Sunfire and Moonshine
When the moment comes for her to walk into the fire, she grasps it with an air of indebted love.
***
Look. None of this is literal; Selene pieces it together from splinters of shell, busted scraps of a thousand swollen hearts and hot redemptive ash.
Her genesis is flame and the cold, cold moon. A female story born from uterine fire.
Her earliest memory is of haze and smoke, a gauzelike diorama punctuated by harrowing screams and the hoarse hitching breaths of survivors. People on their bellies crawling like larvae toward exits, a crackling inferno detonating everything above them. Do you shriek when doing so scours your throat raw? Do you, poor slug, curl into an imaginary shell, a failed snail?
Around such memories and queries, stories coalesce. Accumulate. Agglomerate.
Selene has never seen a field. Abandoned lots staccato and bristling with scraggy dandelions and sullied drifts of morning glory and gummy, chastened condoms and discarded needles? Yes. An actual field? No.
Her shining mother gone, consumed; broken father crumpled to naught, all clamour silenced; heart-rent; siblings scattered like dry leaves in an October gale, she first experiences loneliness. Foster care is not entirely unkind to her, though; she emerges a bedraggled butterfly, split-winged and shuddering, from smeary toxic years of caterpillar hell.
Selene.
They laugh at my watchspring hair, snicker in my constant shadow. One day I'll put my foot down and tell them. You all need to back off, I swear to God.
***
It's daylight but tarnished, like some golden thing showcased by morning, lit by a tentative new sun, and found wanting.
"Way too fucking real to recognize itself."
She speaks a name. "Helios. Helios. Helios. Helios."
"Girlfriend, you talkin' to yourself agin?"
Won't answer. Can't answer. Let the new moon dream of a perfect sky, and return to me this tale entire. Envision my kinsfolk in unison. No longer am I so desirous of its telling.
***
Selene is alive, and every time she feels the hot-coal blare of her ferocity, she loves herself a notch or two more, the reciprocating world a notch or two less.
***
A time arrives when Selene becomes embroiled in an ugly clash with someone named Salome somewhere in the world. All she is, a collection of pixels and surly, pitiless text, but that's enough. Salome and Selene. Ironies laid in fault lines through the geology of lives.
***
Which gods moved what sign? Whose deities transgressed?
Whole neighbourhoods feel their way into mercy, the men and the women, the bewildered children milling in squares, lost pets meandering, ruffled treetops, a glaring moon behind breakneck rags of cloud, snatches of vapour, the abraded cough of grey and white, all so harsh and well, Kali fucking Loki in avid silence, each grinning maniacally as their zealous crotches lock and they converge on Vienna to dance.
Two ways. Will you walk into the Danube, my love? Or is this bacchanal insatiable?
Nothing but an interlude in a story whose momentum is manifest.
***
Salome is a troll hunched beneath a digital bridge. All she knows is the hurt of Selene's dismissal, a disregard however mild requiring recompense. Dogged, she will gather her patient ordnance. Which she one day sends like the heart's own poison darts.
"My girl Selene, I hate to tell you this"—she loves to tell her this—"but you killed your mother. You rested some plastic toy on the element of a stove, and it melted and dripped, catching a towel alight, spreading quickly. Three people in the floors above were burned alive, two more succumbed to smoke, along with your own mother. It was you, Selene. You killed them. It's time you knew what you did."
Selene's mind says no, but her mortal heart knows. Fragments of memory suddenly make sense. She could search the records, but she already knows what she will find. She is like a theatre without actors or audience. A shamefaced ghost within a bad dream. The silence at the centre of a hurricane. She haunts the streets like someone condemned.
Then one day she hears it. The screaming of someone in peril. She sees windows aflame like the eyes of madmen and the astonished O-gape of a door and she hears the screams. Of whom she neither knows nor cares. A tiny child as she was, perhaps? A young mother, even. This is her moment, her brief opening to fashion from an ending a beginning, to make of her life a ceaseless loop. Arms spread, she walks into the furnace, smiling.
Reader Comments (4)
David, I read this with the storm of stories and heartbreak regarding missing and murdered indigenous women in my heart. Your words and literary telling of such pain have grabbed my heart and shredded it. Absolutely beautiful and pain-filled in equal measure. Stunning work, David.
Yes, I'm so happy you gleaned that from the story. I had those stories in mind too, as well as the recent story of an apartment fire in which a child accidentally started it. I wondered what it would be like if someone kept that from you in order to protect you, and how it would feel to discover it one day. And also, it's about male and female, sun and moon, Loki and Kali. Destruction, creation, and the fine line between the two. Selene is the Greek goddess of the moon, and Salome (meaning "peace") is a daughter of Herod, widely thought to be the one who orders the head of John the Baptist. I like that contrast between a name's meaning and the violent association. All this to say it's not always fun living in my own head, lol.
Wow! The words are their usual prose and poetry meant to enlighten and yet disguise.
Some lives wind them selves up to one incident, one happening. I often wonder how some folks got where they did: Mother Theresa for one. i would guess there is more to her beginning than her life afterwards.
Did your lady find redemption? Or did she find her punishment? Better still, what was she looking for? I would love to believe it was redemption.
Russell, I love your observations.