Sunday 25 February 2018

After the Fire Fantasy (2) - Dionysus to the Rescue



Asphodel winced as grit thudded on to her. Not hail, that would be too much. She had only asked for a few showers not a bombardment of ice balls.
   ‘Sorry, I didn’t mean to throw them your way. I’m trying to spread them around evenly. Lord this is exhausting work. Normally I don’t have to do anything.’ The seed master collapsed onto fallen trunk, clutching a bulging satchel inside his greatcoat.
   ‘I don’t need competition this close,’ she said, wriggling to dislodge a seed from between her base leaves, which was itching. ‘How’s Donny coping?’
   ‘Not in good humour at all. He’s got a shocking hangover so don’t let him hear you calling him that. He’ll live with Dion, though he prefers Dionysus in full. Or Bacchus, though I doubt there’ll be much of that this year.’
   ‘All gone are they? The vines?’
   ‘Some left to the west. The fire stopped when it hit the bare ground around them. Just as well they weren’t bio vineyards, where they leave the weeds to grow. They’d have gone up with the rest.’
   ‘What’s he fussing about?’
   ‘No one to pick them or press them. The houses were burnt, so the folks will be rebuilding, not preparing for the Saturnalia. And the crops are gone so they won’t be in a mood to celebrate. They’ll starve this winter or have to move to the towns for work.’
   ‘What’s he going to do? He’s got responsibilities to prepare for next spring. Getting drunk on last year’s wine and giving up isn’t an option.’ She adjusted her leaves to make room for a flower stalk, beginning its slow ascent from her roots.
   ‘He’s gone off to see his mother to ask for her help. But it’s always a slow process. You’ve never lived through a fire, have you?’
   ‘No, but I’ve been given the knowledge. My grand-daddy lived through two, including that dreadful one two decades back which cleared 200,000 hectares.’
   ‘Nearly gave me a nervous breakdown that one.’ He rubbed his whiskery cheeks with a grubby finger. ‘I thought we’d never recover. But do you know?’  His leathery face broke into a smile of delight. ‘Within a month it was a paradise, with wild flowers kicking up their heels like can-can dancers, shimmering colour as far as the eye could see. Honey bees and bumble bees we hadn’t seen in years came to visit, pollinate and set up honey factories. The grass was growing, so the mice could refurbish their nests and start breeding.’


   ‘But not the same as it had been,’ she said, irked at his positivity. ‘Many died in that fire. There should have been a time of respectful mourning, not a vulgar display by pushy arrivistes.’
   ‘Now, now, you know that isn’t how nature works, Asph. Everything has its season. Trees grow like thugs and their shade crowds out the pretties, who lay down their seeds and wait.  Then the forest gets overgrown with fallen needles souring the soil. We need a major house-clean once in a while to re-set the balance.’
   He cracked his knuckles and extended one leg stiffly, kicking up a pile of ash with his sturdy boot. A large black stag beetle emerged, bleary eyed, and waved a horn in thanks as the branch that had been blocking the exit to its underground layer was pushed aside.
   ‘What’s the death toll, this time?’ she asked the seed master, determined not to let him off the hook.
   ‘Not as bad as you might imagine. A few late breeders lost their young, rabbits, foxes and the like, and will have to wait till next year. Two eagle nests unfortunately. Now that was sad.’ His huge hand dug into his greatcoat pocket and emerged with a pipe and packet of tobacco. He pulled forward the brim of his hat to keep the rain away, lit it and sighed.
   ‘Suppose you could be right,’ she said grudgingly. ‘The deer left early and the birds. The boar too caused quite a stampede. Ma pig and her little humbugs were going like the clappers last I saw. Pa’s gone after them.’
   His laughter echoed round the clearing.
   ‘There’s another of nature’s tricks. Cutest babies you ever saw, growing into plug-ugly adults. Nothing stays the same for long. Get used to it.’

   A flash of red and a flutter of wings was followed by sharp knocking on a seared trunk nearby.
   ‘Woodpecker, you’re ahead of yourself’ she said, glad of the distraction. ‘Your insects haven’t arrived yet.’
   ‘I’m forward reconnaissance,’ he said, arching his long neck, his red crest buffed to military pomp above a pristine white stripe and gleaming black body. ‘I’ll let the others know on first sighting.’
   ‘Did you see many corpses on your way here?’ she asked.
   ‘Apart from the trees, you mean? Wasn’t looking. Dead animals are no use to us.  Mind you, didn’t see any vultures so there can’t be many. I’ll try that grove lower down. The borers will likely find the burnt oaks tastier than these crispy craturs.’ He flew off with a bravura sweep of his long tail feathers.
   ‘Too uppity for his own good,’ she muttered.
   ‘But very beautiful, my dear, you must admit. Always lifts my heart when I see him. And he’s right. Everything has its purpose and its place.’
   They sat in companionable silence for a few minutes until pools of water threatened to seep into his boots. With a gruff nod, he pocketed his pipe, groaned to his feet and walked off, his precious cargo of seeds clutched to his chest. She braced herself against a rivulet that was spilling down from the bank above her.
   ‘Enough then,’ she said, conjuring up the tousle-feathered rain god again. ‘I only asked for a shower not a torrent. Row it back.’ Sheets of rain redoubled in strength, obscuring the far side of the glade. To survive a fire and then drown was too much. Then to her astonishment, it stopped and the puddles receded as the thirsty soil drank them down to nothing.
   ‘What are you doing, Asphodel? Messing around with nature. That’s my job.’ A sulky youth, his coarse robe drenched, strode in front of her. He jabbed his staff within an inch of her leaves, the pine cone on the end glinting in the pale sun. His beardless face, too soft to be handsome, was redeemed by a high brow and penetrating green eyes.
   ‘No, it’s not, Dionysus. It’s the Great Mother’s. You’re just her plaything, on an endless groundhog spin of seed, grow, harvest, die and then start all over again.’

   ‘True enough.’ He sank onto a fallen trunk with a weary expression, wiping tears from his face, leaving a smudge across his cheek. ‘Problem is the cycle’s been ruptured. The peasants have fled which means the few grapes left will rot on the vines, and the wheat, oats and maize are all toast. No harvest, no celebrations. What am I going to do?’
   As she searched for an ecnouraging slogan, he leapt to his feet, ran across to the upended tree roots and waved his fennel rod so excitedly the ivy entwined round sprayed out. 
   ‘Look, it’s a catacomb entrance. You’re a miracle Asphodel.’
   ‘I am?’
   ‘Yes. It’s why you’re here. You protected this clearing. Standing guard, waiting for the trees to fall and an old doorway to the underworld to open again. We can have the rituals here. I could kiss you.’
   So many compliments in one day were beginning to make her feel queasy and she hadn’t even got her finery on yet.
   ‘There must be other ways down,’ she said, anxious about hordes of drunken feet tramping around.
   ‘No, it has to be this one. Mama’s oracle said the usual one won’t do. Bad joss, she said, because of exigent circumstances, or something. She was jabbering so fast I only caught a few soundbytes. A beautiful star would show us the way. That’s you. How quickly can you dress up?’
   ‘My jewels are buried and will take time to unpack,’ she said, clamping her leaves round the flower stalk, attempting to push it back down.
   ‘Tomorrow will be time enough. Just one star that’s all I ask. I’ll go round up the celebrants. Ma will be so pleased with me.’ He tossed the ivy crown on his head high into the air and caught it with his staff, twirling it round and round, as he skipped off to the west.
   Overnight she pondered long and hard about the pine’s last remark before darkness fell. ‘You preside over the graveyard, my dear. That’s your role. But even you can’t live in perpetual winter. The life cycle has to push on through decay and destruction and emerge into new growth. Dionysus’s ritual will help humans reconnect to this natural imperative, and show them that demanding constant summer and plenty is arrogant and self-defeating.’
   Her grand-daddy had once related the Dionysian Mysteries to her. He had lived beside a tree grown from a seed dropped by a partridge who had been in attendance. The seedling tree knew from its forbears, who surrounded the holy grove, what went on and explained them in great detail. In turn the story was handed down to her. Truthfully she hadn’t listened too closely to her aged relative’s rambling yarn since it seemed irrelevant. And she’d been embarrassed by him lingering on graphic images of sexual depravity, some of which involved a goat’s penis and a fig-wood dildo, all fuelled by a booze-sodden, narco-high. Too much information. She shuddered at the memory. 

    They could call her a prude if they liked, but she was very glad she was a plant and didn’t have to engage in all that sweaty, groaning, squeaking and screaming animal coupling. When it happened in her vicinity, she always went into a meditative trance to block out the noise and foxy smell. Which was going to make the next few days quite a trial.
    From what little she could recollect, most of the action happened in the underground chamber, so she would be spared everything bar her imagination. Men and women went down separately into the darkness, were stripped of their status, rich clothes and pride, suffered a painful initiation ceremony, and emerged better people, or so the theory went. 
   What was the point of it? Mirroring nature’s way was what the pine had implied. Her flowers faded and died by late summer and her leaves crinkled into trash at the first chill of autumn. Did she feel humiliated at not being a diva through winter? Perhaps a little, but she knew she would come back twice as beautiful next year.
   Didn’t humans know that? Maybe they had forgotten their place in the eternal cycle, so loss became a cataclysmic reversal, not a preparation for better to come.
   By next morning, her flower stalk had emerged though the buds were tightly shut. How did that happen? Normally it took a week or more. Dionysus up to his tricks as usual. He really was a spoilt brat. What he wanted had to happen instantly, otherwise teddies went in all directions. Disrupting her orderly timeline made her cross and uneasy. What if she couldn’t manage a star flower to open his ceremony?
   ‘Be calm, Asphodel. If the oracle says it will happen, all you have to do is believe,’ the pine murmured, as he welcomed the breeze, riffling through the few fronded twigs still perched on top. ‘We’ll all have to look our best to help the poor people recover. Show them how it can be done.’

Part 3 next week:  The Nature Cycle Rolls Round


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Sunday 18 February 2018

After the Fire: a woodland fantasy

‘Stella, time to get moving. It’s late.’ She snuggled down, burrowing deeper under the covers, refusing to listen.  Why was she always expected to be the first to get up? It wasn’t fair. Her wise granddaddy’s response that it was just the way it was, never gave her much comfort. Anyway her name wasn’t Stella.
   ‘Belle, beautiful, where are you?’
   The call to action was soft, insistent, rippling unease, along with guilt, through her curled up body. She sighed and stretched a toe out to gauge the temperature. Heat pulsated above her, but underneath the earth was cool and inviting.
   In normal times, she revelled in being adored and complimented. It was these tiresome times which stretched her patience. Yes, she would put on a magnificent performance with little competition, at least for a while. But who wanted to be a shining star amidst devastation?
   Despite herself, she could feel movement, as an energy outwith her control, pulled strength from the tips of her being, up through her lumpy, misshapen limbs which she always kept out of sight, and a small green shoot poked its head above the surface.
   ‘Welcome Asphodel. Good to see you.’ A blasted pine tree with blackened, amputated branches and a lone green patch high up, like a lop-sided wig, sighed its pleasure at having company.
   All around as far as the eye could see was bleakness, except she had to use other senses to capture the scene. What did it look like? Hiroshima after the bomb or a World War One painting of the day after the worst battle in living memory. Where a forest had stood were upright, tarred sticks with ugly gashes on top where their parasols of leafy branches had been sheered off and reduced to a pile of rubbish at their feet.  All around flakes of grey ash drifted through the air, coating everything, including her own vestigial leaves, with a chalky veil.
   Where was the wind when you needed it? During the fire it had howled and hollered like a coven of witches. Now when it would be useful, it had sunk into an exhausted torpor. A hint of rain might be good as well. Not that she needed a drink since she had prudently stored several months’ supply underground. Well, prudent was probably an arrogant way of looking at it, since she hadn’t designed herself. Whatever, water from above would help to wash down the grim mess and dissolve the calcified foliage into the soil. Then life could start again.
   The trouble with being first was there was no one to talk to initially, barring the blighted pine who was so old he was off her wavelength. A faint nudge to her top leaf caught her attention.
   ‘Seed master, is that you?’ she asked with a faint tremble.
   ‘Can’t stop,’ came the reply. ‘Too much to do. Just wanted to say hello. Snowbrush and Hollyhock may need my help cracking open their seeds.’ His laugh was like a bell tinkling a note of optimism across the gloom. ‘I’ve brought my little hammer. Then I need to round up the annuals and perennials. So much space and sunlight now. They’ll love it.’
   What kind of benighted souls only thrive after destruction, she wondered. They not only love fire, they can’t reproduce without it. Holding their babies in cryogenic suspension for years, decades sometimes, and then, lightning strikes and they get boiled and barbecued into existence.
   Where were her brothers and sisters? There was no sign of any surface movement. Maybe they were being indolent. Or more likely they had been too close to the heart of the heat and even their tuberous roots had been cooked. That would be a bore, since she’d have to work ten times harder spreading her seeds around to start a new colony.
   One of her toes tickled as a movement deep in the earth indicated that a burrowing animal was risking an ascent. She just hoped they didn’t take a nip as they passed. It might be mole, who rarely surfaced, or shrew, or even turtle, though it didn’t feel the kind of earthquake he caused when excavating an escape route.
   A loud cracking several yards away was followed by an eerie silence as a giant tree, or the remains thereof, considered which way to fall. She cast up a prayer to her favourite deity and waited. The goddess answered and it tipped in the other direction, sending a spume of dust and cinders high into the air as it collapsed, its huge root bed exposed.  Fungus will love that, she thought. Just his cup of tea. Once the rain comes, he’ll be all over the rotting cadaver like a rash.
   That was another one who only prospered when there was death and decay. But as the High Woodsman always says, ‘it takes all sorts. Fungi are the best recyclers there are. What lives, must in time die and be returned to the soil.’ A horticulture carrion-eater. Each to their own. She gave a grudging nod.
   ‘C’mon Saphy, give us a show. We need cheering up.’
   Her spikey leaves stiffened with dislike at the raspy voice emerging from a pile of debris beside the fallen tree. Small whiskers, like tracking antennae, twitched and quivered as a brown rodent struggled onto the surface, wheezing and sneezing into the dust. There was no telling who it was from the grime-encased fur. But it had to be that runt of a rat.
   ‘Do I look like Usain Bolt? The Great Mother doesn’t do Merlin or Dumbledore. Being first doesn’t mean arriving fully formed in my party frock.’
   ‘Don’t get your knickers in a twist. I was just making conversation.’ The rat gave another series of racking coughs, sat down and stood up in a hurry as smouldering bark threatened to singe his coat.
   ‘But you are the high priestess of death, the lady of the graveyard. A shining star above the corpses.’
   ‘If you’re so knowledgeable, kindly remember to use my proper name in future.’
   ‘Yeah, yeah, whatever.’ He turned away, his nose sweeping the burnt air, looking forlorn as his keen sense of smell choked on carbon.
   ‘Over there,’ she said, taking pity on him. ‘Behind that clump of boulders. I saw a family of baby rabbits taking shelter before the fire. They wouldn’t get out.’
   ‘Cool,’ he croaked, lifting his feet as high as his spindly legs allowed to avoid hot spots, and headed for his first cooked meal in a while.
   Despite her irritation, she was pleased to see him. Life was beginning to stir, which evoked old memories, not personal ones since she had never survived a fire before, but her ancestors had. They had handed down their knowledge and she knew that soon the forest, what was left of it, would be humming with new friends. The old ones might be fried into the afterworld but their demise prepared the way for exciting opportunities.
   The fire beetles would soon be colouring the sooty tree trunks with red tattoos as they bored into dead wood to lay their larvae.  Then the birds would return to pick off the insects and so the cycle starts again. The huckleberries will grow, some of them, from their root, attracting bears back next year. The wasteland will be carpeted with a flowery cornucopia and a botanical wonder of grasses, all just waiting for a spot of water to speed their germination into fast forward. At which point the deer will return.
  Rain, where was the rain? Mentally scrolling through her rolodex of gods and goddesses, she wondered who to beseech. Zeus did rule rain but he also brought thunder which was unnerving and worse lightning which could set off another conflagration. Moderation wasn’t his style. What was needed was a mild downpour, well truthfully several days of constant splosh to melt the ash of the past into the hardened ground underneath.

   Toneinilii, that was it. The Native American rain god. Or was it? She could hardly pray if she had his name wrong. Maybe just visualising him would do, without having to linger on the spelling. It was the problem with oral languages. When they were written down, they turned into a logographic horror. 
   A trickster and a clown, his camouflage was a mountainous froth of black feathers like a wild turkey with a bad Afro. Presumably he did a war dance, though quite who he was brewing up murderous energy to destroy didn’t come to mind. The drought presumably. Did it matter?  No, no, she was being stupid. Cloud bursting that would be his game. Shafting his spear heavenwards and waiting for the celestial canopy to rupture.
   ‘Delia, do you have a moment?’ A musky, acrid odour threatened to fog her vision.
   ‘No,’ she said crossly, wishing she could turn the other way. ‘I’m busy invoking the rain.’
   ‘All power to you, sweetheart. I’ll be back. Just wondering if you’d seen my family. Ma and six little striped ones. There’s no scent trail in all this gunk.’
   A spot of rain landed on her crown. The Lord be Praised, or whoever. Three more followed, then ten turned into a steady shower. The hunched shoulders of wild pig and droop of his head made him look a picture of misery as he slouched off eastwards.

   ‘Sang,’ she called. ‘They went north, up to the higher ground. I saw them before the fire reached this glade. They may be alright.’
   His tusks shot up and his eyes glinted.
   ‘Oh thank you, thank you. Ma always did have her wits about her. I was off foraging and had to go south to escape.’
   The thud of his cloven hooves moved into a canter and then a gallop as he crashed through broken branches and even leapt over a tree stump in his joy.
   ‘You’re doing well, Asphodel.  That’s three good deeds today.’ The pine tree looked down on her with admiration.
   ‘Four,’ she said smartly. ‘If you count me turning out on parade.’  Feeling she was being ungenerous because of his advanced age and ugliness, she managed a tight smile. At least he had the grace to use her proper name.
   The water cascaded down, cleaning the dust off her leaves which was a mercy, though it threatened to encase her feet in grey sludge. All around there was cracking and rumbling as the deluge proved the tipping point for several scarred relics of a once proud forest.

Part 2: DIONYSUS TO THE RESCUE (next week)



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