Friday, February 2, 2018

Dance of the Imps

Dance of the Imps
Edwyn Kumar

A gentle beating drum resonated through the woods. The raging glow of a fire, from a single distant source, fractured the leaves and found gaps in the trees, struggling to meet me, guiding me forward. The edges of flickering light shone on the moss cushioned stones and damp earthy floor.
The even paced drumbeat carried with it a lilting laughter and the flighty jingling of bells and cymbals, cycling and forming a cacophonous din to an underlying rhythmic harmony before once again collapsing into entropic dissonance.



I hesitated and imperceptibly turned towards the tree-lined passage that drew me closer. I paused only for a moment and then moved at an even pace, the central path disappearing behind me.

The circles drew tighter. How had I already come so close to the center? Too soon. I couldn’t find a path that would lead me further away from the light. It has been so long since one had appeared that it felt like a time faintly remembered. When I was a child the outward paths were plenty. Here now, in my adulthood, the connecting trails leading inwards were persistent and common, like bruised veins spilling me towards a puncture wound.
I took the most direct paths at my weakest hours. When the fatigue of the journey started to wear me down.
My feet felt raw, my breath labored. The blood in my muscles and veins turned to sap, sticky and slow. The physical ails were the most obvious to feel and realize. At the height of my turmoil, I would rage at the forest around me. At my lowest, I would find myself leaning against the unmoving trunk of a millennia old tree for support as my heart raced and I sobbed dry tears. It was in those moments when the small shooting paths leading deeper into the woods rapidly would appear. The sound of The Dance grew livelier with each day. The fire brighter. The heat from the high flames warm and promising.

The forest was eternal as time and as finite as life itself. It was layered and dense, and for all its existence had reflected the seasons of the mind, unconfined by the turning of the earth to dictate its clime. In the briefness of an hour or a day, the warm embrace of a summer morn could transition into the freezing depth of the harshest winter.
In the center of it all lived The Dance. Like the forest, The Dance was everlasting, and I too would find my way to the crashing sounds of those yet unseen figures who played its discordant tunes.

In the early days, when I found a shorter path, I took it without hesitation, squandering my time with impatience. It felt like the right choice. As though the immediacy of that decision would be beneficial in some way for the future. I foolishly believed that the inevitable destination would somehow be richer and hold deeper meaning by carving a path straight for it.
For years in my travels, I was seduced by a harmonious and sensual sound. When I would catch a small hint of its comforting and passionate melody, I would eagerly search for a clear line through the deep brush, often cutting and scratching my flesh as I scrambled through the woven brambles and thorns that guarded the gaps between the trees and ferns, shunning my futile attempts to reach it. With certainty, I would find my way back to the central path upon which I had started and intended to travel, perhaps ahead or behind from where I had departed, torn and ravaged by my impulsiveness to breach the woods. I felt a presence beside me at times, even in the better days, yet whenever I looked, there was nothing there, and the feeling left as quickly as it had arrived.

In those early days, the fire was distant. Impossible to see directly except sometimes in the reflection of the night sky. I was innocent and hopeful then. The jingle sometimes wistfully caught my ear, but not enough to lure me closer. I had outgrown the thirst for attaining the fettered scratches and scars of my earlier days.
The warmth of the fire was not a friend to me then, but present circumstances forced a tighter affinity for the finality it offered.

The weather had turned. It started with a gentleness that belied its intention. A light dusting of snow had settled on the soft earth. Crystalline drops froze on the summer leaves and the gentle branches around me. It lulled me into thinking it would pass. Then a biting crispness drove its fingers into my bones. My teeth chattered and my heart drew cold in the passing weeks, as I clutched my arms around me, my movement slowing as the once early morning fogs grew thicker and settled into each day like an unwanted guest. The days wore on.

The light of the sun became a distant memory. The sound of The Dance rang loudly through the forest, carried by the charged and frozen air. The crackling of the flames and the promise of its warmth beckoned me. The shortcuts drew me ever inwards. I longed to be rid of the winter and the unrelenting fog and even of the forest itself. It had betrayed me. Life had betrayed me. My vision and the promise of a new day was blocked and forgotten. All I could feel was the cold.

I knew the fire was an answer that would bring me closer to The Dance and the creatures that tended to it. I could hear them laughing and chanting. I could see the tips of their wavering hats silhouetted against the flames that burned bright in their personal twilight. There was no fog towards the within, and the clarity of the sky shone down in a star blanketed light.

The path forward and the path inward were the same now. The thickness of the undergrowth that held me back so many years ago was gone, and I found nothing to impede me. There was nothing holding me back, aside from the fog and the cold of the forest path behind me, and the ever-growing warmth of the grove ahead.

I pushed aside the last of the tightly budded and frostbitten branches. I saw the imps then.
The glee with which they danced, swimming around the flames, flitting through the sparks that landed at their feet, but never touching them, reeked of insanity. Some of the imps held bells that rang with shattering clarity. Some held triangles and oddly shaped instruments that made perverse sounds that cracked the air into a thousand pieces, as their brothers gulped the broken shards of reality like candied glass. There were imps with handheld drums who thumped and pounded. Others spun and held noisemakers that cracked and reverberated with crunching and snapping like bones being torn asunder.

In the center of it all, untouched by the flames, she stood. Serene and kind. Welcoming, without beckoning or impatience. I was drawn to her translucent and dark skin, reflecting the starlit twilight sky and revealing a depth as though looking through the glass of a snow-globe that had swallowed the universe. I followed her contours to a face that comforted me and made me forget of the imps that danced around her. They were her gate keepers: tragedy, murder, infection, wrath, illness, all servants and instruments of her . . . and the imp who, for me, played a delicious harmony.
The one with whom my eye kept darting towards, and now, that his song was clear and distinct, the one who had been calling to me for so many weathered days before. It was his tune, the one that had pursued me through the bitterness of the forest. The one I had hummed in my head and slept with at night. The one who promised to release my despair.

He spun away from the circle upon my approach, and my body, my hands, my feet and my mind began to move to his rhythm. I fell in tune and time with him and lost myself to the reverie and acceptance of his advance. He went to take my hand. I reached out.
Then I felt the presence again, this time behind me. I turned abruptly, breaking my step.

She was there.

I could feel her as much as see her, as beautiful up close as she was when she stood in the center of the flames. I was not afraid. She took a single step and my dance with the imp was broken. Relaxed and still, I stood. The grove was silent. A path, somehow unseen to me before, led not towards, but rather away from the fire, back into the cold and dark forest, that somehow held a new promise of something different and possible.

I realized then, that my fear had blinded her from me. She had always been with me.
Waiting, when I was slow. Traveling, when my progress was erratic and energetic, never interfering or forcing herself to be known. She was with me since my first breath, and had never left my side since my soul came into being.
The imp realized quickly that I was lost to him, and returned to his brothers, to the warmth of the fire and to the crashing song that fueled their dance.

I could no longer see her, but I knew she was there.
Her presence gave me comfort and strength. She was, and is, my eternal companion.
With her at my side, I stepped back into the forest and traveled a path away from the grove.