They were half a generation beyond the end of oceans. Half a
generation since the elders had seen one, and half a generation since the young
could only imagine them. It was half a generation, down to the very day of
conception, when the tides of fermented blood rolled across ancient shores,
turning parched deserts to dripping beaches.
Upon this gory tide rode a ship. It flashed no bearing and
collided with a sandbar that, for half a generation, had been a popular hill.
It rose, and it shuddered, and they fled, and they sang warnings inland. Its
hull heaved for breath, and every groan of its sundry structures contributed to
the songs of the natives, until warnings turned to invitations.
There was not a soul aboard, nor a husk through which a soul
might have conducted seaworthy business. Yet there were many fine armors, which
the middling and young shared and donned, not for war, so much as for fashion
as only new varieties can afford. Beneath decks lay exquisite weapons, spears
that made the air bleed, and swords with epic poems etched along their edges,
verse honed to unparalleled sharpness. These, the natives beat into
ploughshares, and rapidly set about tilling and sowing before the gory tide
could dry up. Already it was fleeing into the horizon, as though happy to be
rid of the vessel.
They stripped, too, the skin of the ship, and fashioned it
into new bodies for their elders, so that Grandpars and Grandmars could join
them in the fields. They stripped the bones of the ship’s mighty underhauls,
which they fashioned into the outlines of new houses. When, at last, the ship
was naught but an empty indentation in a sandbar, every individual, young and
middling and elder, scooped up a handful to keep in memory. They pocketed their
handful of the ship as they set to work.
For this culture didn’t trust the ship had been a miracle.
If it were a miracle, then there would be two more, for miracles always come in
threes. One miracle is happenstance; two miracles a coincidence; three, a
confirmation. More, none alive had ever witnessed, and none dead had spun songs
about.
The uncertainty of miracles meant labor, raking the scabs
over the desert, tilling and churning, and planting the warts and rust from the
former hull, along with the thumb bones of their ancestors, which had been set
aside for just such an occasion. All this planting meant making music.
So they spun songs of who built the ship, who raised its
marvelous hide, who operated its great oars and gills, and every song of every
sailor was at the behest of a hero. They spun many songs about this hero’s
journey, about the madness that had driven him to jump overboard, or feed
himself to the ship so it might still live, or his pursuit of a love that had
launched a thousand such ships. None was particularly good, and none was
repeated, thus disqualifying them from truly being songs. If it’s only sung
once, a song might as well be an errant miracle.
They sang to work, which is the duty of song, to render long
labors brief, and render brevity pleasant. They erected fine homes of the
ship’s vast bones, and they patched every elder’s new body, and they marched
the rows of their uncanny crops in numbers only songs had ever referenced. It
could well have been the music that caused their crops to sprout.
They smelled the wrong rain coming. First a few seedling
squelched, and then rows belched brine. By noon their fields showered blood
upward, so many geysers as to terrify the elders. Their entire culture was
sprayed, and their entire world flooded by bounty. Sandbars disappeared beneath
viscous waves. The middling sang the young and elders into their new homes,
with solid ceilings, and the pores of their windows fastened shut, and their
rich floors rose. The riding tide lifted every home from its roots, settling
them to bob like corks in global liquor. Some elders fell into the maelstrom,
nerves feeble beneath their shells, yet their shells were as buoyant as the
hero’s ship had once been. It was the first opportunity in half a generation
that anyone had to drown, and not a soul took it.
What a marvellous, and mildly grotesque, thing. It feels like an alien world, just ever so slightly beyond what we know, and understand. And what images it conjures...
ReplyDeleteVery much enjoyed it. =)
What a wonderful comment to wake up to! Thank you kindly, John. Helped make a crumby morning much more bearable.
DeleteTo me it felt more like a tale of how a legend was brought into being. How in the singing of their songs they passed on how they had used this ship.
ReplyDeleteThey definitely enshrine the events in song. How did the delivery affect your enjoyment, Helen?
DeleteI liked the way you unfolded this story, adding to it bit by bit .
DeleteRich and visceral stuff, John. Really liked this one. From the horrific feel of it all, to the way the tribe turned the warship into something wonderful. As John Xero says, marvellous!
ReplyDeleteWhat elements felt horrific or Horror-like to you? Very curious for how people interpreted this one. Regardless, thank you for the kind words and retweets!
DeleteI'm with Helen, I liked the mythic feel of this in the sense of trailing back to how a myth originates and the folklore and song draws it out into the world of men's belief
ReplyDeletemarc nash
And you were at peace with them engaging with the fantastic rather than the realistic as they mythologized?
DeleteOh, I love this. The mythical feel, the imagery, the miracles coming in threes. And the blood. I love the blood. Lovely stuff John!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much, Maria! Very glad the piece landed for you. And here I wondered if anyone would get anything out of it.
DeleteYour imagination is truly boundless, John.
ReplyDeleteIs that a good thing here?
DeleteThe language in this is absolutely intoxicating. Downright heady.
ReplyDeleteDid it overpower the narrative or other elements for you?
DeleteJohnW channels Marc Nash! :-) A great piece here, the ambiguity of the characters was amazing. The ship (in part) a living being, the members of the tribe (in part) cobbled together from living flesh and patches of anything that could be used... and, in a way, the two merge toward the end. Not to mention the oceans of blood and the vast deserts.
ReplyDeleteYou seem to be in a whole new groove lately, John. Wonderful, wonderful stuff! Chock full of beautifully inventive, descriptive language, "settling them to bob like corks in global liquor" is just one example. Well done!
ReplyDeleteI'm with Larry -- definitely a "Marc Nash" thing happening, although also totally a "John Wiswell" thing happening. The music/ocean/blood mix was very intoxicating. Seemed like a giant conceit for sentient microbes living on the face of an acne-ridden teenager. Very cool.
ReplyDeleteThis was really unusual, really captured my attention, though not quite sure I "got" it all. Very interesting!
ReplyDeleteOh my John what imagery! Absolutely beautiful piece, very consuming in its complexity. Each re-read offers a new visual.
ReplyDeleteScavenging as saviour...I almost saw them like the Sand People of Tattooine, in a way, and that's no bad thing.
ReplyDeleteHi John, I thought I left a comment here last night but now I don't see it. Anyway, great story!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed this one, but I wasn't really sure why. (I'm guessing that's a good thing.) It got a second read, which is pretty rare for me. Maybe it was the mythical feel, or maybe it was their optimism.
ReplyDeleteAt any rate - great story!