The Weeping Willow Tree
By James Sterner
I
On
nights when fireflies drifted around like
The
will-o-wisps my grandfather told me
About,
I’d ride through the park on my bike
Til I
came to the weeping willow tree.
The
tree was old—how old I didn’t know,
But in
my imagination, it seemed
As
old as time itself, and it would grow
Long
after I was dead. I dreamed
Of
cutting into the trunk of the tree:
A
black hole of deeper and deeper rings
That
never seemed to end. But I could see
That
deep within the darkness there were things--
Wet squirming
shapes that wanted to get out.
Then
I’d wake up. On sunsets in the park
While
riding home, I’d sometimes change my route
So I
could see it, waiting in the dark.
And I
waited too, while all the world slept,
Half-thinking
the tree also was awake.
But
all was silent while the willow wept
Its
leafy tears in streams into the lake.
For
years, I’d follow that routine. I’d ride
Until
I came to the lakeshore, the strange
Tree waiting
there, its secrets locked inside,
Unknown.
Until the day there came a change.
II
My
grandfather was old, his skin like ice
So
clear and cold that the hospital staff
Would
think him dead, until at the precise
Time
they checked his pulse, he’d let loose a laugh
That
wasn’t quite a laugh, but more a smirk
Made
audible and simply said, “not yet.”
And
so, the staff would go back to their work.
“He’ll
act the same tomorrow night I’ll bet.”
But one
night when they checked, he didn’t laugh.
My
father got the call. “I understand…”
They
buried him without an epitaph
Beneath
an unmarked stone, as he had planned.
He’d
been a paranoid old man, and he’d
Recited
ghostly tales for all his life.
For
he was part of that peculiar breed
Of superstitious
folk. Left by his wife,
He’d
emigrated from the old country
And,
taking his son, my father, along,
Set
out to find a place where he’d be free
From
haunting specters, or at least prolong
His
days until the wisps came back for him.
The
wisps, they say, were ghosts that led children
Astray
in forests with lights that glowed dim,
And
boys chasing wisps did not become men.
He’d
tell a story to my father when
He
was still young, then he’d tell it to me.
My mother
hated it: his tale again
Would
come up at dinner innocently.
“Yes,
I remember when I was young. Did
I
ever tell you anything about
When
I was young?” he’d say, twisting a lid
Around
the lip of a jelly jar. Out
The
back door, the wind was starting to howl.
“You’re
scaring him,” my mother said before
He’d
even begun. “Nonsense,” he said with a scowl,
But
now the wind was knocking on the door.
“Not
trying to scare, just to educate.
You
don’t mind, do you my boy?” he’d ask me.
My
father stayed out of it. It was late.
Too
late to argue. I sat silently.
“You
see? He doesn’t mind. It won’t take long.
And
every telling of the story, I’m
Forever
getting those last moments wrong.
But
now I’ll tell it right. Just one last time.”
III
“You
know how I grew up outside a town
That
slept within the hills upon the edge
Of an
old forest where the slopes swept down
Like
waves, our house at the bottom. A hedge
Was
all that separated us from that
Typhoon
of trees, marking the borderline
Between
the sleeping town, its roofs all flat,
And
endless seething hills, all serpentine.
We
called it Jörmungandr, for we saw
Within
the shadows of the hill and dale
A
snake with coils the size of hills, its jaw
Unhinged
and devouring its own tail.
Oh
yes, those hills were alive, to be sure.
Their
lungs would exhale the cold mountain air,
And
just outside the gaping maw, a lure
To
bait the children wandering out there:
A
path that twisted through the pines and came
To
end within a place that was nowhere
But
that was everywhere one and the same.
And
then one night I wandered, unaware
Of
constellations, unknown and unseen,
That
watched my movements from above and pulled
The
flow of streams in directions between
The
three dimensions known to me and dulled
My senses
beneath their glow, that soft light
That
seemed to twinkle, then to grow, and then
Which
seemed to come down from the sky that night.
Not
stars. No, something else. Some halogen
Gleam
of bioluminescence, bobbing
First
up, then down, just like the deepest eel
Within
the deepest trench, with gills throbbing
And its
breath a stench—a light I could feel,
A
light that wasn’t warm, but that burned cold.
It
led me off the path, into the wood.
I shambled
over roots tangled and old
Until
I came to a clearing. I stood
Inside
a wisping ring of trees, within
Which
reared a polished black stone monolith
That
did not reflect, but seemed to draw in
All
light, and softly pulsed as if the pith
Of
the woods had converged in its black heart,
Sucking
in life and exuding darkness.
And
then, at once, the lights shattered apart
In a
darkened void, black and bottomless.
The gliding
lights, now within the black hole
That
was the monolith, became shadow.
The pulsing
stone had opened a portal,
Into
a far-away, starlit plateau.
And then,
as watching from a windowsill,
I
gazed into the depths of the cosmos.
Inside
the dark was something darker still.
I saw
a twisting shape. Ouroboros.
The
end and the beginning. A single
Ring
of serpent head and tail, devouring
And
being devoured. And then a tingle
Ran
up my back, as if cold hands scouring
My
spine had taken hold, dragging me down
Into
the earth. My eyes went dark, and then
I saw
no more. When I awoke, the town
Had
woken too, as morning’s light again
Was
dawning on the flattened roofs and brought
The
color back into the world, that had
Disappeared
from sight overnight, and naught
Of the
black stone remained. Yet clad
Upon
my fourth finger was a brass ring
Of a reptile
consuming its own tail.
But I
could not remember anything
Of
where it had come from. To no avail,
I
sought to recall the night preceding.
Memories
like muttered whispers and lisps,
From
my mind’s ears were slowly receding.
And all
that remained were the ring and wisps.”
IV
My
grandfather wore the brass ring for all
His
life, believing the wisps had meant for
Him
to remember the pulsing portal
And
what lay beyond the opening door.
We
buried him wearing it, the coffin
Locked,
and six feet of earth atop the wood
Which,
like a door nailed shut, sealed him within
That tract
of earth where a single stone stood.
And
as we turned our backs to go, I thought
I saw
that stone grow dark, and pulsed as soft
As a beating
heart. But no. My mind fraught,
I looked
away and climbed the stairs aloft
And
joined my parents far beyond that patch
Of broken
earth. That night I rode alone
Around
the park, beneath the trees. Their thatch
Cast
shadows on paths long overgrown
Until
the limb-roof was gone, and I stopped
Beside
the lake, with just one tree standing
Forlorn
on the shoreline. There, fireflies swapped
Their
secret songs in whispers enchanting
While
moon-rings danced upon the lake’s mirror.
And
in the sky, I saw strange glowing lights
Like twin
suns in a distant hemisphere,
With
tendrils stretched like writhing phagocytes
Consuming
elements of alchemy.
They
slowly drifted down to earth, skimming
Across
the surface of the lake towards me.
Beneath
the water, bubbling and brimming,
There
was a shape like a giant serpent.
I
watched it lurk, as a predator waits,
While
the lights, now ashore, circled and went
Behind
the weeping willow’s leafy gates.
The
lights began to dim, and then went out,
But just
beyond the leaves, a rustling stirred.
While
the shape in the lake began to spout,
And
then the leaves parted. Unsepulchered,
A
thing was reaching, like a tentacle, but
No—it
was an arm, shriveled and lifeless
Yet
somehow still moving, and it astrut,
Beckoned
me forward into the darkness.
But
then, I saw it. Around its finger,
Was
wrapped a ring made of brass, like a snake.
I
could not move, though I dared not linger.
The
lake’s depths churned and waves began to break
And
from the depths, there came a rising form.
The
leviathan rose at last, into
The
theater of night, as clouds and storm
Turned
black the stars, and all that shone were two
Eyes,
reptile and cold. Then, from in the tree,
There
emerged a face, whose features I know.
Though
distorted by death’s veil, I could see
My
grandfather in the weeping willow,
Crying
out. And I, mad with terror, screamed
As
blackness clouded my vision, and all
The
world melted away, or so it seemed,
Until
I was awoken by rainfall.
The
tree was still there, but the giant shape
Was
gone from the lake. My grandfather too
Had
disappeared, so I made my escape.
I
fled through the pathways, muddied with dew,
And
grabbed my bike. But there, upon the seat,
Was an
object that was left behind by
Someone
or something. It was the ring. Feet
Racing,
heart pounding, I put it in my
Pocket
and rode away into the night,
Never
to return to the park again.
I’d
often thought of life as just finite.
But I
believe that deep within the glen,
There
in the old country, my grandfather
Found
something ancient, something terrible,
Some
infinite loop where heads and tails were
All
the same, and the eldritch push and pull
Of life
and death conflated, becoming
A
thing that was neither living nor dead.
And
on some nights, I’d stare at the brass ring,
Thinking
Was I the ophidian head
Or
tail, the one devouring or being
Devoured? With secrets behind locks and
keys,
I, who
like a seer forever seeing
Behind
the veils of weeping willow trees,
Am
eternally trapped by memories
Of
what I saw that night, and now I know
That
there are no real truths other than these:
That
death is not the end, and the shadow
Of
Ouroboros descends on us all.
Forever
we swallow our former lives,
Whatever
fate may upon us befall:
Though
our spirit ends, something else survives.
Comments
Post a Comment