Life in Poetry reading, writing, reflecting

Life in Poetry reading, writing, reflecting
April showers bring May flowers

Saturday 6 April 2019

⌗AtoZ Challenge, April 6th. letter F

Here is my contribution to the A to Z Challenge of April 2019.
This is the first time I am participating in this challenge, so we'll see if I have the stamina to complete the whole month !
I am also, very ambitiously, writing for the April NaNoWrite ! So the challenge is twofold !!

Hang on to your horse and enjoy the ride. And good luck to all my fellow participants.







My contribution today is F for Fantasy. An anticipation story written in 2011for Mslexia. Theme 2021.

Mathilda

“Stop fidgeting and listen !”
The old old man glared at the youngest of the dark round heads gathered around his wicker chair. Beneath the stern look that darted from his eye, shimmered a benevolent gleam. He had seen it all, he had survived 2097, yes he had. On the top of the mountain, a young, young man in sandalled feet and draped shoulders, he had been an engineer on the Huma-Terra project.
He had seen the crevasses split the earth's crust, zigzagging on the screen: Tokyo, Paris, Shanghai, LA, Calcutta. Through the smoked bay window he had seen the giant wave crash at the foot of Kilimanjaro.
“The animals had fled days ago, you see. The cheetahs, leopards and lions had escaped towards Mount Kenya. The elephants had filed up Kilimanjaro. The flamingos had taken off in a cloud of flapping pink and pedalling stick legs, no-one knows where to.”
Peter raised his forehead to the sky and squinting at the sun, tried to imagine a vessel-shaped storm cloud pulsating with the curious birds he had only seen on the archive pad.
“ Once the waters had finally receded, a colony of fuchsia flamingos was spotted on Table Mountain ! ” the ancient man gazed over the hair of his audience, his mind wandering. “ That was in 2120, but I'm getting ahead of myself. ”
A few of the boys shifted on their silk cushions. One of the girls, Mathilda, pulled at her pigtail and sucked on her teeth : “ suurrp ”.
2
“ I met May, your great-great-grandma in Megêve in November, plus-thirteen. The Kilimanjaro survivors flew to the Alps in the Huma 1, the first solar-powered air glider. The Mediterranean then stretched from Mount Kenya right up to the foothills of Mont Blanc. ”
“ Was she pretty ? ” Mathilda asked, surprising herself with her own boldness.
“ Like a prairie in the wind, golden locks on speckled wheat skin...She was as light and fresh as I am dark and oily like slick fuel. ”
“ What is fuel ? ” interrupted Peter, perplexed. “ I haven't seen that word in the archive. ”
“ Ah! That's because we wanted to forget about it. The Devil's substance, the curse....More about that another time, ” the ancient survivor snapped impatiently. His eyebrows notched up and stuck V-shaped, his lips tightened, a lead bar.
“ May was part of the Mont Blanc project. She had witnessed a river of cows gushing past boulders and screeching crows beating around the peaks. She told me of a blazing horizon in the far distance to the west where the volcanoes of the Central Plateau were erupting. We travelled there a few years later, together, and trod on a sea of caked lava, cars melted to metal plates frozen in the mud. There were no survivors. We will probably find the inhabitants of these buried towns and villages a thousand years from now, standing petrified, eerie statues, in their homes like in Pompeii. ”
Cows, volcanoes, lava, cars, Pompeii. A lot of words of which Peter could not grasp the meaning. He opened his mouth to ask but then shut it again. A vibrant gong had sounded above the wooded porches. Then a tune tinkling from a triangle. They say a large clock-tower in England used to chime the same melody everyday at twelve o'clock noon.

3

“ That's enough for today. Time for potato pulling. Up, up, Samantha will be waiting for you... ”
The wise African settled back down into his wicker chair and laid his neck on the headrest, a firm canvas pillow embroidered with a large-tusked elephant pulling a wooden plough.
Peter, Mathilda, Sarah and the rest of the twenty boys and girls skipped down the porch steps and ran along the dirt path to the potato field. Their arms brushed against umbrella-like green-brown banana leaves; the stem of fruit, a black eye seemed to record their progress.
Peter ran ahead, jumping from side to side over the potholes in the path, slithering on damp grass like the snow-boarder he had seen on the pad, down the slopes. The other children attempted unsuccessfully to keep up. They were nowhere close to having Peter's agility and stamina. Mathilda brought up the rear, idly skipping along, dreaming of May and imagining her own wedding in an ivory dress with frills round the shoulders. She had seen a picture of a princess who had lived over a hundred years before the cataclysm and who died in a tragic accident. A sad, sad story which brought wells of tears to her eyes every time she saw the pictures on the pad.
“ There you are Mathilda, I had almost given up on you!Lost in your dreams again,” Samantha wagged a finger and then pointed to the last row of dark earth.
“ Sorry ” Mathilda whispered as she took up her spade and bucket.
The air filled with a tune of scrapings and thudding as each child dug the earth and dropped the potatoes into their buckets. As the rhythm intensified, there rose a melody, a deep-throated song that stretched back through the wakes of time.

4

Another day, sun beating my brow.
We dig, we delve, bend and bask't
Oh ! The earth is hard but my life is sweet.
Tonight we'll gather round the fire.
We stand upright on our two feet.
Hewella, wangole, wangole.
Hewella, bandome, bandome.

Peter was already seated at the long wooden table in the shade of the vine trestles, nails clean and face eager, when Mathilda having at last finished her row stepped onto the large porch. Samantha bustled the children together and one by one they filed along the table to their chairs.
“ Boiled carrots and beans with sautéed grasshoppers today, ” announced Peter, who could always be relied upon to keep up with the week's menu.
Once everyone had their helping, the children awaited Samantha's signal.
“ We give thanks to Mother Earth for providing. Tuck in. ”
Sarah chatted to Mathilda between mouthfuls.
“ What are you doing this afternoon ? I'm going fishing with Auntie Grace. The river is swollen with fish. Pike, minnow and trout. Then we'll smoke and salt them. The minnows we'll pickle. It might rain round four o'clock and Auntie Grace promised us a rainbow, a full arc over the hills. ”
Mathilda munched the insect legs, then swallowed.
“ I found an e-book Emma, by a woman called Jane Austen, written ages ago. I think I'll sit under the gum tree and read it. ”

5

“ You're so lazy Mathilda. There's work to be done. You know, 'for the communal good' ” she added, ironically quoting the words with her fingertips as she'd seen Samantha doing.
Mathilda looked at Sarah's face with sad puppy eyes and sighed. After their bananas for dessert, the boys and girls lined up to stack their plates on the wooden counter. The five girls and boys who had dishwashing duty slipped behind it. Mathilda quickly slunk towards the library to borrow an e-pad, vibrating, shivering in anticipation at her stolen afternoon on the hillside devouring Emma. At 5 o'clock ironing duty was on her schedule : sheets ! No way of sneaking out of that one. She could be sure that Amy would hound her down by a quarter to.
The path up the slope was steep. Moist blades of grass caught in her sandals cooling her toes. Wild flowers, lady's smock and meadow sweet tickled the back of her shins. Snug under the gum tree, Mathilda closed her eyes to the wind in her face and thought about the words she had just read : ' the cold, however was severe; and by the time the second carriage was in motion, a few flakes of snow were finding their way down, and the sky had the appearance of being so overcharged as to want only a milder air to produce a very white world in a very short time.' 1Mathilda had read about snow and seen pictures of blanketed landscapes but couldn't grasp the panorama evoked by Jane Austen's words. She tried to imagine England and winter in December. Here in Eastern Africa snow rarely fell. Sometimes you woke up to a white-topped Kilimanjaro but only great-great grandfather Joseph had stood in a crisp January morning and caught snowflakes on his tongue among the wooded fields of Europe. In the book, Emma and her father Mr Woodhouse would have
6

thought nothing of falling flakes among the meadows. The wonder and delights of winter magic were not foreign to them; a lost world that Mathilda could only dream of. She would never see England. There was nothing left : a few dried-up, weather-beaten peaks, barren lakes in the North and unwholesome marshes in the South. They say the ruins of the once big city of London lay under twenty feet of salt water; St Paul's dome, a cracked green globe, sometimes reverberating a glint of weak sunlight. Mathilda, however, wished to be able to sit on a window bench in one of Jane Austen's cottages and watch spring blossoms float feather like to the ground. Or to curl up on a woven rug by the hearth of a stately home with colonnades and listen to the conversation of her own two parents discussing matchmaking between respectable men and women of the county or the success of the latest ball at the Manor House. Mathilda sighed.
All of a sudden a pitter-patter could be heard on the leaves of the gum tree and a wonderful clear rainbow arched over the hills below Mathilda. She plunged once more into Emma's intrigues. Life did seem complicated in 1800. Four hundred years, however, hadn't changed human nature much. Mathilda knew whom she must avoid and whom she could trust. Sarah was always amiable but was she really a friend ? She often reproached Mathilda her whims. How would Sarah react if they were ever in a tight spot ? Peter could be counted on to provide you with information and would be practical and clear-headed in the face of danger. Mathilda liked Amy, the chore coordinator. She was strict but fair and never beat about the bush when things needed to be done. At the same time Amy was full of stories about her grandmother and the way she went about domestic tasks. A leader in the colony, who had established the round of duties, she had kept alive the songs and nursery rhymes to which rhythm the tedious work had pulsated.
7

Hickory dickory dock
The mouse ran up the clock
The clock struck one
The mouse ran down
Hickory dickory dock

Amy said the clock was a tall wooden box called a grandfather clock with a moon face and metal hands travelling round numbers : twelve at the top and six at the bottom. Peter had made a drawing and shown the other children while they were at their studies : playing a game of calculus with pencil and paper; counting beads on an Asian wooden contraption. Mathilda sometimes felt the world that was no more must have been decidedly strange. Even Jane Austen would have been out of her depth.
A soft tread on the path behind a boulder woke Mathilda from her speculations. She whipped her head round in time to see Amy's dark closely knitted braids appear through the gum tree's leaves.
“ There you are ! Four forty-five, sheet time, ” she declared.
Mathilda smiled, folded her pad and sprang up. She squinted into the infinite sky and breathed in the immense landscape below, the yellow plains of Masaï Mara glowing in the setting sun. Her soul lifted from her melancholy. She followed Amy down through the shivering tall grass and they picked up an old tune :

He has the whole world in his hands
He has the whole world in his hands
He has the whole world in his hands
He has the whole world in his hands

1Emma, Jane Austen, chapter thirteen.



©susanbauryrouchard