement.
“It’s about looking around you,” he looked off into the distance slowly panning across the horizon with his pale eyes, “Seeing what is there, and processing it into something unseen…” Melvin really liked to pause for dramatic effect. “…thoughts.” Melvin, satisfied with his impact on the young mind, turned and plodded away, the fine grime of an early spring crunching methodically under the soles of his shoes. Lizzie, a little shaken by the encounter, continued in her previously planned pursuits.
Shing-a-ling-ling ting-ting ting-ting ting. “Hey.” The seventeen year old boy put down the card board box he was carrying.
“Hi Jeff.”
“What were you and the ostrich man talking about?”
“Things that are unseen.” she said quietly.
Episode 2
“There you go Friendworthy,” Melvin said affectionately to his large tabby cat. “You munch on that for awhile. Yummy-yummy.” He smiled. Friendworthy was Melvin’s primary receiver of love and affection. The cat did not care too much for the loud streets of the town, but rather preferred chasing mice in and out of maze of ostrich talons, and sitting on fencepost number one watching for Melvin’s broken down, rust bitten truck to pull up the lane. Melvin had always said that Friendworthy was his anchor, his picture of what was still good in this modern world.
“A more constant friend one can’t find in this world of upside-down priorities. And people are always so hung up on talking. Just because he can’t talk doesn’t mean he can’t talk.”
“Well, yes Melvin, animals have their special ways of communicating.” Mrs. Manchuck said as she placed a reminder for the men’s breakfast on the church bulletin board.
“See there’s my point right there. People don’t say ‘talk’ anymore, they say communicate.” He added apostrophises to the final word with dramatic finger motions. “Why is everyone so scared of talking animals?”
“I don’t know, Melvin.” Mrs Manchuck said sighing.
“Rudyard Kipling wasn’t, Walt Disney wasn’t, and I’m not.” Melvin exclaimed raising his voice and pointer finger. There was silence.
“Is there anything I can help you with today Melvin.”
“When are the potlucks scheduled for this month?”
“Well…um let’s see…” she paused and looked up from her appointment book. “Melvin?”
“Yes?”
“You are the kind of man that always says exactly what is on his mind, right?” He nodded. “Well do you mind if I say what is really on my mind?” He shook his head from side to side. “Why do we always see your perfect attendance at the potlucks of our church, but have we ever seen you attend one Sunday morning service?” Mrs. Manchuck could see that Melvin was preparing to say something very insightful.
“Well, I don’t have a fancy study Bible or anything, I guess I just got the small red one I got when I was in grade five but it seems the Lord liked to sit down with his disciples and have a good meal together…and It doesn’t say anything about hard wooden pews that hurt my tailbone.”
“April 6th, Good Friday.”
Melvin walked out the door, not stopping to rigorously inspect the bulletin board in the usual fashion. Thoughts of this transaction plagued Mrs. Manchuck’s thoughts all afternoon, not about the content, but about the unusually coherent delivery the Ostrich Man’s final statement. She wouldn’t be going alone to the church anymore.
Episode 3
It was another damp spring day as Lizzie sat in the ditch crying. A light, misty rain was falling creating large shallow puddles on the highway; one of which Lizzie was wearing after the passing of a 2006 Dakota. This only made things worse. She had been trying to flag down passing vehicles with no success for quite some time and with her mental and emotional stamina at its bitter end, she sat down under the Plainfield 14 Km sign (safe from any more puddle incidents) and she cried.
Cars passed now and again but only faint sounds could break through the walls that Lizzie had made out of her tucked knees, wet jacket collar and dripping hair. This fortress made a private space for her cold, wet face to be warmed by her tears.
Squish sqweesh squish sqwash, Lizzie looked over her right shoulder. A decrepit, rusty truck had pulled up behind the March family minivan, and Melvin Merkle was making his way down the slope of wet dead grass. Lizzie turned away, the tears still coming.
Melvin sat down in silence and for a few moments, the two sat listened to the hush of the rain. In that silent company there was a certain amount of peace that was finding its way into Lizzie and the tears were coming more slowly now.
“I ran out of gas.” she said. Melvin stayed silent. “I was just avoiding going to that stupid gas station on the weekend…”
Melvin stared straight ahead at the opposite side of the ditch.
“I…” she was beginning to cry more violently “I…just couldn’t…see him.” She sobbed for a few more seconds and then brought herself under control. “You see I really liked the boy that works there on the weekends. And so last weekend, I decided to be brave and just come out and say it. He didn’t feel the same. He told a bunch of his friends, even though he promised he wouldn’t tell anyone! And now it is over the whole school that I was rejected…I feel so stupid!”
Tired of being sad, and tired of crying she was beginning to reach down for some anger from the pit of her stomach, but then she felt something strange and wonderful. It was the feeling that someone is catching you from a hard fall, or at least holding on to you as you look over an edge. Melvin had wrapped his jacket around the girl.
“One minute,” Melvin said getting up leaving a clean handkerchief in her hand. He returned five minutes later to find Lizzie mostly recovered. “I filled the tank of the minivan with extra gas that I had in the back of the truck. There is probably enough in there that you can make a trip to town and back home…and then you wouldn’t have to swing by the gas station.”
“Thank you” Lizzie said wiping the tears from her cheeks. She pushed herself on to her feet and walked over to Melvin. “Here is your coat.”
“Thanks.”
“Thank you…” she didn’t exactly know how to address him, but she knew she didn’t want to call him Ostrich Man, “Thank you.”
She hugged him, got into the minivan and drove away. Melvin waited for a minute, and then began to walk. He had drained the truck’s tank.
Episode 4
“What can we learn from this kind of death?”
* * * * *
Melvin walked, hands in his pockets gently holding two twenty dollar bills. Melvin thought very little, at this point, about what he was about to do, but he knew he knew that there is a time for peace and a time for war, a time for mercy and a time for the full justice. Melvin was not going to allow for one of the persons under his care to be treated this way without a stern rebuttal. When Melvin had seen the girl sitting there, crying, something in his heart sparked, and now the fire was burning strong and bright.
* * * * *
“Where might we find the lesson in all of this?” The voice went out into the already sun baked morning air, finally nestling into the brand new stems of green grass.
* * * * *
Melvin had a plan. The rain had been constantly falling since he had abandoned the truck and he had become quite wet. But that wouldn’t matter because he was coming to his first destination: the old Patkin’s farm.
Robert Paktin still lived there and for thirty years been trying to sell the object of Melvin’s current desires. It was a lawn tractor; orange in color with a black padded a seat. Melvin knew that the forty dollars he was carrying was a generous offer for the 1972 beast made out of steel and plastic. The tractor had a wicked sense of humour when it came to the question of perfect working order. After a few moments of bargaining with Robert, the tractor was his for all forty dollars.
He jumped on, a fine steed; something with this much spirit (good or evil) was not going to give up in the face adversity. A fine steed indeed.
* * * * *
“Is our lesson in courage, or rationality; pessimism or hope?”
* * * * *
Thick dark clouds were setting in and the once gentle spring rain was now a fierce some storm. Melvin turned the fog lights of the garden tractor on and due to some electrical error, they shone extra bright. As the tractor popped and clanked its way down main-street, the rain became more and more forceful, and the drops began to sting his face a little. But luckily, because of Melvin’s thorough surveys of Plainfield, he knew exactly where this boy lived.
A large thunderclap sounded overhead as Melvin cranked the steering wheel and turned on to the Dawson family’s extensive front lawn. Melvin pushed the gear shift forward and the tractor kicked into its top speed as it rumbled and whined its way towards the large picture window of the living room.
Melvin, hearing the adrenaline pump in his ears ploughed up the lawn with an expressionless face. When he had covered almost half the distance of the lawn, he prepared for the final push, he took a breath and then holding it in, made three succinct and satisfying smackering sounds with his large lips. Melvin was king.
A large boom thundered and echoed its way down all the streets, alleys, and back yards of Plainfield. Melvin now lay with his chest slowly rising and falling, listening to the rain pound down on the neatly cut grass beside him. And he knew he was going to lose it all. Melvin was bleeding and shaking…but he soon stilled. The open door of the house creaked on its hinges as the bewildered man lowered a rifle. The tractor’s engine sputtered and stopped with no turning of key, the wheels rolled in silence for a few more feet and stopped yards short of the picture window. The rain poured down on the newly silent scene. The lights of the tractor dimmed sporadically then went out. The tractor stood there, soaked in glory, giving a mystified look as the water poured over its brow.
* * * * *
“What do we learn from this kind of death?” Lizzie repeated tears in her eyes. “I don’t know what to learn from his death, but his life is ingrained into our hearts and our town. He was not a perfect man, and he did a lot of strange and even wrong things while he was here with us…but he was, as we all are, just trying to find our way back home.” Lizzie paused and listened to the birds singing for a few moments. “And spring comes with hope that ashes will bring forth flowers and what was lost in an old promise can be gained in a new one.” Lizzie took a piece of the dark earth and threw it onto the coffin.
The crowd milled and dispersed but Lizzie stayed for a while. She eventually sighed and left with Friendworthy tagging along behind her. The men, who before were standing back leaning on their shovels, moved in. They burried the coffin and sprinkled new grass seed on the fertile soil.
That One May 28, 2008
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That one?
She ain’t gunna be held down by no words
On no page!
Is like a rushing wind comin’ on up from the gulf
With a hurricane on her tails.
Trapped on a page! boy?
She is a dancer thats gots perfect feet
The fastest feet–
When she walks, she walks so her feet
Ain’t never touched the ground.
They just be resting there,
In the air, for a moment
Held by some magic
Then is gone
Cause’ she be movin on
Gone to someplace deeper in,
Past on over the ridge
Where the trees grower thicker
And the air be colder…
I ain’t never been there,
But I know that one when she be passin’ by.
I have also been skateboarding… May 25, 2008
Posted by david in Creative Non-Fiction, Musings.1 comment so far
This is an excerpt from my diary…
For Those of You Who Have Been Wondering What I’ve Been Up To Lately… May 23, 2008
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I’ve been working/going to empty lots and Wainwright, sporting my new pump-up shoes and being a little showy-off with my new cool haircut…here’s the video of a passer-by…
A Man Sets Out to Run the World… May 18, 2008
Posted by david in Musings, Poetry.add a comment
A man sets out to run the world
With slanting side streets
And hills overlooking harbours.
Under torrid day light
And the musty haze of dusk.
With stars in his eyes and stars overhead
With drums in his ears and drums in his chest.
He runs in straight lines and gentle curves,
He runs in circles and paths that fold back and back upon themselves.
.
He covers the gate of his father, and his brothers,
his contrymen and his lovers…
Borges tells that all these trails of blood and water
Trace his iron clad labyrinth of fate against the persistant time.
.
Sometimes when I run
I block out the wind, the groans of the city, and stop my metronimic heart.
In that silence I hear only
The kiss and cuss
Of fine gravel being spread out;
Tumbling across the face of the earth to find rest again.
And I wonder, with all the gravel that I have pushed out,
All the blades of grass I have swept aside with my bare heel,
And all the grains that I rushed away with the soul of my foot –
What strange face am I drawing in the sand?
*
* *
*
¹It seems to me, that the more important question I can’t let rest, is that when the drums in my chest begin to weaken and fail – when the trail of blood that once trickled begins to lap down upon the hot asphalt, when my knees and my face press themselves and lay themselves down upon the earth… — in that silence — will I hear the beating horse hooves of my salvation? Will the deep swells and hollows of the earth echo this ressonance as to gently shake my stillest face? Will I feel my saviour’s hands firmly hold my cheek bones as they percieve the same touch they felt, only once, on the day when they were moulded from the dust?
I think I might have just answered my own question…because all I can imagine are nail-pierced hands stretching out in front of the artist’s eyes…
The Pakistani Trees of a Childhood Memory: My Final English Assignment April 8, 2008
Posted by david in Creative Non-Fiction.1 comment so far
My head fell soft against the grass, and the hideous expression upon my face faded into the most peaceful death-mask. I took a deep breath, even though warriors lying face down on the battle field aren’t supposed to breathe. The cool air above me and the cool grass below lapped away the heat from my small, incandescent body. I was six.
We had been running our selves dizzy on the playing field sandwiched between the dormitory and the forest. My schoolmates and I were in the throes of some game based on an ancient civil war, where we carved turning and returning footpaths on the field of grass till all the faces and limbs blurred in our eyes, due to the dizziness. At full speed, we ducked in and out of each other, firing shots with our imaginary long-bows. Then, when fatal wound number twenty one (or forty one) was inflicted, we would pirouette, and fall to the ground. I was one of the best in the art of faking death. Many of the other boys would fall in silence (my brother often fell smiling!) but I would always let out a hideous scream as I died. Then the face of agony would slowly fade into a quiet visage. It was in this peaceful sleep that Joel had jumped on my back.
I struggled, arching my small back; pressing my palms into the grass trying to rise. This attempt utterly failed and after a few seconds I resumed my death pose. “I think this one is still alive.” Joel whispered in my ear. “I think this one is still alive!” He repeated. “I think this one is still alive.” I smile now thinking about Joel’s lack of creativity in attempts to produce a response, but I smiled then because we were children at play and I wasn’t actually dead. Since he had found me out, I was obligated and out of a deep joy for play, my lips curled.
I turned my body to face his. He had become distracted by the still raging war and was watching the carnage that had continued without us. I had never been taught to punch, and thinking back on it now, a good sock to the gut would have been my best chance for release, but lacking this gift, I grabbed his wrists in an attempt to throw him. I kicked and flailed in my attempt to remove him, but he was stronger than I, and in a much better position. Soon, I was struggling to breathe as he had now centered himself on my chest. Joel was smiling, but for me, this game was becoming less and less fun. “Joel” I coughed, “I can’t…breathe!” He, thinking I was playing the game, didn’t relent. I started to become fearful, which further constricted my breathing. When I thought I could take no more – he rolled off. I lay there paralyzed by my new freedom of air. The reason for Joel’s rather sudden departure became quite clear in the next few moments.
A small Pakistani boy was heading over towards us, and Joel had rolled off to avoid him. The boy was maybe two years old and propelled himself towards Joel and I on awkward steps, leaning forward and letting his weight carry him onward. He was smiling, eyes wide and full. He obviously had seen the fun Joel and I were having and wanted to join us. Joel at this point was looking frightened, I’m sure, because he never questioned the older boys’ mythology, which recently included a disease. The boy, which was pedaling towards me, was covered in sores. He had a pox of some sort on the full length of his body. He wore only a shirt that was unbuttoned, leaving his belly and his bottom half exposed. I sat there frightened more by his nakedness than by the blistering sores.
“How could he have had a disease,” I asked the boys later that evening, “If he was smiling and happy?” Diseased people in my young mind never smiled and never slept, they walked the dark city streets with palms outstretched under the moonlight. When they got a few coins they hid in a corner, or went down into a man-hole and ate them.
The boy came close, extremely close, and it is this moment that is etched as one of my most vivid memories of that era. He reached out a small arm ready to topple on top of me. I looked at the clean palm of his hand reaching for my white shirt. But he was jerked away. His sister had run from the door of their small home; the only building that belonged to the woods and not to the school. The look on his face was changed from overflowing joy to broken sorrow; his mouth dropped and tears filled his eyes. She pulled him away and he stared back in despair at what he had lost. As she brought him up to her hip he began to wail openly. She was dressed in a red salwar kameez; it was the last thing I saw when the two disappeared through the dark doorway of their one-room house.
Joel ran off to tell the older boys about how I had just about got the disease, but how I was okay because he had pulled me away – right when the boy was about to touch me. Joel also had another story like this, where I just about drown and he had pulled me to the surface. Actually, he just kicked me and used me for leverage as he scrapped for his own breath of air. Later, his stories for the older boys included a scene where he comes up and doesn’t see me; amidst all his fear he goes back down to save me.
The next day, when we were supposed to be playing in the front of the dormitory, I snuck out back. Alone in the huge field of grass, I made my way to the edge of the wood. We had seen monkeys on the fringe of the forest, and gypsies a little further in, some boys had claimed to have looked jackals in the eyes – but despite the blurred lines our society of boys had made between myth and reality, we were really quite sure that all of the most fervent life dwelt in the deep deep reaches, and rarely came to the outer gates. I stood there alone, staring at the cold green face. I was a dramatic child, and mostly copying my current stare from some movie I had watched earlier that month as part of our weekly viewings. A light breeze was up, rustling through the tangled patch of ferns and weeds that stretched toward me, but the massive evergreens stood stone-still. Many souls wandering these Pakistani mountain ranges would only need to look to the great snow caps of the Himalayas, or the fiery white stars that cut through our thin mountain air – but for me it was the trees that made me feel small. I looked over; there was a dim yellow light in the window of the small mud house. Or was I imagining? More importantly, which was I looking for: the boy, or his sister?


