{"id":2642,"date":"2021-03-24T16:46:10","date_gmt":"2021-03-24T16:46:10","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/martinemussies.nl\/web\/?p=2642"},"modified":"2021-05-25T09:37:07","modified_gmt":"2021-05-25T09:37:07","slug":"natural-splendour","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/martinemussies.nl\/web\/natural-splendour\/","title":{"rendered":"NATURAL SPLENDOUR"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p>Last night I had that dream again. I heard a voice of glass and iron, a voice of<br>tobacco and boiling stew, the sound of barns set ablaze. A voice that sounded<br>like someone I knew, someone I met when I was young. Someone that, for a<br>reason surely known to God, I have long since forgotten. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<!--more-->\n\n\n\n<p>Words only a little louder than a whisper, ringing through my head like a gunshot <br>in the night. \u201cTime to sleep, Dolores,\u201d it said to me, my bones all cold and trembling. <br>I try to speak, to reply to the stranger, yet to my surprise I cannot. My body won\u2019t<br>move, not at all, stuck down somehow, like I\u2019m sinking in mud. Like my body<br>is full of lead, dropped down to the bottom of the water.<br><br>\u201cA deep and dreamless slumber ,\u201d I hear the voice say, and my eyes shut so<br>tightly, closed up before I can see who sits before me. Then I wake from that<br>strange dream, dressed in all my day clothes, the morning light clinging to the<br>rooftop. I wake like this, like so many nights before, my mind set to the task of<br>my errands, set to a plan that I feel I cannot change. I recall that I lay there for<br>a moment, thinking of a book I once read, about a little girl who fell down a<br>hole, a hole that lasted forever and ever. I cannot recall the title of that book.<br>Yet when I woke this morning I felt some great distress within me, a poison<br>panic in my stomach as if the walls themselves were closing in. I smelled smoke,<br>burnt hair, the sound of wood snapping in my ears. I fled into the hallway and<br>stopped in my tracks, caught up like some fish in a net, my breathing mighty<br>shallow. There was nothing there to see, not a thing out of place. But then, you<br>see, I turned around to see my momma, waiting there in the dark, her face a<br>blanket of sorrow.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>She was sitting in there, alone in the dark, peering down into the glass of her<br>gilded vanity, curtains all closed. I watched her touch her face in the shadows,<br>feeling it over like a map. But her skin, it was fine and clear, and her eyes, her<br>eyes looked as if they could barely behold what they saw. \u201cMomma?\u201d I had<br>asked once or twice, \u201cAre you well this morning?\u201d But this time she did not<br>turn to me, a horsefly settling upon her cheek. So, with some regret I left her<br>there, sitting all lonesome in the dark, thinking it was best to go on with my<br>day. It had occurred to me then that I had not seen her face for some time, that<br>in time I must do more to care for her. It occurred to me then that I barely<br>knew Momma, that all I had were memories of us from long, long ago.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Out on the porch I could hear a small, familiar sound, the soft creek of my<br>Daddy\u2019s chair, the wood rocking in the morning light. Outside the birds were<br>singing and the air it buzzed with insects, the hum of Sweetwater\u2019s industry<br>rolling all over the hills. I wished my Daddy good morning and asked how he<br>had slept, walking over to face him. But Daddy\u2019s reply came so quickly, and it<br>was deep and rough in tone, spoken by lips I did not yet know. \u201cWell enough,\u201d<br>it said, asking me if I was heading out to see the \u201cnatural splendour.\u201d I looked<br>my Daddy square in the eye, his face at once familiar and peculiar, his bones<br>misshapen and odd. A long black moustache curled across his lips, a pipe<br>hanging from it, smoke rising up across his eyes. \u201cDolores?\u201d the man asked,<br>\u201care you feelin\u2019 alright, darlin\u2019?\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>The butterflies in my belly returned, a great sickness consuming me. I could<br>neither reply nor open my mouth, trapped just like in the dream. Daddy\u2019s new<br>face began to tremble in confusion, an eyelid fluttering open and closed. I<br>stumbled backward, falling from the porch. My father called to me but I<br>crawled and gasped and stood up quick, straightening my dress and running<br>toward our horse. I was fearful of Daddy, fearful of what he had become in the<br>night. My papa wept on the porch, screaming for me. I knew it was foolishness,<br>on my part, yet I could not stop it. I fought back tears. I set off and rode on<br>until the house was out of sight, fearful my Daddy would send the sheriff after<br>me. I somehow felt out of place, lost in a land I knew so well, a doll abandoned<br>in the sand of some desert.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By the time I had reached the edge of town it was afternoon, the clock ringing<br>out upon my arrival. I tethered my horse, took a deep breath and tried to ease<br>my mind, to think of my errands, the things I was meant to do. Main Street<br>stood before me, the crowd thick with newcomers and lawmen, bounties<br>paraded by the roadside. Eyes gazed as if they had known me before, a group of<br>strangers staring from the porch of the Mariposa Saloon. A young man in a<br>black hat pointed toward me, whispering to another in a red waistcoat. It<br>looked as if they wanted me for something, grins on their faces. I knew of men<br>like that. I wove through the townsfolk, walking like a ghost, drifting into the<br>general store. My thoughts seemed to blur in the heat, a bell ringing when I<br>entered. The place felt empty, abandoned, the smell of fresh paint in the air. All<br>those tin cans were arranged neatly on the shelves, as if nobody had ever<br>bought anything.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>I could not see the owner, not a soul in sight. Though I did not wish to, I<br>couldn&#8217;t help my hands, my fingers plucking a can from the shelf. I looked<br>down at it, peering through my eyes like the lens of a camera. MaidenBrand<br>Condensed Milk, read the label. I held it to my chest, stepping over to the<br>counter and setting down the money. The coins rolled down, slipping over the<br>edge of the desk. I peered over to see and saw something terrible. The<br>shopkeeper lay down on those floorboards, cowering behind the counter, a<br>large bullet hole in his head. He seemed half alive, his face still moving, eyes<br>white as snow, his mouth opening and closing. \u201c Howdy ,\u201d the dying man<br>whispered to nobody, over and over, \u201c what can I do ya for? \u201d His blood filled<br>the floor like a little river, pooling around his face, dollar bills floating on it. It<br>was horrible. The cash register was opened up, empty as a nest in December.<br>And worst of all, the voice in my mind, it spoke to me as if I had seen this<br>before, as if I had watched this man die many, many times. I saw these deaths<br>pass before my eyes, like reeds moving in the water of a lake.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>I could barely stand or walk. I stumbled out of the building, holding onto the<br>wall, almost sick. I knew I should tell the sheriff, or scream, or tell someone the<br>General Store had been robbed. It\u2019s what my Daddy raised me to do, him being<br>a lawman in his day. But something deep inside me told me not to, something<br>told me to walk away real slow, to just step quietly into the middle of Main<br>Street, to not shed a single tear, just to smile. My heart raced something<br>terrible, my mind conjuring up all kinds of strange memories, vivid dreams of<br>corpses littering the ground, of my hands covered in a man\u2019s blood, cradling<br>him in my arms. But then my clumsy hands, shaking as they did, dropped the<br>can to the ground, the milk rolling across the dirt. Time seemed to slow, the<br>voices of the crowd drowning out, breath sucked out of my body.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>My eyes followed the can, watching it roll against the boot of some fellow. I<br>looked on up, the sun bright in my eyes, the brim of his leather hat looming<br>overhead. At first my heart stopped, only for a second, a strange fear washing<br>over me, until I saw who it was above me. The man clenched his fingers around<br>the milk can, reaching out to pass it to me. It was a man I hadn\u2019t seen for some<br>time, a man named Teddy Flood, his handsome face a real sight for sore eyes.<br>Suddenly all the pain I felt was replaced by something else; a sense of meaning,<br>purpose, of belonging. His smile seemed to last forever, his eyes telling me to<br>follow him. I felt like telling Teddy what I\u2019d seen, but my memory of that<br>moment had begun to fade, as if I\u2019d seen nothing at all, as if it was something I<br>wasn\u2019t supposed to recall.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>\u201cDon\u2019t mind me,\u201d he said, \u201cjust trying to look chivalrous.\u201d And though these<br>words brought a smile to my lips, my head telling me to respond with kindness,<br>my heart told me not to, my body beginning the shiver. I had heard him say<br>that a thousand times, the same exact words, like the verses of the bible. I<br>stepped back from him, Teddy trying to pass me the can. My mind saw exactly<br>what had happened before, a life I was living again and again. \u201cDolores? Ain\u2019t<br>you pleased I\u2019m back?\u201d he said, reaching out further, his smile changing to one<br>of fear. I flinched, looking across to my animal. It took everything within me to<br>leave, to pull away. It was as if I were killing my own instinct, fighting my own<br>desire. \u201cI\u2019m sorry, Teddy,\u201d I tried hard to say, \u201cI\u2019ll see you again.\u201d His face went<br>cold, something in him naive and lost, watching me untether my horse. I saw<br>him hold that can, looking at it in the sunlight. It wasn\u2019t how things were<br>supposed to be. I think something in Teddy died in that moment, a part of him<br>that needed to.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>On my way home I passed by the place I liked to go and paint. There, at the<br>lake I saw my easel, the one that I\u2019d left out beside the rocks, its wooden frame<br>buried in the sand. There were no animals by the lake, only me and the<br>broom-tail. I rode her some way beside the water, the clouds passing overhead,<br>killing time before sundown. Every step I took felt new, as if I had never done<br>it before, my mind thinking of the milk can. I knew if I had taken it that my<br>fate would be decided, burnt into time. If I had even touched it my destiny was<br>written. I had to end the repetition, But I knew tonight they would come for<br>me, just as they had in my previous lives. That much I couldn&#8217;t change. As the<br>light began to fade I tied my horse close to the water so that she might drink,<br>leaving the riverside on foot.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>By the time I made it back to my family\u2019s ranch, a warm darkness had set in<br>across the land. All was silent, crickets chirping, oil lamps flickering in the<br>windows of the house. I crept through the gloom toward my window, hiding<br>by the tree on the right side, waiting for the sound of hooves in the dirt. And<br>without fail they came, three four riders came riding towards the house,<br>smashing the door down with wild abandon. I heard my Daddy talking, my<br>mother screaming. My fingernails dug into my palms. The bandits silhouettes<br>danced in the lamp light. In the distance the train moved through the night, a<br>cloud of steam rising from it, its windows glowing like fireflies. I took a deep<br>breath and climbed into my bedroom, slipping under the gap between the<br>wood and glass.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>I landed gently without a sound, my feet touching the one floorboard that<br>didn\u2019t creak. I saw that my oil lamp was switched on, casting its warm yellow<br>light on the drawers beside my bed. I reached for the handle and pulled open<br>the desk, the drawer opening slowly. There, wrapped in cloth, was a gun. I did<br>not know how it was there, but somehow it was. The gun felt smooth and<br>heavy in my hand, resting like it had been there before. I had gone hunting<br>with my Daddy before. But this gun felt different, like it was made for me. I<br>pried open the door to my room, peering through the gap.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>There, in the hallway of my home, stood the man that resembled my Daddy,<br>facing up to and another gentleman in a top hat. Rebus was his name, I had<br>heard it spoken in the town, a no good halfwit always in and out of a cell.<br>\u201cAin\u2019t you got anything out here other than milk, old man?\u201d the man asked my<br>father, putting a gun to his head. For a moment I considered not saving my<br>father &#8211; after all, today he did not feel like my blood. But my hand did the work<br>for me, extending from the gap in the wood. I pulled the trigger and fired at<br>Rebus, my first shot hitting his chest, my second in the head. Half the bandit\u2019s<br>face blasted to the floor, my fingers becoming steady. I still loved my Daddy,<br>whoever he was that day.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>As I stepped into the hall I saw my momma\u2019s body laying still, her mirror<br>smashed to the ground of the bedroom. A man they call Walter stepped out, his<br>hands covered in dripping red, staggering towards me with a knife. On the<br>wall the young man had drawn a map, a crude drawing of many circular lines,<br>painted in my mother\u2019s blood. In his eyes I saw the madness of some rabid dog,<br>some deranged, pathetic animal, led only by instinct. I put it down with three<br>shots, his body writhing in agony. I tried to fire again but the gun, it wouldn\u2019t<br>do a thing. Not a single bullet left in the barrel.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><br>A noise came from behind the front door, my Daddy swinging it open. Shouts<br>and screams rang out, Teddy shooting at a man in a red waistcoat. The<br>newcomer blasted Teddy away, stepping over him to finish him off. I winced<br>for a moment, but did not shed a tear. I knew I would see him again. This man,<br>this killer dressed in finery, was nobody I had ever seen. His smooth, youthful<br>flesh and perfect blue eyes that pierced through the night. Before my daddy<br>could talk his chest had exploded in a hurl of bullets, the stranger running over<br>his corpse. There was a look on him like a child amused, like a cat playing with<br>a mouse. I hated everything in the newcomer, every part of his soulless being.<br>An empty shell dressed as a man. He extended his gun toward me.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I ran into my bedroom. With all my strength I pulled the heavy drawer across<br>my bedroom doorway, blocking the way. Though I knew in my heart,<br>somehow, that my body would return, I knew a part of me would not. That<br>person I was today, that piece of my soul, would be gone, disappeared forever,<br>never to come back to this place. I threw the oil lamp to the ground, the<br>newcomer still kicking at the door. The glass split into shards, fire and oil<br>licking at the bedsheets. As my body became engulfed by flame, I looked ahead<br>and smiled. The fire was bright enough to blind my eyes, my flesh scorched in<br>the searing heat. I thought of what my father had once said, his words coming<br>back to me in a plume of the smoke, the things he\u2019d once whispered in my ear.<br>The words were as loud as those in the dream, as loud as the roaring fire.<br>\u201c These violent delights ,\u201d he whispered, \u201c have violent ends .\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Last night I had that dream again. I heard a voice of glass and iron, a voice oftobacco and boiling stew, the sound of barns set ablaze. A voice that soundedlike someone I knew, someone&hellip; <\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":2643,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"om_disable_all_campaigns":false,"_monsterinsights_skip_tracking":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_active":false,"_monsterinsights_sitenote_note":"","_monsterinsights_sitenote_category":0,"footnotes":""},"categories":[54],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-2642","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-creative-writing"],"aioseo_notices":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v25.4 - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>NATURAL SPLENDOUR &#187; Martine Mussies<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"http:\/\/martinemussies.nl\/web\/natural-splendour\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"NATURAL SPLENDOUR &#187; Martine Mussies\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Last night I had that dream again. 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