There’s peculiar weather in the most southerly isles. It’s
more predictable than the seasons themselves, more predictable than war and
politics, more predictable than old milk turning to new smells or young love
turning to old disappointments.
One day a year, and on the same day every year, it snows
yellow and green flakes across those shores. They’re cold as ice, and they
stack and stick and turn into fluffy mounds of odd snow, and they taste
something like powdered mango that’s gone off.
Originally the islanders ate such flakes out of poverty, but
soon they realized the unique properties of the annual precipitation. It
appears anyone who eats these “mana flakes” is given the gift of magic, able to
cast spells from the tops of their heads and keep going until they tire
themselves out.
Folks fly from island to island, and conjure parades of
imaginary creatures, and do the same old card tricks they always do except for
this day they’re real. There is something like a two of spades really vanishing
rather than going up your sleeve that tickles a certain kind of person. I spent
one such frosty afternoon listening to a little girl teach her pet pink
elephant how to sing. Never been much of a mana flake eater myself, though I do
enjoy watching the tourists frolic in waking dreams. My hotel takes all major
credit cards.
He's an opportunist, for sure!
ReplyDeleteNow I finally understand where Science Fiction and Fantasy novels come from.
ReplyDeleteThat's a fairy tale in the making ^_^
ReplyDeleteI know where I'm going on my next vacation!
ReplyDeleteLove the last line! I'll have to see what kind of deal the Price Negotiator can find for me...
ReplyDelete