Further to my determination to squeeze out some writing or die trying, I thought I’d share the day’s efforts on Grace Awakening Myth (Book 3 of 4 in the Grace Awakening series). It’s a first draft, remember. To be honest, there are already some changes, but you’ll get the idea. This is 1230 words. My goal is about 1200 a day, (5 pages) or 6000 words (25 pages) a week. That was the pace for the first 2 books in the series.
As I sat down to write, the image in my head was of blackness. I wrote about that while wondering exactly why it was so black, and then Kharon walked in…
Truly, I just take dictation. The story is just floating out there, waiting for me to listen to it. Ben is narrating.
It’s a black night, Stygian black, as they say. That’s very black. The River Styx drifts, black as crude oil, roiling and burbling with the murmuring sibilance of thousands upon thousands of lost voices. Its thick waters seem to suck the light from the sky, and leave all around it in an inky grey wash. Kharon the boatman floats along on his ferry, pole in hand, pushing it away from the banks, gathering the departing souls and taking them safely to Hades, for the price of a coin, of course. He shows up at the stops to collect what Hermes has dropped off: the confused half-shadows, some still not quite aware that they are ghosts, reclaimed from new graves. The shades dazedly cough up their coin, and they load into the ferry as Hermes waves to them heartily and wishes them luck on the next part of their journey like some jolly tour guide. Hermes can be quite an ass. The vacuous faces hardly stir in response, though. Those without a coin are on their own to get across the Styx. If you’re on your own, you’re not going to make it across. Simple.
I shivered at the memory of that blackness and the descent into the sucking void of the underworld. This was earth though, and not the underworld. This was Grace, not Eurydice. It was a Stygian black night, though, and the oppressive gloom was creeping into my gut.
“Hey, there. Ben is it?” The low voice held a faint glimmer of amusement.
“Hello Kharon.” I nodded courteously, recognising him at once. Had my thoughts summoned him? Or was this dismal atmosphere a result of his presence? “What brings you here? You’re a little far from the river.”
“Not so far. A guy needs a bit of a break from water now and then, after all. The river flows where it needs to. It’s near enough that I can step ashore for a moment.” He looked around with interest. “I thought I’d come have a chat with you.”
“With me?” My heart stopped for a moment. “I’m honoured, of course,” I said with a polite incline of my head, “but…uh…why?”
He smiled. His long nose and slightly blue tinged skin made it a rather eerie expression. Though it was probably meant to be reassuring, it made him look a trifle morose. It didn’t lighten the mood, at any rate.
I waited while he stood ponderously thinking. His thoughts seemed to move like he was punting through them with the stick he used on the ferry. They moved slowly and methodically in one direction. Patiently was the only way to communicate with Kharon. He would not be rushed.
Finally he said, “It’s about the girl.”
I took a deep breath. “Which girl? Grace?”
He shook his head. “No. The other one.”
“Other one?”
“From before. You know. The snake bit her, and you went to Hades to try to get her out? You snuck by the dog with some singing and got everyone down there all in a mush of sentimentality with your music, and they let you take her. But something happened and she had to stay, after all.”
“I looked back.” I whispered, suddenly cold.
“Ah.” Kharon nodded sagely. “Oh right. Looking back can cause a lot of problems for a person, can’t it?”
“Apparently.” I tried to bite back the sarcastic tone in response to his unintentional understatement.
“Yeah. Well. She was at the river bank the other day when I went by, and she asked me to give you a message.”
I swallowed. Then swallowed again. My mouth was the Sahara all of a sudden. I croaked, “She asked you…to give me a message.” She had never tried to communicate with me before. Why did she need to send a message now? What did she know?
He nodded in confirmation at my dazed expression, then after making sure that I was paying attention he looked up, as if trying to recall her exact words. He cleared his throat and intoned, “She said, ‘If you have a chance to see my love, when you’re above. Tell him that the song has many verses, some rich with hate and curses, but that he deserves whatever joy, that girl can give a boy.’”
“She rhymed it?”
He shrugged. “I think she thought it’d help me remember.”
“Oh.”
“I think she misses you,” he added. “She looked sad.”
“She’s been in the underworld for a couple of thousand years. Of course she’s sad.”
Kharon shrugged again. “Not everyone is. They get used to it. Everyone has to be there eventually after all.”
“I suppose.” It hurt to think about Eurydice. It hurt to remember that my failure doomed her to that two thousand years in the underworld. She wouldn’t have been there if I hadn’t been inept. My failure. Mine. It wasn’t Kharon’s fault. “Thanks for passing along the message.”
He nodded. “I think she was afraid Hermes wouldn’t deliver it and Iris doesn’t have reception there.”
“Oh yes. Of course not. I appreciate you taking the effort.”
He stood waiting for something, with a studied nonchalance.
“Oh, wait.” I rummaged in my pockets and studied the coins. “I don’t have anything ancient. Will a twonie do?”
He eyed the polar bear on the two dollar coin dubiously. “A little on the cheap side, but whatever. Next time we meet in the Other Realm, you can top it up.” His mouth twitched in something that might have been a good-humoured smirk, but might not.
I chose to interpret it positively. “Thank you, Kharon.”
He started to stroll off with that particular, unsteady gait of sailors walking on land, and then looked back over his shoulder, “You take good care of that new girl, you hear? Don’t let looking back blind you to the possibilities ahead of you. What you’ve done before doesn’t have to bind your future.”
His words hit me like an arrow and I reverberated for a moment from the impact. When I went to answer him, he’d disappeared. With him went to ominous atmosphere of blackness, and I was able to take a deep breath again. The fresh air oxygenated my lungs and cleared my head, but his message sat heavily on my heart.
I thought of Eurydice from time to time, of course. If I was being honest with myself, it was her that made me most anxious about Grace. Eurydice was my first and greatest failure. My first love, my first wife, symbolized such an essential lack in my character that any thought of her ensured my elemental humility, despite the loud accolades about my brilliant talent. Such bone deep awareness of inadequacy is not overcome. Ever.
It is also why I am afraid that I won’t be able to protect Grace this time.
I’ll tell you a secret. I’m pretty sure that it is also why they appointed me her guardian. They don’t expect me to succeed. They think that it will appear they’re giving her a guard, when I’m actually so useless that she is doomed.
I know it.
I know it, and despite being overwhelmed with the awareness of my own inadequacies I am so damned full of pride that I’ll risk it anyway, rather than let Mars or Alexandros have the job. What kind of fool’s paradox is that?
Mine.
an Indian wedding February 10, 2012
Tags: Arulai, Chellaya Pillay, gordon taylor, Grace Awakening Power, india, madras, salvation army, Seenavasagam
I have a rather fond spot for India. There is family history here. My mother has a Sanskrit name. She was named after her aunt, who in turn was named after a maharani who was a family friend of my great-grandmother. There is a collection of Hindu god figures which they brought from Madras, (called Chennai since 1996) still in the family.
My great-grandparents lived in the India of the British Raj. They were with the Salvation Army. William Eva, following SA protocol, took the local name “Seenavasagam.” He arrived in India August 29, 1887. Jane Saxby (who took the name “Arulai”) arrived December 26, 1890. They were married on Wednesday, March 25, 1891. The Salvation Army newsletter, “The Indian War Cry” of April 13,1891 relates the following:
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“On Wednesday evening a very important event in the lives of two officers of the Tamil Division was reached–a wedding; when Capt. Seenavagam, Financial Special, took Lieut. Arulai for his “perpetual companion in the war.”
“The actual ceremony was preceded by an officers’ council, the wedding feast, and the march.
It is hardly necessary to say that the marriage-feast was interesting. Of course it was. Tbe major was present and after the feast called uopon both maried and single officers to speak. Lieut. Chellaya Pillay said: “I was speaking to a high churchman about this wedding and he thought it was very inappropriate for such a joyous celebration as a wedding to take place in Holy Week. I assured him that we Salvationists look upon a wedding ceremony as a very holy thing, and that Holy Week was therefore a very seasonable time to perform it.” This was the feeling that ran through the day’s doing–we believe everything was done “for God.””
The full page article carries on for a bit, describing a procession through the city, provides lyrics to songs sung, how much money was collected, and explains how great-grandpa Seenavasagam accompanied the music on his concertina. (A small accordion like instrument). I am ever thankful to the Salvation Army archivist Gordon Taylor who managed to find this prize for me. How many of us get such a clear description of their great-grandparents’ wedding day? If you noticed the wedding was scarcely three months after Jane’s arrival and were thinking William was a fast worker, as I did initially, you may be relieved to know that I discovered that William had been posted in Stockport prior to his departure for India. Jane was from Stockport. That seemed unlikely to be a coincidence.
I think I looked a little like Great-Grandma Jane in her youth, and I was also married on a Wednesday.
Stay tuned to Grace Awakening Power for some developments which reflect this family history…
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